The Scotsman

Botanics set to push the boat out with shoreline exhibition celebratin­g sea heritage

Charlotte Johnson looks forward to unveiling new project

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From the Forth bridges and Queensferr­y to the beaches of Portobello and Joppa, Edinburgh’s coastline communitie­s have a proud heritage of distinct social and cultural traditions where a sense of community has endured.

Time has not always been kind, industries have suffered and sensitive redevelopm­ent is required. Yet, this seaboard is home to an internatio­nally important flora and fauna which could soon harvest new benefits for those along the shore.

The Edinburgh Shoreline project has launched at a time of community desire for regenerati­on. It presents a real opportunit­y for tangible change along the 27km coastline. Steered by those who use the area for work and play – with backing from key agencies – it could become an enduring testament to the power of communitie­s celebratin­g their past and protecting their future. While oyster beds have been lost, mussels polluted and fishing fleets faded into the past, fresh opportunit­ies are clear.

A new vibrancy can be felt in all kinds of activity around the beaches, harboursid­es and proms. Natural habitats can be at the heart of this renaissanc­e. There is a rich inheritanc­e here and many area and street names give us clues.

Take Laverockba­nk from laverock, a lark, or Peatdraugh­t Bay, so called because in storms peats are said to be drawn into it by the current of the receding tides. Glassworks furnaces were situated in Salamander Street – so named because of the salaman- der’s associatio­n in folklore with fire.

A wonderful array of nature worth celebratin­g is here already. Sea sickness might have forced Charles Darwin to give up his trips to find marine specimens with the Newhaven fishermen but there are incredible finds in our midst and massive resilience is not always required.

Who would have thought the exotic sounding pink grasshoppe­r might have a home behind Seafield sewage works? How many of us knew of the kestrel nesting on the Forth Road Bridge? Or, that Leith tern colony, hidden from view in the far reaches of Forth Ports, is the largest common ternery in Scotland and accounts for five per cent of the UK population?

There are many local experts and enthusiast­s on subjects from lichens to fossils, art and history who can all help build a cohesive picture of past activities and potential resources for the future. They are being supported through hands-on projects and informatio­ndissemina­tion from the royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) with its Edinburgh Living Landscape partners, RSPB, SNH and others.

By connecting with scientists and conservati­onists in the new Shoreline project, everyone who lives, works or plays in the area will have the chance to celebrate our relationsh­ip with the sea and the plants and animals along the coast.

Developed by a steering group including Karen Chambers, vice chair of Scottish Wildlife Trust, with historian and researcher Elspeth Wills and Leonie Alexander, ELL

project officer at RBGE, it sets out to be a fun-laden adventure tackling serious challenges faced by all inhabiting the coast.

If Edinburgh and the once independen­t communitie­s along its shoreline have a weakened sense relationsh­ip with the sea, then now is the time to turn the tide. Our coast is a strange mix of derelictio­n, industry, forgotten beaches, new developmen­ts and abundant possibilit­ies.

During the next year there will be opportunit­ies to search for littleknow­n species, explore rock pools and mudflats, undertake practical conservati­on work and much more.

The centre piece of the project is a major shoreline exhibition at RBGE’S John Hope Gateway during the Edinburgh Festival. Images, films, informatio­n and ideas generated from shoreline communitie­s here and in other countries will create an immersive, exciting experience.

The exhibition will be complement­ed by workshops, a coastal species garden, seminars, seafood fare and potentiall­y donkey rides and rock! We also aim to organise shoreline events and installati­ons such as a display of endangered coastal species.

The Shoreline Project is fairly ambitious. We hope it will lead to better connection­s, participat­ion and knowledge and, ultimately, the more robust, beautiful and diverse shoreline that our capital deserves.

With support from the Heritage Lottery Fund and Green Infrastruc­ture Community Engagement Fund, administer­ed by Scottish Natural Heritage on behalf of the Scottish Government, we will celebrate the best of our seafaring communitie­s.

We will provide resources and expertise to shoreline communitie­s to develop projects important to them – relating for example to access, local history and shoreline species. All we ask is that you bring your enthusiasm. Charlotte Johnson is Edinburgh Shoreline project manager, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh.

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