It’s always a moot point with Sheffield Wildlife Trust whether what they do comes
from being cynically devious or plain gormless. Someone experienced in dealings
with them claims it’s usually the latter, sometimes the former and best to
assume a weird mix of the two; then went on to say they think there is some advantage in being perceived as incompetent. (Think about it).
The latest evidence that this organisation still exists is
to be seen this bank holiday weekend in a number of notices erected on the moor
and detracting from the natural beauty that we all like to enjoy. But that is
one of their trademarks:
A4 laminated notices scattered around natural sites which are never taken down but left to fall and be found in the vegetation months, or even years, later in a state of decay.
You feel glad they didn’t bring them on in a supermarket trolley.
It’s a sign of their love for the place – alongside the fact that nobody will see them patrolling and protecting the site they lease - to defend the wildlife at holiday times when the public may be expected to show up in numbers.
A4 laminated notices scattered around natural sites which are never taken down but left to fall and be found in the vegetation months, or even years, later in a state of decay.
You feel glad they didn’t bring them on in a supermarket trolley.
It’s a sign of their love for the place – alongside the fact that nobody will see them patrolling and protecting the site they lease - to defend the wildlife at holiday times when the public may be expected to show up in numbers.
The notice does the job – it makes a show of informing
people when something undesirable is about to happen, so they can say they’ve
conformed with legal requirements. But in such a way that no concession is made
to the public’s ability to read or understand what they say or are up to. You have to go down on hands and knees to read the map and it isn't user-friendly anyway.
It’s about bringing heavy vehicles on to Blacka and spraying
and cutting bracken – a perfectly natural native plant. They’ve decided to do
it because they get money from organisations to do it – organisations like
Unnatural England which is in the pocket of the wealthy grouse shooting lobby –
they hate bracken because it doesn't help them breed more ground nesting birds to shoot. The grouse moor owners have lobbied determinedly
to have the ban on this chemical spray removed with some success; not surprising when some of them are actually in the government. Now SWT and
National Trust and others are shamelessly taking advantage of that and the
sundry grants available to go in for more intrusion in what should be a
natural publicly owned site.
Bilge about Bilberries:
Once they decided to do it they look around for reasons to
justify it in the eyes of the more gullible sections of the public. So the
notice reads:
Priceless is the sentence:
Should we call this bilge or be kind and say mendacious nonsense?"This'll take place when the bilberries are past their best, as requested by bilberry-pickers"
'Past their best'? The bilberries are close to their very best now and will continue to get sweeter in September. SWT have always intended to spray in the last week of August and will not allow any considerations of public or wildlife to change that. But do they care that their ignorance is exposed? Or even know, as they do not value the site for itself but for what they can get out of it. And 'requested by bilberry pickers'? Who are they? It's as if there's a definable group of bilberry pickers set up to be stakeholders. But Friends of Blacka Moor members who've picked more bilberries on the moor than anyone else have not even been asked about it. It's tempting to say that it's not the bilberries that are past their best but SWT; except it's hard to think of a time when they were at their best. Best is what they can get away with.
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