At the Edge

Peter Cairns

Across the UK, sea eagles, beavers, wildcats and wild boar are all staging a comeback. Calls for the return of lynx grow louder each year. But as wildlife rebounds, it’s confronted by a society that has long forgotten how to live alongside wild nature – and isn’t sure it wants to try. Join Peter Cairns, host of At the Edge, as he explores the fault lines that divide opinion over nature’s place in our future.

Episodes

  1. 1 DAY AGO

    Puddles of bluebells

    Wild boar are making a quiet comeback — not just in our landscapes, but in our conversations too. Attempts to hold boar captive in farms have repeatedly failed and today, pockets of these prolific digging machines can be found across the south of England and several parts of Scotland. Fans point to their ecological benefits – their rootling turns over the soil and their wallowing creates mini wetlands. They are to our woodlands what beavers are to our rivers. But this disturbance of the ground is what many people find unsettling. Wild boar strike a nerve because they not only dig in fields and forests, but in gardens, parks, golf courses… even cemeteries. And, it seems, they have a particular liking for bluebells. Additional info At the Edge is an independent media platform that takes a deep dive into our relationship with wild nature, exploring pathways to living well with wildlife. Follow us on Instagram, or join me, Peter Cairns, on LinkedIn and Bluesky. And if you like what we do, please consider Buying Me A Coffee to support the production of future podcasts and other content. This episode of At The Edge is produced in partnership with Adventurous Audio and is kindly supported by Ballintean Mountain Lodge. Useful links Meet the contributors on LinkedIn: Alex Davies, Calum Brown, Chantal Lyons, Toryn Whitehead, and Pete Moore. Learn more about Bunloit Estate. Order Groundbreakers, the excellent book about boar by Chantal Lyons. Read this interim policy brief on feral pigs in Scotland. Find out more about NatureScot's position on wild boar/feral pigs. Learn more about wild boar in England and view the Action Plan.

    36 min
  2. 16 APR

    People like you.

    “People like you don’t understand the countryside.” It’s a sentence that ends conversations before they even begin. When it comes to disagreements on issues such as hunting, farming, rural tradition or rewilding, most of us don’t start with facts – we start with identity. Town vs country. Left vs right. Tradition vs change. Lines get drawn. Sides get chosen and suddenly, it’s not about the issue anymore, it’s personal - it's about 'people like you.' In this episode, we step beyond tribal labels, past the lazy assumptions, and into the conversations we’ve stopped having. Additional info At the Edge is an independent media platform that takes a deep dive into our relationship with wild nature, exploring pathways to living well with wildlife. Follow us on Instagram, or join me, Peter Cairns, on LinkedIn and Bluesky. And if you like what we do, please consider Buying Me A Coffee to support the production of future podcasts and other content. This episode of At The Edge was produced in partnership with Adventurous Audio, and kindly supported by Ballintean Mountain Lodge. Useful links Visit Colin Murdoch at Reraig Forest. Learn about the Cairngorms Crofters & Farmers Community. Learn about The Centre for Good Relations. Meet Sam Tedcastle, Matt Hay, Hugh Webster, Ruaridh Ormiston and Julius Purcell. I'd thoroughly recommend three podcasts hosted by Julius Purcell as part of the Rewilding Earth series, in which he explores the resurgence of wolf, bear and Iberian lynx in Europe.

    38 min
  3. 26 MAR

    Can an eagle really kill a horse?

    In August 2025, a farmer from the Outer Hebrides in Scotland, claimed that sea eagles had taken five of his Shetland pony foals. Whether this happened—or could happen at all—remains unproven, but the incident ignited a media storm and brought a key question back into focus: How do we balance nature recovery with the needs of rural livelihoods? In Episode #3 of At the Edge, Peter Cairns explores the complex factors shaping perceptions around the resurgence of these charismatic birds. Additional info At the Edge is an independent media platform that takes a deep dive into our relationship with wild nature, exploring pathways that allow us to live well with wildlife. Follow us on Instagram, or join me, Peter Cairns, on LinkedIn and Bluesky. And if you like what we do, please consider Buying Me A Coffee to support the production of future podcasts and other content. This episode was produced in partnership with Adventurous Audio, and kindly supported by Ballintean Mountain Lodge. Useful links Watch the RSPB film "The Return", a celebration of white-tailed eagles (or 'sea eagles'.) Learn about the Sea Eagle Management Scheme in Scotland. Learn about the reintroduction of sea eagles to southern England. Learn more abut the work of the Roy Dennis Wildlife Foundation. Learn about Tom Fry's research on attitudes towards sea eagles. Thanks in this episode go to Alice Bacon, Lewis Pate and Ewan Miles of Nature Scotland. Thanks too to the many people who have offered their views on this subject.

    39 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
8 Ratings

About

Across the UK, sea eagles, beavers, wildcats and wild boar are all staging a comeback. Calls for the return of lynx grow louder each year. But as wildlife rebounds, it’s confronted by a society that has long forgotten how to live alongside wild nature – and isn’t sure it wants to try. Join Peter Cairns, host of At the Edge, as he explores the fault lines that divide opinion over nature’s place in our future.

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