Somewhere in the Cairngorm mountains, a herd of reindeer is picking its way through heather and lichen. They belong to no one. They roam where they please — and on most days, you can walk among them.

How Scotland Got Its Reindeer Back
In 1952, a Swedish Sami herder named Mikel Utsi came to the Scottish Highlands. He climbed into the Cairngorms and saw something most visitors miss entirely.
The altitude, the terrain, the lichen-covered slopes — it all looked like Lapland. Mikel returned home, gathered eight reindeer, and brought them back to Scotland.
The gamble paid off immediately. The animals did not merely survive the Scottish climate. They flourished in it, producing calves in their first season and adapting to the Highland year as if they had always been there.
A Herd 800 Years in the Making
Reindeer are not newcomers to Scotland. They were here long before the Cairngorms had a name.
Scotland’s last native reindeer are believed to have died out around the 12th century. Hunting reduced their numbers slowly, then all at once. The ancient forests that sheltered them were cleared for farmland. Without habitat, without protection, Scotland’s reindeer vanished and stayed gone for eight hundred years.
Mikel Utsi did not believe they had to stay that way. What began as an experiment with eight animals has become Britain’s only free-ranging reindeer herd and a living piece of Scotland’s wild past, restored.
Life on the High Ground
Today, the Cairngorm Reindeer Herd numbers around 150 animals. They range freely across the high slopes of the Cairngorms National Park, Britain’s largest.
No fences confine them. The herd moves with the seasons, grazing on lichen and heather, drinking from mountain streams. In spring, calves are born on the open hillside, the only wild-born reindeer in Britain. In autumn, the stags grow restless as the rut begins.
In winter, they are entirely in their element. Their hollow, insulating fur traps warmth. Their wide, cushioned hooves spread on snow like natural snowshoes. The cold that drives most animals to shelter seems barely to register.
Walking With Britain’s Only Wild Reindeer
The Cairngorm Reindeer Centre is based at Glenmore, near Aviemore. Each day, staff lead a small group of visitors up the hill to find the herd where they graze.
There are no barriers. No fences. The reindeer stand calmly among the walkers, large and unhurried, nudging for the lichen treats their keepers carry. They are bigger than most people expect, and quieter.
Standing among them on a Scottish hillside, mountains stretching away in every direction, is one of those moments that is hard to describe to anyone who has not done it. It feels less like a tourist experience and more like stepping briefly into a different world.
If you are planning a trip to the region, The Ultimate Scottish Highlands Road Trip Itinerary is the best place to start building your route around the Cairngorms and beyond.
The Right to Roam
One thing that surprises many visitors: you do not need a ticket or a guide to walk the Cairngorms. In Scotland, there is a legal right of access to almost all land on foot, including open hillsides, mountains, and moorland.
That means the hills where the reindeer live are yours to walk freely. You might not find the herd without a guide, as they range widely and follow no fixed timetable. But the landscape they inhabit is worth every step regardless.
Why You Can Walk Anywhere in Scotland explains this remarkable freedom in full, and how visitors from other countries can make the most of it.
Scotland’s Other Great Mountain Icon
The reindeer are not the only creature that stops visitors in their tracks on a Highland hillside. If you have never encountered a Highland cow face to face, that shaggy, patient giant with the long fringe covering its eyes, you are in for something equally memorable.
Highland Cow Myths and Facts covers everything you would want to know about Scotland’s most photographed animal, and a few things that might genuinely surprise you.
Coming Back to Where They Belong
There is something quietly moving about the Cairngorm reindeer. They are not an attraction that was imported for novelty. They are a restoration, a return.
Scotland lost these animals over centuries of hunting and land clearance. One man looked at the same mountains eight hundred years later, recognised what they once held, and brought the herd home.
Today, the herd is healthy, the calves are born on the hillside each spring, and visitors come from across the world to walk quietly among animals that have no reason to fear them.
The Cairngorms have not just given reindeer a home. They have given Scotland back a piece of itself it did not know it had lost.
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