Issue 141

Hello and welcome to the new issue of the Voice for Arran. We hope the start of February finds you well! Based on a Celtic tradition, the celebration of Imbolc begins today, marking the mid-point between the winter solstice and spring equinox. Though happy for the assurance of spring soon to come, after an astronomical energy bill this month, I have nearly all appliances off and am wearing at least three jumpers, while I contemplate the themes that have come in with this issue, of war, climate change and energy.

For this month marks a whole year of war in Ukraine, and despite the present heightened risk of nuclear war, last week Scottish campaigners were also observing the second anniversary of the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. While the Treaty is growing in stature and credibility, despite the nuclear states refusal to engage with it, sitting here writing in the semi darkness, I am wondering if and how all these things might be connected.

The upcoming council budget here in North Ayrshire seems to be another related issue. In a recent survey the council asked for our views on the future of local services. With their very limited resources, they asked what are the most important things for them to focus on in the next year. As far as I could tell nearly all the options given were essential – keeping sufficient numbers of teachers in schools, action on climate, maintaining roads and tracks, outdoor education. NAC wrote, “We are facing unprecedented budget challenges due to factors that are largely beyond our control, including rapidly rising energy costs, inflation and the cost-of-living crisis.”

In these uncertain times, it is good to be reminded there are things we can do that can make a difference. As Katy Clark suggests in her response to the budget, the government could use their tax raising powers. She said, “Under the devolved settlement, the Scottish Government can create local levies on inheritance, workplace parking, carbon emissions and tourism“ so that “Instead of passing on cuts to local government, they must explore every possible avenue to ensure vital public services are not only protected but improved in the years to come.”  And as I have found out, although my enormous debt to SSE isn’t good news in many ways, it has meant I have implemented some radical energy saving measures I otherwise may not have just now.

Alongside these matters, there is a lot going on in Arran this month and interesting events to look forward to. There is an ArranSound Listen In radio play, meetings with the Arran Saltire Society and the Arran Natural History Society, a Corrie Film Club mini festival, and a really lovely concert with Music Arran and the Gould Piano Trio. There are also some timely energy workshops with the Eco Savvy Green Islands Project, where participants will be able to sign up to get an EPC for their home, and find out about ways to reduce energy use. I will also be writing to councillors in support of the Arran Outdoors for All campaign, which has been set up to highlight what an incredible asset the Arran Outdoor Education Centre is in the face of its possible closure.

Wishing you all a lovely month, Elsa

For a State of Peace

Last month Scottish campaigners marked the nuclear ban treaty’s second anniversary. The treaty marks an important step in exerting peace, and points to the role Scotland could play in creating that world.

On Sunday 22nd January disarmament campaigners in Scotland and across the globe will mark the second anniversary of the entry into force of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW). States which join the TPNW are prohibited from having anything to do with nuclear weapons. As of today, the Treaty has been signed by 98 of the UN’s 193 states. Many more intend to join the Treaty, as shown by the fact that around 130 states regularly support it whenever it is on the agenda at the UN General Assembly.


Climate Change, Renewables and War

The shift to renewable energy is speeding up, because wars have unintended consequences. Russia’s war in Ukraine is speeding up the global energy transition from fossil fuels to renewables. This is good news for the climate, nature and indeed for us all. Even North Ayrshire Council is introducing more car electric charging points, encouraging insulation and renewable energy.

Three recent developments show not all is gloom and doom. Reported by The New York Times:


Holocaust Memorial Day, ‘Ordinary People’, and Climate Change

Holocaust Memorial Day just took place on the 27th of January and is when we remember the millions of people murdered during the Holocaust, under Nazi Persecution and in the genocides which followed in Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur.

In the words of the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, “this is a time when we seek to learn the lessons of the past and recognise that genocide does not just take place on its own – it’s a steady process which can begin if discrimination, racism and hatred are not checked and prevented.


Arran Outdoors for All – Take action Stop the Closure

As reported in last month's Voice, the Arran Outdoor Education Centre is facing possible closure when North Ayrshire Council decides its budget next month.

In the run up to the decision on the Centre's future on March 1st, the campaign Arran Outdoors for All has been set up to highlight the enormous asset the Outdoor Education Centre is, and has been from its beginnings in the 1970’s.

Jamie Green MSP at Holyrood yesterday, raising concern at the possible closure  said, "Outdoor education has an overwhelmingly positive impact on young people, teaching them vital life skills that simply can't be learned in the classroom."


High Corrie Philosopher

Philosophy is such a strange pursuit. There from the beginning of time surely, and certainly from the times of the ancient Greeks. It has always had a perennial fascination for us humans. Rather lovely that one lady who practised it had a home here in High Corrie. Eva Schaper, originally from Germany, was a member of the philosophy faculty at Glasgow University for 40 years from 1952 till her death in 1992. For the last many years she was the Professor of Philosophy there.


