Issue 105

Hello and welcome to the December issue of the Voice for Arran.

It’s set to be a busy month both locally and further afield, and we have a range of interesting pieces that give a snapshot of some of what is going on! Before we even get to Christmas there is lots happening, in Arran and more globally. There is the UN Climate Change Conference COP25 taking place from 2nd to 13th in Madrid. Controversially the conference has relocated from its original place of Chile amid the protests that are happening there due to the growing inequalities in the country. For readers on the mainland who might be interested, there is a solidarity event , ‘Putting people and planet first, from Chile to Glasgow’ in Glasgow right at the start of the month.

Patricia Espinosa, Executive Secretary of UN Climate Change has said in a COP25 press release: “This year, we have seen accelerating climate change impacts, including increased droughts, storms and heat waves, with dire consequences for poverty eradication, human health, migration and inequality. The world’s small window of opportunity to address climate change is closing rapidly. We must urgently deploy all the tools of multilateral cooperation to make COP25 the launchpad for more climate ambition to put the world on a transformational path towards low carbon and resilience”.

Let’s hope governments attending the conference will take her words seriously, (see our articles The Climate Emergency and A Global Ocean Treaty for further discussions on these issues), as we also hope we can take (most of) the party leaders in the UK seriously, in their pre-election pledges on tackling the climate crisis. It seems that finally political parties here have understood the gravity of the situation and are planning to do some far reaching things about it. Jeremy Corbyn has even promised that under a Labour government two billion trees would be planted by 2040 and that a total of £3.7 billion will be invested in habitat restoration and creating 10 new national parks.

Back on Arran, the National Trust and Arran Ranger Service are already well on the way to doing a huge part in recovering natural habitats with the Glen Rosa Woodland project. In their article, the rangers tell us about the arrival of 32,000 native broadleaf saplings, including oaks, hazel, and willow, ready for planting. The plan is to plant 40,000 trees this winter, and they have made a fantastic start over the last month, with working volunteer groups and pupils from Brodick school and schools from the mainland, planting well over 3,000 already. There is a volunteer tree planting day planned for 5th December, and more will be planned for 2020. To give us a further idea on the precious and extensive ecosytems that even a single tree can support, we have included a fascinating study on the oak by Gordon Eaglesham.

Conferences, elections and trees aside, we also have several previews of exciting things happening in Arran including a performance of The Storm Bride by storyteller Martin Ross on the 4th. A fundraiser for Eco Savvy’s shop in Whiting Bay, it is billed as an environmental fairytale for the modern age, and sets to be a lovely festive night with music from the Daiko Drummers as well. There is too this year’s panto Peter Pan taking place in Lamlash from 5th – 7th, and also an interesting screening and talk, of Dream Big, on 8th, which tells the story of Mel Nicholls recovery from a series of paralysing stokes to becoming a GB paraolympian and record-breaking Handcycler. We have added the Arran Community and Voluntary Service newsletter to the Voice website, so if you miss the tree planting day on 5th check out the many other volunteering opportunities that you can get involved in, from Arran lunch clubs to helping at the Geopark interpretation centre, to spending some time at Coast in the Octopus Centre.

And finally after all that, there’s Christmas! From all at the Voice we would like to wish our readers a very happy and peaceful time, and we look forward to seeing you in time for New Year.

Root and Branch

Writer and rewilding campaigner, Gordon Eaglesham, explores the astonishing natural history of the magical oak tree. First published in the November issue of Think Like A Mountain. For more information see Scotland: The Big Picture

Few species demonstrate the inter-connectedness of nature better than the oak. A single tree can create and support an entire mini-ecosystem for centuries. A recent study of Britain’s two native oak species, the pedunculate and sessile, found no less than 2,300 species connected in some way to them, with many dependent on these majestic ‘wildlife reserves’ for food and shelter. For some creatures, the tree is their sole habitat. To explore these interactions and the oak’s countless nooks and crannies is to enter a hidden world.


Glen Rosa Woodland Revival

The National Trust for Scotland are hosting a volunteer tree planting day next week on Thursday 5th December, to help with our landscape scale woodland revival project in Glen Rosa. Their aim for the week - to plant 1,000 trees in one of Scotland’s most dramatic landscapes; Glen Rosa on the Isle of Arran. Generously supported by the players of Peoples Postcode Lottery, the project aims to revive woodland landscapes lost gradually overtime.

