
Owners of remote Scottish island announce rewilding plans
However, today it contends with limited seed sources, overgrazing of herbivores, and minimal natural regeneration.
Since purchasing the island in 2023, the owners have spent considerable time researching and understanding how a robust environmental regeneration initiative can realise the island's full potential and contribute to community, environmental, and economic wellbeing.
Andrew Marshall, co-owner of Ronay Island and founder of Carlowrie Group says: 'We're taking a multi-generational approach to caring for the land and have partnered with a range of organisations and individuals to support our mission. We know this is not a matter of 'winding back the clock', but is an opportunity to create a resilient, species-rich island that will benefit all, long past our own lifetimes.'
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The project has support from the Uist community and environmental experts from across the United Kingdom. Their partners include Northwoods Rewilding Network, RePlanet, and a purposely-formed steering committee of local stakeholders. The steering committee includes the owners of local accommodation and tourism business Langass Lodge, the operators of local wildlife tour company Lady Anne Wildlife Cruises, the founder of Love Gaelic language courses, a specialist in woodland conservation, and other interested parties.
This summer, the team will undergo extensive baselining surveys to gain a comprehensive understanding of the island's current state of biodiversity. These surveys will support targeted regeneration efforts and will act as a means of measuring progress over the coming years.
Mr Marshall said: 'There is a lot of potential to increase the existing biodiversity on Ronay Island, and we can already see nature attempting to make a comeback despite many years of extensive grazing, but it will need human intervention to help these natural processes thrive.'
He says it is not uncommon to witness red deer swim between neighbouring islands Grimsay and North Uist to Ronay Island. To aid in the restoration of natural habitats, the team will embark on a robust deer management plan and explore innovative approaches to land management.
In the future, they expect to make a range of Ronay Island products, using wild-grown seaweed and quality venison, for people to experience a slice of the wild and rugged Ronay Island from their own homes.
Already, the team at Carlowrie Castle, a luxury events venue near Edinburgh, has been enjoying the benefits of the project. Executive chef, David Millar, has been serving Ronay venison to guests and was recently named Scottish Chef of the Year 2025 using the direct-from-source meat as the star of his menu. Meanwhile, the castle's head gardener Alex Knubley has been exploring the benefits of the nutrient-rich Ronay seaweed as fertiliser on the estate.
Carlowrie Castle and Ronay Island are both part of the wider Carlowrie Group of brands which were founded by Andrew Marshall and which put positive impact at the core of their operations.
He said: 'What we're doing on Ronay Island is a fantastic opportunity to show others that environmental regeneration can be done in a way that benefits local communities and the planet in a lasting and robust way. It is a big undertaking and something my business partner and I have been interested in for a long time. We're thrilled to be on this journey making it happen.'
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Daily Record
03-06-2025
- Daily Record
BBC Death in Paradise's Kris Marshall reunites with Love Actually co-star in new series
Death in Paradise star Kris Marshall has opened up on an unexpected reunion with his Love Actually co-star in the upcoming series of the hit detective drama. Death in Paradise star Kris Marshall has whipped up excitement amongst his followers by teasing a delightful on-set reunion with an old Love Actually cast mate in the incoming series. Whilst previewing the brand new instalments of Beyond Paradise down under, the actor playing the affable lead detective revealed this tantalising nugget during an interview. Jubilantly speaking on The Project last Sunday, Marshall unveiled that Abdul Salis - who portrayed his close companion Tony in Love Actually - has graced the enigmatic show with a special appearance, reports the Mirror. The 52-year-old celebrity was visibly thrilled about encountering Salis anew, despite it being more than two decades since they last acted together. "I had only seen him once in 24 years," he disclosed with sense of wistfulness. Contemplating the fortuitous twists often found in acting careers, he reflected poetically: "It's a beautiful thing about being an actor. You pick up where you left off. It's kind of symbiotic. I love it." With unmistakable glee about rekindling camaraderie with a former colleague, Marshall added: "So, he came in and did a guest thing and we're all a bit older and, you know, we're not very much wiser. We're all good." Although tight-lipped regarding the intricacies of Salis's role, Marshall couldn't help but insinuate, possibly exonerating Abdul's character from any foul play. With a suggestive tone, he began: "I don't think he's..." before giving himself to laughter, ensuring audiences stay in the dark for what Wales Online describes as a cheeky manoeuvre to avoid spoilers. Abdul has certainly left his mark, having portrayed paramedic Curtis Cooper on 'Casualty', and gracing screens with roles in renowned series such as 'Doctor Who', 'Father Brown', and most recently adding 'The Wheel of Time' to his burgeoning filmography. Kris and Sally Breton have recently offered insights into their new series, drawing from their real-life parenting to mirror the foster care experiences of their characters. While unpacking the intricacies of DI Humphrey Goodman and Martha Lloyd's foray into foster care, Kris revealed to HELLO!: "Parenting is often three steps forward, two steps back, and when you think you're winning, the rug gets pulled out from underneath you." Sally echoed those complexities by sharing reflections from her own life: "I understood getting it wrong. I understand thinking right, I'm getting somewhere, and then the next day, there's a new problem or another worry you've got on the shelf." She elaborated on the perpetual challenges of parenting, stating: "I understand that you never get to a point where you think: 'I've got this', and then absolutely haven't. And that is parenting in my experience." Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community! Get the latest news sent straight to your messages by joining our WhatsApp community today. You'll receive daily updates on breaking news as well as the top headlines across Scotland. No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the Daily Record team. All you have to do is click here if you're on mobile, select 'Join Community' and you're in! If you're on a desktop, simply scan the QR code above with your phone and click 'Join Community'. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'.


