Episode Details
Back to EpisodesSecrets in the Sand: Findhorn Dunes Rewilded
Description
A sand dune can look lifeless but is actually one of the most important places for biodiversity in Scotland. We head to the Moray coast to explore the Findhorn Hinterland, where a small, determined local charity is restoring dunes, grassland and woodland while keeping the whole community involved. Along the way we hear why Nature 30 recognition matters for safeguarding the site, and why conservation success can start right on your doorstep.
We’re joined by Jonathan Caddy from the Findhorn Hinterland Trust, who shares the long story of this landscape, from childhood memories to today’s hands-on habitat management across a 50-hectare mosaic. He explains what it takes to run a community conservation organisation, how volunteering keeps momentum, and why environmental education with local schools is central to long-term nature recovery.
Then Alan Watson Featherstone, founder of Trees for Life, brings us into the tiny world that most of us miss: lichens, fungi and invertebrates that hold ecosystems together. Ecologist Sean Wade walks us through sand dune restoration in practical detail, including the challenge of scrub encroachment, the need for early successional habitats, and the careful work of creating new bare sand that rare species can use for decades.
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