Issue 126

Hello everyone, we hope you are well and have had a great month. Here on Arran, October is literally blowing herself in and we have news of many island events to look forward to in the coming weeks. There is a Ceilidh in Whiting Bay in the middle of the month, a chance to help craft an Ogham alphabet with Arran Geopark, a celebration of All Hallows’ Eve at the end of the month, and Corrie Film Club is at last able to meet again! Also at the very start of October is the final chance to vote for COAST to become the RSPB’s Nature Champions of the Decade!

As we take in the global picture, this month heralds the final run up to the much anticipated COP26 UN Climate talks which start in November in Glasgow. This is set to be an epicentre of protest and hopefully, finally some significant coordinated governmental action as well. But first, last month saw a couple of local protests, including one objecting to the state of our ferry service and in WTF from the OAPs, Barb Taub gives her amusing interpretation of events. Then at the end of September a gathering at the Peace Tree in Whiting Bay was organised. The group met as part of Climate Fringe Week to highlight the urgent need for action on climate change and also to oppose the government’s recent proposals to increase its military capacity and spend billions on nuclear weapons. (At the same time as this peaceful action was happening, next to us in the Firth of Clyde a huge multinational military exercise was starting).

Last month also saw the 50th birthday of Greenpeace, and as this issue of the Voice has formed the twin concerns of militarism and ecological crisis (and their opposites ‘green’ and ‘peace’) have developed. As a long-time supporter of the organisation, Sally Campbell reports on the work they have been doing to both protect our natural world and also boycott the militarism that is part of the systems that support the destruction of it. Over the past five decades, “Greenpeace has grown from a handful of people setting sail to stop a nuclear test to the present day, an unstoppable worldwide movement of millions. The name came from the first time the words “green peace” were said together in Vancouver in 1970 (after the decision was made to confront US nuclear weapons testing).” Since then, the organisation has had some amazing successes, managing through creative campaigns to galvanise public opinion and forcing some substantial changes in policy.

It is possibly more than can be said for the Agreements that have been established over the last 30 years or so at the COP meetings. Nicolas Eliades provides us with an overview of these international climate talks in A Short History of COP. He gives a clear sense of the missed opportunities and lack of commitment from many participating nations that have beset the Conferences and resulted in the subsequent lack of progress. The climate scientists attending these meetings over the years have been “struck by the near total disconnect between what science demanded and what was delivered in the form of meaningful action.” Rex Wyler (a co-founder of Greenpeace) explores these themes further in Why is the political process so slow to respond to our ecological crisis?

While we joined together at the Peace Tree, there was a palpable sense of energy and hope in being part of the positive changes that need to happen, but also incomprehension that these problems could still be plaguing our world. In the next months, many of us will be looking to governments to reflect our aspirations and wish for radical change in their leadership. Will the world leaders get it together this time (or in time) in Glasgow? I am eager to see. Meanwhile we hope you enjoy the issue and wish you a lovely month, Elsa

 


Gathering at the Peace Tree, Whiting Bay

Over 50 people of all ages gathered at the Peace Tree in Whiting Bay last Sunday 26th September. In the run up to the forthcoming COP 26 in Glasgow there has been a renewed focus on the environment and the issue of the Weapons of Mass Destruction based in the Clyde.

At the same time some Arran CND members went to the gates of the Faslane submarine base for a protest whose particular emphasis was on the specific implications for the marine environment of radioactive pollution and the more general carbon footprint impact of military resources.


There is no Planet B

An essay by Arran High School student Louis Gray

We are living on this planet as if we have a new one to move to. Mother nature can only take so much of a beating until the biosphere of this gentle planet collapses. Right now we are at an important point in history - we choose if future generations get to live on a prosperous biodiverse earth or one that has been reduced to ruins. Throughout previous decades we have found out more about the complex workings of our climate and maybe a few decades ago you could be forgiven for not doing anything about climate change, but now we have the facts, we have the knowledge and there's no excuse for not playing your part in saving the planet.



Overcoming Martin Luther King Jr.’s ‘three evils of society’

This article was originally published on Waging Nonviolence https://wagingnonviolence.org/

On August 31, 1967, Martin Luther King, Jr. stood before an audience of thousands while delivering a prophetic speech at the National Conference for New Politics in Chicago. Spoken less than a year before his assassination on April 4, 1968, he famously decried what he called “the three evils of society,” namely, the “giant triplets of racism, economic exploitation and militarism.”