Daily Mail
31-05-2025
- Daily Mail
The chilling final two words uttered by teenager on the phone to his parents while walking home in the dark - before he vanished forever
A teenager who mysteriously disappeared after getting lost in the dark while driving home said two final chilling words to his parents on the phone before the line went dead. Brandon Swanson, from Marshall, Minnesota, started walking home after his car got stuck in a ditch after taking a wrong turn on a country road while on the way home from an end-of-semester spring party in 2008. Just before 2am, the 19-year-old rang his parents to come and pick him up, but was so lost he sent them in the wrong direction. Trying to find somewhere they would both know, Brandon told them he thought he could see the lights of Lynd, a nearby town, and decided to take a shortcut through an abandoned farm field. There, while still on the phone to his parents, Brandon uttered his final words - 'oh s***' - before the line went dead, and he was never seen again. Brandon's parents and friends searched throughout the night while ringing his phone, but there was no answer. His mother, Annette, reported him missing to police next morning. Sniffer dogs led police towards the Yellow Medicine River but lost the scent. His case has become one of America's greatest unsolved mysteries and, while some believe he fell into the river and died, his body and belongings were never discovered. Brandon's evening started in the nearby town of Lynd, about seven miles southwest of his home in Marshall. After leaving the party early, he headed 35 miles north west toward Canby to meet another friend. It was a route Brandon had driven every day to college, but this time it was believed he decided to take the back roads instead as he'd been drinking at the party. However, his friends confirmed they didn't believe he'd been overly intoxicated. If he had taken the main highway, it should have taken just 30 to 40 minutes to get home. After he getting lost in the backroads and subsequently stuck in the ditch, Brandon told his parents he was somewhere on the road between Lynd and Marshall - although it's now believed he was around 25 miles away. When his father Brian and mother Annette arrived, they couldn't see his car. Still on the phone, they flashed their headlights and, although Brandon said he was doing the same back at them, it remained pitch black. Getting increasingly desperate to get home safe, Brandon started honking his car horn - which again, couldn't be heard by his parents except through the phone. Frustrated, Brendan decided to abandon his car and walk to what he thought was a nearby town and they all agreed to meet in one of the bar's car park. Brain stayed on the phone to his son for 47 minutes as he made his way through fields, over fences and along streams of water. At around 2.30am, Brandon suddenly yelled 'oh s***!' and the phone disconnected. Brian immediately called Brandon back six times in a row, with each getting no answer. His parents continued looking for their son until the next morning when they were able to report him missing to police, who initially dismissed their claims and said 'teenage boys go missing all the time'. According to Annette, one officer said directly 'as an adult Brandon has a right to be missing if he wants to be'. It took hours of Annette pleading with officers before they would take Brandon's disappearance seriously. Authorities managed to track his phone and it turned out Brandon was 25 miles away, between the towns of Porter and Taunton, from where his parents were searching. Moving the search to the Taunton area, authorities quickly located Brandon's abandoned car which was in a ditch on the side of the road, just as he said. Ground and air searches took places over the next few days for Brandon and rescue dogs were brought in to track Brandon's scent from his car. The dogs followed his trail across an abandoned farm, and then along the Yellow Medicine River, at the river's edge, the dogs lost Brandon's scent, which indicated he may have gone in the water. However the dogs did pick his trail back up on the other side, which suggested he got back out. After the initial response to her son's disappearance, Annette successfully campaigned for the introduction of 'Brandon's Law' in the state. Brandon's Law was passed in Minnesota later that year in 2008 and it requires police to begin an immediate search for missing adults under 21, as well as older adults who are missing under suspicious circumstances. If you have any information, please contact Lincoln County Sheriff's Office 507-694-1664.


