Wednesday 27 October 2021

Prunus spinosa/ blackthorn

 


Prunus means plum and the genus includes plants like blackthorn, plums, damsons and other stone fruits like nectarines and peaches. 

Blackthorn is one of the first plants to blossom in spring yet its sloes survive well into winter. 

When winter comes in earnest to fulfil
His yearly task at bleak Novembers close,
And stops the plough and hides the fields in snows;
When frost locks up the streams in chill delay
And mellows on the hedge the purple sloes …”.

John Clare, The Shepherd’s Calendar (1827)

Clare and his fellow agricultural workers apparently planted miles of blackthorn as part of the nineteenth century field enclosure programme, begun in the previous century. 

Being unremarkable when not covered in blossom or sloes it is better to find it while in bloom when it is easy to see.

I find this hardy plant enjoys the sun and discover it on the edge of meadows or fields.

The etymology of 'sloe' eventually connects to a proto Indo European root: sleiə- "blue, bluish, blue-black". They are called endrino in Spain, which also means blue black. The Croatian šljiva means ‘plum’ as does Russian sliva. 

There is also a connection to 'livid' via Latin 'lividus' meaning a bluish color, black-and-blue. Livid with rage is connected to the idea of being purple with anger.

In Southern Norway they are sometimes called Krigerplommer - Warrior’s Plums

A friend in the north of England lives in Slaithwaite (pron. Slawit), which I read much later is said to mean ‘Sloe Clearing’.

I tasted sloe gin for the first time in the summer. It was unlike gin, more like a sweet almondy liqueur. Almonds are also in the genus prunus. The Italian drink argnolino, made with sloes -'bacche'- and diluted pure alcohol. In Spain, especially Navarre and the Basque country, Patxaran is made by soaking sloes along with a few coffee beans and a cinnamon pod in anisette for several months.  

Sloe gin mixed with apricot brandy and lime juice makes a Charlie Chaplin, an apparently sweet but tasty drink that I am inclined to try.


Sloe Gin by Seamus Heaney

The clear weather of juniper
darkened into winter.
She fed gin to sloes
and sealed the glass container.

When I unscrewed it
I smelled the disturbed
tart stillness of a bush
rising through the pantry.

When I poured it
it had a cutting edge
and flamed
like Betelgeuse.

I drink to you
in smoke-mirled, blue-black

polished sloes, bitter
and dependable.


The species is spinosa, the spiny one. I have been nursing two small, sore wounds on my finger from picking sloes again for gin this week. The Devil was said to prick his followers with a blackthorn but anyone who has gathered sloes without gloves is liable to come away pierced.  The plant has thorns longer & thicker than your average needle but easily as sharp.



 I heard recently of someone whose wound from blackthorn turned nastily septic and yesterday of someone who lost an eye to blackthorn while out riding. The thorns are covered with a bacteria which can cause blood poisoning. Despite its mundane appearance for most of the year, it is a plant that commands respect. Do not delay treatment of injuries caused by it.  

There is a saying "many slones, many groans" implying that if the sloe harvest is bounteous (as it is this year) the following year will be full of sickness...

But blackthorn has apparently medicinal uses too.  I have read twice that an old remedy for bronchitis was to boil the peeled bark of blackthorn and drink it.  On the theme of drinks, blackthorn leaves were used to adulterate Chinese tea in the nineteenth century. The practice was even legalised and the tea sold as "English".
  
Blackthorn makes a robust and fast growing hedge, also excellent for wildlife, birds being well-protected among the thorns.  Similarly good are hawthorn, gorse, holly, crab apple and dogwood.

The name probably comes from the bark which can turn nearly black with age but given the thorns I rarely get near enough to see. 

The knocking stick used by Parliament's usher, Black Rod is apparently made from blackthorn. If a witch intended to lay a curse she used a blackthorn rod with thorns on the end.  

Walking sticks and tool handles are all characteristic uses of the hard wood which is supposed to burn well and at a high temperature. Perhaps this is one reason why it was apparently used as fuel in the execution pyres of witches.

It is shrub well-suited to the winter.  I have picked sloes from their thorns in a high meadow fringed by forest in a windy, gathering dark when it is easy to see why this plant is associated with witches, the cailleach, the veiled old woman of winter carrying her blackthorn staff.

Thursday 21 October 2021

Bedding in a wooden window sill and reliable, long-lasting window seals for wooden frames.

