Bird Watching (UK)

Grumpy Old Birder

Bo wants us all to refamiliar­ise ourselves with the Country Code…

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Bo Beolens wants us all to brush up on the Country Code

Given that the majority of people think that access to the countrysid­e is a necessity, and that many more people started needing nature in their lives in the time of the Coronaviru­s, I think that the ‘Country Code’ needs reiteratin­g. In pre-decimal times everything was by the dozen and so it was with the code. Back then you could get it in booklet form and it was considered on a par with the Highway Code. As we have urbanised, so have we lost contact with the natural world and its rules of use.

● Enjoy the countrysid­e and respect its life and work

● Guard against all risk of fire

● Leave all gates as you found them

● Keep your pets under close control

● Keep to public paths across farmland

● Use gates and stiles to cross fences, hedges and walls

● Leave livestock, crops and machinery alone

● Take your litter home

● Help to keep all water clean

● Protect wildlife, plants and trees

● Take special care on country roads

● Make no unnecessar­y noise

Seemingly, back then it was OK for your pooch to poo, so long as it wasn’t in a pond. For some reason, in 2004 the code was revised and, I think, dumbed down and made more commercial­ly oriented. Nature is mentioned once, and the rest is more about not rocking the boat of country life. No mention is made of fire or water, strange considerin­g how global warming makes wildfires more likely and water shortages more common.

● Be safe – plan ahead and follow any signs

● Leave gates and property as you find them

● Protect plants and animals, and take your litter home

● Keep dogs under close control

● Consider other people

The pandemic (anagram of ‘ dem panic’) seems to have made Government think in threes, dumbing down the latest version even further. Along with “hands, face & space” we have

“Respect, Protect & Enjoy”, or the longer version of “Respect other people, Protect the natural environmen­t and Enjoy the outdoors”. The trouble with dumbing down is that they then had to explain it all, so the ‘shortened’ COVID-19 Version code ends up even longer than in the 1960s and the 2004 version! But, then, anything pertaining to the pandemic is full of contradict­ion and confusion!

● Respect other people

● Consider the local community and other people enjoying the outdoors

● Park carefully so access to gateways and driveways is clear

● Leave gates and property as you find them

● Follow paths but give way to others where it’s narrow

● Protect the natural environmen­t

● Leave no trace of your visit, take all your litter home

● Don’t have BBQs or fires

● Keep dogs under effective control

● Dog poo – bag it and bin it

● Enjoy the outdoors

● Plan ahead, check what facilities are open, be prepared

● Follow advice and local signs and obey social distancing measures

The trouble is, regulation­s are announced as diktat and ordinary people don’t get to discuss their meanings, let alone whether they are safe, sensible and satisfacto­ry. Most of us want a greening of policy, as we emerge from the virus, with environmen­tal factors outweighin­g economics.

That needs a national debate, not diktat, and, if we want to use the countrysid­e more without ruining it, we need to mark, learn and inwardly digest the country code.

Bo Beolens runs fatbirder.com and other websites. He has written a number of books.

 ??  ?? Enjoying nature safely and responsibl­y is second nature to many, but not all
Enjoying nature safely and responsibl­y is second nature to many, but not all
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