The SMP managers want a "Cherished and Working Landscape", or so they say.
Managers
are there to crush the delight in the happy accident, the free spirit, the
serendipitous. They want to control everything and kill off the pleasure we get
from discovery and replace that joy with their own artificial enthusiasm for
the artificial.
They want
to kill the thing they claim to love so as to replace it with something they’ve
created or recreated to their own pattern. They then go out and claim that
there’s something new and wonderful they’ve manufactured. This sums up the
attitude of the conservation managers.
The message is: Wild red deer must not be allowed to stay wild.
They must either be culled/killed or harnessed to the plans of the managing
class, reprogrammed to fit their purpose. Their appeal to the visitors who see
them is exactly that they are free from a management agenda. But to the
managers that will not do. Wild animals coming to the land of their own free
will is a threat to the top down instincts of managers like those in the
Sheffield Moors Partnership.
It’s been
evident in their whole approach from their tentative uneasy acceptance of the
deer when they first appeared, from their virtually ignoring them as if they
wished they would go away, their organising a shooting party to rid themselves
of them, their failure to acknowledge them in their literature, for some time
concentrating on promoting their imported cattle instead. It’s been written on
their very faces, until finally they had to accept that the public regarded the
wild deer with delight. It’s been amusing beyond measure to watch them. Now
they want to manage them and squeeze out as much of the pleasure we get from
them as they can.
Quote from
the Master Plan that has been concocted by this Master Race:
WHAT WE ARE PLANNING TO ACHIEVE – THE STRATEGIC
OUTCOMES BY 2028
Appropriate
grazing to achieve conservation objectives
Extensive grazing including
appropriate livestock and the resident red deer herd is the primary land management tool on the
Sheffield Moors.
Notice that word ‘herd’.
It’s a stage in the control process. Just saying it has an impact. It
immediately makes us think of controlled herds of farm livestock which is what
the managers want.
Next look at this quote from
THE KEY ACTIONS IN THE FIRST
FIVE YEARS
Develop an overall deer management policy for the Sheffield Moors and
adopt by 2015
Think about this. It means controlling and culling. It's playing to the paranoia about wild animals that has been fostered by the farming industry many of whom see all wild animals as vermin. But what the managers want to have is something akin to the deer in large estates which are regularly controlled. The free roaming animals that decide for themselves don't fit in with the world of management planning and office based tasks where they feel at home.
Underlying
this blog is the belief that we need in our landscape places that are free from
managers and the curse of managerialism. One function of these posts is to
exercise a kind of Managerwatch in one place. The managers invade and wreck the
charm and beauty of places that would get along well without them. They are
corrosive of the natural integrity of places because it is in their nature to
intervene and stamp their own will on them. Managers are a class apart driven
by needs of their own quite distinct from the place or the organisation they
find themselves in.
Now they
are out to manage the remaining free–spirits in the natural world. All in the interests of a " Cherished (!!) working landscape" and plenty of grant money to keep their office roles ticking over.
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