Meet the team – Colin Shreenan

Colin Shreenan portraitColin Shreenan will be taking over as Chair of the Findhorn Hinterland Trust when Jonathan Caddy steps down in September. Although he’s new to the team, he’s very closely connected to it! We’ll get to know him more fully in time, but for now, meet Colin Shreenan…

I was prompted to volunteer for this new role as board trustee and later interim chair because my wife, Laura, has been involved with the Green Burials team. Because of that connection I got to meet some of the team members, such as Jamie and Kajedo, and I was impressed by the work ethic. Later was introduced to Jonathan, and his passion and love for the Hinterland is palpable – and infectious.

By the time he invited me to join the board as a trustee I was well acquainted with how they run things. I particularly like  the non-hierarchical structure, so I was more than happy to join them and play my part.

Some of the work I’ve done previously that has led to this moment includes Laura and I being involved in our own charity in the past. We were responsible for running major projects, with dozens or sometimes hundreds of volunteers. I’ve been looking after land and gardens for some of the properties we were involved in, and I’ve been a trustee on other boards as well as on a community council – so I’m well aware of the work that goes into keeping things moving and keeping the vision alive. I’ve always been a hands-on kind of person, with a can-do attitude, and I have the skill set to match. 

Colin Shreenan wide

I’m excited about stepping into this new role as it’s an opportunity to work with such a great team of motivated people. You can see the passi

on they have for the Hinterland, and its management and conservation.

My vision for the Trust right now is simply to continue the good work that’s been done. To build on the foundation that’s been established, and to help guide the team through this transition time as Jonathan steps down. My focus will be on helping to ensure the cohesiveness of the team.

Moving from Glasgow as a kid to a more rural setting – a town in the country – inspired my love for nature.  I spent lots of time wandering the hills and enjoying the wildlife – and adding to my egg collection, something people would frown upon nowadays. I enjoy bird spotting, and searching for newts and toads. Nature always brings me a feeling of peace. Right now I’m looking at the rain falling and it just gives me that sense of delight and belonging. It keeps you grounded in the now. 

My high dream for the Findhorn Hinterland Trust is that it continues the good work it’s doing for the conservation of nature, and that it becomes a centre of excellence for everybody to learn in and enjoy. I’m just so glad to be part of this hard-working, good-natured team. I’ve been part of other teams and I haven’t seen such openness of communication without aggravation! I like what I’ve seen so far at FHT, delighted to now be part of it.

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Chair’s Report – Summer/Autumn 2025

FHT Chair Jonathan Caddy with Cabinet Secretary for Climate Change and Energy, Gillian Martin

FHT Chair Jonathan Caddy with Cabinet Secretary for Climate Change and Energy, Gillian Martin

Findhorn Hinterland Trust chair Jonathan Caddy shares news on an extremely busy Summer, as well as some impressive legacies as he steps down as FHT chair in September 2025:

It feels strange knowing that this will be the last Chair’s report that I will be writing as I step down at the FHT AGM on the 18th of September, when the long-planned restructuring of the charity will come into effect. Colin Shreenan will become the new Chair and his wife Laura will hold the paid position of Whole Team Coordinator. A new Education and Community Team is in the process of being formed to ensure the education and community purposes of the charity are more fully developed, and I will be staying on as a trustee and will be the Team Lead for that aspect of the charity’s work.

All these changes are to ensure that the charity is structured to remain sustainable and resilient well into the future. For those interested I will write another article in the next edition explaining the charity’s new form more fully. I am also sharing this in a ‘Sunday Slot’ session on the 7th September. It is a big change for me as I have been Chair since the charity’s inception in 2015 and was instrumental in forming and developing its precursor, the Findhorn Hinterland Group, over the previous 10 years. It has been a rich and fulfilling journey, worth an article in its own right in the next edition.

Nature30 awardAs I step down there are two significant events that are part of my legacy to the land and charity: the Nature30 award presented to FHT on the 20th August at the launch of this national conservation initiative, and the final signing of the land transfer documents with Duneland Ltd and the Findhorn Foundation Trust, meaning the charity will own the land it has been managing for the past 20 years. These are great and long-lasting achievements with which I am proud to have been involved.

The last three months have been exceptional in terms of the many things that have happened on the land and also in terms of the weather. It has been so warm and dry most of the time, which is unlike how Scotland usually is. We have had to be so careful because of the wild fire potential. Then, I have not known a summer storm of such intensity as storm Floris that swept through on the 4th of August and blew down a number of trees in the Wilkies Wood, Woodland Garden and also in the Park Ecovillage Findhorn settlement. Luckily it came just after the Woodland Shelter was the venue for night time fun during the Ecovillage Findhorn CBS Lunasa festival.

