BBC Wildlife Magazine

Nature for all?

The joys of being surrounded by nature can seem out of reach if your class, ethnicity or access to transport make the countrysid­e a no-go zone.

- By Anita Sethi Illustrati­ons Patrick George/Debut Art

Can your background limit your access to wildlife and the countrysid­e?

This year, I returned to the Lake District for the first time since childhood, walking around Rydal Water to the Rydal Caves, spending night-times watching out for badgers and other wildlife, moving on to the glories of Grasmere in a place overlookin­g its lake, and onwards to walk around Derwent Water, all the way up to Buttermere and beyond to Loweswater. It was a deeply emotive experience feeling close to the nature of the North for the first time since childhood – and I felt more than ever that people of all social background­s should have ready access to the countrysid­e.

Having grown up in inner-city Manchester, I’m acutely aware of the vast discrepanc­ies in who has access to the countrysid­e and is able to enjoy the physical and mental health benefits that nature brings. My writings on class and the countrysid­e in the recent anthology Common People explore these inequaliti­es in access to nature. In it, I chronicle my first childhood trip to the countrysid­e – a visit to the Lakes – which was made possible only by subsidised accommodat­ion through my mother’s nursing associatio­n.

I can’t remember visiting the Lakes after that during my childhood. But even from that one trip, the landscape lived within me. I often drew on that memory of nature as a source of strength. It became part of my imaginativ­e landscape. Nature is a great equaliser, crucial to every single human being – without trees that turn the sunlight into oxygen, none of us would exist. Yet these profound inequaliti­es exist. I have been led to explore the painful root of the issue: why it is vital all can access nature; why the situation is as it is; how it makes us feel to be excluded from nature; and what is being done, or can be done.

Just how great the gulf is between socially deprived areas and the countrysid­e has been revealed in a 2019 report by the Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE). Half of the country’s most socially deprived areas are more than 25km by road from 10 national parks and 34 Areas of Outstandin­g Natural Beauty (AONB). The CPRE revealed detailed maps that show 36 per cent of England’s population live too far from the current network of National Parks and AONBs for these areas to be classified as easily accessible.

Let’s not forget why access to the natural world is so crucial. “When the most beautiful parts of England’s countrysid­e were given national park status, or designated as AONBs, they were done so as a public good,” points out Emma Marrington, senior rural policy campaigner at CPRE. This was, she says, so that “everyone could enjoy the benefits that access to them can bring. But the mapping demonstrat­es that a huge amount of people are currently missing out.” In terms of those benefits, Emma continues, “Regular interactio­n with the natural world – fresh air, exercise, escaping the stresses and strains of urban living, just being in the great outdoors – is inextricab­ly linked to increased levels of health and happiness.”

I definitely felt a surge in serotonin walking through the woods and by the waterways, and marvelling at the mountains during my trip to the Lakes – and remembered how it made me feel on first visiting the countrysid­e as a child. I also remember the loss of that landscape when I did not visit it again, how I grieved it.

I had been living in an inner-city block named Rothay (after the river flowing through the Lake District), feeling the heightened stress levels that urban dwelling can bring, and longing for the actual Rothay River.

How I’ve craved to journey through AONBs and yet how ridiculous­ly expensive it is to travel within the UK. The eyewaterin­g cost of transport without doubt stalls both social mobility and actual mobility, and creates a deeply entrenched divide between city and countrysid­e.

So, what is being done to tackle such inequality in access to nature? The CPRE study has prompted calls for better bus and train links from towns and cities to national parks and AONBs to “create a countrysid­e for all”. Visitors to national parks overwhelmi­ngly rely on private transport to reach them and get around, with 93 per cent of journeys made by car. However, the majority of areas where less than half of all households own a car also fall outside the accessible range of these landscapes. There are innovative schemes, such as the Dales Bus service in the Yorkshire Dales, but these are few and far between – as I have discovered during my own journeys without owning a car and being reliant solely on walking.

A welcome and noteworthy initiative to improve access to nature is ‘National Park City’, and this year London became the first capital city in the world to be awarded the status in recognitio­n of its open spaces, waterways and natural environmen­t. The declaratio­n was made by the National Park City Foundation. “We must do all we can to help tackle the global climate emergency and ecological crisis and address the decline in biodiversi­ty,” said London Mayor Sadiq Khan, pledging to make the capital even greener and wilder. This is great news for London, but it is also important that the Government ensures access to green spaces in inner cities outside the south-east.

Without doubt, my walks boost my physical and mental health, and I make the most of city parks every day. But it’s imperative that we are able to get out of the city, too, deep into the countrysid­e, to appreciate nature in all its glory. During my visit to the Lakes, I came to understand just how crucial visiting the countrysid­e can be, as I experience­d some of its wonderful wildlife.

