Issue 139

Hello dear readers, we hope this issue of Voice for Arran finds you well as we head into the last month of 2022. There are scientific reasons for why time, or our perception of it, speeds up as we get older, but still I can’t quite believe we are already back in December! Nevertheless I find it a lovely time of year for its sense of anticipation – of (hopefully!) joyful gatherings, of the sparkle of lights, of the promise of longer days returning at the darkest point of the year.

In this issue we have news of events that have been happening over the past month as well as of the Christmassy things to come. Amongst a sprinkling of carol concerts and festive markets, over the next weeks we can look forward to the return of the Arran Christmas pantomime, some winter crafting workshops with Eco Savvy, and a really interesting talk organised by the Arran Natural History Society on ‘The amazing power of bees to change lives’.

We also have reports on wider events that have been taking place across the globe, where it seems a great deal of change has not been happening. In News from COP27, we hear about the lack of action characterising the COP process once again. The strong commitment needed from governments to decarbonise and reduce emissions has been left for yet another year. This outcome is especially disturbing given that before the start of the climate conference, the UN published a report stating there is ‘no credible pathway in place’ to keep the rise in global temperatures below the 1.5 degrees mark.

It would be easy to get lost in a sea of despondency at this news. Yet one theme to emerge from several of the pieces is the concerted community activity that continues, regardless of the lack of direction or coordination on a global level. In Arran, as elsewhere, such instances are clear – from those who met on 12th November for Arran’s day of climate action, to the ongoing work of organisations such as COAST, Eco Savvy, and the Arran Ferry Action Group. The minutes (published in this issue) from AFAG’s recent AGM indicate both how much this group are doing for the island, and the numerous challenges they are working against. They also reveal the kind of focus and determination needed to bring about change in an opaque political and economic environment.

And there are always wee gaps. Perhaps the picture we have posted above, taken last month by an Arran resident, captures this state of affairs perfectly. Photographed at Brodick pier just a week ago, the image of a tiny Antirrhinum or Snapdragon growing amidst the landscape of tarmac and stone is astonishing. Not only for the lateness in blooming (more evidence of unseasonal warmth?), but for its bright and tenacious beauty, and its remarkable ability to flourish in such apparently adverse surroundings.

I love these examples from our natural world, of bees changing lives and flowers growing through cracks in an unyielding concrete environment. And while much of the time it seems humanity is doing its best to destroy these things, we can learn a lot from the qualities of resourcefulness and fortitude they reflect. Qualities which many people are trying to uphold, and which, in order to protect such life, we will certainly need much of in the coming year… From all of us at the Voice, we wish you happy and inspiring times this Christmas! Elsa

With thanks to Eleanor Winship for permission to use her image.

News from COP27 and the Environment

COP27 overshadowed by Lack of Ambition

‘No credible pathway’UN reportwoefully inadequate”.During the Conferencewww.carbonbrief.org

Here are some of the key Unearthed takeaways:

How climate change is forcing Kenyan women to leave their homes behindDisplacement Monitoring CentreBeef and the Amazon an example of dishonest practices, driving climate changeImazonRevealed: How the meat industry funds the ‘greenhouse gas guru”approach to the tobacco industry playbook, which refuted health implications in smoking by clever PR for 40 years.

CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION AND DISHONESTY

Mines, pipelines, oil rigs: What HSBC’s ‘sustainable finance’ really pays for.Bureau of Investigative Journalism and Source Materialsustainability-linked bonds”What Really Happens When Emissions Vanish? The need for vigilance!“market based accounting”Bloomberg investigationTree Planting and Land Pledges would need an area larger than the USA, report estimates.References:Junk Carbon Offsets are What Make These Big Companies ‘Carbon Neutral”.COP27: Key outcomes agreed at the UN climate talks in Sharm el-SheikhGreenpeaceUnearthed 

Responding to Christmas Overwhelm

Among all the definitions of mindfulness, the one that I particularly like I came across years ago in one of Pema Chodron‘s many books (and I can’t remember which one!). It says that

mindfulness is loving all the details of our lives

I guess that’s at the heart of my motivation to practice bringing mindfulness to my consuming, to the many small decisions made daily about what to ‘take in’. That goes for what I eat and drink, for what I buy and who I buy it from, what I ingest in terms of news, music, films, books, conversation topics. And I wouldn’t for a moment hold myself up as a great example in any of these areas – but I would really recommend (if you haven’t already), to extend your mindfulness practice into loving all the details of your life.