We have still not fully cleared up after the storm as it coincided with Kajedo, our Land Manager, slipping and breaking a couple of ribs – ouch! This gave me the opportunity to refresh giving Hinterland tours of the land with guests and also to hold more of the volunteers that Kajedo usually works with. Thankfully he was still able to coordinate the German Vision Quest group that was with us for two weeks at the end of August (see News from the Land). It made me appreciate once again how much he does and holds as a guardian of the land – thank you Kajedo!

The warm weather has meant that some of our bee hives have been very busy and we are expecting a bumper honey harvest this year. We presented three one-day bee workshops – one in June and another two in August – which introduced 18 new potential beekeepers to the fascinating world of bees.

Raising awareness of bees and beekeeping was also one of four activities we focussed on when over 100 pupils from Forres Academy visited in June as part of their transition from S2 to S3 days to the Hinterland. They learnt a little more about bees and beekeeping as well as learning the practical task of how to construct bee frames from our now four-strong bee team, Martin Harker, John Willoner, Mathijs Mulder-Barge and I.

Other activities included nature awareness games with Roy Simpson and helpers, conservation work with Neil Meikleham and George Paul, pulling up tree seedlings on rare dune heath areas of Findhorn Dunes Trust land, helped by FDT Chair Steve Worth, and Andy Goldsworthy inspired art projects on the beach from found materials with two of the school Art teachers.

This was part of our partnership work with Forres Academy funded by the Newbold Legacy Trust, which – for the fourth year running – also included about 40 Biology pupils coming out for their field study day to learn about sampling vegetation, investigating minibeasts on the land using pitfall traps, and the world of lichens from Heather Paul, our local expert. Amongst other things!

The other partnership we have been developing this year has been with the Guest Services wing of the Findhorn Bay Holiday Park. It has taken considerable time for their Manager, John MacPherson, to set up a new tent booking system for our camp pads and for us to set up a monthly calendar with a series of activities connected to the land for guests to enjoy, but they are now there for next season. Hopefully more people will get a chance to enjoy connecting with the land in these ways and in the long run it will also help bring in funds to help pay for the good work that we do.

We have recently been successful with funding through other grants. A Neighbourhood Ecosystem Fund grant from Inspiring Scotland brought in £13,500, which is being used to fund a new 10-year Local Biodiversity Action Plan being written up by ecologist Sean Reed as well as a major study by the James Hutton Institute in Aberdeen of beetles and other invertebrates on the land. The latter involves about 40 pitfall traps being placed in different areas but particularly on the new Dune Restoration Project (DRP) site from July to October. These will record what inhabits our land and if rare dune species are starting to colonise the areas of bare sand created through this project.

Other funding has been £2000 granted through the Moray Climate Action Network Seed Fund, which will be used for the Dune Restoration Project work to be carried out this coming November – creating new bare sand in the fire pit area within the settlement, mulching gorse next to the previously created sand areas to allow the natural process of wind to blow sand into these areas, and the clearing of gorse from an area close to the wind turbines that we are earmarking for an extension of the green burial ground.

There were more events worth mentioning back in June. For the second year in a row 13 pupils and two staff from an innovative school just outside New York visited to explore our land and Ecovillage for the day, followed on the 15th June by a special birthday party for Ariane Burgess’ mum, held in the Outdoor Learning Space in the Woodland Garden Ariane helped create. On the 17th June I led our first tour of the land as part of the Moray Walking Festival with a small and very interested group of local people. We will be looking to get more involved with the latter next year.

Finally the FHT is becoming involved in the process of helping distribute the remaining assets of the Findhorn Foundation Trust (FFT) as it winds up. FHT is one of its legacy charities, along with the Park Ecovillage Trust, Ecovillage Findhorn CBS, the Findhorn Foundation SCIO and Ekopia as an asset-locked community benefit society. FFT has appointed a consultant firm to help the organisations work out how best to carry out this task for the Park Ecovillage Findhorn community, and it will be interesting to see what comes out of this process for all organisations, but particularly the FHT. Colin and I will be representing the FHT during this time, with the aim of having decisions made by the community birthday on the 17th of November.

I think that is all from me now as Chair. My final word is to thank all the many hundreds of people who have been involved over the past 20 years in making the lasting achievements of both the FHT and its precursor, the Findhorn Hinterland Group, possible. As a real team we have collectively made such a positive difference to both land and people over the years, helping open eyes and minds and honouring this beautiful part of the Earth we live next to. If all the World could take care and delight in getting to know and looking after their backyards as we have done, I believe it would be a far better and different place.

