West Stormont Woodland Group

West Stormont
Woodland Group

Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation (SCIO) SC051682

Join us today to bring Taymount Wood and Five Mile Wood into community ownership

Community Monthly Update – October 2024

Let's start with a big thank you to PKC for the great job they have done resurfacing the U38 road from Five Mile Wood car park to Stanley past Active Kids. All done within the scheduled closure period and neatly tied in with a recessed tarmac apron at the car park. So much safer and more comfortable for everybody now the potholes and rough edges are no more.

Looking eastward along resurfaced U38 from Five Mile Wood car park

What has WSWG been doing this month?

And here’s how the U38 road has been improved looking westwards with a proper connection to the multi-user path which was constructed as part of the local A9 dualling. Someone maybe needs to trim the broom back a bit before long though!

The new tarmac apron in front of Five Mile Wood car park

With the first steps now underway towards prospective community ownership of Stanley Wildwood Rookery through Tayside Woodland Partnerships and WSWG, preliminary site inspection by TWP’s professional arboriculturalist and woodland ecologist is informing thoughts on initial and ongoing management needs and objectives. We will be giving a brief update at the Stanley Community Council meeting on Monday evening, 21 October.

On 16 September, we had a lovely recce walk in Taymount Wood with a group from the Community Payback Team to look at various tasks and activities they may potentially be able to help WSWG with going forward, including hopefully an initial event under our WizzyWARP24 Programme.

On 21 September, WSWG gave a short PowerPoint presentation on the “Wildlife in Taymount Wood” at the annual Tayside Recorders Day in Dundee. Several people came up to us after the event with prospectively very interesting and helpful connections for WSWG in the future, including an Art and Ecology Project on moths (we have already had an initial meeting in Taymount Wood), scope for bio-acoustic applications, and interest from fungi and beetle experts. It would seem longhorn beetles, of which we have quite a few important species in Taymount Wood, are generally in indicator of “good” woodland, and we were further advised that one species (Judolia sexmaculata) we had previously recorded as Nationally Scarce was now Red listed as Vulnerable and Nationally Rare.

On 4 October, WSWG was delighted to attend the formal opening of the Vision PK Sensory Hub in their new George Street premises in Perth which has been specially designed to support the sight and hearing loss community in Perth and Kinross. What an amazing facility it is and what an enjoyable event it was.  

On 6 October, a small but wonderful group of guests joined us in Stanley Village Hall for our Silver Sunday event as part of a local programme of events celebrating older people and the role they play in our society. The afternoon consisted of displays and chats about the walking routes, history and biodiversity in the woods, a rolling slide show, afternoon tea from Alison’s Kitchen and a Pop-up Climate Café highlighting the role of woodlands in general and the WSWG Project in particular in addressing the dual climate and ecological emergencies we are in across the globe. A big thank you to everyone who came along, whether for a quick chat or the full thing.

Silver Sunday Afternoon Tea
Silver Sunday Pop-up Climate Café

A sad piece of news to finish on, however. Fiver, the baby hedgehog who was rescued in Five Mile Wood earlier in the summer and who had done so well for a couple of months, suddenly took a turn for the worse and sadly passed away at Hogscroft Hedgehog Rescue a fortnight later on 28 September. The cause of his death remains a mystery, but hedgehog carer, Alison, said that whilst this does happen on occasions, it is awful to lose one who was doing so well. At least we know he was in the most caring of hands, so thank you to Alison and RIP Fiver.

Farewell to little Fiver

Word of the Month

Komorebi: Literally meaning “sunlight leaking through trees”, this Japanese word describes the beauty and wonder of rays of light dappling through overhead leaves, casting dancing shadows on the forest floor. www.morethantokyo.com

If anyone would like to send us photographs of autumn Komorebi, in our woods or elsewhere, that would be wonderful. Please email them (and your name for any credit should we publish it at all) to contact@weststormontwoodlandgroup.scot

What’s coming up next?

Monday 21 October: WSWG will give a 10-minute update on plans being developed for the Wildwood Rookery at the Stanley Community Council meeting (Stanley Village Hall, start time 7pm).

Saturday 2 November:  WizzyWARP24 event with Biscuit of Wee Adventures. We will be circulating the event notice very soon.

Share:

Facebook
Email
LinkedIn
Print

Previous Articles

Community Monthly Update – April 2025

On 1 April, WSWG participated in the Nature Networks Community Engagement event in Birnam, one of several such workshops run recently by PKC in conjunction with Perthshire Nature Connections Partnership. (Nature Networks? See our Word of the Month for more information.)

