Issue 157

Hello dear readers, and a warm welcome to this slightly delayed edition of the Voice for Arran! As we move into the more autumnal ambience of September we have some wide-ranging pieces that take us from Hustings to Housing, and from Health to Happiness. I read last month on a local social media post that August was ‘International Happiness Happens Month.’  Despite my edge of cynicism at the proliferation of their being a day, a week, a month for everything these days, it struck a chord. Possibly a reflection of the fact that happiness, and seeking happiness, is one of the universal truths of being human.

We are told a happy mind allows us to live a longer and more satisfying life. But is it all about positive thoughts and can joy be found anywhere if only one looks? It often feels that despite our best efforts to seek it out – in our relationships, work and personal interests – the more elusive it seems to be. Furthermore, according to the article Mindfulness for Living, A Different Approach to Happiness, in these modern times most of us are drawn to a “hedonic” kind of happiness, a happiness that “is all about getting and consuming – filling an inner sense of hunger and lack.”  Yet the author Choden goes onto say there is another kind of happiness that does not depend on external conditions but one which arises from within. It is what the ancient Greeks called eudemonia and it comes when we begin to live in alignment with our inner values. Choden writes, “This kind of happiness is about recognizing that there is a pre-existing completeness and freedom within that we can tap into and savour. But first we need to learn to be still.”

Coming to Arran’s Housing Crisis, Problems and Solutions, I wonder how likely this kind of happiness is for those people who struggle with difficult realities in their lives. For Choden also writes that this happiness is available to all of us, “when we are not threatened and have what we need.”  And the “dire” housing situation on the island that Neil Wilkinson describes shows that the basic needs of security and safety for a significant number of people on the island are not met. Writing as retiring housing officer for Arran, Neil outlines the different and compounding issues that the younger generations and those on the national living wage particularly face. He explains that “Social housing, which gives people the security and dignity of knowing that they can live as long as  they want in their home,” is in very short supply. At the same time the issue of housing need and homelessness is mostly hidden. This is mainly because people of all incomes live in very close proximity on Arran, so that “despite widespread poverty, no area of the island scores highly in the Scottish government’s ‘index of multiple deprivation’”.

Neil notes that the situation could be addressed with a shift in policy and by “politicians who will press the council and government to fix the housing crisis on Arran”. The upcoming by-election on the 12th of this month is our chance to make sure our voice is heard and hopefully influence this situation. Elsewhere in this issue, and over the coming weeks, health and wellbeing and the benefits of being out in nature are spotlighted. There are various walks to join with Eco Savvy and the Ayrshire Walking and Wheeling festival, and therapeutic gardening sessions are starting again at Heather Lodge. There are also some free introductory mindfulness sessions at Eco Savvy’s Zero Waste Cafes and in the middle of the month a session at Heather Lodge if you are interested in learning more about this different approach to happiness.  Otherwise, we wish you all a very happy month! Elsa

Some Voice for Arran Housekeeping:

For a number of reasons we have decided to reduce the Voice for Arran output to a quarterly publication. This may change again in the future but for now we will bring you an edition every 3 months, the next one being in December. We really value the continued support and contributions of our readership, and we hope to keep bringing you interesting and informative issues for many months to come! Please do get in touch with any questions, queries or observations by email at: info@voiceforarran.com and we will keep in touch through the Voice for Arran Facebook page. We will love to hear from you!

This issue was reconstructed from the historical production issue page. The editorial and sponsor panel were recovered, but a reliable issue article list was not available in the source page at import time.

Photos from August

With thanks to John Campbell and Jim Henderson. Photos include a swannery on the River Severn at Worcestor and images from the recent open day at the new Dyemill bike park in Lamlash.


Poems for September

Haiku
they spark a moment
      fireflies
then the deeper dark
deeper into the forest
and deeper still –
the silence
soothing me asleep
the hush
of the rain
leaf on the river
this moment
here now
the oystercatcher’s cry –
cold loneliness,
the far north
Alan Spence (b.1947)
Clear Light, (Canongate: 2005)
The language is unobtrusive, almost plain. The effect is physical. Spence’s haiku pivot like the wind, catching your breath, raising goosebumps.
IM

Paperboats Haiku Competition

What can you say in seventeen syllables or less?