I am looking for an alternative to foam / silicone for bedding in a wooden window sill on to a stone sill.  The main criteria are for it to resist water & be long-lasting 

I don't find one, I will probably just use plastic window sealant in a gun.

Of course the best thing is to stop water getting in in the first place through good paint/seals but I would also like a bedding in product that is going to help.  This is the second time in twelve years I have had to replace these sills and there have been repairs in between times.  

The amount of weathering is partly because the windows are four stories up, facing south, in Scotland (and I could have been better with my maintenance).

The sill is going to sit on stone and back up against the wood of the frame - or rather, against the two part filler I have used to protect the frame at the bottom.  This filler at the front of the frame has yet to be sanded but you can see the idea.  



The frame is partly wrapped in tape only to stop it sticking to the filler when I test it for fit.

There is still a gap though, between the frame and the sill...



I used foam on the first sill I installed but the two-part wood filler I was using to make a seal for the front of the windowsill did not adhere well to the foam, which itself is very friable.  













The two-part tended to crack when applied to the foam just as a thin seal.















 I had to dig out at least good inch of the foam from under the sill in order to make the wood filler seal deeper.  It is not easy to smear in the filler either, into such a small gap, never mind leaning out the window four floors up.  It is a time consuming and smelly job! 

UPDATE:  A friend who has replaced window sills on an old property said the traditional method is to use batons under the sill to keep it off the stone.  The idea is for there to be air under the sill.  In the event that water does get in, the sill is not sitting in water, rotting.  The batons may rot, but can be more easily replaced than the sill. I am quite taken with this idea.  I only have a finger's width between my sill and the stone though so any batons would have to be slender.  

I would find the idea that rain might get in past the seal or down the sides of the frame (both classic water-ingress points)and head straight for the wooden frame at the back of the sill, quite terrifying, given what it can lead to. But, given how well I have sealed that with two part filler, I am not so worried. 

My friend also said condensation inside the room can also cause damp.  I said that back we had money to pay people to do things like this, I ensured inspection hatches were put in the plasterboard on the window-wall side.  We keep these open to keep an eye on things and allow air circulation.
 

*

Two part wood filler may seem unusual as a sill seal.  I am considering going over it, belt and braces style with silicone/acrylic window sealant.  

I have also resorted to using it as such on the vulnerable lower sections of the external sash frame. You can see it (the yellow stuff) on the right hand side here.  In this picture it still need to be sanded / painted.



The as yet unpainted block is just to protect the sash frame at a commonly vulnerable point. More on that here

When excavating the rotten windowsills the one part that was untouched by rot was a repair that had been done with two part filler.   So I know that water just doesn't penetrate. It was so solid we shaped this and fit the windowsill to it rather than dig it out.




So I'm pretty confident it'll work as an outstanding, if expensive & tricky to apply, seal for the sill and the most vulnerable parts of the exterior frame.  Well worth the money.  I will only use it on the lowest, most vulnerable sections of the frame as shown above.  It can be sanded and painted over.

In the past I've seen silicone round the frames.   It doesn't last and peels off in stringy strips.  I've made up a traditional kiln dried sand / linseed oil paste called burnt sand mastic which can be very good but which can also crack. It's also quite time consuming to make / apply.  An example in the lower section here:



You need to get the sand from a reputable supplier as it needs to be totally dry.  Some of the stuff I have dug out below rotten sills has been quite damp.  I'm not sure if that's from water getting inside the sill from the sides though.  

The most durable thing I've seen on the windows is this:



  Unfortunately, I'm not sure what it is...


Wednesday 6 October 2021

Picked clean



Elderberries



Continuing a theme begun in the previous post...

I find elder because often its leaves are paler than those of leaves on other trees. I am always happy to see it, not least because elder and I both like the sun. I usually find it on the margins of fields, meadows or woods. Its twigs can be a pinkish-red and the stalks holding the dropping umbels of dark berries are a similar colour.