Jonathan Caddy
FHT Chair
1st September 2025

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Where it began: Nature, Ecology and Biodiversity at Ecovillage Findhorn

From bare dunes and a caravan park to a rich natural treasure – the stories of nature, ecology and biodiversity at Ecovillage Findhorn have now been compiled into one comprehensive feature. 

By Janet Shaw and Sean Reed

The founders of what is now Ecovillage Findhorn set the community on an environmental and sustainability path that continues so strongly today – coinciding with the recent recognition, by the Scottish Government and NatureScot, of the Hinterland and its dune restoration work as one of Scotland’s first Nature30 sites.

Janet Shaw and Sean Reed have woven together the riches of historic articles in the community’s online archive, Celebrating One Incredible Family, as well as lived experience and recent discussions with community members, to create this compilation ‘Topic’ around Nature, Ecology and Biodiversity in the community. 

It is one of a series of topics relating to environmental and sustainability themes at Ecovillage Findhorn. 

In summary:

The Topic starts with the founders’ initial focus on the spiritual dimension of nature, at a time when a world-famous garden was grown on the bare sand and shingle at Findhorn Bay Caravan Park. 

Dorothy Maclean, one of the founders of the original community, attuned during meditation to the intrinsic nature of each plant grown in the garden, leading to an extraordinary flourishing of the garden, and drawing attention to the Park at Findhorn from far and wide. 

The focus widened from the garden surrounding the caravan in which the founders lived, to the environment of the caravan park, and a tree-planting programme was established. 

In the 1970s, influenced by increasing global environmental concerns and a rapidly growing green movement, the concept of ‘planetary village’ was born at the park. The three guiding principles of the community were established, including Co-creation with the Intelligence of Nature.

The planetary village became known as ‘Ecovillage Findhorn’. It developed rapidly in the 1980s and 1990s, with the main ecological focus being on eco-housing, renewable energy, recycling, waste-water management and organic food production.

The purchase of the adjoining Wilkie Estate in 1997 led to the beginning of a new phase of working with nature at the Ecovillage, focused more on land management and biodiversity. The Findhorn Hinterland Trust was established and became a charity in 2015, with one of its main aims being to promote environmental protection and improvement. 

Further eco-housing development was established at the area called the Whins, this time including an ecological impact assessment for the first time. A growing worldwide awareness of the biodiversity crisis has led to an increase of interest in the subject throughout the Ecovillage and an embracing of national biodiversity priorities.

Please enjoy this rich read here.

 

 

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Dunes research – deep-time glaciers, gorse and a hidden golf course

Dunes mapThe Findhorn Dunes are a moving miracle, showcasing nature’s awe-inspiring cycles and telling an epic historical story – from neolithic artefacts, natural disasters in 1694 and 1703, to a 1930s golf course now hidden by time.
The signs are all there, if you know how to read them.
Ecologist Sean Reed has done extensive research into understanding Findhorn Dunes and how they came into existence, recognising this as being fundamentally important in the production of the Trust’s next Local Biodiversity Action Plan (LBAP).
His findings outline how glacial activity helped form the dunes thousands of years ago, highlights records of medieval sandstorms, and how later storms and river breaches destroyed an earlier village of Findhorn. He shares the work of local archaeologist, Michael Sharpe, whose finds – from the Mesolithic to the second world war – include some ritual objects that suggest this area was possibly long considered a ‘liminal place’, of spiritual significance.
‘Most relevant to our land management work – especially the Dune Restoration Project – is that it appears the dunes have been stabilising ever since a huge storm, over 300 years ago, severely reduced sand supply to the dunes,’ says Sean. ‘Sand stabilisation has then accelerated rapidly over the last 100 years due to various human activities. This stabilisation has allowed the growth of encroaching vegetation, which now threatens the national biodiversity importance of the area.’
This research is a fascinating and important read!

The geomorphology and history of Findhorn Dunes_Sean Reed_ FHT Autumn Newsletter.docx

 

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News from the land – August 2025

Kajedo Conservation HubOur Land Manager, Kajedo Wanderer, shares news of a Vision Quest held recently in the Hinterland, and the importance of being still and listening to the land.

‘Be still, and listen’ – a mantra of sage advice from the co-founder of our community, Eileen Caddy.

Easier said than done, I found out when I tried. Monkey mind, they say. ‘Sit still and don’t move’ were the first instructions of most of my meditation teachers, as well as my instructor during my years of forestry training.

I became a forester because I wanted to spend my days ‘in church’ (temple/mosque/synagoge). Among trees in wilder places I found it easy to connect with the presence of something beyond the physical dimensions we usually perceive with our senses. The presence which whispered of the presence of a G(ame) O(verall) D(irector) – a divine intelligence or organising principle that oversees life as we experience it.

And learning to be still and being willing to truly listen clearly is the cornerstone of building a conscious relationship with that presence.

