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Scotland Outdoors

Dendrochronology, Seals and The Salt Path

Scotland Outdoors

BBC

Nature, Society & Culture, Science

4.7709 Ratings

🗓️ 31 May 2025

⏱️ 84 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Dendrochronology is a niche field of study, used to work out the age of trees, forests and wooden objects. However, it is not only useful for looking at the past, but also for considering how to manage wooded areas in the future. Mark met with expert dendrochronologist Dr Coralie Mills, and Borders Forest Trust Project Officer, Catriona Patience, to find out more about more about these scientific methods, and how they have informed forest management.

Drones can have a lot of potential for wildlife researchers, and one person who has found them incredibly useful is Claire Stainfield, a PhD student at Scotland’s Rural College. She is using drones to monitor the numbers and behaviour of seal colonies on Newburgh Seal Beach, and Rachel met with her to find out what her research is all about.

In the week that The Salt Path film is released, we dig into our archive to hear an interview with Raynor Winn, who shares her incredible story which the film is based on.

Climate change and environmental pollution has a significant impact all over the globe, something that Professor Alice Ma, an Environmental Studies lecturer at the University of Glasgow, knows very acutely. When visiting her ancestral village in China in 2018, she was struck not only by the issues of pollution, but also the ways in which regional traditions and folklore interact and are disrupted by the climate crisis. Rachel met her in Glasgow to here more about these revelations, and the book they have since inspired her to write.

Tucked away along the River Ness is the UK’s most northerly botanic gardens, in Inverness. As well as caring for colourful tropical plants in their glasshouses, the garden is also taking part in a project to distribute thousands of hanging baskets to various towns and villages across the Highlands. Phil Sime met with garden manager Ewan Mackintosh to find out more

Amy Dakin Harris is a professional dancer turned flower and herb farmer. She combines her two passions on her hilltop farm near Dunlop in East Ayrshire, offering specialist movement classes, alongside her flower arranging and foraging courses. Rachel joined her on site to hear more about her background, and how natural it feels for her to unite dance and nature.

The government have announced this week that they have rejected the proposal to establish a national park in Galloway. Kevin Keane joins us live on the programme to tell us more about where this decision has come from, and what it means for the future of Scotland’s national parks.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Why do some big successful brands go bust?

0:05.0

Toast is back for a new series, taking a look at the decisions that often left investors burnt.

0:11.0

I'm Sean Farrington, a BBC business journalist. I'll be hearing about the hype.

0:15.0

They're going to do the deal that makes them the most money at that point of time.

0:19.0

And I'm picking what went wrong,

0:21.6

talking to owners and employees to ask,

0:24.2

what can we learn?

0:25.4

It was being undercut by similar rivals.

0:28.5

It just couldn't survive.

0:30.3

Toast. Listen first on BBC Sounds.

0:34.3

This Scotland Outdoors podcast from BBC Radio Scotland.

0:43.7

Hello and thanks very much for choosing to listen to this.

0:46.0

We do a couple of Scotland outdoors podcasts every week.

0:48.7

One of them, this one, is built on the live programme we do for BBC Radio Scotland, which is called Out of Doors.

0:55.1

And this week, it's a botanical theme.

0:58.1

Out of Doors with Mark Stephen and Rachel Stewart from BBC Radio Scotland.

1:07.7

Just in case you haven't clocked the geography at the front of BBC Aberdeen, there is a slight, slight overhang.

1:13.5

Okay, and our bench seat is kind of sitting just half under the overhang, and in the spirit of Sir Walter Raleigh, if it rains, as it was this morning, I shove the bench slightly out so that Rachel gets wet.

1:25.0

I'm Mark Stephen. She's Rachel Stewart. Slightly damp.

1:28.2

Such a gentleman.

1:29.5

Yeah, you can see the raindrops

1:30.8

are just gathering right at the edge.

...

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