Paperboats is excited to announce the launch of our Haiku Competition. We are inviting writers of all ages to submit their haiku to be in with the chance to win a cash prize and be published in a special Paperboats Zine issue dedicated to the traditional Japanese poem.

The haiku — consisting of three lines containing, respectively, five, seven and five syllables — can be in English, Scots or Gaelic and take the themes of rewilding or a future free of fossil fuels as inspiration.


Support the Lamlash Community Hub

The Lamlash Community Hub Project are holding two events on Saturday 14th September to continue their fundraising efforts – a table top sale followed by a family ceilidh.

Residents of Lamlash are hoping to buy the church and associated buildings, which closed recently, in order to save the church and hall for use by the community. Over the last year they have been working hard – constituting the Lamlash Community Hub group, consulting with the community, working with architects and fundraising for a feasibility study to look at how the buildings could be renovated.


Notes from The Arran Naturalist

The Annual Clyde Eider Survey is taking place this year from 7th to 30th September. Organised for nearly thirty years by Chris Waltho, the data collected shows the post breeding population of Eiders in the Firth of Clyde is in decline. Chris’s latest report “Clyde Eider News No22 August 2024” can be accessed using this link. When the following article was written in 1980 for The Arran Naturalist, the author notes that the Eider population had been increasing in numbers over the last years.


Outdoor cooking with Eco Savvy and Arran Pioneer Project

On the 17th of August we ran an outdoor cooking workshop in conjunction with the Arran Pioneer Project team at Cordon Community Garden.

Although the weather was dreich to start with, the garden was verdant in the rain with beautiful fresh produce for us to craft our menu from. Eight of us set to work collecting our ingredients and preparing a shared meal.

What were we cooking?

We lit the fire pit then dug some tatties, including Arran Victory and Charlotte varieties fresh out of the ground to make a dish with garlic that had been drying and fresh rosemary from the herb patch. Using freshly pulled onions and courgettes to make skewers sprinkled in fresh oregano. We then rounded our meal off with a warm salad of char-grilled sweetheart cabbage, broccoli and cauliflower. We dressed this in a sauce of chopped basil, garlic, lemon juice, parsley and chilli. The meal was finished with some delicious apples cored and stuffed with sugar and cinnamon. We then roasted these in foil to make a tasty BBQ dessert.


Ayrshire walking and wheeling festival

The Ayrshire Walking & Wheeling Festival is back for its third year. They are once again organising walks showcasing the very best that Ayrshire and Arran have to offer.

The Festival has been arranged by The Trinity Active Travel Hub. They want to promote walking for health and for a greener way to travel for short journeys. There are walks for people at all levels, with many being easy or moderate. There are a few walks which are more strenuous, and these are usually walks that are either longer or involve rougher terrain.


Arran by-election online hustings

A North Ayrshire Council seat has become vacant following the recent resignation of Councillor Timothy Billings. Following the nomination deadline on Monday, August 12th, the candidates have now been confirmed. They are:

  • Charles Currie, Scottish Labour Party
  • James Andrew McMaster, Independent
  • Mackenzie Smith, Scottish Conservative and Unionist
  • Matt Taylor, Scottish Liberal Democrats
  • Carole Thomson, Reform UK
  • Neil Alexander Wilkinson, Scottish Greens

Voting gets under way at 7am on Thursday September 12th, and polling places will remain open until 10pm. The count, which is carried out electronically, will be held the following day, on Friday September 13th.


No New Oil and Gas for a Liveable Future

Following the Supreme Court’s historic ruling in June in Sarah Finch’s case against an oil field in Surrey (see article in the Voice for Arran here) the UK Government has just this week, conceded that approving licences for the Rosebank oil field and Jackdaw gas field without looking at their full climate impacts was unlawful. Uplift and Greenpeace brought a legal challenge against them, which the Government has decided not to defend.  

Back in December 2023 Greenpeace and Uplift launched two separate legal challenges to UK government plans to open Rosebank, a massive new oilfield in the North Sea. Greenpeace and the campaign group Uplift argued that the decision to press ahead with the Rosebank development – the UK’s biggest untapped oilfield – was incompatible with the UK’s legally binding climate commitments, and say ministers’ original analysis ignored the devastating impact of burning oil from the site. Tessa Khan, executive director of Uplift, said at the time: “If Rosebank goes ahead, the UK will blow its own plans to stay within safe climate limits. It’s that simple. If the government disagrees, it needs to provide evidence and prove it in court.”


