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Saturday, 2 August 2014

On the River Otter: Five reasons why we should [not] reintroduce beavers to Britain's rivers

The media buzz on beavers continues:
Futures Forum: On the River Otter: the media behaving badly over beavers

On the BBC's Countryfile website, there's been a vigorous debate on why and why not to 'bring back the beaver':

Five reasons why we should reintroduce beavers to Britain's rivers

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1789 was a bad year for British wetlands and wildlife. That year, the last bounty was paid for a Eurasian beaver skull in Britain. This entirely vegetarian animal, native to Europe and Asia, plays a vital role in shaping our landscape. Lost from Britain once, we need it back.
1. Our wetland species evolved alongside beavers
Ever since the last ice age our wetland plants and animals lived in wetlands created by beavers and adapted to rely on them - look at the way trees like willow, alder and aspen regenerate when cut.  Beavers coppice trees to stimulate fresh growth, and so open out our river banks and wetlands for other species to thrive. They are remarkable water engineers and create an amazing mosaic of dams, ponds, and canals.
2. Two thirds of all British wetland species are supported by ponds
Almost all ponds are now man-made – because all the beavers have gone. In the Devon Beaver Project site, our family of beavers have made over 10 ponds in 3 years benefitting a wonderful array of dragonflies, birds and amphibians.  The 10 clumps of frogspawn laid in 2011 increased to 370 clumps this year!
3. Our rivers and wetlands are sick
They have been drained and over-engineered to get the water off the land and out to sea as quickly as possible. We suffer floods when it rains and dry rivers during droughts, and our wetland wildlife is massively depleted. Beavers are the medicine. They reinvigorate these wetlands, and hold water back in the headwaters, reducing the risk of flooding and ensuring a more constant flow of water during drier periods – better for mayflies, dippers and fish.  And the rivers are cleaner as the dams filter out the sediment and other pollutants.
4. Natural rivers are best for fish
Across most of Europe and North America, beavers are generally considered beneficial for fish like trout, and the science appears to support this. They create braided meandering rivers, with clean and extensive spawning gravels for fish. The evidence suggests that young fish grow faster and return to sea healthier if they live in beaver ponds.  Despite this some British anglers seem concerned that re-introduced beavers will dam rivers so securely that salmon will be unable to migrate up to their spawning gravels – despite the fact that our native fish evolved alongside beavers.
5. People want them back
Many other countries in Europe have now reintroduced beavers, driven in part by the great affection that people feel for this large charismatic plant-eating rodent.  In the Knapdale area of Scotland, one local hotelier has reported that 20% of his 2013 guests were there because of the reintroduced beavers. And we have absolutely nothing to fear. Beavers are slow to spread, and stay within a few metres of rivers and streams.  They are also easy to control and any disease risks and adverse impacts can be managed. Devon Wildlife Trust is seeking to use the small wild and breeding population now living on the River Otter as an opportunity to study these impacts in a real life lowland British landscape.


 Mark Elliott is the Working Wetlands Project Manager at the Devon Wildlife Trust


Beavers in Britain's rivers: five reasons why they should be reintroduced | Countryfile.com