Elder is a native tree much-loved by foragers. In folklore it was said to keep the devil away. According to the Woodland Trust the Anglo-Saxon word 'aeld', meaning fire, named the tree because the hollow stems were used as bellows to blow air into the centre of a fire.  The wood is good for whittling and carving. Many caterpillars eat the leaves which are also a natural fly repellent. The flowers make a delicious summery fizz which can be alcoholic.  Birds and small mammals enjoy the berries. They are often found by badger or rabbit setts. I had come across what looked like a badger sett below an elder tree just recently on the thinnest piece of woodland, threatened by a housing estate behind Quarrymill between Scone and Scone Palace. The berries make an intoxicatingly delicious cordial or syrupy vinegar that is like nothing you have tasted before. They are used also for wine. All parts of the tree were apparently once used to colour the Harris tweed tartan.

I had been exploring woodland in Coupar Angus, then walked down a track that had once been a railway.  Nature often gives me a vibe, one of those unscientific inexplicables. I will go out looking for one plant but feel nudged towards another. I had an uneasy feeling about the track, but persisted, sensing it was somehow a mistake.

Then I noticed the elder. Something seemed wrong with not just one tree, but with all of them. I realised they looked wrong because they were all bare.  None of the trees had berries, when at this time they should still be dripping with them. 



Where were the bird-pecked umbels? On this sunny site, even on the most straggly tree there should at least be a few bunches of berries, some picked away by birds, leaving thin stalks behind, like skeletal pink fairy fingers, or like veins, semi-calcified. But there was none of this. Someone had come along and very efficiently cut off every bunch of berries, picking every tree clean, all down the track. There were none left for the plant to seed itself, none for the wildlife to feed upon and none for other foragers. It was that rapacious, exploitativeness, that I had turned away from in town, in the world at large, turned to the countryside to escape, applied here to nature. It was a stark reminder of who not to be, when faced with even the most bounteous tree or bush. Some foragers say take 1/5th of what you find. Some say 1/20. Some say 1/100th. But what does any of that really mean? A child though could understand: take only so much that it would be hard to see that you had been there at all.

Foragers are not, in the grand scheme of things, the bad guys. Foraging in the UK is largely about plants, meaning, the food focus is not on environmentally damaging, intensively farmed meat.  Many foragers care about plants, nature and the countryside, at least, in a self-interested way, and perhaps more than that. 

Still, I had seen a pattern: There was a professional, teaching foraging courses in a UK habitat ten times rarer than ancient semi-natural woodland, of which itself only 50,000 hectares remain in the UK. The necessity of these plants to the stability of this environment was explained.  We were advised not to overpick, but these figures and the rarity of this habitat I discovered later, reading about it. In a way the course which was interesting, fun and enjoyable, had had a beneficial outcome far greater than teaching me about the edible plants in that habitat.  But it also meant I now questioned the ethics of foraging from and more particularly teaching foraging in that same rare and threatened environment. 

On other courses some students clearly believed they were picking into a communal basket to be shared later while others just picked quietly for themselves.  The latter I noticed tended not to be from the UK. Perhaps there is still some vestigial concept here of fair play.  I encountered a forager who allowed their students to add to a communal basket, promising to share the spoils but then taking nearly all of it home. 

I saw people boasting about the kilos of wild food they were stripping (not the word they used) from the hedgerows.  Perhaps they have permission from the landowner.  Perhaps they have a deal with the landowner.  Perhaps they were the landowner.  Perhaps not. 

People who say, "Good for them, let them get them on with it" remind me of those on Facebook  - generally a sinkhole of idiocy - mindlessly egging on the local jetskiers. A noisy, polluting jetskier is nothing like a forager, even one filling their boots, but I mean the audience.  The jetskiers park on the pavement, take over an entire stretch of river and bomb up and down it egotistically, noisily, and according to local councillors legally, dumping petrol into a site of international conservation, destroying habitat, disturbing and almost certainly killing the wildlife.  Many locals think it's fine.  But to what point are these things fine: exploiting, for your own personal or commercial gain, a common resource, more particularly a natural resource, one essential for the local ecology?   

Each foraging professional would, doubtless, talk about how their teaching and tastings were actually making people care about the countryside. And, many foragers do share recipes and provide a wealth of free advice on the subject on websites and social media.  The more commercially canny titillate the reader with crumbs of information, while withholding the elements key for its recreation at home. In general, American foraging professionals are far less coy, with adverts not quite, but along the lines of that tried and tested formula:  "Do you know the three essential secrets that will let you...."  I remembered a friend commenting on someone defending an approach of not sharing information.  I mentioned that the man happened to be a barrister though he was commenting in a non-professional context.  "That profession is based on hoarding knowledge", replied the friend, with characteristic concision, acuity and bite.