Tree loss in Glen Rosa started with felling by the first Bronze age settlers, then grazing by community farmers, followed by sheep after the people were cleared from the Glen during the clearances and now sheep are replaced by red deer. The remaining trees in the Glen cling to steep sided gullies or crags where the deer can’t reach. Now deer will be fenced out of a 400 ha area, allowing the ground to recover from over grazing and enabling us to kick start the habitat revival by planting trees.


A Global Ocean Treaty ties in with the Climate Emergency

Sally Campbell, Arran resident and marine scientist, reports on the progress of the work of Greenpeace in developing a Global Ocean Treaty with countries across the world.

My privilege this last two years has been to represent a major funding donor by participating in progress reporting and discussion within the Greenpeace team in one of their primary objectives to protect the resource diversity of our oceans. This is equally important closer to home too and I will explain why later.



A statement on Brexit from the Scottish Creel Fisherman’s Federation

Brexit Situation Statement

‘Seas Of Opportunity’. Only for the few.

1539 of them are under 10 metres longAlistair Sinclair,SCFF National coordinatorScottish Creel Fisherman's Federation                                                                                                                    Furnace, Inverary, Argyll, PA32 8XX                                                                                                                                     Tel. 01499 500644  Email. ats1@btopenworld.com

Glasgow event to show solidarity with Chilean protestors

Putting people and planet first, from Chile to Glasgow

An event organised by Friends of the Earth, Scottish Trade Union Congress (STUC) and Glasgow Supports Chile

Sunday 1st December, 2-9pm STUC, 333 Woodlands Rd, Glasgow

Putting people and planet first, from Chile to Glasgow’Glasgow Supports Chile, Friends of the Earth Scotland and the Scottish Trades Union Congress (STUC).Glasgow Supports ChileFriends of the Earth ScotlandSTUC General SecretaryfacebookValentina and Voces del Sur,Nae Pasaran

The Climate Emergency

Environmental campaigner, marine ecologist and Arran resident, Sally Campbell, assesses here the lack of funding currently being invested in tackling the climate emergency and suggests that after the election next month, whoever is in government will need to start making extensive but in no way unimaginable changes in public expenditure and to the country's tax systems to start moving towards a green economy.

“The open sea, the Arctic, the Antarctic and the high mountains may seem far away to many people,” said Hoesung Lee, Chair of the IPCC*. “But we depend on them and are influenced by them directly and indirectly in many ways – for weather and climate, for food and water, for energy, trade, transport, recreation and tourism, for health and wellbeing, for culture and identity.”


Draught proof your home with secondary glazing

Glaze & Save are magnetic secondary glazing and draught proofing specialists - “Our award-winning flagship bespoke magnetic secondary glazing InvisiTherm® is an innovative polycarbonate secondary glazing that turns single glazing into double glazing, eliminating the need to replace windows.”

On 15th November, Dr Tanya Ewing, inventor and businesswoman, came to talk about her company’s secondary glazing product InvisiTherm. Hosted by Eco Savvy, a number of interested Arran locals attended and were treated to a practical, informative and optimistic hour with Tanya. She then visited attendees at home to give further advice on energy saving changes we can make.


Growing Scotland’s Circular Economy – the Cumbernauld Tool Library

TOOL libraries function on a membership basis, but allow access to a range of tools (and sports equipment, games, and craft equipment) to be borrowed and shared. With Eco Savvy currently planning exciting future projects, including development of circular economies on Arran, a tool library could definitely be an option to increase recycling, and the sharing of resources. The Cumbernauld Tool Library http://toollibrarycumbernauld.org/ is one such place that has opened this year, and the youtube link below shows Teri from Cumbernauld explaining a little bit more about how they can be set up, why they are an important part of reducing our consumption and so also reducing our carbon footprints.



Santa comes to Arran

A review of the recent Music Arran concert, with pianist Santa Ignace. By Alice Maxwell.

The Latvian pianist Santa Ignace presented a Music Arran audience with an extraordinary early Christmas present this month. Her virtuosic playing pinned us to our seats, leaving us speechless and lost in wonder.