January news from Katy Clark MSP

AXING OF ELECTED SURGERIES IN AYRSHIRE & ARRAN “DEEPLY CONCERNING” – 12th January

Commenting on NHS Ayrshire & Arran cancelling elective procedures for three weeks, Scottish Labour MSP for West Scotland Katy Clark said: “This another deeply concerning development in what is surely the worst crisis our NHS has ever seen – certainly the worst in NHS Ayrshire & Arran board’s history.

“We now have a situation where A&E departments are overrun, the public are being asked not to attend for minor injuries, ambulances are stuck queuing to drop off patients, and patients are missing out on important procedures because emergency departments and clinical assessment units are under such pressure.


January news from Patricia Gibson MP

TIME TO DELIVER FAIRNESS TO ROYAL MAIL WORKERS - 3rd January

This Friday I meet representatives from Royal Mail, after joining local posties on the picket line at Saltcoats sorting office in December, as the attached photo shows.

In joining striking workers, I understood that many of us would receive Christmas cards from loved ones later than usual due to postal strikes, which sadly look set to continue. I also tabled a Westminster Early Day Motion in support of Royal Mail workers which can be seen at: https://edm.parliament.uk/early-day-motion/60447


Reintroducing Lynx to Scotland

Last week in the Scottish Parliament the Scottish Government presented its Biodiversity Strategy to 2045.

The strategy is the starting point in a process leading to the development of rolling delivery plans and, through the introduction of a Natural Environment Bill, statutory nature restoration targets.

Unfortunately, Scotland currently ranks 28th from the bottom in the Biodiversity Intactness Index (BII). A global analysis on how much human activity has impacted nature.


Rewilding Mountains Webinar

Join a webinar with Scotland: The Big Picture, on 15th February, to explore what rewilding mountains means to Scotland’s environments

Scotland's hills and mountains are a defining feature of our landscape. The first of Scotland: The Big Picture's #NextGen series of webinars will explore what rewilding mountains means to young people, as well as share information, resources, stories about rewilding processes, and actions that are taking place across Scotland.


Urgent vision and strategy needed

Two stories from Brazil that show change is coming with the country’s new President. The Power of Office and the election of Lula da Silva

Tragedy in the AmazonWhat about the UK in 2023?directlylink Changes of POWER at the topPresident of the USA Joe Biden is pro- environment,CARBON OFFSETS  leading carbon standard$2bn (£1.6bn) voluntary offsetsThe GuardianBased on a new analysis at least 90% of Verra’s rainforest carbon credits do not represent real emission reductions94.9m carbon credits claimed5.5m real emission reductionsThe GuardianFeatured image credit: Greenpeace.org

Energy help from the Green Islands Project

Get an Energy Performance Certificate and energy help for your home

By Ruth McLaren, published on the Arran Eco Savvy website 

Eco Savvy are delighted to have been awarded funding from the Scottish Government’s Rural Communities Ideas Into Action Fund for a Green Islands Net Zero domestic energy project.

The work will try to address some of the issues with Arran’s housing and related services to islanders. It will also help build a better understanding of the island’s carbon emissions as a whole and the best way to potentially reduce these.


Arran Natural History Society meeting in February

A note from the Arran Natural History Society about their meeting this month. See their Facebook page for updates.

It’s all go in the world of red squirrels!

January 21st was annual Red Squirrel Appreciation Day and campaigning group Saving Scotland's Red Squirrels chose that date to publish their 2022 Great Scottish Squirrel Survey.

That along with a recent squirrelpox outbreak in south Scotland has kept the wildlife charity busy in the start of the new year.


Poem for the month

home

blind man
came to the isle, said
now I have parameters
I hear the surf
I hear the birds my eyes
can’t map which way
they come          my hands
can’t tell their shape
the voices of          the wind
and birdsong tell me
all I need to know

Aonghas MacNeacail (1942 – 2022)

from Rock and Water (1990:Polygon)

I like this poem because it suggests that in giving attention to the wildness at the edge of our lives our sense of ‘home’ might be expanded.

IM


The Wild Escape project

Artists and environmentalists are creating a mass artwork inspired by animals to highlight the biodiversity crisis. Be part of a nationwide celebration of UK wildlife and nature, and if you're an off island Voice reader, discover family-friendly events at museums and galleries near you. This article is based on a press release from the Art Fund 

Launched at the end of January by the UK’s leading arts charity, Art Fund, The Wild Escape is the largest ever collaboration between the UK’s museums. Supported by Arts Council England, the project aims to inspire hundreds of thousands of children to visit museums and respond creatively to the threat to the UK’s natural environment by looking for animals featured in museum collections and creating their own wildlife artworks. The children’s animals will be brought to life in a newly imagined epic-scale artwork, created by leading immersive games studio, PRELOADED, to be unveiled on Earth Day 2023, Saturday 22 April.


Zero Waste Cafe and Health Walk dates

Some dates for your diary in February - Visit the Zero Waste Cafe in Shiskine, Lochranza or Corrie, for some packaging free shopping and delicious soup and baking! Or join one of the Stroll with it Arran! health walks. These are popular so remember to email ahead in advance and book a spot.