The late Joanna Macy gave me my favourite interpretation of the word ‘Dharma’: ‘The dharma is that within all things which whispers – come a little closer. Come a little closer.’

Over the years of working with the land I heard that gentle invitation from the ‘still small voice’ increasingly – from the trees connecting Earth and Sky, the flowers, and the many creatures of the land. And as we are part of nature, I tried to apply it to my human relationships as well.

Kajedo Later ‘Permaculture’ affirmed the guidance to be still and listen, through its governing principle of (before you change anything in the natural world) ‘observe, observe, observe’.

Over the last 10 years as steward of the land in our care I learned more about the many ways in which we can do that.

Investing a thousand pounds a year in surveys of creatures we are sharing the land with is another way. Looking through the eyes of experts I never cease to be amazed about what reveals itself – the wonders of small creatures we usually hardly notice. The sheer numbers are often staggering – over 200 different species of lichens on our small piece of land! Siders, mosses and fungi – the numbers are always impressive. Right now we have a beetle survey going on and I can’t wait to learn of their findings.

As I write this the 10 days of a Vision Quest we’ve been hosting on the land are coming to a close. These 10 questers and three support staff have conducted this ancient rite of passage, practised by many indigenous peoples all over the world. This group from the Eschwege Institute in Germany is offering a modern version of that, but the steps are the same: ‘dying’, ‘passing through’ and ‘being reborn’. After thorough preparations the 10 brave souls spent four days and nights without food under a tarp, alone in hidden corners of the wildest part of our land. They return dirty and hungry – but without exception, with shiny eyes. To tell the stories of their journeys with the mirror of nature and little else. The follow up is as thorough as the preparations.

I felt it an honour to host this ancient rite here. And it served as a reminder of the importance of ‘ being still, and listening’ – to the ‘still, small voice’ of nature that gave rise to our community over 60 years ago, when those who had learned to truly listen started the miraculous Findhorn Garden.

And it reminded me of the spiritual essence underpinning our relationship with the natural world.

My work here is worship. An act of devotion to all that I hold sacred.

To finish this offering to you, the readers of our newsletter, let me share a few lines from a poem by Hermann Hesse:

Sometimes, when a bird cries out,

Or the wind sweeps through a tree…

 I hold still and listen a long time…

…My soul turns into a tree,

And an animal, and a cloud bank

Then changed and odd it comes home

And asks me questions. What should I reply ?”

Kajedo Wanderer, August 2025

 

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New species in the Hinterland

Female linnet (Linaria cannabina) on a small branch of a young Scots pine in July.

Female linnet (Linaria cannabina) on a small branch of a young Scots pine in July.

From a couple of linnets, a ‘zombifying’ fungus and fly that’s been recorded only twice in Scotland so far, there have been some significant biodiversity discoveries in the Hinterland this summer.

As part of my role as the charity’s Land Trustee, I carry out detailed photography and research to identify the biodiversity on the land we have responsibility for. It’s an ongoing process and I’m constantly adding to our knowledge of the range of species that live here. Summer is the season when the greatest number of species are visible and active, so there have been quite a few significant discoveries recently.

In July I was delighted to see a couple of linnets (Linaria cannabina) on some trees out near the wind turbines. As far as I know there have been no records of this small bird in the finch family on the Hinterland before, although it is a widespread and common species – it has almost certainly been present on our site for a long time.

Two dance flies (Hilara scrobiculata) inside the flower of a harebell (Campanula rotundifolia).

Two dance flies (Hilara scrobiculata) inside the flower of a harebell (Campanula rotundifolia).

On that same day in July, I made an interesting discovery when I was looking at some harebells (Campanula rotundifolia). When I turned some of the downward pointing flowers upright to look at them, I noticed some small black flies inside a couple of them. These were subsequently identified as being a dance fly (Hilara scrobiculata) that is Nationally Scarce. I found more of them inside other harebell flowers in the following weeks, so this may be a notable behaviour for the species that hasn’t been documented before.

Male fly (Pegomya deprimata) on a flower of a sweet chestnut tree (Castanea sativa).

Male fly (Pegomya deprimata) on a flower of a sweet chestnut tree (Castanea sativa).

Another fly I found that day has proved to be even more significant. It was feeding on the flowers of a sweet chestnut tree (Castanea sativa) near the Green Burial Site, and after photographing it, I sent it to Peter Chandler, an expert in flies who helps me with their identification. He said it was a male fly (Pegomya deprimata), and when I checked for that species in the online National Biodiversity Network (NBN) Atlas database, it showed there are only 11 records for it in the whole of Britain, with just two in Scotland, both from near Aviemore.

Calum Maclure from the James Hutton Institute setting a pitfall trap for a beetle survey on the Hinterland in early July.