This would trouble me for many years and still does.  People have to make livings.  When is it OK then to ask people to pay for knowledge, through books or courses so that you can eat and pay bills.  And when is it not?  Maybe he just meant that the man was so soused in the concept of paying for knowledge that he could no longer see the world any other way.  When should you just share your knowledge, free?  I suppose the answer is, when you are able to.  But when is that and with whom?   Just with friends? With interested strangers, when you can, today?  When you have your retirement covered? When the spirit takes you?  Or always?  And to what extent is giving away information free when it could or does support you, different from giving away your money and possessions? 

To return to foraging, if the people the professionals were teaching then went out to replant or protect the countryside it might even things out. But how many of these students who then go out and also forage from the countryside are doing anything to replant or protect the hedgerows and habitats they use? How many of those professionals making money from these habitats go out, I found myself wondering, and campaign for the same? It's not something I see much, actually anything of, on their Instagram feeds. 

I sometimes wish I did not feel so driven to question things.

I have benefitted from the exquisite pleasure of wild meals prepared by a professional forager for a few customers at a time, and once, on the scale of a banquet. There are wild food businesses that call on local foragers to supply them in various wild plants and berries in exchange for money or vouchers. This is quite canny because individuals foraging could claim they were doing so for themselves and avoid prosecution whereas a business foraging for itself would have to pay staff, overheads, licence fees etc.  Calling on individual "freelance" foragers, they provide a wage or vouchers, employment - at the cost of the commercial exploitation of our most natural resources, taking from the wildlife and the local ecologies which have no means at all to defend themselves or even object.  But maybe it's  OK if just one company does it?  What about when two or three or four, get in on the game? We who enjoy foraging all say, oh it's fine, it's wild, it's free, it's abundant.  But for how long? And what are our own roles in that? 

There are now businesses which will ship wild food and wild mushrooms to you.  Curiosity and my poor wild mushroom ID skills got the better of me.  I wanted to see hen of the woods for real, before I picked the wrong thing for my own plate.  With considerable guilt I awaited my order.  When it arrived I recognised some items easily gathered on the seashore and was staggered at the price I had paid. Some of these plants help stabilise the coastal environment.  I wondered if this fact featured at all in the company's harvesting policy and how that policy was applied in practice.   

Still, it is one thing trying to see a mushroom on a course for an hour or two in a forest, with others, in a rush, maybe not holding it or smelling it, or taking much time with it. It is another altogether to examine it at your leisure, cutting it, smelling it raw and cooked, tasting it, knowing it is safe.  While you do not get to see them in their environment, ordering wild mushrooms for study and food is an excellent, and tasty, learning technique from which you can become more independent in your own identification skills. 

But is stripping hedgerows to supply a business OK? Is it more OK than commercial farming or is it just the same model, applied in a different way?  Or does the fact that the product is different mean it's OK?  Mark Boyle, businessman turned woodsman, writer, forager, standing in his health food business years ago realised that importing food from all over the world and selling it in plastic packaging was really not much different as a business model to that of a supermarket or any other business plugged into exploitative, commercial processes. How different then, is the commercial foraging business model?

It seems that no matter where I go, town or country, everyone is in on the commercial exploitation game which cumulatively have led to the industrial processes that are stripping the planet and disrupting its vital rhythms.  The leap of faith in Boyle's writing and behind his "pay it forward" philosophy is that the universe will provide.  Actually, "pay" would be a clanger of a term to use, "give", or "share" being more appropriate to his idea of the free economy. The idea is the ancient one from Luke:  "Give and it shall be given unto you".  

Certainly, it worked, repeatedly for Boyle and seemingly, still does.  He gave and gave and was repaid - no, 'given to' -  either by the people to whom he gave but, I think he might say, he was provided for in a "what goes around comes around" kind of way.  I don't think he thinks we should be thinking about giving in a tit for tat, reciprocal sense.  

I remembered trying to give away a service, years ago.  Someone I don't think I knew but who knew I spoke good French was going to put me in touch with a family who needed a French tutor.  I was happy just to be doing something useful, that I was good at and offered to do it for free, especially as I had no formal track record in teaching other people's children.  An email was accidentally sent to me which described me as something like harmless but a bit kooky.  I never did hear from the people.  People expect to be exploited.  They don't expect and they generally distrust being offered free stuff except in certain well-known contexts.  This week I responded to a Freegle advert asking for a piece of equipment I happened to have no more use for.  I wrote offering it but received no reply.  Giving things away can be harder than it might seem.

