Monday, 3 January 2011

Good News, Bad News....

Looks like the 'Indy' is continuing with last year's scheme of having their columnists not actually read any of the news before pontificating on it.

First, this:
Britain's rivers, some of which were little better than sewers a generation ago, are now at their cleanest for more than a century.

In the past decade, our waterways have returned to conditions not seen since before the industrial revolution, the Environment Agency says.
Yay! Good news, right?

Well, Victoria Summerley, in the very same issue, thinks otherwise. She thinks this is just a start:
In the past 20 years, various initiatives have not only helped restore the health of the Wandle but given it a new career. Merton Abbey Mills is now a craft village. At Morden Hall, a former deer park now owned by the National Trust, the river becomes a series of meandering streams, and children play Pooh-sticks on the bridge.

And the trout are back, released into the river each year by local schoolchildren who raise the fry under the Wandle Trust's Trout in the Classroom scheme.

The trust, in partnership with a whole host of organisations ranging from local boroughs to the Environment Agency and fishing clubs, oversees the health of the river and organises regular clean-ups. These, sadly, are necessary because although the Wandle is no longer polluted by dyes and chemicals, it is used a dumping ground for tyres, supermarket trolleys, and any other items of household detritus people can't be bothered to take to the tip.
Eh..? Hang on, supermarket trolleys?

Since when was that an item of 'household detritus' that people couldn't be bothered to take to the tip?
We may have legislated to prevent industry releasing waste into our waterways but we still have to educate the general public that "river" does not spell "dustbin".
The 'general public', Victoria? What, all of them?

That seems rather wasteful, when you consider the sort of people (i.e. kids) likely to be dumping supermarket trolleys in rivers...

2 comments:

  1. Between the train station and the office where I work, there is a beautiful park featuring a stream and duck pond, both crossed by a pretty wooden bridge.

    On Christmas Eve morning, as I walked to work through this park, everything was white with snow and the duck pond was frozen. As I crossed the little bridge, I saw that all of the ducks were swimming in the stream instead: hundreds of them, quacking and fussing and looking very silly. Every now and then, in order to clean and preen, one of the ducks would emerge from the flow of water and climb onto... the upturned shopping trolley protruding from the center of the stream.

    Yes, it was unsightly. But the ducks don't know that. To them, it was a highly useful perch from which to escape the melee and perform regular personal hygiene whilst appearing to lord it over their neighbours. I wonder how long it'll be before it's taken away from them.

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  2. "Yes, it was unsightly. But the ducks don't know that. To them, it was a highly useful perch from which to escape the melee and perform regular personal hygiene whilst appearing to lord it over their neighbours."

    Spot on! There's a tendency to assume all human waste and detritus is unsightly and dangerous and should be removed ASAP.

    And yet the biggest and best reef colonies are always around sunken boats...

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