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The Tourism Forum run on 24th September by the Cowalfest team Continue reading

MoD grounds Nimrod fleet 30 months after inquest blames aircraft for 14 in-flight refuelling deaths

BAE NimrodThe Ministry of Defence has now announced that it is grounding the BAE Nimrod fleet from 31st March. The aircraft will have their engine bay hot-air ducts and their fuel seals replaced.

These were each thought to have played a critical role in an accident in September 2006 that claimed the lives of 14 servicemen based at RAF Kinloss. The men died when fuel leaking during in-flight refuelling hit a hot pipe.

The coroner at their inquest in May 2008, Andrew Walker, said that the aircraft had ‘never been airworthy’ and called then for the entire fleet to be grounded. The then Defence Secretary, Des Browne, multi-tasking as Scottish Secretary, insisted that the aircraft were safe to fly.

The families of those who died back in September 2006 will reasonably wonder why it has taken so long to make this decision.

Those who have had to fly Nimrod since then will wonder why their safety has been consistently compromised.

The crew who must continue to fly the aircraft until 31st March – and their families – will  wonder why the, now admittedly unsafe, aircraft are to be kept in the air for another three weeks.

All the aircraft concerned are based overseas and the MoD says that there will be no operational impact from their withdrawal. This rather defies logic since, in his written statement to the House of Commons, Defence Minister Bob Ainsworth says that the temporary halt to overseas operations ‘will allow us to free up the maximum number of aircraft for the modification programme while also allowing Nimrod to continue with its critical homeland security tasks’.

It is hard to see how a temporary halt to overseas operations can be described as without operational impact.

Then there is a bit of compensatory spin on continuing ‘homeland security’. This is itself undermined by the fact that the movement of engineering staff from Nimrod’s home base at RAF Kinloss to work on the modifications at RAF Waddington ‘will cause a temporary reduction in routine UK-based Nimrod flying but will not affect our ability to protect UK interests at home’.

Again, where’s the logic. Any reduction to what is considered a necessary flight frequency cannot but ‘affect our ability to protect UK interests at home’.

Then the MoD say there will be no operational impact in Afghanistan because they plan to use other UK and coalition aircraft to cover any shortfall. This begs the question why they have not done this long before now.

Nothing adds up. It never did. We can only hope that the Nimrods in the air between now and 31st March get back to base safely.

The photograph, above, of a BAE Nimrod in flight is reproduced here under the Creative Commons licence.

Argyll and British Columbia – HMS Discovery, Archibald Menzies and the Stronardron Fir

HMS Discovery - late 1800sScotland’s Year of Homecoming has generated an extraordinary degree of interest in the idea of ‘journeying’. For instance, several new biographies of Robert Burns have been published recently which resurrect the old debate concerning what the consequences would have been if Burns had left for Jamaica in 1786. The successful publication of his Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Language, meant that the journey was never taken. Burns headed instead for Edinburgh; and Scottish culture and literature were the direct beneficiaries of his changed circumstances.

A lot of ink has been spilt, then, over a journey that never happened, but much less on a journey that did.

Concurrent with the Burns biographies, but with none of their fanfare, a book has been published that tells the story of a plant collector called Archibald Menzies.   Monkey Puzzle Man is the first full biography of Menzies, who was born in the parish of Weem near Aberfeldy in Perthshire, Scotland.

The title is derived from the story of Menzies returning to Britain in 1795 from a banquet with the Irish Captain-General of Chile, who went by the remarkable appellation Don Ambrosio Bernardo O’Higgins de Vallenar. During the meal, Menzies is said to have pocketed some Araucaria nuts which were subsequently used to introduce the Monkey Puzzle tree to Britain. The authenticity of the story is matter of some debate though author James McCarthy supports it here.

archibald menziesWhat is certain is that the Chilean visit was an unanticipated stopover on the return trip to Britain from an area of the world where Menzies had collected many more plants and trees. He was surgeon and botanist on HMS Discovery with Captain Vancouver.

Until now, Menzies’s influence as a plant collector and a source of connection between Scotland and British Columbia has gone largely unrecognized except by specialists. Yet, his work in British Columbia still affects the landscape of contemporary Scotland. For instance, one of the 190 species he collected was the Sitka Spruce which flourished in Scotland just as it had in the similar climatic environment of British Columbia. Today Sitka is the subject of a lively debate on the issue of whether its ever-increasing presence is a benefit or a detriment to the Scottish countryside.

One of the most interesting elements in Monkey Puzzle Man is the author’s explication of the strained relationship between Menzies and George Vancouver. Though Vancouver captained the Discovery, Menzies reported directly to the redoubtable Sir Joseph Banks, Director of Kew Gardens in London and personal friend to George 111. It was Banks who issued Menzies with his instructions for the voyage and Banks who insisted, to Vancouver’s distress, that a plant hutch be constructed on the quarter-deck of the Discovery to nourish the plants and seeds that Menzies would bring on board.

The tension generated by the plant hutch issue boiled over on the return journey to Britain. Vancouver had Menzies confined to his cabin towards the end of the voyage. And there were other things that the two men saw differently. Vancouver appears to have taken little interest in native cultures and was slow to distinguish one from another. Menzies had a keen interest in native cultures, went out of his way to record them and had a facility for picking up different native languages.