A New Ceilidh Band is Born

There will be a Family Ceilidh in Whiting Bay Hall on 15th October, courtesy of the recently formed Arran Ceilidh Band. The Band is available for private bookings such as birthdays, weddings and parties.

Introducing the band: On fiddles are Alice Maxwell and Rhodri Herapath. Alice played with the String Road Potholes ceilidh band for over ten years, playing for the Brodick summer ceilidhs as well as parties and weddings. She teaches violin and piano and is enthusiastic about bringing people together to play music.


WTF from the OAPs

“A DEMONSTRATION,” SAID THE TEXT. “BRING A POSTER AND WEAR BLACK.”

See, that’s what happens when you seriously annoy people from my generation. We’ve already had experience with protests—we’ve marched for equality, boycotted grapes, and laid down in front of tanks. And we vote.

Arran Ferry Action Group, a grassroots group which includes a significant portion of Arran residents, has been attempting to meet with the Scottish government to share concerns about the ferry situation. When AFAG** heard that Scotland’s recently appointed Transport Minister Graeme Day MSP was coming to the island to meet with a secret group of people about a secret list of things but the results of their meeting would be…wait for it…secret—they knew it was time to act.
**I did not and could not make up this unfortunate acronym.


The Green Claims Code

GREENWASHING IS ALL THE RAGE: IS IT COMING TO AN END?

The Green Claims Code The Green Claims Code.guidance on environmental claims on goods and serviceshttp://ow.ly/ypbq50GbOPJare a business in the UK,January2022A practical, how-to guide.guide to what ethical businesses need to knowWhat are environmental claims, and when are they misleading?omits or hidesWhy the Code is so important?Are unsustainable business models under threat?not omitting relevant informationAnilocrawww.voiceforarran.com April 2021 Issue 121ReferencesDespite Millstone Point, our campaigning is not yet doneU.K. Gov (2021) Green claims code: making environmental claims on Goods and ServicesSally CampbellSeptember 2021

A short history of COP

Come to think of it, what does COP26 actually stand for?

Most people will by now have heard how Glasgow will be hosting an international Climate Conference in November: COP26. Some may even be aware of its importance as a last chance to get things right.

But, wait. How did this come to be? And what happened at the 25 previous COPs? Come to think of it, what does COP actually stand for?

COP, or the Conference of the Parties, traces its origins to the United Nation’s first major Conference on the Environment and Development. The parties are the national and intranational governments of the world.


SNP-Greens Deal fails to deliver sustainability in Scotland’s seas

The new SNP-Green deal is breaking new ground for Scottish politics. It has been cautiously welcomed from some environmental quarters, but does it promise anything new for the sustainability of our seas, and can it deliver?

In the first deal of its kind in Scottish and UK politics, the SNP and the Scottish Green Party have announced a formal power-sharing arrangement. The deal was months in the making and it was reported that marine and fisheries issues were some of the thorny sticking points that held up the cooperation deal negotiations as the parties struggled to reconcile their differences.


Vote for COAST to be the RSPB Nature Champions of the Decade

Local community marine conservation group shortlisted for Nature Champion of the Decade

The Community of Arran Seabed Trust (COAST), has been named as one of the nominees for Nature Champions of the Decade at RSPB Scotland’s 10th anniversary of Nature of Scotland Awards.

Over the last 25 years, COAST has created a dynamic community-based path to restoring marine biodiversity. Key achievements include establishing the UK’s first community-led No Take Zone and the 280 km2 South Arran Marine Protected Area (MPA). Research conducted in collaboration with COAST has shown that there has been a dramatic increase (approx. 80%) in marine life abundance in the seas around Arran. This success has led to Arran and Scotland being regarded as international leaders in community-led marine conservation, including co-founder Howard Wood winning the Goldman Environmental Prize in 2015. Since then, COAST has continued to sare the word and advoacate for coastal community voices, and have opened the UK’s first community-based MPA Discovery Centre to help promote this cause further.


Living the Celtic Year Ceremonies

At the heart of Druidism lies a love of Nature and her changing faces as the seasons turn. Eight times a year, about every 6 weeks or so, Druids participate in a celebration that expresses this love.