Calum Maclure from the James Hutton Institute setting a pitfall trap for a beetle survey on the Hinterland in early July.

Over the years we’ve commissioned various biodiversity studies for such groups as spiders, aphids and fungi etc, but one important omission so far has been beetles. I’m very pleased therefore that we have two staff from the James Hutton Institute in Aberdeen carrying out a beetle survey for the Hinterland area as part of our Dune Restoration Project. There are some specialist beetles that live in the bare sand habitat that we’re restoring, and we hope the survey may reveal their presence.

Tiny beetle with a fungus (Cordyceps sp.) erupting out of it, on the underside of a leaf of a hazel tree.

Tiny beetle with a fungus (Cordyceps sp.) erupting out of it, on the underside of a leaf of a hazel tree.

It will be some time yet before we receive the results of the beetle survey, but in the meantime I made an interesting beetle-related discovery in August, when I found a tiny beetle on a hazel leaf with a fungus erupting out of it. I suspect this is one of the ‘zombifying’ fungi (Cordyceps sp.) that alter the behaviour of the insects that they parasitise, causing them to climb up trees or other vegetation. There, the fungus fruits, releasing its spores to rain down and infect other insects, which then behave similarly, enabling the fungus to spread to other hosts. 

Fox (Vulpes vulpes) near the wind turbines. 

Fox (Vulpes vulpes) near the wind turbines.

Finally, one highlight for me in recent months was photographing a fox (Vulpes vulpes) early one morning near the wind turbines. Although we’ve known foxes are on the site from finding their droppings, this was the first time we’ve had visual proof of their presence. 

Posted in News

FHT receives global Nature30 status

Nature30 awardThe Findhorn Hinterland has become the country’s first to receive official recognition as a Nature30 site, part of a global movement to ensure that by 2030 a least 30% of the planet is effectively protected or conserved for nature.

The 20th of August 2025 was a very special day for the Findhorn Hinterland Trust charity: it became the first in Scotland to receive Nature30 status – a new approach by the Scottish government to help combat the worldwide biodiversity crisis.

FHT involvement came about from a casual conversation with Andy Rockall, one of the Community Woodland Association trustees during last October’s annual conference in Inverness. We were talking about the Dune Restoration Project and biodiversity work that was being carried out on the land. Months later Andy contacted me to ask if we were interested in a pilot project that has since developed into Nature30. With the expertise and enthusiasm of ecologist Sean Reed, the biodiversity work of trustee Alan Watson Featherstone and the knowledge of lichenologist Heather Paul, we got involved in the process and ended up being one of four organisations that successfully qualified for the award. Not only that, we were being asked if we wanted to host the launch of this new national conservation initiative.

Nature30The result was an award ceremony that took place at our Conservation Hub and on the new dune created as part of the Dune Restoration Project. It involved a visit from the Cabinet Secretary for Climate Change and Energy, Gillian Martin, and Nick Halfhide, CEO of Nature Scot, the Scottish government nature conservation organisation, along with their 30 by 30 team based in Inverness that had been developing the project.

It was also good to see a fair turnout of FHT members and supporters, including Green Local Moray Councillor Draeyk van der Horn, who manages the FHT Woodland Garden, and Fabio Villiani, who now works for the Scottish Climate Action Network. Gillian Martin talked about the importance of this new Scottish initiative and how areas of land, like that held and managed by FHT, were key to Scotland delivering their commitment to the natural world that is important to all of us in so many ways. In a recent article in the Herald newspaper she was quoted as saying:

‘Findhorn Hinterland is a small group, doing something of global importance – the first in Scotland, the first in the UK, one of the first in Europe – and it was very moving to see them awarded the Nature30 accolade for their years of hard work.’

She went on to say that Nature30 is Scotland’s response to the 30 by 30 national and global movement, which is built on the target to ensure at least 30% of land and sea that is important for nature is safeguarded and effectively conserved by 2030. At its heart this global movement is about ensuring there is the space to allow nature to thrive, including essential connectivity which in Scotland will be achieved through Nature Networks. It is also about recognising that these places can have many other benefits for society. Places that are great for nature can also help us tackle climate change by boosting flood protection, capturing carbon, supporting pollinating insects that are vital for food production, and generating renewable energy. These areas can provide food and materials, recreation, enjoyment and huge benefits to our health and wellbeing.

Nature30Additional information followed saying the Nature30 recognition is designed to help Scotland achieve the 30 by 30 target by celebrating and supporting land management that does and will continue to deliver great long-term outcomes for nature and people. It will be achieved through a combination of new and existing Protected Areas as well as this new Nature30 recognition.
Nature30 sites will safeguard a diverse range of ecosystems, are bottom-up and ‘opt-in’ and, importantly, designed to recognise sites whose sole focus may not be nature conservation but where their business or service provision results in important benefits for nature. Strongly rooted in criteria created by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), Nature30 sites will recognise effective stewardship of our nature-rich areas and recognise their contribution to a global commitment for biodiversity as part of 30 by 30.