George VancouverThe two men even disagreed about the landscape around them. Menzies found the coast of British Columbia awe-inspiring and reminiscent of his native Scotland; Vancouver was less impressed describing the land around the  Inside Passage as ‘desolate inhospitable country as the most melancholy creature could be desirous of inhabiting’.

Though Menzies was careful not to undermine Vancouver, he did sometimes criticize him in letters to Banks. He wrote, for instance, that Vancouver Island should ‘with more propriety be named after his Majesty’ i.e. King George Island.

Menzies, however, does appear himself on maps of British Columbia as a result of his association with George Vancouver.  Menzies Bay and Mount Menzies, north of Campbell River, commemorate the plant collector’s passage though that area.

He also has approximately 100 plants named after him though there are several others that should bear his name. One of the species Menzies recorded was the Douglas Fir, the most commercially in western North America. Menzies named the tree for his fellow Scottish botanist, David Douglas, but made sure that the correct attribution was hidden in the scientific name Pseudotsuga menziessii.

Coincidentally, the book we’re talking about appeared at the same time as a project was undertaken to find the tallest Pseudotsuga menziessii in Scotland. It turned out to be the 63.79 metre high Stronardron Fir near Dunans Castle in Glendaruel, Argyll. The tallest in Canada is 94.3 metres and stands in the upper Coquitlam watershed. Behind the comparison lurks the humble figure of Archibald Menzies and his remarkable investigation of the plant life of the Pacific Northwest.

Harry McGrath

The author of this review, Harry McGrath is, with Graeme Murdoch, director of Cultural Connect Scotland and organiser of the Canada-Scotland cross cultural photographic exhibition, This Is Who We Are. The exhibition is currently on tour throughour Scotland as part of Homecoming Scotland 2009.

Monkey Puzzle Man: Archibald Menzies Plant Hunter is by James McCarthy and issued by Whittles Publishing, in association with the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh.

The images above are out of copyright and in the public domain. They show,  from the top:

  • HMS Discovery
  • Archibald Menzies
  • Captain George Vancouver

National Trust for Scotland to change status of 11 properties – including closure of Argyll’s Arduaine Gardens

Loch Melfort at ArduiaineYesterday For Argyll reported that the National Trust for Scotland is shedding around 90 jobs in a restructuring to deal with the recession and falling revenues.

Today, as they promised, the Trust released plans to revise the status of 11 of its 130 properties, as part of the same restructuring.

Some properties are to be closed, some to be converted for residential purposes to earn money, some to be moved to external funding and sponsorship.

Of these 11 properties, one is in Argyll and it is one of those slated to be closed. It is the famous and much loved Arduaine Garden at Loch Melfort in Mid Argyll. Arduaine is renowned for its collection of exotic plants and at this moment is hosting its Snowdrop Festival, which runs until 16th March. Arduaine is also one of the ‘Glorious Gardens of Argyll’, marketing themselves jointly to garden visitors.

The statement released by the NTS makes no reference to when Arduaine may be closed nor of what may happen to it. For Argyll is pursuing the matter and will report on it as soon as possible.

The total list of properties affected and the specific decisions taken on each of them is:

  • The David Livingstone Centre at Blantyre will no longer be managed by NTS and will be returned to its Trustees unless the full deficit of the property is funded externally.
  • Hill of Tarvit Mansion House in Fife is to close and the property is to be let to a suitable tenant. However the gardens and estate would be maintained and remain open to the public.
  • Leith Hall House, NW of Aberdeen, is to be closed to visitors, with the the property converted into permanent residential use to meet the cost of managing the estate and garden, which will remain open to the public.
  • Barry Mill in Angus is to be offered for external funding or sponsorship. If this does not materialise, it will be closed.
  • Hugh Miller’s Cottage in Cromarty is also to be offered for external funding or sponsorship to avoid closure.
  • Kellie Castle in Fife will in future be operated by local volunteers provided that the castle’s deficit can be resolved. If this cannot be achieved the castle will be closed to visitors, with the gardens remaining open to the public.
  • Haddo House in Aberdeen will change focus to specialise solely on functions, events and pre-booked tours. The shop, tearoom and gardens will remain open to the public, in conjunction with the country park.
  • Hutchesons’ Hall in Glasgow will be let to a suitable long term tenant.
  • Arduaine Garden in Argyll is to close.
  • Inveresk Garden in East Lothian is to close.
  • Ben Lawers Mountain Visitor Centre in Perth is to close.

Kate Mavor, Chief Executive of the National Trust for Scotland says of these decisions: ‘We are making some difficult decisions today about some of our properties that are making a loss as part of our overall cost saving programme.

‘We will make every effort to work with our staff and external partners to minimise the changes to these properties. Our members and supporters can rest assured that we will only propose closure, or in the case of the David Livingstone Centre, relinquish management of a property, if it is absolutely necessary.

‘However the Trust is firm in its belief that doing nothing about the affects of the economic downturn is simply not an option’.

The photograph above shows the view from Loch Melfort Hotel, beside Arduaine Garden which is to the immediate right. It was taken by Mike and Kirsty Grundy and is reproduced here under the Creative Commons licence.

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It’s a YES. Argyll has the tallest tree in the UK – see it from Dunans Castle in Glendaruel

Tree Measurement 6For Argyll reported a few days ago on the Scotland-wide measuring of candidates for the title of Britain’s Tallest Tree. A specialist team from Sparsholt College in Hampshire toured the various candidates, assessing, climbing and measuring.

The results came in this evening and it’s very good news for Glendaruel. Continue reading