30,000-odd hectares of land, holding 15 Munros (mountains over 3000 feet).
Over 5,000 species, with more recorded every year.
Ancient tracts of Caledonian pinewood, with woodland regeneration across several contiguous glens for the first time in over two centuries.
A twentyfold increase in regenerating trees in ten years in monitored plots.
Hundreds more hectares of montane scrub returning to the high hills.
The return of breeding hen harriers for the first time in living memory.
Nine million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent locked away across thousands of hectares of peatlands.
Targeted conservation plans for a host of Scotland’s rarest plants and invertebrates.