Arran Ferry Action Group Annual General Meeting

Minutes of the public meeting held at 2pm at the Ormidale Pavilion, Brodick, on Saturday 26th November 2022

Present: Sally Campbell, Sam Bourne, John Ford, Chris Attkins, Jan Attkins, Ian Relf, Peter Mackay, Alastair Bilsland, Douglas Bilsland, John Campbell, Walter Brown, Carol Davis, Barbara Paulucy, David Hutchison, Jim Climie, Bill Calderwood, Bob Haddow, Robert Cumming.

Apologies: Barb Taub, Sharon Shenhav, Gavin Fulton, David Barker, Douglas Coulter.


The Samsons in the Garngad

From The Garngad - God’s Garden - to the Great Garden - High Corrie

By Peter Finlay

I started as minister to Townhead Church in 1988. Townhead Church sits atop Garngad Hill in Glasgow’s East End with its amazing 198 foot high spire. The Hill is one of the highest places near the centre of the city. The Hill whose tall spire German bombers used to guide them as they headed for the Clydebank shipyards. The Garngad - the locals would call it ‘the Good and the Bad’, or else God’s Garden, which sounds great as a place for a church. Unfortunately the Garngad was better known as a place of poverty and is depicted as such in a 1915 etching I have. Similar in name, if perhaps in little else, to An Gàrradh Mòr, the Great Garden or High Corrie, An Coire Àrd. And that is where I now live.



Arran Natural History Society December talk

On Tuesday, December 6th at 7.30pm, Dr Nicola Bradbear, founder and CEO of the charity Bees for Development, will give an online talk  on 'The amazing power of bees to change lives’.

In this talk Nicola Bradbear will describe the work of the organisation Bees for Development now approaching its 30th year, enabling people in different nations to vastly improve their lives by gaining reliable beekeeping skills, while improving their local habitat and surrounding ecology at the same time.


Poem for December

Hearsay

At the back of my mind, there is always
the freight-line that no longer runs
in a powder of snow

and footprints
from that story we would tell
of the girl from the next house but one

who should have been tucked up in bed
when she went astray,
a huddle of wool in the grass, or a silver bracelet

falling for days
through an inch and a half
of ice.

Nothing I know matters more
than what never happened:
the white at the back of my mind and the legends we made


Interiors of Arran book launched

Arran Civic Trust launches its new book, Interiors of Arran

Today, 1st December, Arran Civic Trust is launching their new, fully illustrated book Interiors of Arran. An ideal Christmas gift and a companion to Buildings of Arran.

This new book demonstrates the richness of the island’s heritage and resourcefulness of its people with many examples of aesthetic sensitivity and local artisanal skill. The book has been a long time in preparation, not least because of Covid interruptions, and the committee hope that you will agree it has been worth the wait.


COP27: Addressing the Climate Emergency

Following the cautious progress made during COP26 in Glasgow, COP27 in Egypt was always going to be a difficult summit, with many leaders from across the globe vociferously defending their countries’ immediate economic and geopolitical interests.

That is to say those leaders who even attended a conference aimed at tackling the greatest challenge humanity is facing. I’m therefore glad that the UK Prime Minister eventually U-turned on his ridiculous initial position that he was “too focused on the domestic economy to attend” even if he only did so for fear of being upstaged by Boris Johnson.