It is fabulous to have such recognition of our bottom-up community work over the last 20 years, consciously managing the dunes, grassland and woodlands along with engaging so many within the community and those visiting the area in this vital work.

What will it mean to the future for the FHT? This event has certainly put us on the map as far as innovative conservation work happening in Scotland goes. There have been articles in local newspapers, like this one in the Northern Scot, and will most probably open funding opportunities by having such recognition for the work that we do.

For me it is a fitting accolade that personally rewards the special relationship I have developed for this land from early childhood to the present day. This has been a relationship where the land has given to me as I explored it in my younger days, and through this became inspired to study Ecological Science, which led me on to get involved in many land-based work experiences. Coming full circle, I have now been able to give back during my many years of teaching and retirement by setting up and giving to the charity to help others appreciate the wonders and benefits of the natural world on our doorstep.

It has been both a thoroughly rewarding and fulfilling experience and I give thanks to all those who have been involved and made it happen with me. This award is simply the icing on the cake and makes me smile and feel warm and content on the inside, knowing that small acts by individuals in seemingly insignificant places result ultimately in positive global impact.

Nature30Jonathan Caddy

FHT Chair

3rd September 2025

 

 

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Weaving Maypole magic

Weaving the MaypoleIn May the the Hinterland saw the Ecovillage Findhorn community celebrating the Celtic festival of Beltane with a traditional weaving of the Maypole, led by Scottish Greens councillor and FHT member, Draeyk van der Horn.

One of the FHT’s mottos is never let a disaster go to waste! That was the intent when a storm felled many trees in the Hinterland. That open space is now the Green Burial Ground – and plenty more.

Not only does it have a fire pit, shelter, composting toilets and shower used by campers, it’s also a space for celebrations and community gatherings, such as this joyful dance of the Maypole at Beltane, celebrating fertility, unity and the energy of Spring. Watch a short video of the weaving of the ribbons, symbolising the union of male and female energy.

Maypole music

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Maypole band

Leading the Maypole dance

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Video and images by Adelle Horler and Jonathan Caddy

 

Posted in News

Chair’s Report – Spring/Summer 2025

As I write it’s only May and yet it feels like summer is already upon us, with so many sunny days, warmth in the air and the trees, plants, birds, bees and other creatures making hay whilst the sun shines! We could do with rain because of the mounting fire risk but I am sure it will come all in its good time.

Jonathan Caddy beekeeper

Jonathan Caddy, beekeeper and chair of FHT

FHT apiary bees are happy with nine out of 11 hives having made it through the winter, most now with strongly laying queens. We started weekly inspections at the end of April and have a few more people joining our core team of Martin Harker, John Willoner and I. It’s so important to pass on both our knowledge and enthusiasm so that future generations can learn and enjoy the gentle and rewarding art of beekeeping. Thank you to new member Mathijs, as well as Amanda, Goran and others, for stepping up to the mark. Great also to have visiting Gina Pattison and her son and daughter join the first inspection – read what they thought about the experience.

Group on visit to beehivesOpportunities for visitors to get involved in our regular Thursday morning (10am to 12.30pm) bee inspections are just one of the things we will be offering as part of the partnership between Findhorn Bay Holiday Park (FBHP) and FHT, along with Family Sharing Nature mornings, volunteering opportunities on the land as well as our regular tours. The most significant benefit to the charity will be FBHP using their booking system to offer our 12 camping pads to visitors when not in use by FHT volunteers. We are excited about this as it will open up the good work we do to more people (FBHP had over 10,000 visitors last year), bring in another potential source of income and provide a different experience to those that choose this camping option. It is an experiment and so let’s see how it goes this season. There have been a number of enquiries from students wishing to become long-term volunteers this summer and they may be able to help out with this project. FHT felt it was time to tighten up on how we involve volunteers so have done a little housekeeping to produce improved volunteering forms and agreements. 

Sharing natureAnother partnership that is developing is with the educational charity Growing2Gether, where we are offering Sharing Nature games up at our Woodland Shelter, facilitated by educator Roy Simpson. This is so that the secondary school pupils can come as a group and experience something outdoors to build confidence and gain some skills. Two groups have visited so far: Alness Academy on the 13th May and Inverness High on the 19th May.  Roy also offered a free Sharing Nature workshop earlier in the month that was well attended by 17 local educators, including a number from Wild Things!  One outcome was that Ada Valeria came forward to apprentice with Roy.  This will ensure skills are passed on and Roy will have help delivering a summer programme of events.

