The Sunday Post (Inverness)

A wild year: Writer on why lockdown has helped Scots enjoy the everyday wonders of nature

Editor of new anthology of Scots nature writing reveals why

- By Sally Mcdonald smcdonald@sundaypost.com Antlers Of Water is published by Canongate; Surfacing is released by Sort of Books

As locked-down Scots stayed in, cars were parked and planes were grounded, our country’s emboldened wildlife came a little closer.

Foxes were spotted in Edinburgh’s Waverley Station and deer spotted on Glasgow’s Buchanan Street, while dolphins played in normally bustling harbours.

And, as the world stopped, we began to notice nature again, the birdsong usually drowned out by our racket and the unexpected visitors to our neighbourh­oods.

It was not before time, according to Kathleen Jamie. The award-winning poet and nature writer, and editor of a new collection of contempora­ry Scottish writing on nature and landscape called Antlers Of Water, said: “We have lost this ability to look and listen hard to our immediate environmen­t and that was a thing that came back in lockdown. The silence enabled us to hear it again.”

This looking at and listening to what she terms as “the more-than-human world” and considerat­ion of our relationsh­ip with it, is the basis for the new anthology of poetry and prose described as “celebrator­y, political, frightened and hopeful”.

With 20 contributo­rs, the writing ranges from wild swimming with author Amy Liptrot, to a house-invading blackbird with Saltire award winner Em Strang.

We caught up with the anthology’s editor at the home she shares in Newburgh, Fife, with her woodworker husband.

She explained the book’s intention to celebrate our everyday encounters with nature: “The Scotland reflected to us when it comes to nature writing is not the Scotland we all live in. Very few of us can actually go and hang out in the Cairngorm plateau for any length of time. I was interested in what I would get if I asked them (the contributo­rs) to just write about something to do with the natural world.

“When the pieces started coming in I was delighted, because we have people in tenements looking at pigeons on the window ledge, and we’ve got Jaqueline Bain in Paisley who is interested in the wasps’ bike in her garden.

“That’s what I was after, the kind of Scotland we do inhabit rather than the kind of Scotland sometimes TV programmes tell us we inhabit, which none of us recognise.”

Nature writing – a term

she admits she’s not keen on “probably because it’s still associated with trolling through the undergrowt­h looking at little birdies” – has been around almost since humankind could hold a quill. But she explains it went into abeyance for a few years before making a comeback just over a decade ago, this time with “a new awareness of degradatio­n, climate change, and environmen­tal crisis.”

She explained: “You cannot now write about nature without being aware of the massive problems that are going down. There can’t be anybody – however much they deny it – unaware that we are in crisis and we are destroying the natural world and we are being destroyed ourselves because of that.

“Every other species we are supposed to be sharing this planet with is not given a look in. We are putting an end to species we have been sharing the planet with since the dawn of time.

“We have come through this massive evolutiona­ry journey with them as companions without really noticing they are there, except for the ones we have annihilate­d along the way. We have a chance through our writing and through our art to look to these other creatures, acknowledg­e them and ask what they are entitled to?

“Are they entitled to a life on the planet? It’s going to be very hard to say “no”. We can also find joy, redemption and pleasure in the natural world but we would be kidding ourselves if we thought everything was fine.”

The writer, whose interests include archaeolog­y, whales and birds, has witnessed first-hand the devastatin­g impact of climate change, as revealed in Surfacing, a collection of her essays.

In 2015 she spent time at an Alaskan Yup’ik village as a decade-long archaeolog­ical project initiated in Aberdeen sought to save ancient artefacts washed up as the tundra’s permafrost melted.

She said: “Over a handful of years you can see a difference in the sea levels. They are preparing to move the village because the sea is encroachin­g so fast. And because the land is falling into the sea and eroding so fast, people began to discover old objects. They realised the sea had revealed an old village.”

Climate change has left its mark closer to home, on the island of Westray off Orkney. She said: “They are getting winds there now that they haven’t seen in living memory, and sand dunes that had accumulate­d over thousands of years have blown away.

“Underneath archaeolog­ists discovered Bronze Age and Neolithic villages and field systems. It is climate change that has revealed these places and links those two sites.

“As time goes on, we will see less and less of the coastline... many sites on Orkney are falling into the sea as it rises.”

She fears for coastal cities and the impact on people. “It is happening in other parts of the world but it hasn’t quite hit us here in Western Europe,” she said. “More and more people are becoming aware that things are seriously out of kilter. We’d rather not think about it but it is going to be unavoidabl­e. It is frightenin­g. If we don’t get the awful encroachme­nt of the sea we will have refugees who are.”

And she is worried that the lessons of lockdown will be easily forgotten. “We are very quickly going to get ‘normal’ thrust back at us. Privately many people are saying, ‘no this is enough, this is the time to stop, think and change our future’ but I fear we won’t get the opportunit­y.

“Maybe speaking about climate change is part of the turning around…maybe we will think about our own lives and responsibi­lities and make adjustment­s. But as I’m changing low energy lightbulbs I can see the flare from the Mossmorran gas plant here. Still, I like to hope we are thinking about change and this Covid has shunted us on a little bit.”

And she hopes Antlers Of Water – whose title is taken from Norman Maccaig’s Looking Down on Glen Canisp – will help readers to take responsibi­lity and pleasure. She smiled:

“There is a pleasure and love to the world behind this.”

Maybe speaking about climate change is part of the turning around

 ??  ?? Kathleen Jamie
Kathleen Jamie

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