It is hoped two sea eagle chicks will be symbols for the future of 2,500 acres of important Highland woodland which a partnership of the local community and conservationists wants to buy.

Loch Arkaig pine forest, located north of Fort William on the southern shore of the loch to the west of the Great Glen, is being sold by Forestry Commission Scotland under the National Forest Land Scheme.

This gives community organisations the chance to buy land to provide increased public value. Woodland Trust Scotland is partnering Arkaig Community Forest, a small group of local residents, to pursue ambitious plans to restore the woodland.

The chics hatched in the midst of a £4.5 million appeal to buy and restore it in the Scottish Highlands. They were named

Saorsa and Dòchas after a public vote, Gaelic for Freedom and Hope.

Gary Servant of Arkaig Community Forest said: “These chicks are a symbol of the forest’s future. We hope that by this time next year they will be soaring over a landscape where ecological and economic regeneration is well underway. We have a once in a lifetime chance to secure the future of this amazing place.”

The young birds are believed to be the grandchildren of Skye and Frisa, the sea eagle pair on Mull which featured in the earliest series of the BBC’s Springwatch programme.

The Loch Arkaig forest combines two areas of native Caledonian pine, oak and birch woodland, together comprising one of the largest remaining fragments of ancient Caledonian pinewood in Scotland.

The forest has been left degraded, a result of the clear-felling of ancient woodland in the 18th century, the planting of non-native conifers in the 1960s and grazing by sheep and deer.