An extremely attractive, peaceful and tranquil SSSI Loch with woodlands and meandering paths by the Sidlaws on the Perthshire Angus Border
Lairds Loch,
Blairgowrie,
PH13 9LA
Offers In Excess Of,
£175,000
- Sizes:
- 2580930 sqft,
- 239774.25 ㎡
Type: Purchase
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Summary
- Rare opportunity to acquire an exceptionally beautiful land parcel
- Excellent opportunities for habitat management and woodland management
- Total area extends to 59.25 Acres (23.98 Ha)
Location
This idyllic land parcel is located approximately 4.2 miles south east of Coupar Angus. Coupar Angus is a popular town within commuting distance of the larger centres of Dundee and Perth. The town is well places for access to A90 some 15 miles to the east which links Dundee and Aberdeen. There is an established parking bay at the entrance to the woodland where a number of paths have been established around North Ballo Hill and Lairds Loch.
Description
The subjects of sale form an amenity woodland and Loch, both accessible by foot with car parking at the entrance. There are signs that historically vehicular access may have been possible but this is now largely overgrown. This is clearly a much-enjoyed area of land, formerly known as the Hallyburton Estate Community Woodland, we understand Woodland Grant Schemes were carried out between 1991 and 2002 across the land and its peripheries. There are some beautiful viewpoints, picnic areas, woodland and Lochside walks and immediate access to the adjacent woodland walk at North Ballo Hill. The lochs have been occupied in recent years by commercial tenants, offering fishing for coarse fish then more recently for stocked trout. Its variable depth, weed cover, and lack of algae make it a very suitable habitat for fishing. The loch is registered under the Reservoirs Act and holds a SSSI designation. Laird’s Loch was notified as a Site of Special Scientific Interest on the basis of its open water, aquatic plant communities and extensive fringing acidic mires. Laird’s Loch is naturally mesotrophic and lies in a shallow, flat basin. It is evidenced from reports that the bottom of the loch is mud and silt, lying over gravel and stones and that the loch is largely between 1 and 2 metres deep but is dammed and deeper at its western end. We understand that it is drained by a small stream. The loch is notable for the number of pondweed species. The acidic mires fringing the loch are the most extensive of their type in the Sidlaw Hills. The path linking the woodland to the path network around North Ballo Hill to the southwest of Laird’s Loch runs along the north side of the loch within a few feet of the shoreline.
There is a structure by the Lochside, which we assume to have been a boathouse which is now in very poor repair. There are no services available.
The sellers have declared that the amenity woodland is of a mixed age comprising of mainly native conifers and broadleaves.