It was the first time I had seen a badger in real life, as I stayed in a place with a dedicated badger-watching site, the Glen Rothay and Badger Bar in Rydal, in whose forested grounds lives a family of badgers. I watched the darkness deepen, and then saw the shadows shift, and a creature appear. I had previously only seen a badger on television screens and in books. Clapping eyes on a real-life creature, of course, creates a stronger connection. As I

My white friend commented that she felt stared at as she walked with me. I doubtless stick out like a sore brown thumb in the countrysid­e.

write this, I am affected deeply by the news that thousands more badgers are facing culls as the number of killing zones surges.

It’s urgent that the authoritie­s improve access to nature, by creating more green spaces in the city but also through schemes enabling those from cities to travel affordably to nature reserves and national parks.

I recall the wise words of Wendell Berry, the American farmer and essayist, and how apt they are when thinking of wildlife. “People exploit what they have merely concluded to be of value,” he wrote, “but they defend what they love, and to defend what we love we need a particular­ising language, for we love what we particular­ly know.”

We all need to have the chance to come to know nature deeply, to learn how to name it, to love it, and be able to defend it. I also feel that Berry’s words are relevant when it comes to valuing people, for the more all are valued as equal, the more will be done to ensure that every human being has access to nature.

Intersecti­onality comes to the fore as the CPRE also revealed that only 1 per cent of visitors to national parks are from BAME (Black Asian and Minority Ethnic) background­s, despite making up 14 per cent of the population. We see how race, social background and postcode interact as a higher proportion of ethnic minorities inhabit cities.

In terms of how it feels to walk through areas as a visible minority: the white friend who accompanie­d me for some of my journey through the Lake District commented that she felt stared at as she walked with me and her two white children (my godchildre­n). I doubtless stick out like a sore brown thumb in the countrysid­e.

This summer, I also went on a long walk through the South Downs with a group of refugees, asylum seekers and those formerly held in immigratio­n detention centres. The walk was organised by Refugee Tales, an outreach project run by supporters of those held in detention centres at Gatwick. It passed through the English countrysid­e to make a point about how unwelcomin­g such landscapes can be to certain social strata, and how walking through them can assert the right of those of all skin colours and social classes to exist in such places.

The walk left Brighton on a bright, hot morning and we journeyed to the city’s edge past wildflower­s growing on the roadside, and soon the city gave way to countrysid­e. It felt deeply symbolic crossing over that border by foot. Uphill we walked into the South Downs, the sun beating down fiercely, but soon the challengin­g terrain was soothed with a gentle breeze and I stepped out into fields filled with poppies. I felt the stresses of the city fall away.

The journey showed the power of both walking and talking – what Robert Frost called “talks-walking”. Just as special as the places I passed through were the people I walked with and the conversati­ons we had: on how it feels to be excluded from places and just how painful that can be, but how joyful it was to be walking through the countrysid­e, and how each footstep was one of reclamatio­n. Our long walk also followed a route along the River Ouse for 9km, stopping to admire egrets, herons and gulls, and then continuing towards Charleston and on to Alfriston – some of the most quintessen­tially ‘English’ places. Onwards we walked, all the way to Seven Sisters cliffs and beyond to Eastbourne, Bexhill-on-Sea and our final destinatio­n of Hastings.

Never have I seen so many St George’s flags before than in the villages I passed through. Ever since the flag was appropriat­ed by the racist far-right, it can seem like a hostile symbol to a non-white person from a multicultu­ral inner city. It made me think of how the countrysid­e has associatio­ns with a certain kind of ‘Englishnes­s’ – but also, how crucial it is for all of us to feel welcome in the countrysid­e and walk within it to show that such narrow definition­s are evolving.

Having dwelled on our human difference­s, I must also point out that being in nature can free us of such difference­s. Experience­s of nature reach beneath the skin and beyond social strata. This year, my epic walks through both northern and southern England have transforme­d my sense of time and place, and my relationsh­ip with the world. I have been struck deeply by astonishin­g natural formations, such as limestone landscapes, and I feel how ancient the land is and how fleeting are our own lives. My perspectiv­e shifts profoundly.

Yet, though nature feels as if it has been, and will be around, forever, it’s crucial to remember that the UN warns we only have about a decade left to stop the irreversib­le damage caused by climate change.

As I watch a peregrine soar into the sky, the first peregrine I have ever seen, I think not only of how each and every one of us should be able to access the physical and mental health benefits nature brings, but also of what we in turn bring to nature – a deep and necessary care and respect, and a realisatio­n that we are not apart from but a part of nature.

WANT TO COMMENT? Do you agree that Britain’s countrysid­e isn’t accessible to all? Email us at wildlifele­tters@immediate.co.uk

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