West Stormont
Woodland Group

Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation (SCIO) SC051682

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

So it’s January 2021. What has WSWG been doing this month?

West Stormont was the name used in medieval times to cover the parishes of Auchtergaven, Kinclaven, Logiealmond, Moneydie, Redgorton (Stanley) and the Murthly portion of Little Dunkeld. West Stormont has been chosen as the most suitably inclusive title for the many communities connected to Taymount and Five Mile Woods today. Working with local people to bring Taymount Wood and Five Mile Wood into Community Ownership
West Stormont Woodland Group
  • A fabulous blog from Margaret Lear to end the year – “Little Acorns, Great Oaks”. How nature never ceases to amaze! A massive thank you to Margaret for treating us to these monthly delights through a difficult 2020. Alongside this blog, in this oak mast year, we have been gathering acorns in nearby woods, including, with the kind permission of the Woodland Trust, Kinclaven Bluebell Wood. As we are unable to hold community planting events due to the lockdown, these are being distributed to members and community groups who are growing them on in pots for planting out in Five Mile Wood and maybe Taymount Wood at a later date. Anyone who would like some, please get in touch.

  • Excellent report produced for WSWG by retired international forestry consultant, Alastair Fraser, offering a woodland management option which would create a woodland structure that achieves the greatest overall sustainable combination of benefits from biodiversity, amenity, carbon sequestration and timber production. This includes carbon sequestration calculations for the woods. 

  • Draft Feasibility Study on WSWG’s proposal for bringing Taymount and Five Mile Wood into community ownership, produced by forestry consultant, Donald McPhillimy. 

  • We are delighted to say that several WSWG members have agreed to join our Shadow Board or offer specialist advisory back-up in the next critical months of the WSWG project.

  • Lots of work towards finalising the pulling together of the many aspects of our Vision and Proposal for the two woods which have been identified and evolving over the past two years. This has included embracing many great ideas but sadly rejecting other aspirations (eg small field-scale community renewable energy project) which investigation has proved would not be currently viable. But we believe we have a fantastic set of ideas to consult you on in a few weeks’ time. 

WSWG Word of the Month – January

  • Carbon sequestration: The long-term capture and storage of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere in carbon sinks such as oceans, forests or soils to mitigate global warming and avoid dangerous climate change. A classic example is the photosynthesis of trees and plants, which absorb carbon dioxide and produce oxygen. (Source: Jargon buster: ‘Carbon sequestration’ (edie.net))

What’s coming up next?

  • Ongoing hard work by the WSWG Steering Group and our consultants, Donald McPhillimy and Chris Collins, to consolidate and integrate the Feasibility Study, Business Plan Parts 1 and 2 (Forestry and Community Benefits) and Community Consultation process, which will be open to everyone as well as Members. 
  • Launching new WSWG website!  
  • WSWG CATS Community Consultation – from Monday 22 February 2021 to Friday 19 March 2021.

Share:

Facebook
Email
LinkedIn
Print

Previous Articles

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.

Read More »

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.

Read More »

Community Monthly Update – October 2025

Mike Abbott, a founding member of WSWG.
It is with great sadness that we wish to let you know of the passing in August of our dear friend, Mike Abbott. It was Mike who started the whole WSWG ball rolling when, whilst walking his dog in Taymount Wood in 2018, he came upon a small notice announcing that the woods were for sale and that communities with an interest in buying, leasing or a management agreement should submit an Expression of Interest. With just two weeks left before the deadline, Mike and wife Betty got the local grapevine going and, the rest, as they say, is history. Mike was a key member of the WSWG Steering Group for several years until ill health meant he had to step back, and we are so grateful for everything he put into the development of the WSWG project at that critical stage. We send our love and thanks to Betty and family and will remember Mike very fondly.

Read More »

Community Monthly Update – July 2025

WSWG member Mike Thewlis has been investigating the local access network and has come up with a circular walking route he has named the “Stanley 3 Woods Nature Walk”, taking in Taymount, Five Mile and Stanley Rookery Woods along the way. He is encouraging us to use our core path network and other walking routes to get out and discover (or rediscover) what’s there on our doorstep. Read what he has to say about local access and other connections helping us enjoy and improve our natural environment.

Read More »
WSWG - Magic Moths

‘FRAGILE’ – the development of an art and ecology project, by Jan Hendry’

I’ve been wanting to do an art & ecology project for years. If the purpose of art is to show what you care about, then I see it as my job as an artist to make work inspired by the ‘living planet’ (apologies to David Attenborough!).

Why moths? I decided to focus on moths after going to two moth-themed events in 2023: one at Scotia Seeds near Brechin, run by Buglife and a group of local experts; one at Campy Growers at Camperdown Park in Dundee, organised by wildlife tour leader Ian Ford. I was amazed at the beauty and variety of the moths and the knowledge and enthusiasm of the experts. The other people at the events were as impressed as me and we had a very sociable time passing round moths in pots, “ooh-ing” and “ah-ing” at their amazing patterns and colours.

Read More »

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 »