Tag: Conservation

  • Conservative Lies And The Sewage Briefing

    Water companies made £2.8 billion of collective profits in 2020 and discharged raw sewage 400,000 times – for more than 3.1 million hours total. Shockingly, these figures are low-end estimates.

    Liberal Democrats, The Sewage Briefing.

    UK Conservatives seem to be caught up in a net of partygate lies like a gaggle of rotten trout, soaked in the stench of disgrace, the sewage party of neglect under the misdirection of Boris “Crime-minister” Johnson. A party that has failed to protect our rivers and waterways, and stood by as water quality regulations and waste disposal regulations are abused, leading to the current country wide outbreak of algal blooms and so loss of plant and species diversity. (See George Manbiot) If you want to see your local environment thrive vote for a Liberal Democrat or Labour representative. Read their proposed actions concerning the Stour, plus those actions already undertaken, and compare with the current gang of scoundrels and their legacy of environmental neglect. HS2, Brexit, PPE Scandals, etc.

    Our rivers and seas are being transformed into open sewers by greedy business and useless governments.

    George Manbiot, This Stinks.

    My rhetorical questions: Where is the evidence of conservation activity to protect our local waterways? Why are we still allowing sewage and farm waste to flow into rivers and waterways? Who is responsible? How do we bring justice and protect and enforce? Where are the alternative plans for waterside developments and ecological centers, new nature reserves and wildlife habitats?

    With increasing frequency, warm weather brings algal blooms. Water that should be crystal clear becomes a green or brown slop of diatoms (microscopic algae).

    George Monbiot, Shitstorm.

    It’s a fact that most cities and towns in the UK, and worldwide, are often named after or were settled next to a river. Stourbridge is one such town, the river Stour is one such river. There before any human settlement, and treated like a handy public waste disposal system, the river stour has paid its dues throughout the industrial revolution, right up to the present day. From washing the dye from carpets in Kidderminster to the Holloware Metal Industry of lye and the Iron Forgeries and Foundries of the Black Country. We all owe the river Stour for assisting with the local industry neatly moving our waste elsewhere.     

    Rising up by the Clent Hills near St Kenelms Chapel and Well, the water is relatively clean and pollution free, yet on its way east across to Haelsown to the Dudley Metropolitan Borough it picks up waste. It weaves through the past heavy industrial area of Cradley Heath, Lye toward Stourbridge, its namesake, and on through Wollaston, Amblecote to Stourton. From my observations, the bulk of pollution comes from the remaining industrial areas, plus whatever the water authorities allow to be added from sewage outlets and pipes that feed into it. I should know, I’ve climbed up a number of them and witnessed first hand the strange liquids, foams and discoloration in the River Stour, mostly from Stambermill before the Viaduct over 20 years.

    I welcome the new volunteer initiatives to clean up the river, and a healthy competition to show-off your local piece of the Stour, and which can lead to cross party support for the initiatives. Everybody benefits from a clean river, not least the fauna and flora that live in and around the river the gradual return of native species wiped out by industry and neglect over the last 200 years is a cause for optimism. But rivers need active defense units, ever vigilant of plots and schemes to undermine their value, or simply ignore them. They are the life blood of any town or city.  

    From my research, the Liberal Democrat Party have by far the best plan of action to transform the river and bring highly needed criticism of the current mismanagement and neglect of the Conservative Party. Read The Sewage Briefing now.
    Besides the long list, as long as the river Stour, of repeated failures of the Tory party, their lack of support and unwillingness to protect the Stour and all waterways in the UK is a single reason enough to send your vote elsewhere, either Liberal Democrat or Labour. Register to vote, use your vote, use your voice. Put pressure on those polluting the river and those who support the continued contamination of the UK water-ways, driven by profit over public interest.  

    The privatised water companies, granted local monopolies on supply, extract vast dividends and salaries while investing as little as possible in pipes, sewage systems, reservoirs and pollution control. Instead of stopping leaks or discouraging overconsumption, they draw down the groundwater that feeds our rivers.

    George Monbiot, Watery Grave.