Five reasons why we should not reintroduce beavers to Britain's rivers

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The Angling Trust warmly welcomes Defra’s commitment to capture and return to captivity a number of beavers which have escaped from captivity – or have more likely been illegally released – into the River Otter in Devon for the following five reasons:
1. Our rivers have changed dramatically
Although beavers were native to some parts of the British Isles more than 500 years ago, our rivers have changed dramatically in the past five centuries and suffer from endemic pollution, over-abstraction of water and the presence more than 20,000 weirs and dams which act as barriers to fish migration.  Nearly all fish species, not just trout and salmon, need to migrate up and down rivers in order to complete their life cycle and the addition of beaver dams would only increase the number of obstacles that fish have to overcome.  If we remove all these barriers to migration, then beavers present less of a problem to fisheries.
2. It would be irresponsible
In a healthy natural ecosystem, beavers can actually be beneficial because they introduce woody debris to rivers and their dams can trap silt and create new habitats.  However, fewer than 25% of England and Wales’ rivers are in good ecological condition and the Angling Trust’s view is that it would be irresponsible even to consider reintroducing this species into the wild without first restoring our rivers to good health by tackling low flows, pollution and removing the vast majority of man-made barriers to fish migration.
3. Beavers can spread fatal diseases
Beavers imported from abroad have the potential to spread the tapeworm Echinococcus multilocularis which can spread to dogs and humans, for whom it can be fatal.  Britain is currently free of this parasite.
4. They pose a risk to infrastructure
Evidence from North America and Germany shows the considerable risk to infrastructure – including flood defence assets, roads and railways – from allowing beavers to become established in high risk and populated areas.  An adult beaver can bring down a 10 inch wide tree in under an hour, and a single beaver family will fell up to 300 trees a year.  In the upper Danube region of Germany, beavers have caused £5 million of damage.  How will riverside residents feel when the only tree in their garden is gnawed down overnight?  Or a beaver dam floods a housing estate that has never before flooded?  The problem with beavers is that they are very secretive and mainly nocturnal, and they don’t stay put, so they will spread from rural areas to villages and the edges of towns and cities.
5. Consultation is necessary
The beavers in Devon were almost certainly released illegally by some enthusiasts who believe they can take a unilateral decision on behalf of the whole nation; there was no democratic decision taken with proper consultation with local people, businesses and landowners to seek their views.


 Mark Lloyd is the Chief Executive of the Angling Trust


Beavers in Britain's rivers: five reasons why they should not be reintroduced | Countryfile.com

Thanks to: Friends of The Byes / Sidmouth BEE Project | Facebook
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Friday, 1 August 2014

The Secret History of Our Streets on BBC Two .............. "How strident community activism paved the way for the Housing Association movement across the UK"

A couple of years ago, BBC took us to the streets of London:

The Secret History Of Our Streets

Post categories:
 Joseph Bullman | Wednesday, 6 June 2012
Charles Booth's survey of London is the most ambitious social survey ever conducted. Starting in 1886, it took Booth 17 years to visit every one of its tens of thousands of streets.
When he was finished, he'd produced a series of stunning social maps, which colour-code each of London's streets according to the class of its residents - from yellow for the Servant Keepers, all the way down to black, for Vicious and Semi-Criminal.


Charles Booth's descriptive map of Deptford, London
I remember sitting in a greasy spoon near Borough Market in London, and putting the idea for The Secret History Of Our Streets to my friend the director Brian HillI told him we should go back to Booth's original study, to find out what had happened to the streets he'd visited 130 years earlier. Brian saw the potential instantly.
We were determined that the people of each street would tell their own story, collectively, for themselves. But handing over the story to the residents was a challenge, because most knew only fragments of the street's story. There were no 'experts' in Deptford High Street and historians don't specialise in single streets.
The Deptford High Street we found is one of the poorest shopping streets in the country. But when Charles Booth had arrived in the 1890s it was the Oxford Street of south London - so prosperous that many of its working class shopkeepers kept domestic servants.

BBC - BBC TV blog: The Secret History Of Our Streets
BBC Two - The Secret History of Our Streets, Series 1

Following this very successful first series, BBC Two now takes us to Scottish cities:



BBC Two - The Secret History of Our Streets

The people of Duke Street in Glasgow are famous for getting together and defying their Council leaders who wanted to demolish the buildings:


Campaigning of residents on Glasgow's famous Duke Street to be celebrated in major new documentary

Jul 30, 2014 00:01 By Paul English

THE pioneering work of Reidvale Housing Association around the east end of Glasgow’s Duke Street - the longest street in the UK - features in The Secret History of Our Streets.

Duke Street, Glasgow

THE legacy of campaigning residents on one of Glasgow’s most famous streets at the centre of the Commonwealth Games celebrations is to be celebrated on a major new BBC documentary.

The pioneering work of Reidvale Housing Association in the east end of Glasgow is the focus of an hour-long film detailing how strident community activism paved the way for the Housing Association movement across the UK.