The Guardian
03-05-2025
- The Guardian
I always wondered what had happened to my missing brother. Could I ever forgive my father for driving him away?
One morning in March 1995, my father and I were having coffee at the kitchen table when somehow the conversation deviated to my brother Marshall. As always, I had questions. 'He was tall for his age,' my father said, gazing at the memory of his estranged son, as if he was standing beside us in the kitchen. 'At school they always wanted him for the football team. His hair was red, deep red like your grandmother's, and his eyes …' my father paused, searching for the right comparison. 'Copper. His eyes were copper-coloured and he'd tan so well in the summer he looked as if he'd been dipped in wood stain.' Another memory still tickled. 'A 15-year-old kid tried to dominate him once, bragging about being 15, and Marsh stood up, towered above him and said in a manly voice, 'Well, I'm 12.'' My father's smile slowly sank as a thought passed behind his eyes. 'When he was 17,' he continued, 'Marshall won a scholarship to Harvard off the back of a short story he wrote, and he declined it! Can you imagine?' My father went quiet for a moment, the blade of that wasted opportunity still sharp. 'He was such a gifted writer.' My father was of a generation that upheld the notion that if an establishment such as Harvard University came knocking, it was your duty to answer. Not to do so was an unforgivable waste of opportunity. Perhaps Marshall didn't want that particular opportunity at that particular time in his life, I suggested. Perhaps it was simply bad timing. I felt my words fail the moment they left my mouth. His voice soured: 'Then he became a hippy.' I was well versed on the family accounts surrounding Marshall's life choices. The last time my father had seen his son was 22 years earlier. Marshall had been a homeless hippy who had hitchhiked from California to Texas in need of money. I knew my father found it all hard to talk about. His hand trembled as he lifted his mug. My father was 54 when I was born, and I loved him beyond measure. He had a warm American voice, and was witty and full of character. At four years old, when I asked why I had a belly button, he replied that it was for dips when eating crudites. Chocolate digestives were wedged in apple tree branches for my sister and me to pick. Hoisted on to his shoulders, we would reach for them in the belief that cookies really did grow on trees. However, as I became an adult, I became more aware of the life he'd lived before I was born, and I wanted to know more. How could my father leave one of his children behind, allow him to disappear into a void? Was it my father's choice or Marshall's? How did my brother become linked to the Charles Manson cult, so infamous it rocked the foundations of American society? Years of research and discussions with family members have brought me closer to the answers. My brother's story begins miles away from sunny California, love-ins and communal living, in middle-class 1950s Michigan and the emotional chaos of Marshall's mother, my father's first wife, Sally. After years of a gradual descent into psychosis, Sally was hospitalised in 1954, receiving electroshock therapy and medication. A year after admission, Sally was deemed fit enough to return home for a weekend. The moment my father went out to do the grocery shopping, she lay on the bed filled with enough sleeping pills to kill a horse, drifting so far into oblivion that her son's pleas for her to wake up failed to reach her. Marshall was 11 years old. After this devastating upheaval, my father, with the help of my grandmother, sought structure for his teenage son, finding the solution with the Marine Corps. An ex-US marine and war veteran himself, my father knew the kind of discipline the marines could inculcate. Marshall was subsequently enrolled at the prestigious Howe school, a private military academy in Indiana, and a photograph was taken to immortalise that first day. Looking closely at that image, it's clear Marshall isn't keen. Aged 13, not yet two years since his mother took her own life, my brother stands rigid in his service uniform next to the Howe school gate, head slightly lowered, flinging the photographer a glowering stare. It is an anger my father's lens doesn't hide. Marshall's time at Howe didn't last long. After a year, my father's job relocated them to the Netherlands where my father met his second wife. By this time, Marshall was 15 and his behaviour was becoming a problem. Unable to self-regulate, my brother became volatile, opinionated, oppositional. Modern psychology tells us that suppressed trauma will find an escape route, behaviour the most common outlet. In 1959, however, my father's emotional awareness was far less acute. Marshall was sent away again, this time to a boarding school in Switzerland. By 1962, at just 18 years old and a fully fledged marine, my brother found himself stationed in Vietnam where his days were fraught with danger. During one of those harrowing moments, an explosion changed his life for ever. The blast resulted in burn scarring on the side of his head and severely damaged the hearing in his right ear. The psychological scars would linger far longer. Discharged in 1966, Marshall was thrust back into a turbulent America that had little regard for the sacrifices