The concept of West Stormont Connect as a vision and conversation space for encouraging regenerative practices and connectedness for people and planet at local landscape scale in fact preceded the WSWG Community Woodlands Project. Whilst the WSWG Project has been evolving as part of the concept, other positive contributory factors have been developing alongside, including the Stanley Biodiversity Village initiative. The map evolved following a Mini Bioblitz programme for P&K Biodiversity Villages organised by Tayside Biodiversity Partnership in 2023 when WSWG asked for Taymount and Five Mile Woods to be included within the Stanley Biodiversity Village boundary.

Read More »

Community Monthly Update – March 2025

Our ongoing priority this month has been working through the steps involved in submitting our revised funding application to the National Lottery Heritage Fund (NLHF), including another very useful Teams meeting on 28 February with Lauren Arthur, our NLHF Engagement Officer. We have been using our Vision Refresh Report from Nikki Souter Associates to inform the shape and scope of this new application where we are approaching NLHF as the main funder in bringing Taymount Wood into community ownership. As this involves material changes since our initial Expression of Interest was approved by NLHF in 2024 when we approached them as a prospective lesser funder, we will shortly be resubmitting our revised Expression of Interest to them. If accepted, we will proceed to submitting what we see as a very exciting Phase 1 funding application as soon as possible.

But meanwhile, can you guess what this is a photo of? See our Extra Word of the Month below for the answer.

Read More »

Community Monthly Update – February 2025

This has been another month where behind-the-scenes admin has somewhat outpaced community stories or new milestones to lead on, so we will instead begin with a celebration of two natural highlights of the WSWG year so far. For most of us, the Aurora Borealis used to be a rare sight in Scotland, needing us to travel to the northern isles or northern Scandinavian for more reliable and impressive viewing. But recently, the Northern Lights have been much more active over the UK, both locally and even down to the south coast of England. Here are some shots taken of the skies above Taymount Wood around the turn of the year. Our second natural highlight is that Taymount and Five Mile Wood came through Storm Eowyn’s 90mph winds remarkably unscathed, both a joy and a relief to us all. Forestry and Land Scotland have carried out priority tree clearance to keep forestry tracks open. Thank you to those WSWG members who reported windblown trees across the core paths.

Read More »

Community Monthly Update – January 2025

It’s been a deliberately quiet month for WSWG over the Christmas period so instead of a summary of what we’ve done in the past few weeks, our focus this January is on wishing all our members, supporters and wider community a Happy New Year, and then musing, with the help of a few uplifting photos taken this week, on how beautiful our woods are when draped in winter sunlight, frost and mist and what a stroll in nature can do for our spirit and wellbeing at this time of year. So, if you can, make sure you enjoy this treat for real with your own walk in the woods, whatever time of year it happens to be.

Read More »

Community Monthly Update – December 2024

At this extraordinarily hectic time of year sometimes it’s rewarding to grab a cup of tea and take time to reflect on just how busy we’ve all been. Treat yourself to 5 minutes off and come down memory lane with WSWG for a photo montage of our Woodland Year. And it has been a busy twelve months for WSWG with lots of events bringing a wider range of people to the woods than in previous years, and even more going on behind the scenes in pursuit of our shared goals for our woods, wildlife and community. You can look back at all our Community Monthly Updates on our website to remind you of all the activities and connections we have enjoyed. We hope you have an amazing Festive Season and look forward to seeing you again in 2025. In the meantime, here are a few WSWG photos from a highly enjoyable 2024.

Read More »

Community Monthly Update – November 2024

Our top story this month has to be the fantastic Bush Craft and Woodland Picnic event we had on 2 November in Taymount Wood with Biscuit of Wee Adventures, working in the woodland environment on a “Leave No Trace” basis.

In the morning, nine pre-school to 6 year old children learned how to put up shelters of different shapes and sizes using colourful tarpaulins and strings and ropes.

In the afternoon, thirteen 7 to 12 year olds had their turn, learning about knots and tarpaulins, working out how to tension and guy with ropes and found stakes to angle and raise or lower the tarps. Tree stumps became seats and tables, moss, twigs and leaves became gardens, and so imaginations roamed all day. Frogs, beetles and millipedes were greeted with enthusiastic huddles before being helped out of harm’s way.

Read More »