The Scotsman

Meet the people who are simply wild about Glasgow’s gardens

It’s not called the Dear Green Place for nothing… Jenny Tweedie introduces this year’s Glasgow Wildfest

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Iremember the summer of 1988 as a series of jumbled, disconnect­ed events woven through with moments of huge personal transition. I broke my ankle that summer, the night before my first day at senior school, and spent three itchy weeks in plaster (there was an embarrassi­ng interlude with a trapped ruler that I’d rather not think about). I got a pet rabbit that summer too, after many, many months of parental pestering, a little Netherland dwarf named Josephine.

But one other thing that sticks out in my memory from that summer was a school trip to the Glasgow Garden Festival; I guess it would have been in June or July. In fact, I found some of my photos from that trip just the other day. Hard to believe it was almost 30 years ago.

It was a seriously hot day when we went, and being Scottish kids that did leave us somewhat wilted and unenthusia­stic. But I’m pretty sure we still did the festival justice: going up in the Clydesdale Tower, wandering around all the exhibits, and ogling the Cocacola Roller Coaster (from a safe distance). We all zonked out on the bus going home, wishing we’d brought more to drink.

Much has been written about the festival since that hot summer of ‘88: about its legacy, about what it did for Glasgow, but there’s a general consensus that the outcome was a positive one. Its success helped the city move forward, transformi­ng its image from an industrial heritage site to a tourism destinatio­n, and ultimately, a city of art and culture.

But one legacy seems to get little attention: the green legacy. This was a garden festival, after all, and Glasgow was well known, then and now, as the dear green place. Almost 30 years on, has the garden legacy vanished? Just how green is Glasgow in this modern era of developmen­t and urban squeeze?

Greener than you’d think. Across the city there are dozens of organisati­ons and small groups working in parks, community gardens and hidden greenspace­s making a real difference to that green legacy. Take GOW, a flourishin­g community group focussed around a tiny, triangular garden in what would once have been a back court, hidden by high tenements. Or the Friends of Springburn Park, nearing the completion of a new community hub and garden on the south side of the city. FORK, the Friends of the River Kelvin, run weekly sessions along the river bank, picking up rubbish and removing non-native invasive plants.

And in December of last year, campaigner­s at North Kelvin Meadow successful­ly defeated an attempt by developers, to build on an area of greenspace transforme­d by the community from municipal football pitches. Children’s Wood offers forest school classes, and spaces where people can meet and enjoy the natural surroundin­gs.

All these organisati­ons, and many more, come together once a year for their own version of the Glasgow Garden Festival: The Glasgow Wildlife Garden Festival, or Glasgow Wildfest as it was re-named last year (because it was a bit of a mouthful!). Launched by RSPB Scotland in 2014, the idea behind Glasgow Wildfest was to capture the garden spirit of the original festival, and keep it alive by celebratin­g just how wild Glasgow still is.

Because it is a wild city. There are more than 90 parks and formal gardens in Glasgow, many of these improved with wildlife in mind in recent years. Add to this the usual array of cemeteries, private gardens, riverbanks, and even railway lines, and you find a city criss-crossed with wildlife sanctuarie­s and corridors.

Foxes are probably the best known and most visible creatures on Glasgow’s streets, but many of the city’s other wild inhabitant­s might surprise you. Peregrines have been known to nest on Glasgow’s highrise flats, otters and kingfisher­s are making more appearance­s on and around the rivers, and the population of water voles, discovered a few years ago in the east end, is so large that it caught scientists by surprise. These tiny creatures have declined dramatical­ly across the UK, but in Easterhous­e, they live happily, away from water and well-adapted to their ringside view of the M8, and the brownfield areas where they feed and breed.

Water voles are actually one of six “ambassador species” that Glasgow Wildfest helps to celebrate, along with bats, bumblebees, hedgehogs, house sparrows and swifts. But as much as Wildfest is about wildlife, it’s also about people. It’s about engaging people with their greenspace­s, and

encouragin­g an interest in activities such as planting wildflower meadows, putting up nest boxes for house sparrows, and taking part in community projects. Now in its fourth year, its success is a good sign that the garden legacy of the Glasgow Garden Festival is alive and well.

So why not come along this September and take part? Events run for the whole month at sites around the city, and there are activities from a massive bioblitz in the Botanics, to a civilized picnic at the Hidden Gardens, to the accompanim­ent of live chamber music. And keep a look out for wildlife while you’re there. You never know what you might see. Join in the conversati­on on social media using #Glasgowwil­dfest and find out more at www.glasgowwil­dfest.org Jenny Tweedie, RSPB Scotland.

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 ??  ?? 0 Glasgow has a surprising­ly large population of water voles
0 Glasgow has a surprising­ly large population of water voles

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