The Blackmore Vale May '21

Page 76

READER’S LETTERS

Reader’s Letters My wife and I have taken to picking up countryside litter on our daily exercise walks. Now is a good time to do this; the council has cut the verges back, last summer’s foliage has died away, and new spring growth isn’t yet too high, so it’s much easier to spot our prey. Picking it up gives the countryside a fresh start. Not for long perhaps but, curiously, litter left lying seems to be a magnet for more litter. What do you need to pick up litter? Well, first some gloves are essential. Personally, we don’t use a litter-picking tool because we find the stooping and straightening good exercise, but many volunteer pickers do. You need a bag - I’ve dedicated a couple of supermarket bagsfor-life to the task. And last, for your own safety, a light coat or even a ‘high-viz’ vest makes sense. If you live in Somerset, contact the countryside charity CPRE Somerset, and they can kit you out with a picker, gloves and hi-viz vest if you commit to a regular litterpick in your area. Details at www.cpresomerset. org.uk How much do you pick? That’s up to you of course, but I work by the bag-full: one bag per walk, two if I’m feeling particularly virtuous (or cross with the tossers). On some stretches of road it’s surprising how quickly a bag fills up. It’s extraordinary what motorists carelessly toss into our green and pleasant countryside. Sweet papers, snack packets, face masks and plastic bottles of course. More sobering are the large number of cider and beer cans, and the occasional premixed gin and tonics. This week

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I also picked up two vodka, two whisky and a brandy bottle. I imagine the drinkers were disposing of the evidence before getting home. Or to work. On a less sad note, I also found a baby’s dummy, a pair of reading spectacles, a half-full dispenser of anti-wrinkle lotion and a large black bra.

be similar litter-awareness courses for motorists caught littering. Or a spell in the stocks being pelted with litter. That would learn them, wouldn’t it? Martin Roundell Greene

What’s to be done? How can the tossers be stopped? First we should make clear that littering in the countryside is a serious offence. The fixedpenalty charge for littering should be raised from its present ‘up to £150’ to ‘up to £1,000’, and well publicised. I’d also like to see tossing litter out of a car made a motoring offence, so that magistrates have the power to add penalty points to the driver’s licence and also sentence tossers to unpaid community work. I’d also like to see periodic roadside campaigns: “KEEP BRITAIN TIDY. TAKE YOUR LITTER HOME” or “FOR THE KIDS SAKE, KEEP OUR PLANET TIDY”, “LITTER CAMERAS OPERATING HERE. TAKE IT HOME.” or maybe just “THANK YOU FOR NOT BEING A TOSSER” Schools and colleges can help. A series of information films highlighting the damage that littering does to the environment should be part of the curriculum. They need to be interesting, well produced and regularly refreshed. Not old hat. If the message gets through to children, they’ll pass it on to the parents. Finally, like the speed-awareness courses that speeding motorists can be asked to do, there should

Why is it, that some people in the area treat the wonderful environment around them with such disdain? Here, in a pristine Coombe, only 15 minutes walk from the outer part of Shaftesbury town is a picture of litter horror. Climate change and protecting the environment has become the most vital issue today and has to be the very future of our planet and the lives of our children and grandchildren. Pippa Mukherjee Environmentalist The ongoing disgrace of the works on Dinah’s Hollow is a perpetual shambles - we’re all being distracted by this huge spend on fixing the ‘unsafe banks’ (let’s not discuss how this was caused by poor land management, followed by the council stripping all vegetation from the bank - hardly a surprise a slip followed, is it?). Anyone can see the real and ongoing issue is the volume of traffic and the sheer scale of the vehicles using what is effectively Always free - subscribe here


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Articles inside

North Dorset Property Special

9min
pages 126-134

Puzzles

0
page 102

Night Sky

3min
pages 100-101

Business News | Dorset Biz News

4min
pages 98-99

Health

5min
pages 96-97

Photography

5min
pages 91-95

Art

5min
pages 87-90

Reader's Letters

7min
pages 76-77

Food & Drink

16min
pages 78-86

Charity pages

3min
pages 74-75

Random 19 - Philippa Davis

7min
pages 67-69

Take a Hike

1min
pages 60-61

Garden Jobs

2min
pages 65-66

Barry Cuff | Voice of the Allotment

2min
page 64

Out of Doors

4min
pages 62-63

Farming

5min
pages 56-59

Equestrian

3min
pages 54-55

Brigit Strawbridge

2min
page 49

Wildlife

3min
pages 46-48

Police alert

1min
page 31

Meet Your Local

3min
pages 44-45

Dorset Art Weeks Feature

4min
pages 18-23

Then & Now | Roger Guttridge

2min
pages 42-43

Tales from the Vale | Andy Palmer

6min
pages 40-41

14yr old Ruby ‘The Pocket Rocket’ Else-White recognised as one of Europe’s top talents.

4min
pages 4-5

Rural Matters - CPRE

2min
pages 26-27
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