Solar Energy, the global hunt for profits, farmers, communities. A two-part exploration and explanation.

“Agriculture is our wisest pursuit, because it will in the end contribute

most to real wealth, good morals, and happiness.”

-Thomas Jefferson 

PART TWO

UNDERSTANDING BRITISH AGRICULTURE and GOVERNMENT PRIORITIES

I needed to better understand British agriculture now, with solar energy and government priorities.  As a child in Wiltshire, I helped stook the sheaves of corn and chased harvest mice.  Collected mushrooms on the dairy farm fields. Since those days in the 1950s agriculture has evolved, mechanised, become intensive. It is a long way from the first farmers on Salisbury Plain with a cultivation-friendly climate about 3,500 years ago, during Britain’s Bronze Age, when crop growing came back after a cold period, so the scientists now believe. Farming villages rapidly replaced a mobile, herding way of life. This is my search for information on Britain‘s agriculture in the next 40 years, and the changes envisaged by the need for renewable energy, and food and the effect on communities and farmers.


Solar Energy, the global hunt for profits, farmers, communities. A two-part exploration and explanation.

“It isn’t always true that a critical end justifies desperate means.”

― Richelle E. Goodrich

PART ONE 

STOP LIME DOWN SOLAR FARM, NEAR SHERSTON

A couple of years ago in Voice for Arran (Issue 119, February 2021, Issue 127 October 2021*), I wrote about private equity companies, carbon credits and buying up retiring farmers’ land in Dumfries and Galloway to “grow trees” so they could sell carbon credits on what had been very productive food growing land. Since then, the value of carbon offsets market has plummeted after a series of scientific and media investigations revealed many offsetting schemes did nothing to mitigate biodiversity loss and many planted young trees died of drought or blew down in the ferocious winter gales!


Arran’s Housing Crisis, Problems and Solutions

Featured image shows rural cottage in Scotland. Credit Russ Daley on Unsplash.com

I have been the island’s housing officer since 2010. In November, I will retire, and so now is a good time to give my thoughts on the island’s housing situation and suggest some measures to improve the dire situation.

Housing on Arran is becoming less and less affordable. House prices and the few private rents are similar to those in Edinburgh, but wages are not. Adverts for new privately rented houses have almost disappeared. There is also far less social housing here than in the country as a whole. The extent of housing need, including homelessness, is hidden in official statistics. As well as causing stress and distress to many residents, the housing crisis is a break on the island’s whole economy, and imperils delivery of NHS and social care services. The free market has failed us. Yet North Ayrshire Council holds many of the levers that can improve the situation, and the Scottish Government holds others.


Therapeutic gardening this autumn

As part of the Wellbeing in Nature initiative at Heather Lodge, the therapeutic gardening sessions with Juliette Walsh are starting again in September. For more information see the poster below –

Wellbeing and Mental Health Support at Heather Lodge

Generous funding from the Scottish Government’s Communities Mental Health and Wellbeing Fund enables Heather Lodge to provide a choice of seven free activities promoting Wellbeing in Nature.

‘Wellbeing in Nature’ brings Social Prescribing to Arran, offering care and a range of interventions, including Dance Movement Therapy, Breath Walk, Exercise sessions, Women’s drumming circle, Shinrin Yoku (Forest Bathing), Therapeutic Gardening, Wild Food Foraging. All activities are free to participants.


Nature matters for Mental Health

First Minister John Swinney is drawing up his legislative priorities for the year ahead, and there is hope that his Programme for Government due in early September will include a commitment to bring forward a Natural Environment Bill. This will set targets for nature’s recovery, driving action across government and society. As part of the Scotland Loves Nature campaign, the RSPB set up an easy action people can take to show Mr Swinney there is significant public support to include the bill in his programme. This action adds to the stories they have been sharing from supporters in recent months – people from across Scotland have been explaining why #NatureMatters, and why targets for restoring nature are needed. 


Mindfulness for Living. A different approach to happiness.

Featured image by Luca on Unsplash

Mindfulness is being practiced everywhere these days from monasteries to businesses to schools, and even in the military. It has become part of mainstream life. Yet there is a danger of it becoming superficial – a quick fix to relieve stress and feeling low. What is so important is to practice mindfulness with heart – to bring kindness and compassion into the practice of mindfulness. Then it has the capacity for making a big difference and to transform our lives.