Science and the Parliament November 2022

INNOVATION

: Entrepreneurship is the engine fuelling innovation, employment generation and economic growth. Only by creating an environment where entrepreneur-ship can prosper and where entrepreneurs can try new ideas and empower others can we ensure that many of the world’s issues will not go unaddressed4th Divergence of all Technologies, where we are now.Technology continues to move faster and faster. The biggest change in the world today is that the young don’t learn from the old, they teach the old about the world today.In the new world, it is not the big fish which eats the small fish, it's the fast fish which eats the slow fish.Present thinking:new robotForbes Technology Councilmanufacturing jobsSo, what about Generation Alpha (born between 2010-2024)?So, what should education look like?innovation@rgu.ac.ukwww.rgu.ac.uk/innovation.References:The Fourth Industrial Revolution

I will fight ‘morally indefensible’ austerity

A statement from Katy Clark MSP last month on the situation facing the people of North Ayrshire (and all over the UK) this winter:

West Scotland MSP Katy Clark has described Tory plans for further austerity as “morally indefensible” as she pledged to fight it in the months to come.

Last week, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt announced a raft of tax rises and real terms spending cuts in the region of tens of billions.
The Scottish Labour MSP said this will have a devastating effect on North Ayrshire, which has already suffered from years of cuts to public services and council budgets, passed on by the Scottish Government.


The Warm Room

A great community response by Whiting Bay and Kildonan Parish Church to the cost of living crisis and the onset of colder weather - the Warm Room has been set up in the church hall and is open to everyone on Mondays and Fridays.


Orkneys the best place to be with an EV… or perhaps Lamlash is

With two new connectors (and 4 car parking spaces) installed at the Ship House car park in Lamlash recently, this study by the International Drivers Association is quite interesting. With more (fast charging) points due to be installed at the Clockhouse car park at the Drift Inn, also Lamlash, perhaps North Ayrshire’s ranking of ninth worst place in Scotland for accessibility to a public EV charge point will improve. At least if you live in or are visiting Lamlash you’ll be one of the best places. With a population of around 1,100 and 4 new connectors, that is 1 connector for every 275 people. As the report says, there is still a long way to go, but it’s a great start for this village! 


COAST Explorer Survey

COAST are excited to share their amazing new asset, the COAST Explorer, to help support their marine restoration activities, and they want to make sure they use the boat to maximum benefit for the widest groups of people. COAST have set up a survey to gather the community's input on how the boat could be used and how it may best support plans for research, education, citizen science and other activities.

COAST write:

Now that our amazing new boat is here we want to hear from YOU! How would you like to see COAST Explorer used?


Winter events with Eco Savvy

Join Eco Savvy this month for some lovely festive activities, from a spot of Christmas shopping (online now as well as in the shop), to some gorgeous winter workshops, or a visit to one of the Zero Waste Cafes. See below for details on all there is to come:

The Eco Savvy shop in Whiting Bay recently re-opened after refurbishment and they are ready now to welcome all of you for the festive season. There is still a range of books, household items, clothes and all the pre-loved treasures, as well as some great things in our eco products section.




Christmas Corrie Film Club

Corrie Film Club is having its Christmas special on Sunday 12th December.

The evening begins at 7.00pm with the, now traditional, annual showing of 20 minute short comedy starring Freddie Frinton as butler in Dinner for One. This will be followed by supper at 7.30 and then a showing at 8.00 of The Singing Ringing Tree.

Dinner for One (Director Heinz Dunkhause, 1963. Germany. 18 mins Cert U)

An older Lady is having a birthday again and has invited four guests: Sir Toby, Lord Pommeroy, Admiral von Schneider and Mr. Winterbotton. The only problem is that the four have passed away long ago, and so the butler has to step in and help drinking all the sherry, wine and champagne served with the birthday dinner.



Marine News

Sent in by John Kinsman, operations manager Coastwatch St Monans, east Fife. Featured image shows the Coastwatch station in the old St Monans windmill.

Search for person

A search for a person in the water around Kinghorn coast in Fife was stood down after items of clothes were claimed. A rescue helicopter and lifeboats began searching the Kinghorn coast after items of clothing were found near the water at Pettycur bay.

Kinghorn lifeboat station posted images of the items on the Facebook page, in the hope someone would recognise them. After searching for four hours the operation was stood down with owner of the clothing coming forward.