Corrie Film Club’s Day in the Dark

Corrie Film Club is delighted to announce its free mini-film festival, Day in the Dark, in Corrie and Sannox Village Hall on Sunday 5th February.

Come and spend a luscious day watching films and being fed coffee, lunch, tea and supper – and all free. It starts at 11.00am and finishes at 10.00pm but you can come and go as you please. We hope that as many people as possible will come and support Scotland and film. This year the theme is Scotland (with one Icelandic film - well sort of same part of the world!).



Join ArranSound’s next Listen In play

ArranSound's next Listen In will be on Sunday the 12th February at 7.15pm in The Ormidale Pavilion in Brodick

Arransound.com in partnership with author Jill Korn, will premier

'There Goes Craufurdland’ 

A new radio play, the third in Jill's hugely successful Ayrshire Trilogy:

An historical drama, set in rural Ayrshire of the 18th and 19th centuries, based on an Ayrshire lady's diary. Craufurdland Castle in Fenwick, Ayrshire, keeps its secrets close. But Janet Craufurd suspects that the house has its own story to tell – a story lost in a secret passage, in hidden rooms, in dusty books and neglected papers.



Arran Saltire Society February meeting

The next meeting of the Arran Saltire Society is on Wednesday15th February in Corrie and Sannox Village Hall. The guest speaker will be Ruth Impey, known to many as the Project Manager for the Arran Arts Heritage Trail. The talk will be preceded by the Society's AGM, which will take place immediately before.

The Arran Saltire Society say, "We're delighted that Ruth has accepted our invitation to talk about her work and the progress of the project from start to finish, as well as the legacy it has left here on Arran and beyond. Ruth is an experienced teacher, researcher and maker with an impressive history of managing projects both in the UK and internationally. Previously she developed community projects for a large-scale National Lottery Heritage Fund project, Rediscovering the Antonine Wall which included an arts trail. A keen ceramicist, Ruth has an extensive knowledge of Arran, having visited the island every year since childhood."


Lamlash Burns

LAMLASH BURNS SUPPERS JANUARY 2023

TWA WITHIN A PERIOD OF 7 DAYS, HOSTED BY LAMLASH GOLF CLUB

A double bill for Keith Wallbank of Whiting Bay

All photo credits: Jim Henderson

Time to Abolish the Unelected House of Lords

In 1910, the fledging Labour Party had a bold Manifesto which committed it to abolishing the outdated, undemocratic House of Lords.

Despite UK Labour Governments in the 1920s, 30s, 40s, 50s, 60s, 70s, 90s and 00s, that ‘pledge’ was never implemented. Indeed, hundreds of retired Labour MPs, donors and supporters have enjoyed a sedate and lucrative retirement in the Lords, which currently has 175 Labour Peers.

Now, given that Labour is mirroring the Tories on so many policies from backing Brexit to opposing the right of Scotland to hold an independence referendum, we are expected to be excited by their latest ‘commitment’ to abolishing the Lords. They really do think voters are daft!


Corrie Film Club

As well as this month's Day in the Dark event, Corrie Film club will be holding a usual film night on Sunday 12th February. The film that will be showing is Lamb (Iceland 2021. Valdemar Johannsson. 106 mins. Cert 15), in the Corrie and Sannox village hall, at 7.30pm.

In rural Iceland, a childless couple discover a strange and unnatural newborn in their sheep barn. They decide to rear it as their own, but sinister forces are determined to return the creature to the wilderness that birthed her.



Marine News

Sent in by John Kinsman, operations manager Coastwatch St Monans, east Fife

Lifeboat rescue

A stricken fishing boat with three people on board was towed to safety by two Fife lifeboats in appalling conditions just off east Wemyss in west Fife. The boat suffered engine failure after a rod got caught round it's propeller in atrocious seas. The alarm was raised by the people on board and lifeboats from, Kinghorn and Anstruther raced to the rescue around a mile off shore. The fishing boat was safely towed into Methil harbour there were no casualties.


Recipe for the month

Sent in by Anne Kinsman

Charred Broccoli, lemon and walnut pasta

Ingredients:

1 head broccoli cut into small florets and stalk cut in to small pieces
3 tablespoons olive oil
150g penne or fusilli
2 garlic cloves crushed
1 table spoon roughly chopped walnuts
Pinch of chilli flakes
Half lemon juice

Method:

1. Heat the grill to high. Put the broccoli on a baking tray and drizzle over 1tbsp of the oil, season, and toss together. Grill for 8 to 10 minutes tossing around halfway through until crispy and charred.
2. Cook the pasta in salted water following pack instructions, drain reserving a cup of cooking water.
3. In a frying pan heat the remaining 2tbsp oil over a medium heat and fry the garlic, walnuts and chilli for 3 to 4 minutes until golden.
4. Tip in the pasta, broccoli, and lemon juice reserving a little of the juice. Add a splash of the reserved cooking water and toss everything together to coat the pasta. Serve in warmed bowls with the remaining lemon juice scattered over.
5. Enjoy the meal!