I thought about another man who would seem to be trying to live in a way that avoids the exploitation of the planet's resources.   I had heard on a long podcast recently Kyle Chamberlain, an apparently thoughtful, knowledgeable American forager, botanist and educator. He talks about living without electricity in the country, his discomfort with canning (American for bottling / preserving) as, even at home, this is apparently part of an industrial process.  I suppose he means the jars required, maybe even the fact of processing itself. But nearly all food has to be processed in some form to provide us with sufficient and safe nutrients.  He acknowledged this but was interested in the natural drying process of plants being in some cases, sufficient processing with no use of man-made energy.   Yet despite this, some would say, extreme focus on the avoidance of industrial processes, he has apparently, a truck, works, on the land it would seem for money, runs foraging courses, presumably also for money and has an Instagram profile (so perhaps, a computer or phone) where he has recently railed against the shallowness and misguidedness of his followers. I could see it was well-intentioned and more ethical way of life than almost all of us and yet there was a but in there somewhere.

The low carbon footprint, woodsman lifestyle has also had more than bad press.  By his own admission Chamberlain is or was curmudgeonly, wanting from a young age, to drop out of society.  Take that quite a bit further and you find Ted  Kaczynski an unhinged environmentalist who also lived in a cabin in the woods, on a subsistence lifestyle.  During the seventies, eighties and nineties he embarked on a campaign of letter bombing targeting people involved in some form of industrial process, which could just mean they were a computer scientist academic. He killed three people, maimed 23 others, was finally caught and will now die in prison. 

But in ordinary life is anyone actually bothered about the ethics of foragers potentially exploiting the countryside.  Almost immediately I found that the answer is, in fact, yes.  Landowners very quickly get upset and say there is nothing potential about it, it is happening all the time.  In Scotland I had seen a woman on Facebook insist that while she accepted people had the right to walk on her land, they didn't have the right to pick "her" wild mushrooms for their own consumption, a position she would have trouble defending legally.  A Polish guy just laughed at her trying to keep woodland spoils to herself. In Poland, gathering mushrooms is a social event.  Someone had told me about a Polish wedding they had been to in the woods.  

If we saw land not in terms of ownership but as a common good, how would we agree to use it?  That is theoretically how things are in Scotland now.  We are not at the stage of land being thought of legally as in custodianship, and therefore with more responsibilities to look after it than rights to exploit but since the 2003 Land Reform Act a landowner cannot keep people off land, nor prevent them for foraging for personal use there, though many still try to restrict access with fencing or illegal signs.    

A different woman told me recently about three people from Glasgow she came across in a wood on land she owns.   They had containers filled with kilos of her mushrooms   They said they were travelling round the Highlands they said, picking every forest clean and planning to sell the spoils back in the city.   She explained this was her wood, that they were evidently not foraging for personal use, that she sold the mushrooms from her land to local restaurants and that they should move out sharpish.  That struck me as brave, but sure enough, they moved on, leaving the mushrooms for her - "and no effort of picking them!" she said, with a grin.  

Later, I discovered the commercial foragers had been picking into the same crates used by a well known Glasgow-based foraging company.  She made the point that in her area there was a lot of croft land but in Moray, where she'd lived before, it was estate land and she knew the estate hadn't minded.  "It's less about whether landowners mind, and more about whether they're asked [by commercial foragers]," I replied. 

This case will seem clearcut to most but are those three actually, any different to people who don't own land nor rent it, exploiting it for commercial gain? And how different is it again to people who do own or rent land, exploiting it commercially?  Is the idea of land ownership or tenancy and the custodianship of land for those of today and tomorrow nothing more than a moral distinction? In Wales they have a commissioner for future generations, whose role may have influenced the cancelling of a motorway in that country.

Clearly, the arguments shift depending on what the land is used for.  It is one thing to farm land intensively for plant crops, another to farm animals, another to plant sitka plantations, another to farm organically, another to run a croft, another to forage mushrooms commercially from your own private land. What about bee-keeping?  Is it OK to take bees' honey? And from there we slide easily into discussions over the use and slaughter of animals. Where do we, where should we, draw the lines?  

