Saving Squirrels
BBC Countryfile Magazine|January 2022
One of Britain’s best-loved animals, the red squirrel is being driven back to its Highland heartlands by the slow advance of its grey cousin. We visit a Perthshire farm where naturalist Polly Pullar is doing her best to save the red
By Richard Baynes. Photographs by NaturePL.com, Alamy, Polly Pullar
Saving Squirrels

The sharp frost is slowly loosening its grip, but there is still ice on the bracken. From a chilly seat in a hide in the woods above Aberfoyle, right on the Highland boundary, I see the flicker of a bushy brown tail.

Then a pert face, jaws rapidly chomping, pops up above a log in the clearing. The red squirrel looks directly towards me, then quickly twists away. Its rich chestnut fur undulates as the flexible body races across the ground and up a pine tree.

I never tire of seeing squirrels here in Stirlingshire, especially in winter when they are a warm breath of life, but I am lucky to have them on my doorstep. There are just 160,000 red squirrels now in the UK. South of the Scottish border, reds are now relegated to a few pockets as introduced American grey squirrels have taken over. Most of them – perhaps 120,000 – are in Scotland. They are doing well in the Highlands, mainly in the east, and in south-west Scotland there are good populations. But all face pressure from the bigger greys, which out-compete them for food, and carry – but don’t suffer from – squirrelpox, which is fatal to reds.

Efforts to help reds in Scotland are showing positive results: the Saving Scotland’s Red Squirrels project (SSRS) has restored them to much of the woodland just south of the Highland Line, with a programme of grey ‘control’ – the grim task of culling. The same method is helping to steady populations in southern Scotland.

This story is from the January 2022 edition of BBC Countryfile Magazine.

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This story is from the January 2022 edition of BBC Countryfile Magazine.

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