Some people have asked if they have to have particular beliefs to join in with our ceremonies. The answer is simply, no. Our Druid Order (the Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids) is comprised of people of many faiths, who join together in celebrating the power and beauty of Nature in our lives. We work with spiritual teachings that combine the inspiration of the ancient Druids, and the old stories with contemporary scholarship and insights into the relationship between human beings and the world of plants and animals, stars and stones. There is absolutely no requirement to join the Order, and will only talk about it if someone asks us to.

Samhain or Hallow’een

31st October All Hallows Eve, 1st November All Saints Day, 2nd November All Souls Day

All Saint’s Eve (or All Hallow’s Eve) and Halloween fall on the same day each year, October 31. The concurrent holidays have been influenced by both Christian and pagan beliefs and rituals.



Corrie Film Club is back!

After a long time away due to Covid-19, the Corrie Film Club is now able to reconvene in person, and they are having their first evening next month. Here is a message from the Film Club committee:

We are going ahead with a feel good film on Sunday 17th October at 8.00pm - The Englishman who went up a Hill and came down a Mountain.

Set in 1917 against the background of the First World War, a cartographer arrives in a Welsh village to measure the height of their "mountain". The villagers are very proud of their "mountain", and are understandably disappointed and furious to find that it is in fact a "hill". Not to be outwitted by a rule (and the Englishmen who enforce it), the villagers set out to make their hill into a mountain, but to do so they must keep the English from leaving, before the job is done. There is love, humour, discord and moving sadness as the villagers, despite divisions, find common purpose in rectifying this state of affairs. Hugh Grant and Tara Fitztgerald star in this 1995 entry to the Moscow and Cannes Film Festivals.



Arran Visual Arts workshops

Arran Visual Arts is back with a Workshop programme to end 2021

On Saturday 23rd October Arran artist Heather McLeod will lead a workshop on Silk Painting. Held at the Ranger Centre, Brodick Castle, the workshop will run from 10 - 4 pm. No previous experience is necessary.

For information on how to book please see Arran Visual Arts website here

Heather is an established artist, and has worked from her Studio in Whiting Bay for almost 18 years.
 Living on Arran, the local landscape is the main inspiration for her work.



West of Scotland MSP Calls for Emergency Child Payment Increase

Labour MSP Katy Clark has said the Scottish Government must double the Scottish Child Payment immediately to offset the impact of devastating welfare cuts.

She said doubling the £10 a week payment immediately was critical, with the “triple whammy” of a cut to the uplift of Universal Credit, fuel bill hikes and an end to the furlough scheme all coming into an effect next month.

Scottish Labour is calling for the Scottish Child Payment to be doubled immediately and then doubled once more next year in order to meet child poverty targets.


Local MP highlights shocking State Pension payment delays

North Ayrshire and Arran MP Patricia Gibson has formally written to Ms Therese Coffey MP, Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, calling on her to urgently investigate and address ongoing delays in State Pension payments. This is after being contacted by a number of constituents who have still to receive their pension payments over a month after reaching their State Pension age.

Pensioner poverty has recently risen to a 15-year high of 18%, meaning that 2.1 million pensioners across the UK are now living in poverty. The State Pension is the most important source of income for many.


Marine News

Sent in by John Kinsman, station manager at Coastwatch St Monans, east Fife. Featured image shows the east Fife historic windmill which is now the Coastwatch St Monans base.

Massive search

A search on the river Tay took place after a major late night emergency operation was launched. Police, coastguards, coastguard helicopter and lifeboats were called to an area around the Tay Bridge, after concerns were raised for a man.
Locals reported hearing the helicopter arriving in the area just after 10pm and it spent more than two hours flying above the water. Data from Flightradar24 .com showed the aircraft travelling in zig zag pattern between the Tay road bridge and Burden Ness. The lifeboats from Broughty Ferry and local coastguards assisted in the search. However nothing was found after a long search.


Poem for October

The mum man

A long time ago and far, far away
a boy sat with his mum in a café and there were two men
flicking sugar at each other –
grown men. One looked at him then his mum
and said ‘cute kid’ which made her smile,
then he asked the boy if he wanted a custard doughnut and said they’d had three.
No thank you, his mum said,
but he got one anyway.

His mum looked at her watch and at the buses
and the man asked if she’d bought anything nice.

At first he – the boy – didn’t like them barging in –
having a bun was his treat for a good mark in Maths,
but he liked the doughnut (it was the first custard doughnut he’d ever had and he decided                                                                            he’d always have custard doughnuts from then on)
and he liked seeing his mum smile,
even if it was a different smile
to normal.