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 – 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 a 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. www.hces.coop/community-fund/

One of our HCES-funded events: a Vision PK visit to Taymount Wood 

What has WSWG been doing these past couple of months?

On 29 March, the C406 Community Litter Pick did another stalwart job on clearing the verges of litter accumulated over the past year. Several people who live along the road clear the areas round their own homes on a regular basis, but that still leaves lots of verges uncared for during the year. This year, however, we are pleased to report that counter to expectations, there were about 60 black bin bags compared to 72 in 2025. Some have suggested this reduction may be connected to the opening of the Destiny Bridge taking some of the through traffic off the C406. It still amounts, however, to more than a full bin bag of rubbish per week over a four mile stretch of road. The Taymount Wood car park still remains a bad spot for littering and sometimes, as on this occasion, dumping of horrible polluting waste in the ditch pond, although thankfully these problems rarely extend beyond the forest gate. So well done to all the litter-pickers for the work they do to look after our local patch. A big thank you also to PKC for closing the road to keep volunteers safe.   

Community litter-picking along the C406 March 2026

On 7 April we had another fantastic day of children’s bush craft in Taymount Wood with Biscuit of Wee Adventures, working with the children, as ever, on a leave-no-trace basis. In the morning, a small group of pre-school to P2 children and in the afternoon a full-house of 6 to 11 year olds enjoyed sunny hours of shelter-building, pulleys, rope swings, slack lines and creative construction with found materials in the woods, plus almost too many Easter goodies in the WSWG picnic gazebo. We’ll be having another half day session for primary age children with Biscuit on 6 July so keep a look out for the event notice if you would like to book a place on that. We’ll let you know if there might be spare places at the afternoon session for adults too.

With our Climate Café-West Stormont hat on, we have attended several excellent Climate Café and Climate Connect P&K events. On 24 March, a fascinating talk from a US Climate Scientist in the Reading Room at Birnam Arts. On 21 April, a Network Call finding out about the One Home – Blue Revolution initiative. On 23 April, a wonderful Climate Café Convenors Meeting at Burmieston hearing about all the wonderful Climate Café and Climate Connect P&K activities going on in our communities. On 27 April, a Pop-up Climate Café at the Birks Cinema in Aberfeldy before the big-screen première of the recent 10 minute WSWG video ahead of their monthly Climate Movie Night feature film. On 30 April, the Climate Connect P&K Annual Gathering at the Civic Hall in Perth. Just so much going on to raise awareness and take action on climate in our region.

Also on 24 March, we attended the very useful PKC Community Greenspace Community Action and Networking Day, making contacts and gaining advice and information which will be of value in taking forward the Rookery Wood as a community project in Stanley.

Just-in-time (almost too late!) – transplanting of native and domestic fruit trees in Taymount Wood as part of the Stanley Biodiversity Village Project waiting since they had been temporarily sheughed-in last year! We used brashings and woodland debris to build mini-corrals round the trees to help keep the deer at bay and aim to strengthen these into more robust dead hedges in the coming weeks. Here’s hoping for lots of lovely apples, gages, plums, damsons and sloes to pick along the core path in the not-too distant future.  

On 10 May, we had a joint early morning birdsong listening walk in Taymount Wood with Perthshire Society of Natural Science www.psns.org.uk . It was a perfect morning weatherwise for 8 bird enthusiasts to listen to the diversity of birdsong, walking through the different parts of the forest and to the edges of King’s Myre Loch, usefully backed up by the Merlin app for identifying birdsong. The list of the woodland wildlife we heard and saw currently stands at 23 species of bird, 3 red squirrels, 3 species of butterfly, 9 plant species in flower not counting the trees, and a couple of interesting ferns including the oak fern. Blackcap and wren, chiffchaffs, willow and garden warblers galore, tiny goldcrests, mellifluous song thrush, sweet siskins and coal tits, tuneful robins, whistley nuthatches, raspy coots and so much more. What a lovely way to start a Sunday in spring.

Watching reed buntings and little grebe at King’s Myre

And continuing behind the scenes, the WSWG board is working towards a future Management Agreement with FLS for both woods. We’ll hopefully soon have info to share with you on that front.

Word of the Month

One Home: “Seen from space, Earth transforms us. What if a single view of our planet could make us realize our chance and experience the interconnectedness of life? What if planetary boundaries became suddenly obvious? Astronauts speak of a profound inner transformation sparked by their time in space. Their words reveal the deep, life-changing impact of seeing Earth from orbit or the Moon. Space doesn’t just change what you see, it changes who you are. Through OneHome, you too can experience this perspective — and awaken the same sense of awe, unity, and responsibility.” Find out about how we could participate in this global project at: www.onehome.org/en/about     www.onehome.org/en/blue-revolution

What’s coming up next?

Friday 5 June: WSWG attendance at the Community Woodlands Association exchange visit to Dronley Wood at Auchterhouse to look at their continuous cover approach to woodland management with Dirk Sporleder. Not sure if there are any places left but contact sharon@communitywoods.org if you’d like to find out.

Walks in Taymount Wood with our friends from Vision PK. Dates in June and August still to be confirmed and we’ll be looking for a small band of volunteers to help out on the day. Do get in touch if that might be something you would like to do and we can tell you more about it.

Monday 6 July: More woodland fun with Wee Adventures in Taymount Wood – details will be sent out later.

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Previous Articles

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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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.

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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.

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