Peter Fraser warns rising cull targets could undermine private investment and shift the burden of deer management onto the public purse.
Peter Fraser. Photo credit: SGA Media.
Veteran stalker Peter Fraser has warned that Government plans to increase Scotland’s annual cull by up to 50,000 deer could collapse the private investment underpinning deer management across the uplands and cost 2,500 rural jobs.
Mr Fraser, who retired as head stalker at Invercauld Estate in Royal Deeside in 2012 after 43 years, made the warning as he stepped down as vice chairman of the Scottish Gamekeepers Association at the body’s AGM in Perthshire on 10 April.
“I’d like to see more common sense from all parties when it comes to deer,” he said. “We are in real danger of wrecking a lot of estates’ business models now because of the pace of the culls and the continuous demand for more.
“If you look at the Cairngorms National Park, for example, they are wanting to reduce deer densities to a very, very low level in some places, but they also want less sheep on the hills and cattle, too, because they want to look at the impacts of all herbivores on the environment. For a lot of estates, that is the entire business model – or a large part of it – so I can’t see how that won’t have impacts on jobs.”
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Mr Fraser also warned that growing cull targets risk leaving glens empty. During the pandemic he walked an entire Invercauld beat and found just two stags and one hind on ground that had previously yielded an annual cull of 25 stags and 40 hinds. He warned that estates stripped of deer income could not justify keeping a deer manager on, leaving the public purse to carry the load.
“What people don’t realise is the amount of private investment that goes into deer management,” said Mr Fraser. “If we lose that, the onus for deer management will just revert to the squeezed taxpayer, so there needs to be common sense and a balance.”
Freedom of Information data recently obtained by The Ferret shows Scotland’s publicly-funded forestry bodies spent more than £134 million on deer management over the past decade, yet private estates account for around 80% of the annual cull, according to the SGA.
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While fencing costs have been criticised, with some MSPs seeking the removal of fencing subsidy from forestry grant schemes, Mr Fraser believes it wouldn’t result in cost savings. He argues that fences protecting newly planted woodland for 20 to 25 years reduce the long-term cost of contract deer stalking.
“When you erect a fence, it protects your asset for 20 to 25 years and it means far less money being spent on contract deer stalkers,” he said. “At the end of it, you can take the fence down. A lot of problems were created when people started planting unfenced forestry schemes in the middle of the red deer range. If you see forestry schemes in the lowlands today, they all have fences around them. I don’t know why the uplands are seen as different.”
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Mr Fraser, a pivotal figure in the history of the SGA, will be succeeded as vice chairman by Perthshire gamekeeper Bob Connelly. “To serve as a committee member then as SGA vice chairman has been a great honour and a privilege,” he said.
“With the influx of young Committee members, along with the wealth of experience held by the committee and advisers in the background, I am sure the SGA will grow from strength to strength.”
Contact our group news editor Hollis Butler at hollis.butler@twsgroup.com. We aim to respond to all genuine news tips and respect source confidentiality.
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