Santa is named after the Italian Saint, Ignacio, for no particular reason, other than their family name is Ignace. Her father is an accomplished jazz pianist and was her first teacher. She later studied at the Latvian Conservatory under Latvian teachers who had studied in Russia under the highly demanding regime which still exists today. Lessons were strict and nothing but the highest of standards were acceptable. Santa flourished in this setting, and gave her first public performance when she was 16. Her final teacher (5 years ago, in Amsterdam) abandoned their lessons, saying there was nothing left to teach her.


Martin Ross to perform The Storm Bride

Storyteller and playwright Martin Ross is performing The Storm Bride      a modern fairy tale for an endangered planet

Wednesday 4th December at Whiting Bay Hall, 7pm.

A fundraising event for Eco Savvy. There will also be music from Druma Daiko

This show takes strong elements of Scottish fairy and folk tale, yet situates them in a very contemporary context of an environment being fracked, polluted and generally exploited to within an inch of its life. Energy magnate Nathan Gonrad has discovered a whole new source of cheap energy deep in the bedrock under a Scottish highland valley, but bringing it to the surface causes an environmental disaster. Meanwhile, an old sweetheart of his daughter finds himself invited to the daughter's wedding to a very mysterious groom, all of which has a mysterious connection to the disaster - and an attempt to placate supernatural forces within the ravaged valley.


A poetic invitation to this year’s Christmas panto!

Come to the Panto if you can And meet the dashing Peter Pan, The scheming fairy Tinkerbell And the Darling family as well

Come to the Panto if you dare As Captain Hook is there to scare With hook for hand He threatens all in Neverland

Come to the Panto - do not miss Nana Smee may throw you a kiss. A fairy tale well known to all, See you there - you'll have a ball!

With many thanks to Alice Maxwell for her lyrical invitation to -

The 2019 Lamlash Drama Club & Friends Production of


Rural Tourism Infrastructure Fund Now Open for Applications

Local MSP Kenneth Gibson, reports on a new fund for local communities that are experiencing increased numbers of visitors.

Tourist sites in Scotland’s rural areas such as on the Isle of Arran can now apply for a share of £3 million of SNP Government funding aimed at helping tourist attractions and local communities deal with the impact of increased visitor numbers on local infrastructure by helping with improvements such as parking areas, visitor facilities and recycling points.


Dream Big film screening

Mel Nicholls - DREAM BIG FILM SCREENING & TALK Sunday 8th December 2019, 19:00 – 21:00

Arran High School

This is the story of Handcycle Britain. Mel Nicholls' return to Arran is in her words, "coming home to where I rediscovered my adventure, following a series of life-changing strokes".EventBriteAbout MelDream Big FilmThe evening will be presented by Mel Nicholls,Film Produced by Lewis Smith, Directed by Jack Davies, Friction Collective.

Christmas Corrie Film Club

On Sunday December 8th the Corrie film club will have a Christmas programme that begins at 7.00 pm with a showing of Dinner for One, followed by supper and then It’s a Wonderful Life.

Dinner for OneDirector Heinz Dunkhause, 1963. Germany. 18 mins Cert Uupper will be at 7.30 pmIt’s A Wonderful Life Director Frank Capra, 1946. 135 mins Cert UBedford Falls, Building and LoanFrank CapraJames StewartFeatured image shows a scene from It's A Wonderful LIfe



Marine News

Recent news from the east coast, sent in by John Kinsman, station manager at Coastwatch St. Monans, east Fife.

Fishing Boat Fall Probe

A fishing boat skipper who drowned in Aberdeenshire was not wearing a flotation device, a report has revealed.
A major search was launched outside MacDuff Harbour after creel fisherman Tony Masson, 67, fell from his boat Sea Mist BF918. His son saw the boat circling and raised the alarm.

The Marine Accident Investigation Branch concluded that Mr Masson became entangled in rope. He was dragged overboard.


Poem for December

A Winter Morning

By Gerry Cambridge(at aged 14, Ayrshire)This poem is by Gerry Cambridge (b. 1959). He founded and edits 'The Dark Horse', a Scottish -American poetry magazine. From 1997 to 1999 he was Hugh MacDiarmid writing fellow at Brownsbank, Biggar. This poem, based on memories as a teenager growing up in rural Ayrshire in the 1970s, is one of a group of poems in which he explores adolescence. And, for me, this poem took me back to my youth. Hoping for snow, the best present to get for Christmas!Many happy returns to you all, Isla