Who We Are
Who We Are
The Findhorn Hinterland Trust (FHT) is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation, established in 2015 to manage 50 hectares of land adjacent to the Findhorn Ecovillage. The FHT succeeded the Findhorn Hinterland Group, which had previously worked to bring together land and people for the benefit of both.
The charity has a formal constitution and is regulated by the Office of Scottish Charities Register (OSCR), to whom we report and lodge our most recent FHT Trustees Report and Financial Statements 2024/2025.
The FHT is a membership organisation managed by a group of trustees. Our membership comprises more than 220 people living in the local community and further afield. Our members elect up to 12 trustees to manage the affairs of the trust. The trustees, members and volunteers work together in several small teams that each focus on a specific area of our purpose (conservation, education, community, recreation, green burial).
Membership of the FHT costs just £10 and helps to support our work on the land.
Meet the Trustees

Colin Shreenan, Chair

Alan Watson Featherstone

David Hammond

Fiona McKenzie
Learn more about Fiona >>

Jacqueline Buckingham

Jonathan Caddy

Kajedo Wanderer

Laura Shreenan, Cordinator
LATEST NEWS
Abundant berries on the Findhorn Hinterland
As anyone who walks out on the Hinterland area will have seen, there’s an abundance of berries there just now. The most obvious of these are the red berries on the rowan trees and the blackberries on the brambles (it’s a particularly good year for them). However,...
Hinterland’s Gift for the Future Biodiversity and Taking Local Action
The inspiration for this article came from items published in the Guardian on 8th/9th August 2021. Firstly an article by George Monbiot: “The gift we should give to the living world” and then the publication of the latest IPCC report on Climate Change. In our rush to...
A bee’s view of life at the Findhorn Apiary August 21
The previous report from the Findhorn Apiary was from my great aunt. She hatched last autumn and had the important role, along with about 10,000 of her sisters, of keeping the colony sustained through the winter. She had to help keep the colony warm and the queen fed...



