Do any of our UK members remember "nature tables" in your school room?

Yes I remember the nature table well...we all brought something belonging to nature to class. I had no idea it was no longer practised in schools..however I have to take issue with this..

quote'' There is not a square inch of wilderness left in the British Isles: The human stamp is everywhere.''...that is completely untrue, we have still the most wonderful wild countryside in every country of these Islands.. , but as the author goes on to say, which I do agree with to an extent, Quote; '' Worse still, the scattered and depleted remains of the natural world are increasingly regarded as out of bounds.

Yes the latter is true , Forestry commissions, Trusts and Countryside heritages as well as the Crown have bought up much of the countryside, and to be able to see it or walk on it we have to pay as tourists in our own country and we cannot pick a flower, only look at it.. and even on some of the protected beaches it's illegal to even remove a rock or a shell. All of that is so sad, but it's certainly not as the author states indicative of everywhere on our Islands, that is a huge exaggeration and downright misleading !!
 
There are huge areas of wildnerness in Scotland, and in England as well.
 

Here's one comment to the essay that certainly speaks of the natural beauty throughout Britain.


The author's heart is in the right place, but he is clearly wrong. I have lived in the UK for many years and have found wilderness five minutes from my door, 25 miles from London. There is an astonishing amount of green space in England, Cornwall, Wales, and Scotland, most of which my neighbours are unaware of. Much more green space around the cities than you will find in California.

I can walk or cycle five or ten minutes in any direction and be lost in moors, river ways, towpaths, small lakes, trails, pastures, and farms. In ten minutes I can be kayaking through overgrown green cathedrals, silent, alone save for ducks and swans. No noise, no humans. Five waterways to choose from. All this in and around a single city within a half-hour of central London.

And this is true all over the UK. Villages in Cornwall and Wales, surrounded by deep forests and river ways. Stunning walks around Liverpool. An hour from Edinburgh, tramping alongside deserted lochs. Two hours northwest of Glasgow, places you can only walk or boat to, where you can tramp for days. Canals all over which you can walk along for hundreds of miles with only the occasional fisherman, canal boat, pub, or B&B, seeing hardly a sign of "civilisation".

Of course many of these places have seen the hand of shepherds, crofters, farmers, miners, or railroads, but they have been abandoned for years, left to revert to wildness. Many of these places are right alongside densely inhabited areas, but are unknown.
 
Here's one comment to the essay that certainly speaks of the natural beauty throughout Britain.


The author's heart is in the right place, but he is clearly wrong. I have lived in the UK for many years and have found wilderness five minutes from my door, 25 miles from London. There is an astonishing amount of green space in England, Cornwall, Wales, and Scotland, most of which my neighbours are unaware of. Much more green space around the cities than you will find in California.

I can walk or cycle five or ten minutes in any direction and be lost in moors, river ways, towpaths, small lakes, trails, pastures, and farms. In ten minutes I can be kayaking through overgrown green cathedrals, silent, alone save for ducks and swans. No noise, no humans. Five waterways to choose from. All this in and around a single city within a half-hour of central London.

And this is true all over the UK. Villages in Cornwall and Wales, surrounded by deep forests and river ways. Stunning walks around Liverpool. An hour from Edinburgh, tramping alongside deserted lochs. Two hours northwest of Glasgow, places you can only walk or boat to, where you can tramp for days. Canals all over which you can walk along for hundreds of miles with only the occasional fisherman, canal boat, pub, or B&B, seeing hardly a sign of "civilisation".

Of course many of these places have seen the hand of shepherds, crofters, farmers, miners, or railroads, but they have been abandoned for years, left to revert to wildness. Many of these places are right alongside densely inhabited areas, but are unknown.

True. I have a loch outside my front door, a forest behind me, lots of hiking trails. In my county (Argyll & Bute), 96% of the land area is classified as remote rural. The largest town has a population of 13,000. Lots of beautiful empty space.
 

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