Tree planting

With the fine weather the regular monthly work parties have also been well attended – during the winter there were surprisingly few people who came along to these worthwhile educational and community-building events. Two of note were tree planting on the southern edge of Wilkies Wood, where blown pines had been removed in the winter by Kajedo, our Land Manager, and small Scots Pines were transplanted from elsewhere in the woods; and the other was a productive team that helped in the Woodland Garden, some on the new adopt a plot scheme that Draeyk has put in place. Work party in the edible garden

FHT trustees have moved forward on two significant developments during this period. We have a change in green burial rates/way forward for this important part of the trust (also see Laura Shreenan’s article on the environmental impact of these burials), and have also decided to employ Laura from May to September in the position of Chair Support. Laura will help with the conscious, significant structural change FHT is going through as I step down as Chair in September, and how the charity is going to continue well into the future in a sustainable and resilient way. There will be more no doubt to say about this in the next newsletter, as with the prospective new trustees that should be joining the board this month.

Weaving the MaypoleThere’s so much more I could talk about: the final landscaping and completion of  the new sanctuary – see the story on FHT’s involvement; another successful Maypole dancing and ceremony event on the Green Burial area, led by Draeyk and attended by over 90 people  as part of the community-wide Mayday  celebration; progress with the land transfers from Duneland Ltd and the Findhorn Foundation, which are well on their way; and the printing of green burial folders which now have legacy information included. But suffice it to say that we are busy and thriving as your local charity custodians who care for and help people connect and learn from the land.

 

Jonathan Caddy

FHT Chair

11th May 2025      

 

Posted in News

Beams, barrels and benches: FHT and the Light of Findhorn Sanctuary

After four years, our community once again has a brand new Sanctuary! From the provenance of the beams to the benches to the barrels, there are many significant stories to tell – and the Findhorn Hinterland Trust played an important role every step of the way.

Light of Findhorn Sanctuary Photo: Mark Richards

Light of Findhorn Sanctuary Photo: Mark Richards

Easter Sunday, 20 April 2025 – the day the new sanctuary was completed and opened for the first time – was significant for the whole community at the Park Ecovillage Findhorn and beyond. This project and building has become a symbol of hope and renewal to many. The FHT is proud to have been involved in this community project and I want to take a moment to reflect on all that our land, members, benefactors and volunteer team have contributed to over the past four years.

On 13 April 2021 the fires, an act of arson, ravished and totally destroyed the old sanctuary that had been providing a place to gather and enjoy peace and spiritual sustenance for over 53 years.
FHT had started clearing a site for the Conservation Hub that January, and by February a team of people were stripping bark off poles in the snow for its construction. In September of that year the foundations went in and on 19 February 2022 it was finally completed and we celebrated its opening.
The Hub building was important for the charity as it gave us a number of things that encouraged us to get involved in the sanctuary build: confidence and skills to prepare and use round wood in construction, particularly aided by Henry Fosbrooke, a master in the art, and Sean Brechin who oversaw the Hub build; links with local timber miller Ben Moore, who brought in his portable mill to produce construction timber; and our hard work and achievement attracted the attention of a couple of important funders, including the Hygeia Foundation and a generous community member who remained anonymous. This donation of over £3000 helped pay for the subsequent work the charity undertook on the sanctuary.

FHT is a great believer in never making a good catastrophe go to waste! That’s what happened when storm Arwen struck on the 25 November 2021, resulting in over one hundred trees in Wilkies Wood being blown down. Our Land Manager, Kajedo, set to work felling the trees and I pulled them out using our wee grey Fergie tractor. They were to be either milled by Ben then stacked and covered by FHT volunteers, or stripped, covered and stored as round construction wood by a merry band of young and old within our community.

Much of this was done before the Sanctuary design was finalised, during a design charette event around the 20th March 2022. Hinterland prepared timber was going to be used for the main round columns and beams of the new structure and some of the cut wood for roof sarking.

A number of the Scots Pine trees had been planted in the early 1960s by my father in what became the Wild Garden. The intense sanctuary fires had left them cooked and burnt inside, so on 17 March 2022 they were felled and our tractor again removed them. Two of the lengths were subsequently used to make up a portion of the five main beams of the sanctuary structure. The rest of the trees were milled by Ben for the Findhorn Foundation gardeners and they lay seasoning outside the garden tool shed. In the week of 24 November 2024 they were converted into benches for the new sanctuary’s vestibule and sitting-out area (a sitooterie in Scots!) – you can read about the benches here.  They were moved to the sanctuary on 25 January 2025 and subsequently installed along with the coat hook panels on 2 February.

