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 – July 2026

On 6 July, we had our second Wee Adventures bushcraft day of 2026 in Taymount Wood. In the morning, a group of 4-8 year old children enjoyed a wonderful session of knot-tying, shelter building, tree climbing, swing and pull-up construction, ditch-jumping, skipping, mag posts, fairy-house creation and more. In the afternoon, a group of adults with visual or hearing impairment, carers, Vision PK staff and WSWG volunteers joined Biscuit for a variety of bushcraft activities and wide-ranging chat over a picnic in our glorious woodland setting, beautifully tranquil apart from the hourly accompaniment of a very noisy bird-scarer in a nearby field! Adults and children alike enjoyed the delicious picnic boxes from Alison’s Kitchen in Blairgowrie. Thank you to all our much-valued WSWG volunteers who helped out on the day.

Bushcraft girls practicing knot-tying

What has WSWG been doing this month?

We purchased a barn owl box from the Barn Owl Trust for installation on a suitable tree in Taymount Wood using funds kindly given to WSWG in memory of our dear friend and founding member Mike Abbott. Hopefully we’ll soon have photos to show you when it is in place.

As a proud member of Tayside Woodland Partnerships (TWP), WSWG contributed a short article to their new newsletter, outlining a) the current shift in WSWG focus from community ownership to a Management Agreement with Forestry and Land Scotland in which WSWG’s aim is that our core vision of Nature Recovery and Community Wellbeing and Resilience in Taymount and Five Mile Woods will strongly influence their long term management; and b) an appeal for people to join a dedicated community group to take the lead on working with the PKC Greenspace Team on management of Stanley Rookery Wood for nature and local people. For more information about TWP see www.taysidewoodlandpartnerships.org

We have also been preparing for the next step in discussions with FLS – a roundtable meeting between FLS and WSWG on 30 July at the FLS offices at Inver to preview the process of developing the next Land Management Plans for the woods in the context of the new Management Agreement. There will be no Community Monthly Update in August but we will aim to update you on this meeting in our September Update.

Here are some more photos from our recent children’s bushcraft session in Taymount Wood, and we’ll hopefully be able to show you some from the adult session in the September Update too.

Word of the Month

Pollinators: Pollination is where pollen is transferred from the male part of a flower (stamen), to the female part (stigma), of either the same or a different flower. This is how plants are fertilised so they can create fruits and seeds for reproduction. Pollinators are animals that help transfer the pollen. They include bees, wasps, flies, butterflies, moths and beetles. Without pollinators, there would be far less food, flowers and diversity of plants in our world. It would also be a sad place without the buzz of bees and the beauty of butterflies. Source: www.earthwatch.org.uk

“Ugly or beautiful, it is the little creatures that make the world go round. We should celebrate and appreciate them in all their wonderful diversity.” Professor Dave Goulson

What’s coming up next?

Yet to be confirmed, but through Climate Connect Perth & Kinross, WSWG hopes to have a stall at a couple of summer shows:

Perth Show on either Friday 31 July (am or pm) or Saturday 1 August (2-6pm);

Birnam Games on Saturday 29 August (am or pm).

If you are going to be at either of these shows, do keep a look out for us and drop by to say hello.

Sunday 2 August 2-5pm: Free event, open to all. Come along to our joint Wildflower Walk in Taymount Wood with Perthshire Society of Natural Science www.psns.org.uk No experience needed, just a love of nature and a curiosity about the 80+ wildflower species along our woodland verges. We will also do some FIT Counting to record the pollinators which feed on them. If you’d like to find out what FIT Counting is and why it is so important, go to www.ukpoms.org.uk/fit-counts . A mobile phone, camera or notebook may come in handy if you want to record the flowers and other wildlife we see or hear. Fairly easy walking on firm surfaces for 2.5 to 3km over about 3 hours. For more details go to our events page.

Thursday 27 August: Woodland Walk and Picnic with Pop-up Climate Café-West Stormont conversation in Taymount Wood with our friends from Vision PK. (This is a closed event for Vision PK only.)

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Previous Articles

Community Monthly Update – June 2026

On 28 May, WSWG had an excellent site visit to Taymount Wood with Jen Davidson and Munro Kerr to share with them what WSWG wishes to achieve for nature recovery and community through the proposed Management Agreement with FLS and seek their views and advice. Jen is the Conservation and Projects Officer at Perth and Kinross Countryside Trust, where she is the co-ordinator of the Nature Connections Partnership Perth and Kinross and the lead for the Climate Connect Perth and Kinross Nature Network which WSWG is part of. Munro Kerr runs a nature recovery business with Alasdair Worrell – Alba Fiadhaich (Ala-ba Fee-ah-eich), its translation being akin to “Wild Scotland”.

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Community Monthly Update – April & May 2026

A very big thank you again to the Highland Community Energy Society for continuing their support of WSWG as a beneficiary of community funding each year from their Littleton Burn Hydro Scheme at Dalguise. It is a particularly valuable and versatile donation for WSWG each year, so is very much appreciated. Have a look at the WSWG Case Study on their website to remind you of how we have used their funding over the past few years. Visit www.hces.coop and search for the Community Fund.

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Community Monthly Update – March 2026

Tragically, on 11 February, the PKC Planning and Placemaking Committee voted unanimously to approve the proposal for an intensive poultry rearing unit at Newbigging Farm adjacent to Taymount Wood, despite substantial local objection, including from WSWG and many of our members. The only mention of our community woodland in the planning report was as screening for the development and as a buffer for any pollution of King’s Myre Loch SSSI from the production unit. Needless to say, we are extremely sad and disappointed at this outcome.

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WSWG - woodland pathway

Community Monthly Update – January 2026

Slightly belatedly, a very Happy New Year to all our members and supporters and here’s to a good one for us all. We’ve been hinting over the past couple of months at a change of direction for the WSWG Project and so the main purpose of January’s Community Monthly Update is to tell you a bit more about where we are heading in 2026.

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Community Monthly Update – December 2025

Where has 2025 gone? Hopefully our regular newsletters will have kept you in touch with the WSWG Project throughout the year. You can look back at all our Community Monthly Updates on our website to remind you of the diverse activities and connections we have enjoyed. In the meantime, here are a few photos of some of the new activities which took place in 2025. And to all our members and supporters, the WSWG Board of Trustees would now just like to wish you a very happy festive season and we look forward to catching up with you again in 2026.

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Community Monthly Update – November 2025

Courtesy of WSWG volunteer, Mike Thewlis, we once again have a functional noticeboard at each of the four main entrances to Taymount Wood and Five Mile Wood. So a big thank you to Mike for all the work he has put in over the past few months repairing and replacing the old ones which were all well past their sell-by date. At last, we will be back to being able to post regular updates for walkers and other woodland users at whichever point they access the woods. Thank you also to the PKC Community Payback Team for pre-clearing the vegetation at the north entrance of Five Mile Wood to help Mike in the task there.

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