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Alan Watson Featherstone

ECOLOGIST, NATURE PHOTOGRAPHER AND INSPIRATIONAL SPEAKER
FOUNDER OF THE AWARD-WINNING CHARITY TREES FOR LIFE

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Awards for my work

Awards for my work

Over the years I’ve received a number of awards for my work of ecological restoration for the Caledonian Forest in Scotland.

Receiving the UK Conservation Project of the Year award in November 1991 from David Bellamy, together with Cornelia Fellner (left) and Louise Walsh (right), who were colleagues at Trees for Life at the time.

The first of those was in 1991, when the Trees for Life project (which was part of the Findhorn Foundation at the time, before it became an independent charity) was declared the UK Conservation Project of the Year. This was an award scheme run by the Conservation Foundation in London, and the award itself was presented by David Bellamy, who was a very prominent environmentalist at the time.


In 2001 I was the recipient of the prestigious Schumacher Award, named in honour of E.F. Schumacher, the author of the landmark book, ‘Small Is Beautiful: A Study of Economics As If People Mattered’. The award was given in recognition of my ‘inspirational and practical work on conserving and restoring degraded ecosystems’.

In 2001 I was also shortlisted for the ‘Walking your talk award’ by the readers of Kindred Spirit magazine in the UK.

Receiving the Glenfiddich Spirit of Scotland Award in 2012 from the well-known Scottish radio broadcaster and journalist, Lesley Riddoch.

In 2012 I was voted the winner of the Environment category in the Glenfiddich Spirit of Scotland Awards. These mark the achievements of individuals who provide inspiration through outstanding contributions to Scottish cultural life. The award was presented by Scottish radio broadcaster and journalist, Lesley Riddoch at a special ceremony in Edinburgh.

In 2013 I received the Outstanding Contribution Award in a special event for the Nature of Scotland Awards.

The following year, in 2013, I received another accolade at a major event in Edinburgh when I won the Outstanding Contribution award at the annual Nature of Scotland Awards, which are run by the RSPB (Royal Society for the Protection of Birds). This event, and the previous one in 2012, are amongst the few occasions when I’ve had to wear a suit and tie!

At the end of 2015, I was included in The Guardian newspaper’s alternative New Year’s honours list, where I was named as a hero of 2015 and received The Guardian’s Medal of Honour for my conservation work in the Scottish Highlands. 

During my time at Trees for Life, the charity received a number of awards itself for the work of restoring the Caledonian Forest in the Highlands of Scotland. These included the Millennium Marque in 2000, an accolade given to projects that ‘demonstrate environmental excellence for the 21st century.’

Receiving the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Wood Plaque on behalf of Trees for Life from Princess Anne at Holyrood Palace in Edinburgh in 2012.

In 2012 Trees for Life participated in the Diamond Jubilee Wood project, organised by the Woodland Trust to celebrate the Queen’s diamond jubilee, by planting a 60 acre native woodland on its Dundreggan Conservation Estate. In October I represented Trees for Life at a special event in Holyrood Palace in Edinburgh, where Princess Anne presented commemorative plaques to all the participating organisations that had planted 60 acres of woodland as Diamond Jubilee Woods in Scotland.

In 2009, the volunteer Conservation Weeks run by Trees for Life every year since 1991 in the Scottish Highlands were listed as one of the Top 10 Conservation Holidays Worldwide by BBC Wildlife Magazine.

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My TEDx talk – Restoring the ancient Caledonian Forest.

TEDx TEDx – Restoring the Caledonian Forest

Recent posts

  • The abundant life of dead wood, part 3
  • The abundant life of dead wood, part 2
  • The abundant life of dead wood, part 1
  • Gannets galore, part 2
  • Gannets galore, part 1

News

  • Rewilding workshop in Glen Affric 4-11 October 2025
  • Rewilding workshops in 2024
  • ‘A Rewilding Journey’ Workshop 27 May – 3 June
  • 2023 Caledonian Forest Engagement Diary now available
  • Revised dates for our next Rewilding workshop: 15 – 22 October 2022.

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    Alan Watson Featherstone Follow

    Ecologist, nature photographer and inspirational speaker. Founder of the award-winning charity Trees for Life that is restoring the Caledonian Forest.

    AlanWatsonFeat1
    alanwatsonfeat1 Alan Watson Featherstone @alanwatsonfeat1 ·
    19 Oct

    When I was out on the Findhorn Hinterland today I came across a couple of these conifercone cap fungi (Baeospora myosura) growing out of old fallen cones from a Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris).

    Reply on Twitter 1980027184988467414 Retweet on Twitter 1980027184988467414 1 Like on Twitter 1980027184988467414 16 Twitter 1980027184988467414
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    richimedhurst Richard Medhurst @richimedhurst ·
    19 Oct

    Calling people "terrorists" when all they do is take up arms inside their own territory, against an invading foreign military is complete madness.

    The fact this is a widely accepted narrative in the West shows how widespread the brainwashing and brainrot is.

    Reply on Twitter 1979899808593691049 Retweet on Twitter 1979899808593691049 1697 Like on Twitter 1979899808593691049 4649 Twitter 1979899808593691049
    Retweet on Twitter Alan Watson Featherstone Retweeted
    99blackbaloons George Tsakraklides @99blackbaloons ·
    19 Oct

    “Never before in its history has humanity built a civilisation that had at its disposal so many different technologies to monitor, measure and predict its own collapse - yet has been so unwilling to do anything about it”

    From my book THE UNHAPPINESS MACHINE

    Reply on Twitter 1979840005595177002 Retweet on Twitter 1979840005595177002 81 Like on Twitter 1979840005595177002 189 Twitter 1979840005595177002
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