As a society, the legal lines are clear - you can use your land in the ways people currently do: intensive farming of crops, animals, timber are all OK, more than that, our entire country's functioning now depends on it.  Grouse moors are OK (the watchable Dragon's den spoof is here).  But should they change, will they change?  Meanwhile, there are our own moral choices. I know I am reflecting on mine. 

I came across an idea recently: that we can vote politically three times a day - in our choice of what we eat and from whom we buy our food. It has long been obvious to us all that we can make more or less ethical food choices, depending on income and to what extent we can be bothered but the idea of it as a political act, of a kind of vote was an empowering notion, as well as one that might lead to a more reflective mindset regarding our consumption of food and more generally. 

So is there any way of living that isn't exploitative of other people or the planet and its resources? Or is much less so than the way most of us live and without being hypocritical?

I thought for the nth time of Boyle, living quietly, zealously, cheerfully, in a cabin in the Irish countryside. No internet, no phone, no electricity, no running water, no truck, no money, no bills; a wood burner, a spring, a lot of manual work and, it would seem, good health, a reasonably clean conscience, a good deal of freedom.

Then I thought of the young environmentalist and anarchist I had met who said it wasn't necessary to go to such lengths.  Wasn't it? I still wondered, while at the same time knowing that few would want and still fewer be able to take up such a lifestyle despite Boyle's insistence that anyone can learn the skills he has.  I wondered if he underestimates the many years he had, before embarking on this lifestyle, slowly honing the skills that would later support him. I know too that our current use of land would not permit such a lifestyle for all but the smallest numbers. So did that mean that those adopting it were conscientious, selfish, independent, misguided, brave, mad, privileged? Does it matter?

Can you slow down the exploitation of local land?

Highfield track, Scone, will be bisected by the Cross Tay Link Road and the wood on the right felled, on councillors' orders.


Lockdown last year was so peaceful in town.  No traffic, birdsong, people walking and cycling.  Afterwards, I turned away from the returning traffic, town, capitalism and exploitation to nature. But I found a multitude of paths condemned by a road planned to wreck 6km of countryside and destroy Highfield wood north of Scone which is also a place of refuge and recreation for local people.  The road would include a bridge over the Tay.  There was, eventually, an initial objection from Nature Scot about things like runoff from the road into Tay where salmon and lamprey were their particular stated concern.  Opposition from the national nature organisations was for the most part non-existent, flimsy or, in the case of Nature Scot, withdrawn.  Many of these organisations were funded by the government who was also partially funding the road.  Pine marten had previously been spotted in the wood.  I was told the ecologists who visited about these and the local bats were paid by the developers. The bats would move on they apparently said and they claimed the pine martens already had...   

I tried to point out, not the conservation or climate arguments which would fall on the deaf ears of our councillors, but the fact that the road would increase traffic around town and not solve the traffic problem there anyway.  After the hole in the council's finances caused by the pandemic, weren't there better ways of spending the money and not just on the obvious (but politically unpopular) ones of cycle lanes and park and choose, but on, say, rural broadband and the development of local economies?    

A handful of councillors voted to pause and reconsider but about thirty-five others pressed on, tories SNP and Liberal Democrats alike, people more homogeneous than they were distinct.  None of them as far as I could see had walked much or perhaps any of the countryside they planned to destroy.  The regions's only Labour councillor took me up on my offer to show councillors the land and came for a walk, with his children and mine, through the woods including the children's den that will be all but destroyed by the proximity of the road.

Formal objections from the community about the road were relegated to a page in the council's document about the benefits of the road to councillors.  There were only about fifty objections due to a combination of public apathy and lack of awareness of where the road was actually going to go. These things are deliberately never made very obvious on the ground.  It is a dedicated member of the public who reads and understands every obscure council sign on a post, realises perhaps they might have the right of objection, and a) decides whether it's worth doing b) figures out what the process is.  Everything is stacked against public engagement.   So the fifty odd objections, mine included, were all ignored.   

The Local Development Plan is a statutory document that is incredibly important in deciding local land use.  Developers make decisions based on it and if councils veer from this document they can be and apparently are sued by developers.  Most ordinary people nowadays don't expect to be involved in decisions about their local area and those who try are well used to being fobbed off, shut out, ignored. Most municipal decisions, whether about your local park, streets, services or about wider local land use are made with very little genuine public involvement. In Perth & Kinross any surveying of people about changes is often overturned by councillors eager to appease complainers, especially when these stir up local community discontent which might threaten re-election.   