    The future fight to save the planet and humanity starts at home in your locality. The lasting legacy of environmental work and the re-greening of our towns and cities is a lasting legacy to be truly proud of. Your kids will respect you for it. With some imagination, furthermore our waterways can become functional family attractions, the source of food and a habitat for wildlife: fish, insects and plants. Consider Mills have previously been powered by the river too.

    Why not make the environmental crisis a cross-party issue, and the demonstration of looking after it competitive, with incentives, work opportunities and a myriad of social psychological benefits. 

    –Steve Fly

    We will encourage communities to act for their local river and surrounding habitat, creating a legacy of engaged individuals who will help protect it long into the future. In addition, we will generate awareness of small, everyday changes which we can all make to contribute to improving the condition of the river.”

    Love Your River Stour

  • Bluebells Saltwells And Mordor

    Bluebells Saltwells And Mordor


    “Halfway up Brierley Hill, he points to the quiet street-lit valley below. All empty industrial estates and small, coiled ribbons of housing. ‘When I was a kid, you’d come up this hill, and all of that’ – and he gestures to the valley in front of us – ‘was on fire. The foundries and the forges and the ironworks. The potteries. The whole place glowed – sheets of sparks, 50 foot high. The fires never went out. It looked like hell. That’s what your Lord of the Rings is about.
    Tolkien was from round here. He was writing about how the industrial revolution turned the Midlands from Hobbiton to Mordor.’–How Lord Of The Rings Was Inspired By The Black Country.

    Dear Merry Hill Folk

    I am writing to you, in hope you will consider supporting a campaign to preserve the last relatively undisturbed natural landscape, in the vicinity of Merry Hill Shopping Center.

    The Saltwells Nature Reserve has been able to survive the industrial / technological transformation seen by the rest of the Black Country and Dudley area over the last 30 years. The Merry Hill complex buzzes right next door, and before being an open cast mine and the site of a steel works it was very much like, if not exactly the same as, Saltwells Nature Reserve. A home to fauna and flora, teaming with wildlife, birds, dragonflies, owls, Doulton clay, 13th century mining relics. Merry Hill, back then, might cast the image of a wooded hill into the imagination, like a scene from J.R.R Tolkien’s Hobbit? I’m not the first to compare Lord Of The Rings with the descent into industrialism of the Black Country, and at the expense of our natural woodlands, wildlife, the great old trees and brooks and mines. Heritage. The buck stops here.  

    To clarify, a consortium of interests have made a proposal to build 9 private houses in the middle of the current designated nature RESERVE. It’s application reference: P18/1373 (Google it) A petition already has over 5000 signatures from others who oppose the housing development, plus a rapidly expanding facebook group with 5000 members, again all overwhelmingly opposed to the housing project. Take a look, and if you have not visited the reserve, take a walk over there and see for yourself. It’s a hidden Black Country gem, something worth fighting for, and to preserve for posterity. A codex to local history. I, like many others have childhood memories of this place, and studied it closely while at Thorns School in Quarry Bank, Saltwells was a celebrated sanctuary. May it remain undisturbed by urban structures, no shops, roads, mining, or housing. A nature reserve to mean a reserve for nature. Simple. Not private housing in particular.  

    As a business owner, or worker based at Merry HIll, please consider not only lending your support to the campaign to keep Saltwells Nature Reserve Green, but also pledge support to help make Saltwells a bigger and budding hive of undisturbed natural beauty. A number of exciting alternative plans are in the air, such as an open permission garden project, or plans to simply plant a tree, or sponsor tree planting, workshops, tours, art class, music projects, film and ceramics. Consider your pledge of support as a gift, a gesture to help save the land that once occupied the site you’re on. Link up and help strengthen a community nature reserve, surrounding the Merry Hill shopping complex. And think of the good press and raised public profile locally.

    Let’s make sure Saltwells is free from ever ever having to worry and fight developers who wish to use the Nature Reserve for anything but the reservation of the space for nature to do her thing. I would like to request written confirmation that Saltwells Nature Reserve will be immune from any development for 60 years, no make that 90 years. Furthermore, I demand a new plaque for the reserve, a testament to the will of the people who demand that no private housing be built.  