made by young veterans. In a world that seemed to have forgotten them, countless others like him were searching for a sense of purpose. Thus, at the tender age of 23, my brother entered the hippy world of California as a war veteran struggling to find his place as the country grappled with civil rights issues, anti‑war protests and counterculture movements. As traditional values crumbled, it is easy to see why vulnerable individuals would have been susceptible to manipulation by charismatic leaders, particularly sociopathic predators like Charles Manson, who preyed on those who felt marginalised or disconnected from mainstream society. And so it proved for Marshall. For someone like my brother, who had seen the darker sides of humanity, the 1960s counterculture must have represented not just freedom but a chance to heal. It was a world far removed from the hellscape of Vietnam and the archaic rigidity of military institutions, and Marshall would have been easily swept up in it. Spahn Ranch was the perfect place for Manson to position himself as a guru. In the middle of nowhere, it was as far from any form of social connection as it could be, isolating the 'family' from cultural norms. Yet an internal sense of community prevailed through the language of belonging. At first, it's likely that Marshall would have responded to small requests, such as attending meetings or participating in group hangouts, perhaps getting friendly with a fringe member who would pull him into the circle. He would have received a warm welcome, hugs, been shown around a sprawling compound, while its elderly owner, George Spahn, sat passive and blind in a rocking chair, a pretty girl on his lap. Communal living would present itself as a consensual family space where children were looked after, all burdens of responsibility vanished. Acid trips would create transcendental experiences. Marshall needed family, and, for a short while, he must have felt as if he'd found one. Nine months later, however, the sky would fall. The horror of the Manson murders had exposed the workings of a deeply disturbed mind. There's relief in knowing that my brother was long gone by then. Headstrong and resistant to coercion, Marshall was again on the move, drifting in and out of familial memories until 1973, when Manson and his killers were two years into their life sentences. The most vivid vignette in the Marshall archive occurred in June that year. It was to be the last encounter my father would have with his son. At 29 years old, my brother stepped out of the shadows to materialise on my parents' front doorstep in Houston, Texas. The oppressive heat rendered him shirtless under denim dungarees, and barefoot – a striking figure wrapped in a tattered blanket, caught between past and present. Beneath the nest of hair and unkempt beard, familiar copper eyes gleamed, and my father was pleased to see him. Marshall was warmly welcomed into the home. My father introduced him to my mother, and showed off his new baby daughter. Marshall stayed a few days, and my mother remembers how gentle he was with my sister, helping to feed her, wiping her chin. 'Dad's a quiet man, isn't he?' Marshall said to my mother, a plastic spoon of apple sauce held aloft. She nodded. Yes, she agreed that he was. 'We Potters are a quiet bunch,' he said as my sister's little mouth opened for her spoonful. After a week he announced his departure. My father's corporate job was a big source of contention. Marshall's dubious life choices were disapproved of, sparking defensiveness on his part. A bitter argument followed. Two generations clashed at the kitchen table. My father embodied the principled, archaic America built on religious faith, conformity, academic success and stoicism. The lost Harvard opportunity still stung. Marshall, however, came to the table as a member of a damaged generation in search of change and cultural freedom by taking a stand against conservative ideals and middle-class values. I'm told he called my father a 'corporate whore'. 'This is my life. This is how I will live it,' my brother asserted, forefinger pressing on the table. And so, on the way to the bus station, the last time my father would ever be with Marshall, my brother demanded to be dropped off in a layby along the Katy Freeway. The car door slammed shut. As my father drove away, his rear-view mirror caught sight of a painted van pulling over. His son got in. I often think how strange it must be to see your child disappear into a void, spirited away in a dubious-looking vehicle spattered with graffiti. August 1981. One summer evening, my sister and I were playing in the garden. It had been a warm afternoon and we were still running through the sprinkler as the day waned. The phone rang, my father answered, his demeanour shifting as he pressed his ear to a familiar voice laden with distress and urgency. 