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Beavers booming, wildcats released – success in rewilding Scotland boosts ecotourism. Are lynx, wolf next?

  • The Scottish Highlands has seen the return of beavers, the release of captive-bred wildcats, and increased numbers of other species as rewilding pays off

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A group of 19 Scottish wildcats was released into the Cairngorms National Park in 2023, with further releases planned in 2024 and 2025 as part of rewilding efforts in Scotland that are driving growth in ecotourism. Photo: Daniel Allen
Daniel Allen

At 6am, most guests are still fast asleep in the cabins, shepherds’ huts, yurts and stone cottages dotted across the Bamff Estate, a 530-hectare (1,300-acre) property on the southern edge of the Scottish Highlands.

A few, however, are already awake, cameras and binoculars in hand as they stand around a pond a few hundred metres from the towers and turrets of Bamff House.

If you want to see beavers at work, it pays to get up early.

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As the salmon-pink sky begins to brighten, the creators of the pond are winding down after a busy night of activity.

The Bamff Estate has a range of accommodation options for those looking to witness rewilding first-hand, including visiting the estate’s beaver population. Photo: Daniel Allen
The Bamff Estate has a range of accommodation options for those looking to witness rewilding first-hand, including visiting the estate’s beaver population. Photo: Daniel Allen

Two of the industrious rodents periodically re-emerge from their lodge, disturbing the glassy surface of the water with V-shaped ripples as they scour the area for the most succulent vegetation.

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Occasionally, one clambers over the dam at the end of the pond and swims downstream, its broad, paddle-like tail disappearing into the twilight.

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