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JIM RICHARDSON

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JIM RICHARDSON

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  • Aerials of Muirburn in the Cairngorm mountains of Scotland. The patchwork pattern comes from the practice of gamekeepers on the large estates burning the heather to promote fresh growth for the benefit of the grouse. Grouse shooting on the estates is one of the economic lynchpins of estate life.
    MM8321_20161024_39111.jpg
  • Cairngorm Mountains of central Scotland. The patchwork pattern comes from the practice of burning the heather in strips to promote new growth which in turn feeds the grouse population. Part of estate management to secure good grouse populations for shooting parties.
    MM8321_20160417_27377-Edit-Edit.jpg
  • Gamekeepers Alastair Lyon and Richard Williams work on muirburn on the Ralia Estate near Kingussie, Sotland. Muirburn is done to encourgae fresh heather growth for the grouse. Estates depend on grouse shooting for much of their income.  Richard Williams
    MM8321_20160412_24191.jpg
  • Spring burning of the Flint Hills, along Four Mile Creek Road, southwest of Council Grove, Kansas.
    MM7469_060412_00571.jpg
  • Spring burning of the Flint Hills, some south of Council Grove, some southwest of Manhattan and some south of Cottonwood Falls.
    MM7469_060414_01445(16x24).jpg
  • Spring burning of the Flint Hills north of Matfield Green, Kansas.
    MM7469_060417_02611.jpg
  • Spring burning of the Flint Hills near Bazaar, Kansas.
    MM7469_060414_01445.jpg
  • Spring burning of the Flint Hills in Kansas.
    Flint Hills Fire.jpg
  • Spring burning of the Flint Hills north of Matfield Green, Kansas.
    MM7469_060417_02665.jpg
  • Spring burning of the Flint Hills, along Four Mile Creek Road, southwest of Council Grove, Kansas.
    MM7469_060412_00876.jpg
  • Bracted spiderwort blooming after spring burning at the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve near Strong City, Kansas
    MM7469_060527_05571.jpg
  • Beardtongue blooming after spring burning on the RK Cattle ranch near Council Grove, Kansas
    MM7469_060526_05220.jpg
  • Smoke lingers in the evening after a spring burning of the Flint Hills southwest of Manhattan, Kansas.
    MM7469_060414_01378.jpg
  • Spring burning of the Flint Hills, along Four Mile Creek Road, southwest of Council Grove, Kansas.  <br />
<br />
Contact:  Kent and Rose Bacon.
    MM7469_060412_00876(16x24).jpg
  • Cover of National Geographic Magazine 2004<br />
<br />
Shows night burning on a Kansas Flint Hills ranch.
    NGM Cover - Flint Hills.jpg
  • Duncan MacDonald out at his peat cuttings near Gisla, Uig, on the Isle of Lewis.  Even though he has oil heating in his home now Duncan likes having the peat to burn on a winter evening.  He's been cutting peat since he was a "wee boy."  The spade he carries is a special peat cutting tool that cuts the blocks that have been laid out to dry.  Peat cutting is a two man job, with one cutting and the other throwing.
    MM7189 20050524 27507.jpg
  • Prairie grasses flourish after the spring burn in the Flint Hills in the Beaumont area, north and east of Wichita.
    MM7469_060614_06450.jpg
  • Duncan MacDonald out at his peat cuttings near Gisla, Uig, on the Isle of Lewis.  Even though he has oil heating in his home now Duncan likes having the peat to burn on a winter evening.  He's been cutting peat since he was a "wee boy."  The spade he carries is a special peat cutting tool that cuts the blocks that have been laid out to dry.  Peat cutting is a two man job, with one cutting and the other throwing.
    MM7189 20050524 27507.jpg
  • Duncan MacDonald out at his peat cuttings near Gisla, Uig, on the Isle of Lewis.  Even though he has oil heating in his home now Duncan likes having the peat to burn on a winter evening.  He's been cutting peat since he was a "wee boy."  The spade he carries is a special peat cutting tool that cuts the blocks that have been laid out to dry.  Peat cutting is a two man job, with one cutting and the other throwing.
    MM7189 20050524 27507.jpg
  • Heather covers the hills around Corgarff Castle in the Cairngorms National Park in Scotland. Corgarff Castle is located in Aberdeenshire, north-east Scotland. The castle was built in the mid 16th century by the Forbes of Towie. In 1571 it was burned by their enemy, Adam Gordon of Auchindoun, resulting in the deaths of Lady Forbes, her children, and numerous others, and giving rise to the ballad Edom o Gordon. After the Jacobite risings of the 18th century, it was rebuilt as a barracks. It is now in the care of Historic Scotland and is open to the public.<br />
<br />
Heather blooms in the late summer and is the ideal habitat for grouse in Scotland, making it essential to the economics of estates that depend on grouse shooting for part of their income. <br />
<br />
The park was established in 2003 and is now the largest National Park in Great Britain.<br />
<br />
Contact for information:<br />
<br />
Mike Cottam<br />
Land Management Advisor<br />
Cairngorms National Park Authority<br />
Grantown on Spey<br />
<br />
Office tel: 01479 870535<br />
Direct tel: 01479 873535<br />
Email: mikecottam@cairngorms.co.uk
    MM8321_20150830_13878.jpg
  • Heather covers the hills around Corgarff Castle in the Cairngorms National Park in Scotland. Corgarff Castle is located in Aberdeenshire, north-east Scotland. The castle was built in the mid 16th century by the Forbes of Towie. In 1571 it was burned by their enemy, Adam Gordon of Auchindoun, resulting in the deaths of Lady Forbes, her children, and numerous others, and giving rise to the ballad Edom o Gordon. After the Jacobite risings of the 18th century, it was rebuilt as a barracks. It is now in the care of Historic Scotland and is open to the public.<br />
<br />
Heather blooms in the late summer and is the ideal habitat for grouse in Scotland, making it essential to the economics of estates that depend on grouse shooting for part of their income. <br />
<br />
The park was established in 2003 and is now the largest National Park in Great Britain.
    MM8321_20150830_13897.jpg
  • A Quemada, an ancient Celtic drinking tradition, at Casa Roxo in the ancient Celtic village of Piernado in Los Ancares, the eastern mountainous region of Galicia. At a Quemada the alcohol is burned way, looking very spirit-like, while a poem is read casting away all sort of evil spirits.  Here the old Celtic ways are still pretty fresh and the current generation still uses the old Pallozas, thatched stone houses that were home to livestock as well, even if they have built newer living quarters next door.
    MM7189 20050720 39152.jpg