Yorkshire Post

Stop the heather burning says group

- ROB PARSONS POLITICAL EDITOR ■ Email: rob.parsons@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

RURAL: A campaign group has reignited the dispute over heather burning on the North York Moors landscape by suggesting alternativ­e methods should be used to encourage grouse breeding.

It says there is a “gathering movement of opinion” to say moorland burning was no longer acceptable.

A CAMPAIGN group dedicated to safeguardi­ng the North York Moors has reignited the dispute over heather burning on the protected landscape by suggesting alternativ­e methods should be used to encourage grouse breeding.

Tom Chadwick, chairman of the North Yorkshire Moors Associatio­n, wrote in its magazine Voice of the Moors that there was a “gathering moment of opinion” to say moorland burning was no longer an acceptable form of moorland management.

Mr Chadwick, who lives in the moors village of Castleton, said there had recently been a rise in complaints due to “very intensive periods of heather burning with a pall of smoke stretching for many miles”.

He wrote: “The towering plumes all too often have reached an inversion layer which has forced the smoke down and filled up the dales, most noticeably Danby Dale, Westerdale, Glaisdale, Rosedale and Farndale.”

Mr Chadwick added: “The weather obviously plays an important part as to when it is a suitable time to carry out burning and there have been times over the years, when gamekeeper­s supervisin­g burning, have misjudged changes in wind speed and direction to give rise to fires which have got out of control.”

And he pointed to the report published in January by the influentia­l Committee on Climate Change which calls for a ban on rotational burning, including burning for grouse shooting, to be introduced this year.

The committee’s report says: “Burning heather promotes young shoots, which grouse feed on, but it is highly damaging to the peat, and to the range of environmen­tal benefits that wellfuncti­oning peat can deliver.”

The North York Moors National Park Authority is supportive of the practice but bird charity the RSPB says burning damages important habitats and contribute­s to climate change.

Mr Chadwick wrote in the magazine that though there were conflictin­g views on the issue, one answer is the use of use of horizontal chain flail cutting, a technique already used elsewhere.

He said this method achieves the same end of short, medium and long heather to encourage grouse to breed and prosper but without harming the environmen­t.

He told The Yorkshire Post :“I can understand that landowners who have grouse probably don’t like this, particular­ly because it will cost them more money to do it, that is understand­able.

“Some areas lend themselves better to these cutting procedures than others because of the unevenness of the ground and it being strewn with rocks.”

He added: “Our view is that we recognise the commercial importance of grouse moors and grouse shooting and that it is an important part of the rural economy in national parks.

“At the same time, if it is not any longer acceptable to burn the heather then I think landowners are obliged to look at the alternativ­es that are available, and strip cutting is an alternativ­e.” The Moorland Associatio­n, which represents grouse moor owners and managers in England, says the Government should not rush into an outright ban on controlled heather burning over peatland. But it has asked its members to put any planned controlled burning on hold because of the coronaviru­s pandemic and “the overstretc­hed status of our emergency services fighting the virus”.

I think landowners are obliged to look at the alternativ­es.

Tom Chadwick, chairman of the North Yorkshire Moors Associatio­n

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