    To go further, I might encourage others to look at this as the beginning of a new grassroots campaign to protect our last remaining piece of unspoiled natural beauty i Dudley. And to explore new ideas, like providing free food for local people, or for anybody who visits. Locally and globally begin to weave a new story of how we integrate nutritious foods back into urban environments. A new conversation, starting right next door to one of the biggest shopping centers in Europe: Merry Hill.

    “There’ll be bluebells blowing in salty sepulchres the night she signs her final tear. Zee End.–James Joyce, Finnegans Wake, pg. 28


    Toward A Protective Treatise For Saltwells Nature Reserve

    By the powers invested in me by the Tawny Owl, Dragonfly, Sparrowhawk, Badger, Dove, Jay, Bluebell, Oak, Silver Birch, Mycelium and all the creatures and plants of the woodland, I demand a new protective treatise to ensure that no private housing development can ever ever be put forward again.

    To be signed by a delegate of local citizens, business people, politicians, environmentalists, historians, heritage foundations, lottery funds, art enclaves, church groups and all like minded individuals. Our collective focus and word is unity. Saltwells Nature Reserve could be the literal common ground where all political and cultural differences are set aside. Unity over the issue of eternal preservation, genesis and possible expansion of this model of a Nature Reserve.

    Here, we can lead the country and show the whole world that some people, a large majority, can agree that Dudley needs a re-greening project, and its natural habitat has suffered irrevocably from 200 years of industrialization. We, or better yet I (as I do not claim to speak for all the people of Dudley) feel that climate change is just like a block of flats in the bluebell fields, a challenge to future generations of domesticated primates, and all creatures great and small. Saltwells Nature Reserve is ground zero for a new movement based on unity, diversity. I want to see a permanent solution. A binding protecting status to prevent any commercial development. Nature Reserve means just what it spells out in plain English. 

    Sixteen species of dragonfly are found here on the Daphne Pool, making this one of the best sites in the West Midlands for these ancient insects.”–Dudley gov/saltwells


    Dear Dudley MBC, councillors, ladies and gentleman. To who it may concern.

    I join the chorus of voices in opposition to the proposed housing development project within the Saltwells Nature Reserve. I see tens of thousands of reasons not to disturb the pearl of Dudley, and more than 5000 names on a petition, plus a growing facebook group. No means no housing development anywhere on the nature reserve. Clear and simple.

    The argument for the development seems vague at best, greedy at worst. The argument that Vandals are somehow the reason why the housing development should take place, seems weak to me. However, I agree, we should hear out the arguments for the development, and take the strongest arguments seriously. Questions of ownership and responsibility, environmental protections, and the UNESCO status of the Saltwells might be worth looking into.

    My recommendation purely from a personal point of view is to make your own detailed, balanced overview. Write a personal testimony to why you love Saltwells Nature reserve, and why you think the housing development will be detrimental to it. Easy, clear, simple. Have fun, organize. Speak up.

    Keep yer’ peepers on those who blame the opposition for what they are doing themselves. If you want to curb vandalism, how about you provide a huge canvas outside the entrance to the reserve, and invite the local community to vandalize it with thoughts about a housing development project on the nature reserve? At the same time, get in touch with some artists who can make it clear that ANY vandalism within the Saltwells Nature Reserve is just not cool. Both vandals and some Dudley MBC folks need to go on a course to learn the value of some historical buildings and areas of Dudley….and the UK. imho.

    Alternatives, well, how about you start having events and happenings at the reserve, a new saltwells nature trail, bird watching tour with historical trips. Songwriting workshops, drawing and art and sculpture, ceramics, botany class / tours. How about you open up the space to the people as an ecological art park, featuring an incredible edible garden, make an outdoor paradise, a full blown Shangri La of Dudley. Or just leave it as it is. But… private housing, really, this is your proposal, that’s about as imaginative as building a car park.

    –Steven Pratt

         

    “The Dark Lord has Nine. But we have One, mightier than they”–J.R.R Tolkien


    And happy Halloween

    Then Merry heard of all sounds in that hour the strangest. It seemed that Dernhelm laughed, and the clear voice was like the ring of steel. “But no living man am I!”–J.R.R. Tolkien, The Lord of the Rings