Scottish Daily Mail

Selina: It’s time to get a grip on this blight

- By Xantha Leatham

As a country girl, there’s nothing selina scott loves more than enjoying the great outdoors.

But over the past few years, she’s been shocked by the piles of litter strewn across the moors near her home in Yorkshire.

Now the 69-year-old, who became one of the most famous TV faces of the 80s presenting the news and Breakfast Time, has joined the Great British september Clean, organised by Keep Britain Tidy and backed by the Daily Mail.

Miss scott said it is ‘not enough to complain’ and called for people to ‘get a grip’ on tackling the litter epidemic.

To that end, yesterday she carried out a litter pick near her home in Harrogate, North Yorkshire.

she told the Mail she is ‘delighted’ the campaign is still going ahead and added: ‘I have a thing about the filth that people are leaving behind and the litter that’s everywhere. It has been bugging me now for quite a few years.’

she was horrified to hear that, over lockdown, remote areas in Yorkshire were being used a lavatories and that people were leaving rubbish behind.

Miss scott said: ‘We’re supposed to love our countrysid­e and appreciate its beauty. We don’t get any more of it – that’s it. We have to look after it.’

One of her pet hates is plastic, especially coffee cups and takeaway trays left for others to pick up. ‘It’s absolute disregard for the countrysid­e,’ she added.

she told the Mail one of the most distressin­g things she sees are empty helium balloons which end up scattered across fields.

she has picked up at least 30 while wandering around her home farm and from the nearby road sides. But despite her efforts, and those of local litter picking groups, she says there is a constant ‘tide of litter’ which keeps reappearin­g.

Her anger is directed at manufactur­ing companies, who make it ‘too easy’ for people to buy single-use plastic products. ‘supermarke­ts should be stopped from selling plastic,’ she said.

‘If we’re serious about a clean and green Britain we should make sure the manufactur­ers don’t put out this stuff.

‘I’m so pleased to hear the Great British september Clean is still going ahead. It does take newspapers like the Daily Mail to make politician­s see the probdown, lem.’ she added: ‘A lot of the readers of the Daily Mail will be like me – they will take care of the rubbish that they have and they will recycle and they will do all the right things.

‘so in many ways, you’re speaking to the converted. I think the politician­s are the ones that need to get people sorted out.’ she recalled a time, just before lockwhen she travelled to outer Mongolia to source cashmere for her sustainabl­e clothing range, Naturally selina scott.

‘There was not one piece of litter anywhere,’ she said. ‘It was pristine. I travelled hundreds of miles and there wasn’t any litter. It is not enough to complain. As a country, we should get a grip.’

Miss scott began her career in journalism at the sunday Post in Dundee, later presenting Grampian Today and North Tonight.

she started at the BBC aged 29 and co-presented Breakfast Time with Frank Bough – the first breakfast television programme in the UK.

From 1987 to 2003, she owned a farmhouse in Perthshire but later moved back to her native North Yorkshire.

she now lives on a 200-acre farm in an Area of Outstandin­g Natural Beauty and has establishe­d a natural fibres business.

‘It’s not enough just to complain’

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