'Dad, I've done something stupid.' We heard my father's tone change between long silences. Then he called for my mother. My sister and I looked at each other. Something was wrong. Someone named Marshall needed help, money for a lawyer. In the early 1980s, ongoing investigations scrutinised anyone who might be linked to Charles Manson, and Marshall was caught in that trawling net. The shadow of the Manson murders loomed large. Victims' families were still grappling with the aftermath of those horrifying events, and law enforcement was desperate for answers regarding potential connections between Manson associates and contemporary cases of violent crimes taking place in New York. Many individuals linked to Manson or anyone within his organisation were apprehended and scrutinised. To me and my sister, however, none of this made sense. My parents discussed it at length, long after we had gone to bed, and it wasn't until a few days later that I summoned up the courage to ask my father who Marshall was. But, after that phone call, all things Marshall fell deathly and irrevocably silent. It was 11 September 2002, and my husband and I, newly embarked on our teacher training, found ourselves at home in our London studio flat. The television news that evening was centred on the first anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. We watched as representatives from more than 90 countries arrived in New York City, their sombre presence interspersed with haunting footage of the planes crashing into the World Trade Center. The profound sense of vulnerability that had enveloped the world's greatest superpower struck a chord with me – as though it mirrored a similar vulnerability in my father. This was also the year he would turn 80, and, over the coming months, I felt a sense of urgency to reassess unresolved questions about his past. Over the years, Marshall had never been far from my mind. Still drifting in and out of our lives, my brother would appear by way of a photograph unearthed in a drawer, or a casual mention in conversation would trigger an anecdote. That evening, the mayor of New York City Michael Bloomberg lighting the eternal flame in Battery Park was that trigger. The desire to reconnect, to remember, to unravel the mysteries surrounding my brother's life launched me on a quest to find him for myself. Apart from asking distant relatives, I didn't know where to start. In August 2003, a groundbreaking network called MySpace heralded a new age of online socialising. On the persuasion of a friend, I set up an account. It occurred to me that MySpace might be a way of finding my mysterious lost brother. I still wanted answers; to find out what happened to him after that phone call. My search yielded many Marshall Potters, none of them mine, and it looked like a dead end. I turned to archive sites until I found one offering access to official documents, national census information and addresses. It claimed to have a Marshall Potter on its records. Embedded in documents and certificates, I finally unearthed my brother. His birth date matched, but there was also an additional date, the other bookend to a life: 14 September 1995. I couldn't help but think about my father fleshing out that shadowy figure at the kitchen table nine years earlier. There had been a six-month deadline to find him and I was eight years too late. About a month later, the postman arrived with a document that required my signature. When I held the envelope in my hands, I felt a mixture of dread and anticipation. I was hoping Marshall's death certificate would provide me with the closure I needed. For a long while I didn't want to open it. A part of me didn't want to know the cause of his death. Marshall would have been 51 at the time, and I could only speculate at a heart attack or misadventure. When I finally read it, the certificate told a different story. Date: 14/09/1995. Time: 04:00. Cause of death: gunshot wound to head and brain. No pending investigation, concluded suicide. For a long time, I found myself at odds with how my father let his only son vanish down the barrel of a gun. Still, he was upset by the news of Marshall's suicide, enough so that my mother rang to tell me not to discuss it any further. I was frustrated by this stubborn reluctance to talk. Surely, together, we could cauterise this wound; it would be of help to my father, and me, towards a positive understanding. Or perhaps my mother was right to shoo me away. Perhaps the news had weakened a dam restricting the flow of a regret too big to control. It's no secret that my father's generation had a removed regard to parenting, the misguided assumption that Marshall, being male, would survive, would 'rally round' and 'step up'; an ethos that a 1950s military school would, no doubt, brutally uphold with pride. So often I'd think of Marshall, gun poised to his temple, about to launch himself into another world where he's no longer broken. It still feels strange to mourn someone I've never met, yet my DNA tells me I do. When my father died in 2007, it brought a profound sense of loss, not just of him, but also of Marshall. My father never had the opportunity to make amends, something I'm sure he lamented. I often reflect on my father's decisions and the societal norms that influenced him. Was my father simply a product of his time? Was Marshall a casualty of his? In the future, will our children, decades from now, look back at our parenting choices and say to us: you got that wrong? In today's digital age, rife with toxic influencers preying on our vulnerable children, the relevance of my father and Marshall's story becomes more acute. At its heart lies the need to communicate with our children, to satiate the craving to belong and be understood. As a parent, I will embrace this responsibility, for I know the implications of inaction are far too great.