I could find no way to formally appeal the decision about the road after that.  Eventually, I discovered that in planing law only the applicant can object to decisions about a planning application and anyway, the application had been successful. Who was the applicant, incidentally?  Well, Perth council.  And who judged the application? Perth council.  Was there nothing wrong with this?  The law lets us do it, said the council.  The Green MP Mark Ruskell was the only politician of stature to get involved in any way but had not been effective.  Really what was needed was for him to take up the issue of communities being steamrolled by a system that allowed the council to be both judge and jury on its own application. Actually what was needed was for him and others like him to get better protection for the countryside and to beef up laws on climate change. The UK government isn't ready for COP 26 never mind climate catastrophe. Boris Johnson's new economic model of "higher wages, better working conditions and a rise in productivity" is the same old capitalist mantra that has been destroying the planet for the last 250 years. 

I put in an objection on behalf of a group about the speed limit of the new road and tried to get it reduced to 40mph from 50mph on the basis that it would have an "active travel route" alongside.  It failed.  I put in an application for the point where a local path through the soon to be felled Highfield Wood would be bi-sected by the road, to have a speed limit of 30mph.  This too failed.  The council said they might look at it again when houses and a school were built beside the road as if this had any bearing on the people using the path.  The landscape was to be left with what I started to think of as "hanging paths" - paths left extant but with the countryside around them destroyed.  But what matter if there were no longer any point to the paths, if they were no longer any good for enjoying a quiet walk, listening to birdsong, enjoying the views while being alert for wildlife? The huge planned road within sight and sound would make a mockery of the reasons why people come to walk in the countryside.  But "The council has fulfilled its statutory responsibility..." of in this case maintaining the paths intact or diverted.   The mindless cogs in a machine, continue to turn, blind, deaf, merely operating without  care nor awareness and yet it is humans who issue these orders on the direction of bigger, similarly blind, deaf cogs whom we elect, who then tear up the countryside.  

I walked other paths but found the same insistent focus on exploitation.  I found a countryside trust, run by a businessman not there really to promote and improve access to the countryside, but to run projects to keep the lights on, pay salaries and further careers.  These projects that were less about the stated aim of improving countryside access for walkers,  more about implementing "active travel routes", stretches of tarmac - bike lanes in essence - through the countryside.  These benefit cyclists no doubt, but not families out for inter-generational walks of grandparents parents, grandchildren, toddlers, dogs.  The fact that people slower or hard of hearing are shocked by fast riding bikes is batted away with facile "care and share" type signs on path.  That dogs or toddlers have to jump or be snatched out the way of bikes every two minutes, if indeed they manage, the implementers and funders care not a jot. It probably does not occur to them.  Bike lanes, sorry, "active travel routes" is where the government money is and that's what counts. 

In the case of Stanley and Luncarty this trust planned to open new countryside access between these two villages despite a core path already existing which was illegally blocked by agricultural fencing.  The council has a statutory responsibility to clear the many such obstructions but had failed to do so for some twelve years. The whole thing was supported by a keen cyclist in one of the villages who ran the "community support" while he parked his work vehicle on pavements in town. Most people in the villages didn't even know about the unsignposted, blocked legal path so the wool was easily pulled over their eyes:  give them a choice between new path A and new path B and don't tell them about the old, legitimate path.  When questioned, the council came up with fudged, illogical excuses that boiled down to a planned development on the site of the path (there was no reason the path could not continue through the development) and the council simply being unwilling to tell the farmer to unblock it. He won't want to, they said...

Rather than make a united front of various groups to bid to reopen the legitimate path one man decided he was the one to handle this - on his own.  To my knowledge, to date, he has not been successful.    

Paths blocked by illegal, highly efficient fencing are fading from memory as the traces of them fade from the land and this is what the council counts on.  They clearly do not care because so many remain closed.  Occasionally a landowner takes it upon themselves to gate and fence very popular core paths as happened by Methven farm last year.  The fury of local people, visible in their attempts to destroy the gates and fencing, meant that ultimately somebody used a power tool on one of these gates, reopening it for walkers.  

