Writtle Conservation lecturer, Alan Roscoe, updates us on his latest 'Writtle Wildlife Watch'.
"A couple of months back I mentioned the recent storms and flooding but such has been their impact I feel I have to mention them again before Spring arrives.
"A couple of months back I mentioned the recent storms and flooding but such has been their impact I feel I have to mention them again before Spring arrives.
Clearly you don’t have to live on the Somerset Levels to be
aware of the potential for damage and even here, in warm and sheltered Essex
(where the sun shines every day!) we have had some clearing up to do. This week
we were out with our first years clearing away some trees which had come down
across the green lane which crosses our estate just to let local residents and
horses through.
UK floods in 2014 |
There has been much debate on comments pages attached to BBC
website news stories with many contributors. And, yes, I am among them – see if
you can spot my comments! Unfortunately, to paraphrase Mrs Merton (c.1997),
many people seem to have taken the story as an excuse for a ‘heated debate’. But
apart from the rather predictable ‘I blame the farmers / RSPB / Environment Agency
/ insert name of enemy here’ comments, there have also been some really
interesting observations about the root causes of flooding, the nature of our
countryside, what we expect from it and how to mitigate – and I cannot, hand on
heart, say ‘avoid’ – such significant floods in the future. The most recent
piece on the subject is at:
Perhaps now is the moment when we have that national
(unheated) debate about our competing demands on our countryside, its
aesthetics, its purpose and its future."
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