The area around the east end of Glasgow’s Duke Street - the longest street in the UK - features in The Secret History of Our Streets, to be shown on BBC2 this week.

It was a zone earmarked for demolition by the city fathers in the late 1960s, with generations of working families set to be displaced into outlying schemes.

Glasgow council leaders pushed through compulsory purchase orders and plans for the demolition of many Dennistoun tenements.

Residents were to be decanted into schemes in areas like Easterhouse or into new high rises like the now-deserted Bluevale and Whitevale Towers in the east end, a notorious testimony to failed urban planning projects of the mid 1960.

But the pluck and resistance of a tight-knit group of community campaigners, dubbed “The Bathgate Street Mafia”, stalled bulldozers and established the UK’s first resident-run housing association successfully securing central government funding.

Thousands of families were “saved” from being shunted out into the schemes or into so-called cities in the sky thanks to the determination of activists led by the late John Butterly, who was awarded an MBE for his services to the community in 1987.

VIEW GALLERY

Campaigner Irene McInnes recalled: “They were telling us how they wanted to demolish the whole south side of Duke Street. John stood up at the public meeting and said ‘You go and live in Easterhouse if you like. I will not.”

The film also charts the area’s bygone social divisions, with doctors and lawyers being encouraged in the 1800s by the wealthy Dennistoun family - owners of a leafy country estate to the north of Duke Street - to live in spacious purpose-built gated communities, behind the slum conditions endured by working class families in nearby tenements.

It also laments the demise of notable Victorian architecture in the area, specifically the once-luxurious marble-clad Whitevale Baths which boasted a Turkish baths, reading rooms and a classic Glasgow “steamie”.

Now a listed building, it fell into desrepair and was abandoned by the council in 1988 and was partially demolished in 2012. Local Harriet Stomboli said: “If I won the lottery I would buy this building, because I think it is the most lovely building going to waste, and I would convert it in to something for our area that would do benefit to the people. I would definitely buy this building if I won money.”

Series advisor Dr Gerry Mooney, of the Open University, said: “The programme highlights the issues of power, social inequality and marginalisation that exist within Scotland, as well as the struggles of its people to build a sense of community, a sense of place – often in very difficult circumstances. We hope that the programmes will inspire viewers across the country to uncover the secret histories of their own streets and areas.”

The series will focus on Aberdeen’s Footdee Squares, a model housing scheme build for fishermen in the late 19th Century.

• The Secret History of Our Streets, BBC2, Friday, 9pm


Campaigning of residents on Glasgow's famous Duke Street to be celebrated in major new documentary - Scotland Now

See also:
Futures Forum: Gerald Counter's Sidmouth: an insight into Eastern Town
Futures Forum: The Man Who Fought the Planners: Ian Nairn
Futures Forum: Heritage! The Battle for Britain's Past... Where for the future...
Futures Forum: From Bury to Sidmouth: book launch
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On the River Otter: the media behaving badly over beavers

There has been a lot of coverage of the beavers on the River Otter:
First wild beaver to be seen in Britain for centuries gives birth to three young | Mail Online

And there has been a lot of coverage of beaver goings-on in North America - hopefully much of it ironic in tone:
Evil Beaver Attempts To Kill Family By Dropping A Tree On Their Car
Rogue beaver blamed for tree falling on Quebec family’s SUV in Prince Edward Island

With BBC Two looking at further issues in beaver-land - in a rather crass 'documentary':

Beavers Behaving Badly

Image for Beavers Behaving Badly
Who are you going to call when beavers are behaving badly? Well, if you live in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, Drew Reed is the go-to 'beaver buster'. Drew works as a wetland conservationist, helping to keep the peace between beavers and people. These busy rodents are incredibly industrious - felling trees and building dams are two of their favourite occupations. This can be good news in the wild, helping create rich habitats for a variety of wildlife, but in backyards it can spell disaster. A beaver is more than capable of bringing down a tree large enough to damage property and their dam building can result in flooded homes. Drew must do what he can to steer beavers away from trouble and stop their so-called bad behaviour.