At Bridge of Earn, the same charity bid and got government funding again from Sustrans for a path between Bridge of Earn and villages in Fife. The bike lane was to follow the route of an existing path across four fast motorway slip roads. I pointed out to the community, the designer, the trust and ultimately the funder, the danger of a cycle lane, which apparently a twelve-year-old was supposed to be able to use, across these slip roads without an automated crossing, speed bumps or any indication of who had priority.  No-one really cared.  There were contradictions and excuses and,

-  "Well, there is an existing path there already"

- "Not one that's used.  It comes to a dead-end then and means walking on a famously dangerous road where a cyclist has recently been killed by a driver.""

- Well, there will be a crossing eventually, when the new houses are built".

 - "And when will that be?" 

- "Erm, no date for the houses, yet" 

Careers and money, projects and exploitation and nobody really thinking about the children and families, the actual people the path is supposed to be for.  

There was another path at Luncarty that was due to be cut off by the new road over the Tay. Various groups, including mine, put in objections.  The council said there was another road crossing nearby people could use, but this knocked out the circular route people liked to make.  The council also said the crossing wasn't used much, something disputed by local people and plainly untrue on the two occasions I visited.  The council would obviously like to close both crossings but one of them has a bus stop on both sides of the A9 used by people from Redgorton village.  The council's solution for the route they plan to close?  People should walk from the A9 where the path will end, up to the bus stop crossing, then walk back down to opposite where they were diverted from - a half kilometre diversion, which would negate the point of a circular anyway. "Crossing" in any case is a misnomer, implying some safe way of getting over the A9.  No, you just take your life in your hand and cross four lanes of dual carriageway traffic travelling at 70mph, something I have never been brave enough to do, but people who live nearby do, often.  The council, Scottish government and the developers are destroying so much but decided they could not find the money in a £120 million road and bridge over a river to put in a footbridge or, more accessible yet, an underpass under the A9 to protect peoples' lives.   They will not even put steps up to the river bridge from a footpath below it, because that would cost money.  People can be again diverted to walk along and up the road to the river crossing instead.   They call this road an improvement for "non-motorised users".  

It could not be plainer that pedestrians count for absolutely nothing.

None of any of these plans is ever couched in easy to understand language or clear diagrams.  The diagrams are obscure, the terms are legalese and it is all hidden in abstruse corners of the council's website. Nor is the process of how to object and what then happens clear to almost any member of the interested public you speak to. 

All these projects pay salaries and further careers at the expense of the preservation and improvement of the natural world and sustainable access to it for ordinary people.  

The charity I mentioned is though embarking on an ambitious project of persuading landowners to embrace ecological land reform.  There is funding available here too as people find ways to make money through the restoration of our ravaged land. The idea locally is to use Perthshire to connect the two national parks through a sustainable use of land. After years of watching endless consultations and workshopping in Perth and Kinross with practically no actual change I wonder how much of this latest project will be a funding bid to pay people to look into it and,  in this ultra-conservative region that prefers a drive through Tim Hortons to sustainable horticulture, how much things will actually change on the ground.

There would seem to be a few ways to address the exploitation of local countryside for development in its various forms:

1) Politics, unfortunately, notably the election of sympathetic councillors.  Note, previously sympathetic councillors have been "bought" by convenorships, or ideological deals, so actually, you need a councillor who is both sympathetic and staunch.  The way the populace votes depends largely on their local values, level of education and age.  Unless there is already "green" political will and a local culture as in Bristol, that is known to care for the environment over, say, vehicular convenience, you might as well forget this as a route for change.

2) You can try to get involved in the next local development plan.  This is actually a form of 1).  Good luck with that, even if you are part of a local community group. There are far more powerful monied interests who have already done deals behind the scenes before your community group even gets to the table. 

3) Activist and anarchist type protests.  The Tory government has been cracking down on protest in various forms throughout its term, notably in protests by the general population in Bristol and on Extinction Rebellions protests and their offshoots like Insulate Britain. It is now rushing through legislation to make forms of protest illegal. This is a  brave but dangerous, probably unpleasant and likely ineffective route.

4)  Buying land privately and protecting it whether as an individual or more effectively, as part of a community initiative.  These are likely to protect very small tracts of land and require a huge amount of effort.  You can also apply for council land that is not being otherwise used to be sold, leased or lent to you. In our area I think this is called "Community Asset Transfer".  It is something that the Walled Garden for instance, at Murray Royal hospital is engaged in.

The fourth of these options seems to be the most effective way of proceeding.