Back in the autumn of 2022 FHT got involved with its own volunteers and equipment, along with the Findhorn Foundation gardeners, in clearing the sanctuary site. The landscaping rocks were going to be recycled when needed for the new building, we cleared the plants and trees, including a half-burnt apple tree that was dug up and replanted successfully in the new Woodside garden.

By November we were starting to remove the wooden sheds that had become important and well-used offices as the community grew in the 1970s and 80s, and were still in operation before the fires. First to go was the cooks office on 8 November, the computer office on 10 November and finally the Park Campus office on 2 February 2023. The General Office and food shed were finally removed by the site contractor’s machines on 5 October 2023, after many years of faithful service to the community.

We tried to recycle everything we could from these buildings, being particularly successful with the computer office. This was completely rotten at the base but otherwise in fair condition. Before taking it apart we measured it and it just happened to fit almost exactly the metal trailer frame with an insulated floor we had prepared back in April 2022. So we cut the rotten studs at the base and had Ruari and Jason of Greenleaf Design and Build get in their machine to physically pick it up and set it on the base. Almost instantly we had a shepherd’s hut to be used for FHT long-term volunteers on the land! After installing a wood stove and covered verandah, as well as repainting and re-roofing it back at the Conservation Hub, we moved it into Wilkies Wood on 28 April 2023 and had the grand opening as part of that year’s May Day celebrations.

Also in autumn 2022, after the site had been marked out by the surveyor on 28 October, we selected and cut poles in Wilkies Wood and erected them on the sanctuary site, strung together with ropes to physically show everyone the dimensions of the new building. This basic 3D model was appreciated during the large gathering of community members on the site for a blessing as part of the 60th community birthday celebrations on 17 November 2022.

Another FHT contribution was to remove a large redwood tree that was beginning to threaten Cornelia Featherstone’s house situated on the way up to the Universal Hall. It had been felled by a local tree surgeon, after permission had reluctantly been given, helped by the intention to use the wood as part of the new sanctuary build. The logs that were removed in March 2023 have yet to be converted to furniture, but the remaining stump had a 20cm section cut off and sanded – it is now the centerpiece for candles and flowers in the new sanctuary. It looks and feels so appropriate that the tree is honoured in this way.

A now unseen but significant effort by FHT volunteers was helping to dig the large soakaway for the building. This involved taking up the turf on most of the original garden lawn, stacking it out of the way for the digger to come in and create a huge hole, which was then filled with gravel before the turf was re laid. At this time, a midden of shells and burnt wood was discovered when digging the sanctuary foundations. I informed archaeologist Michael Sharpe – you can read about this find here.

It wasn’t until 23 April 2024 that the building foundations were dug and the concrete poured on 26 April. In June the selected structural poles, which had been stored in anticipation of the build, were moved down to the FHT Conservation Hub for final preparation, before they were moved to site and and erected in September. We also used the tractor to deliver sarking stored up in Wilkies Wood that was used in the roof.

The final act was the landscaping – bringing the new building into harmony with the original caravan, the large cleared area where the former shed offices had been, and the original garden. Some of the milled wood was moved onto site and a group of FHT volunteers used it to create a small fence to protect the seeded grass area. Rocks that had been stored up at the wind turbines had to be selected and loaded onto the tractor to be transported and carried onto site, to be crafted into walls or edging. Topsoil, gravel and mulching material had to be wheelbarrowed into position. Most of this I did myself as an act of connection and love for this place where I grew up. I was born in the original caravan before it was moved to where it sits now, and I lived there from the age of six – with my two brothers, mother, father and friend Dorothy Maclea – for seven years, seeing and living off the expanding garden that became so important as a ray of hope to the world.

It was special to go to Greens Nursery in Nairn on 9 April 2025 and take time to select the plants to enhance the building and surroundings. Long-term community member John Willorner and I had asked if we could collect a few of the whisky barrel planters from Cluny Hill Hotel, as a symbolic connection to this place that had housed thousands of guests for the community since it was bought in 1975. We loaded them onto the Findhorn Foundation bus along with the soil. By the time they were looking magnificent with the new plants in them, Cluny had been sold after 50 years of community service – we were glad we had taken time to gather this small memento.

Recently I heard a long-term community member say it was such a pity that people could not get involved in the building of the sanctuary, as had been the case in the 1970s with the Universal Hall. I was wondering where they were when the call for help went out! I am personally satisfied with what the charity has been able to offer our local community and very pleased that we could fulfil one of our charitable purposes, which is to help build local community, in this way.

Jonathan Caddy
FHT Chair
20 May 2025

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Findhorn Hinterland Trust, Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation (SCIO) SC045806
228 Pineridge, Findhorn, Forres, Moray IV36 3TB