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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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Alan’s blog

Alan’s blog

Alan’s blog

These blogs feature my writing and photographs from my experiences out in the Caledonian Forest and other natural ecosystems. Please subscribe to receive automatic notifications when new blog posts are added.

Newer posts

Ascent into the canopy of a Scots pine

Dundreggan: 4 September 2011 9 Comments

Scots pine with ropes rigged, ready for climbing

At the end of August a group of staff and students from the School of Biomedical and Biological Sciences at Plymouth University spent a week at Dundreggan, carrying out some initial exploration work in the canopy of Scots pines and oak trees there. I had already met Steve and Sarah Burchett, the organisers of the project, when they made a scouting trip to Dundreggan in May this year, and I was excited both by the prospects that their research offered, and by the possibility of climbing high up some of the trees on the estate. So, on the last day of their visit I was delighted to join them and take advantage of their expertise and skill to gain access to one of the least-visited and studied parts of the Caledonian Forest – the canopy of the mature trees. [Read more…] about Ascent into the canopy of a Scots pine

Insect life on aspens in Glen Affric

Glen Affric: 19 August 2011 2 Comments

Cloud formation over Scots pines, between Loch Affric and Loch Beinn a'Mheadhoin in Glen Affric

Last Sunday, 14th August, I spent the day in Glen Affric, hoping to enjoy the classic August landscapes of blooming heather amongst the old Scots pines. However, when I got there the heather was not at its best, perhaps because of the cool and wet summer we’ve been having this year. Certainly there was some heather in flower, but it wasn’t as vibrant and abundant in its massed blooming as I’ve seen it at the same time in other years – perhaps its peak of flowering is still to come. The day was intermittently sunny and cloudy, and there were some dramatic but constantly-changing cloud formations over the ancient pinewood, due to the windy conditions. [Read more…] about Insect life on aspens in Glen Affric

Dragonfly survey and dwarf birch discoveries

Dundreggan: 16 August 2011 1 Comment

This small lochan in the northwest of Dundreggan was one of the sites searched for dragonfly nymphs.

On Sunday 31st July I spent the day on Dundreggan with Jonathan Willett, who is doing a dragonfly survey of the estate for us this year, and my colleague Colin Hall, who also has a keen interest in dragonflies. We went up to the northwest of the estate, to look for evidence of breeding dragonflies in the lochans, pools and small burns there, and I was also intending to look at the dwarf birch plants growing in that area – we fenced an area for natural regeneration of this key montane scrub species there in 2010.

[Read more…] about Dragonfly survey and dwarf birch discoveries
Newer posts

Primary Sidebar

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

Topics

  • Cairngorms National Park (2)
  • Chile (7)
  • Dundreggan (42)
  • Findhorn Hinterland (6)
  • Glen Affric (62)
  • Glen Cannich (12)
  • Glen Strathfarrar (17)
  • Glenmoriston (6)
  • Inverfarigaig (2)
  • Miscellaneous (21)
  • Moray Firth coast (2)
  • Workshops (1)

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My blog archives

I’m speaking at…

  • A Rewilding Journey: Rewilding the World and Ourselves – 10 October 2026–
    17 October 2026
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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.

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    yashar Yashar Ali 🐘 @yashar ·
    22 May

    London Underground station flooding has reportedly been reduced by around 90% thanks to a group of engineers: beavers.

    After conservationists reintroduced a family of beavers into a nearby city park, the animals built dams and restored wetlands that now absorb and slow

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    shaykhsulaiman Sulaiman Ahmed @shaykhsulaiman ·
    23 May

    NEVER FORGET THE 168 SCHOOL CHILDREN KlLLED BY THE U.S.

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    tf_global Terraformation @tf_global ·
    14h

    On Socotra, an island in the Arabian Sea that belongs to Yemen, there is a tree shaped like an umbrella. Not loosely like an umbrella. Precisely like one: a single thick trunk rising straight up, then branching at the top into a dense, flat, circular canopy.

    This is Dracaena

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