I
saw the trig though the stainless steel fence almost immediately and broke into
a small grin of triumph. Maybe ten feet
inside the perimeter, its brown, pebbly concrete was splashed with pale
lichens. Framing it from behind were massive
stacked ranks of metal beer barrels.
Leaf litter from the close-by birch trees was scattered round its base
and, further back, a dip in the grass was filled with a large puddle. Human detritus was also tangled up amongst
the fallen twigs – plastic bags, polystyrene cups, food wrappers – disfiguring the
little corner of wildness in the centre of the business park. Someone had found their way to the trig at
some time and placed a rather worn and weather-beaten golf ball on the top,
towards the end of one of the sight-lines.
It seemed a casual act of desecration, a sign of lack of respect. Who would have done it? Not one of the trig nerds seeking it out; a
bored employee, for some reason in possession of a golf ball? A trespasser who had found a way round the
site’s security? It emphasised the forlorn
scene. This monument to mankind’s
impulse to map and control the world, hemmed in by commerce’s bland structures,
a neglected megalith, the views it was meant to command from its bend in the
river Tame now hidden. I know they’re
neither as ancient nor as significant, in terms of human development, as stone
circles and the like, but I feel their violation the way anyone would that of a
prehistoric site. It’s a pity to see,
and I feel the sadness and the sorrow for their eventual and inevitable
disappearance, these hidden-away markers of the high land. I want them somehow to exert a chthonic power,
to gather the strength of the land somehow, to show us humans that you don’t
mess with the old gods with impunity.
Thursday, 27 November 2014
Tuesday, 18 November 2014
Wilderness Bones
On
top of the moors, an area the map simply marks as ‘wilderness’, the dry
heather, which crunches under our boots, sending ash-like cluster of petals in
to the wind, is interspersed by ovoid patches of chocolate-brown peat, like
bare, untended flowerbeds. Some of these
spread out over the area of, perhaps, a tennis court; some are fringed with
pebbles of gritstone, whose quartzite content twinkles in the sun. One of these rain-ploughed mud-plots is
scattered with the bleached, ancient remains of trees; dry, white, twisted limbs
of wood. The paleness of the wood
against the darkness of the earth makes them look like bones, the strange bones
of long-lost dinosaurs, up there on the hills.
A multi-forked stump looks like a vertebra; a fragment of a branch is a
rib. They sit on the surface, or are
slightly buried in the mud. Industrial rain
has stripped the fibre out of the layers of peat and left these totems of
forgotten forests exposed once more to the air.
How strange to think of these high moors covered in trees. These places, so familiar as bleak wastes of
emptiness and bog, were once thick with greenery and full of life. It’s a vanished landscape, whether it was
caused or abetted by man’s actions, or whether it was just a part of nature’s
ceaseless change, but those bones of trees are there for now, reminding us of
what has passed.
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