BBC Two - Natural World, 2014-2015, Beavers Behaving Badly

The Guardian was not impressed with this coverage - as were many of those leaving comments:

Natural World - Beavers Behaving Badly: a sad way to treat a noble species

Beavers are creatures whose thankless work has helped build America. So what did they do to deserve a Rob Brydon voice-over?

Filipa Jodelka The Guardian, Saturday 26 July 2014
Jump to comments (79)

A camera pans across the majestic Teton mountains. Rivers snake through snow-tipped poplar trees. Scenes that look like they were painted by Bob Ross himself make you giddy at your own insignificance on this beautiful planet. A beaver peers down its nose. A comedy boinging-spring sound is deployed. 

Sidmouth's 'The Loft' restaurant receives national accolade

Sidmouth and surroundings have got some very attractive places to eat and drink 
- many winning prizes:
Futures Forum: Cream teas, Devon and Sidmouth
Futures Forum: Annings: award-winnning fruit cider from Sidmouth
Futures Forum: Sidmouth Hotels
Futures Forum: Green Tourism Business Scheme - more awards

A Sidmouth eatery has just been voted as one of the top 100 in the country:


Great Britain's Great Restaurants
(menu)
gbgr.jpgThe UK’s top 100 restaurants
A combination of readers, bloggers and our nationwide team of reviewers have left 2,400 votes in our annual out-of-London survey – and the results are in.
Here we present your hundred favourite restaurants outside London, the nation's hottest dining tickets from the north, south, east and west. While many familiar names such as The Fat Duck and L’Enclume still colonise the upper echelons, the results also reveal a new generation of rising star restaurants.
Great Britain's Great Restaurants | Square Meal Feature

It is possible to eat very nicely in the town:

'Square Meal' Review of 'The Loft' 

“Great hosts, good value, lovely surroundings, and the best coffee in town”, trumpets a fan of The Loft – a casual daytime eatery and weekend bistro with dramatic black rafters, artwork for sale and reclaimed elm tables, plus a sought-after roof garden. 

Nourishing wake-up breakfasts open proceedings before the daytime menu kicks in with its bright Med-accented ideas, antipasti boards, pizzas, salads and the like. 
At lunchtime, there are more substantial dishes including chicken breast stuffed with goats’ cheese and sun-dried tomatoes or pan-fried salmon on crushed new potatoes, followed by iced chocolate parfait or apple and cinnamon cake. 
Also, don’t miss the whole local crab in season. 
On Friday and Saturday evenings, the kitchen ups the ante by offering, say, seared scallops with crispy leeks and broad bean purée, herb-crusted rack of lamb, and desserts such as pear tarte Tatin.

The Loft Devon | The Loft Restaurant Reviews, Prices and Menu

And from today's Herald:

Sidmouth restaurant in 100 best outside London

John and Katrina Lort of The Loft celebrate being in the top 100 restaurants outside London. 
Photo by Terry Ife. 

Stephen Sumner Wednesday, July 30, 2014

A Sidmouth eatery’s ‘casual but clever Med-accented cooking’ has won it a place in the 100 best restaurants outside of London.

The Loft came out a delectable 83rd in rankings compiled by foodie website Square Meal after readers, bloggers and reviewers cast their votes.

But the news caught owners John and Katrina Lort unawares – and they think the ‘organic’ response of the customers is a real testament to what they and their staff are doing.

“We don’t know how we got it – it came out of nowhere,” said Katrina. “These are genuine, legitimate reviews, completely independent.”

She added that some schemes you can sign up to are more contrived as you pay a fee to be reviewed, whereas their reviewers paid for their meal and were treated like any other customer.

Katrina hopes the listing will give the business a boost and attract more people to Sidmouth as she has already had contact with the owners of some of the other restaurants. John and Katrina opened their Old Fore Street eatery last summer after moving from Selleys in Libra Court.

The Loft is also currently rated 18th out of the 3,200 dining establishments in Devon, according to consumer review site TripAdvisor.


Sidmouth restaurant in 100 best outside London - What's on - Sidmouth Herald

Also, some views from Streetlife:
Streetlife | The Loft | Page 1
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