| Rothiemurchus has everything except the sea; it
has high mountains, native forests, natural hill grazing, low level
arable land and water in the form of lochs and rivers. Only 2% of
the land has sufficient soil to be ploughed for cereal growing but
it can nearly all be farmed.
For hundreds of years cattle were grazed in Glen Einich in the
summer, looked after by herdsmen staying in shielings in the hills,
while their relatives stayed at home and gathered the crops for
the winter feed. They were 'driven' along the old drove roads either
to lower level farms to be fattened for market, or straight to the
market - sometimes Smithfield in London!
The high ground and the forest were grazed by sheep for over 100
years ending in 1960 when it was decided to take the sheep off the
ground to regenerate the trees and look after the deer.
Today cultivation is only carried out on the alluvial soils, mainly
alongside the rivers. The home farm, managed by the estate, aims
to produce about 200 tonne of barley for malting for the distilleries
to make the malt whisky for which the area is world famous. In 2004
we were very surprised and delighted that our barley, grown at 800
ft. above sea level won the best overall malting barley sample for
the North of Scotland.
We expect about 90 beef calves to be born of which 45 are Pedigree
Highland sold as the highest quality beef from the Farm
Shop or kept for breeding, 45 are Highland crossed to other
breeds and their calves are sold to low ground farms when they are
a year old.
In the Highlands of Scotland cattle are traditionally known as
land improvers; their wide mouths take in everything, not just the
sweetest grasses that deer and sheep nibble at, so they enable the
better more palatable and nutritious natural grasses to thrive;
in the old native forest they can create bare patches on the forest
floor for young seedlings to get a start from the natural seed that
is plentiful in the forest. The best tree regeneration on Rothiemurchus
is on land opposite the Coylum Bridge Hotel entrance which had been
well grazed by cattle for nearly a 100 years.
In addition there are the two tenanted farms, Upper and Lower Tullochgrue
and Achnahatnich. They produce young cattle mainly for others to
'finish' and occasionally you might see wintering sheep from other
farms as they have excellent shelter and better grass than the West
coast hills where the sheep usually spend the summer.
We also keep some red deer in extensive ‘parks’; they
breed naturally and live on grass and the young ones are used in
the Farm Shop to supplement the wild supply at the times of year
when it is illegal to shoot red deer; or when the hinds are calving
or the wild stags are not good to eat. These deer will come right
up to you when you are on a Land
Rover or Coach
tour with a Rothiemurchus
Ranger.
From 1976 when the fish farm and fishery
was established, Rothiemurchus produced rainbow
trout; the farm is now operated by Scot Trout Ltd. We sell some
fish at the Farm Shop but most go to their processing and packing
room near Glasgow and are delivered to major retailers such as M
& S, within 24 hours of leaving here. You can feed the fish
which can be very exciting as there might be thousands of fish in
the pond; they are amazing to watch close up.
On much of the land you see will grow crops of grass or grass and
clover. Growth starts after the long winter and the cattle graze
it from the end of May until December. It grows very fast in the
long daylight hours of May and June and much of it is cut in June
and July to make grass silage and a little hay and this is what
the cattle eat in the winter from Christmas until May.
Sandy Mackenzie, his wife Liz and Johnnie Grant manage the farm
assisted by other staff at peak times. A specialist contractor comes
in to make the silage; about 600 tonne in one day! - enough to feed
100 cows for the winter. It is important that the grass is taken
in dry and preferably sunny weather so that the grass pickles quickly.
It’s the anaerobic (do not like oxygen) bacteria that produce
the acid that preserves grass in a sweet state, so the cut grass
is packed as tightly as possible into the pit and quickly covered
in a plastic sheet to keep the air out. If done well, the result
is high in natural protein and provides a complete natural diet
for the cows that only has to be supplemented with some help yourself
minerals and vitamins.
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