BBC Wildlife Magazine

Melissa Harrison

On banning dogs from nature reserves

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obody is more irritated by irresponsi­ble dog owners than responsibl­e ones. You invest all that effort, money and time into training a dog not to jump up, and to come to your call; you carry knotted bags around for hours in search of a bin – and then your hard work is ruined by idiots who let their dogs off around livestock or groundnest­ing birds, chuck bagged poo into the undergrowt­h, or leave it dangling from trees. If I can behave responsibl­y, you think to yourself, why the hell can’t you?

Just as there are many people who drop litter, there are plenty of dog owners who don’t consider the impact of their pet on the environmen­t – and, as a result, some feel that dogs should be barred from some of the country’s most beautiful and wildliferi­ch spots, including nature reserves. I’ve asked myself whether they have a point.

Years ago I had a cat, and while I knew, of course, that he visited other people’s gardens, it didn’t really strike me as a problem – until I got a garden and, cat-less, saw the situation from the other side of the fence. Suddenly it seemed bizarre that I was expected to tolerate other people’s animals climbing in uninvited, defecating in my flowerbeds and killing ‘my’ garden birds.

We pet-owners need to recognise that our perspectiv­e is highly partisan. We love our animals, we enjoy seeing them doing the things that make them happy – and love makes us blind.

Yet I was sad when, on a visit to a new reserve that hadn’t yet opened, I was told that dogs would be banned year-round. Dog owners make up a vast proportion of the people who regularly visit parks and green spaces, and because of this are more likely than the general population to be lovers of the outdoors.

This is a constituen­cy that’s outdoors daily, and in all weathers – something that for me and many others has had a transforma­tive effect on our lives. Dog owners’ sheer level of contact with nature puts them first in line to be champions of it: to campaign for its protection, to fight against its loss. Sure, you might say; they can walk their dogs elsewhere and still visit a reserve without them – but that’s just not how it works. w You want to enjoy a walk, and you want w your dog to be with w you; you’ll go somewhere else rather than do two walks. Banning B dogs might deal d with the problems a few irresponsi­ble owners o cause, but it will w also exclude a lot of o highly engaged, committed c outdoor types t – and any children c they might have, too. And then an opportunit­y for education and behavioura­l change is lost.

In an ideal world, all pet owners would have to undergo training, as would the animals in their charge. And in an ideal world nobody would drop litter, pick rare wildflower­s, light fires, disturb sensitive habitats, picnic where they’re not allowed, tuck used nappies under bushes, discard energy gel wrappers on runs, leave fishing lines in streams, play loud music or clog up narrow country lanes with their cars. But this isn’t an ideal world, and it never will be. The sad fact is that we humans are a messy and selfregard­ing bunch. Our ongoing loss of contact with nature is worrying: not just because it’s bad for us as individual­s, but because it lies behind a lot of the environmen­tal harm we cause. If we’re to counter it we have to accept a certain level of impact, whether that’s litter or the effect of footfall.

That’s not to say we should shrug when, for example, dogs worry livestock – far from it. In fact, as well as better education, penalties for owners should be increased. But shutting out the 26 per cent of people in the UK who own a dog is short-sighted, and runs counter to the far more pressing project of getting more of us outdoors.

YOUR HARD WORK AS A RESPONSIBL­E DOG OWNER IS RUINED BY IDIOTS WHO LET THEIR PETS OFF THE LEAD NEAR LIVESTOCK.”

MELISSA HARRISON is a nature writer and novelist. Her new book All Among the Barley (Bloomsbury, £14.99) is out in August.

WHAT DO YOU THINK? We would love to know your opinion about dogs and wildlife. Write to us or send an email – details can be found on p100.

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 ??  ?? Melissa enjoys a walk with her dog Scout.
Melissa enjoys a walk with her dog Scout.
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