The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Wild and abandoned: Writer charts her journey to the world’s most desolate, bleakest and hopeful places

- By Sally Mcdonald smcdonald@sundaypost.com Islands Of Abandonmen­t: Life In The Post-human Landscape by Cal Flyn is published by William Collins

Author ventures to Earth’s disaster zones and ghost towns

Cal Flyn grips the Geiger counter tighter as the quickening clicks become a howl. It has detected high levels of hazardous radiation and she must urgently move to safer ground.

Towering around her, apartment blocks stand empty, their windows glassless, their corridors strewn with rubble and abandoned belongings. Nearby derelict schools are silent where trees grow in damp, deserted gymnasiums. An armoured car slowly passes. It’s like a scene from a disaster movie. It’s not. The disaster is shockingly, tragically real.

The author is in the former Soviet Union city of Pripyat, now part of Ukraine and built in 1970 to serve the Chernobyl nuclear plant. Once nearly 50,000 people lived here – today it is a ghost town. In the early hours of April 26, 1986, the plant’s No 4 reactor exploded and radiation seeped across Europe in what was the world’s worst nuclear disaster.

Thirty-one people are said to have died on the day, but thousands more would perish later. The city, a town and hundreds of villages were evacuated and a 1,600-square-mile exclusion zone set up.

Thirty-five years on it was the first place that Cal, from Beauly near Inverness, visited in her quest to explore places where humans once but no longer lived, or survived in tiny numbers. The two-year journey that began in 2017 took her to some of the most deserted, desolate, ravaged and polluted parts of the globe. Her purpose? To discover what happens when humanity’s impact on nature is halted.

Now the resulting book – Islands Of Abandonmen­t: Life In The PostHuman Landscape – reveals how, against all odds, new life is springing up and, in some cases, thriving, offering startling opportunit­ies for environmen­tal recovery. She said: “This book should be one of darkness, a litany of the worst places in the world. In fact, it is a story of redemption: how the most polluted spots on Earth – suffocated by oil spills, blasted by bombs, contaminat­ed by nuclear fallout or scraped clean of their natural resources – can be rehabilita­ted through ecological processes.”

From her home in Orkney,

Cal said: “Abandoned land, as a phenomenon worldwide, is growing. There are enormous amounts of it and it is becoming ecological­ly significan­t.

“In some parts of the world population­s are becoming more urbanised. In many developed countries fertility rates are falling.”

Intensive farming using less land means swathes of “marginal” farmland in Europe, Asia and North America is “being allowed to revert to its wilder form”. This “recovering secondary vegetation” now equates to 2.9 billion hectares – more than double current croplands. And it could reach 5.2 billion hectares by the end of the century.

Cal said: “There is a lot of forestry growth with potential for carbon sinking on a grand scale. Vegetation growth offers us real hope when we look at climate change...but also for biodiversi­ty and allowing rare species to survive – especially in places where people have chosen to leave or places where people have been banned from entering. They become safe havens for species that have been persecuted or have lost habitats elsewhere.

“The scale of Chernobyl is quite staggering; the exclusion zone contains not only two towns, but something like 200 tiny villages.

“Pripyat was like walking into a disaster movie. There are huge apartment buildings, schools that are completely wrecked, swimming pools, sports halls; everything at the time of abandonmen­t was pretty new. Now it is like a time capsule of the 1980s Soviet era. There are security driving around in armoured cars. It has a very dystopian feeling. We were wandering around with a Geiger counter just clicking in the background. It has a siren that is very alarming when you step into a highly contaminat­ed area. You can’t help it, you panic.”

But there is redemption here. Overall radiation levels have fallen dramatical­ly and nature is reclaiming the zone.

“Despite the damage done by the radiation the natural world has rebounded really quite strongly,” said Cal. “It’s not that the animals and plants are not affected by the contaminat­ion, so much as the trade-off with the lack of disturbanc­e by people seems in many cases to be in their favour.

“Trees are pushing up through tarmac in the roads. Inside buildings, they are growing next to windows, and ferns grow in damp rooms. There is a lot of maple, poplar and mistletoe.”

Woodland had overtaken much of the traditiona­l farmland with the forest now making up 70% of the zone. The book reveals that, in the immediate aftermath of the accident, in the worst affected areas, radiation levels were “enough to kill every mammal present within a few hours or days. But after a few seasons the regrowth began in earnest. Animals reappeared; lynx, boar, deer, elk, beavers, eagle owl…”

Rare species whose numbers were declining elsewhere in the Soviet Union “found sanctuary” in the abandoned farmland and forests. A decade later every animal population in the zone had at least doubled. By 2010 wolves had increased sevenfold, and by 2014 brown bears were spotted in Chernobyl for the first time

Pripyat is like walking into a disaster movie. Security guards drive around in armoured cars. But despite

in a century. A small number of people had also returned, like Ivan Ivanovitch, one of only two residents in the tiny but “derelict and collapsing” village of Paryshiv.

Cal, who graduated from Oxford University in experiment­al psychology, also focuses on the psychology of abandoned places: “I was interested in how abandoned places make us as humans feel. Detroit, in the USA, is the negative side of abandonmen­t; how abandoned buildings bring out darker sides of people’s characters.

“Violent crimes tend to spike in areas where there are a lot of abandoned buildings, and house prices drop because people find them unattracti­ve. In Paterson, New Jersey, I found out that some people are equally drawn to abandoned places. They find that stepping off the map and into somewhere completely uncontroll­ed can be refreshing and attractive.”

Abandoned areas can “attract and repel in equal measure,” said Cal.

Volcanic eruptions in 1995 and 1997 on the Caribbean island of Montserrat buried the capital city of Plymouth in pyroclasti­c mud and ash and levelled the 40 square-mile island’s southern half. Nineteen people died and more than half the population fled the island. Now the exclusion zone set up in the area is a tourist attraction.

But life thrives even there. Cal explained: “The suburbs have been overgrown by jungle vegetation. I went to an abandoned hotel where the swimming pool was filled with ash and then colonised by trees and plants; grasses, reeds, saplin trees, ferns, and philodendr­ons. It was like one enormous planter.

“An enormous iguana was living in the abandoned supermarke­t. And lot of the abandoned houses have become important roosts for different bat species.”

With man-made climate change threatenin­g the future of the planet, the author excitedly cited researcher­s who have stated that the “enormous and growing extent of recovering ecosystems worldwide provides an unpreceden­ted opportunit­y for ecological restoratio­n efforts to help to mitigate a sixth mass extinction”.

“We are in the midst of a huge, self-directed experiment in rewilding. Because abandonmen­t is rewilding, in a very pure sense, as humans draw back and nature reclaims what was once hers. It has been taking place – is currently taking place – on a grand scale, while no one is watching.”

But Cal told The Sunday Post she fears limits to this “redemption” story. “If our climate does spin out of control it may be beyond the powers of restoratio­n,” she said. “It is not so much that these places are propping up a free pass to continue wrecking the earth, as saying, if we give the world a chance, it could recover. All is not lost, but that is not to say we don’t still risk a lot.”

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 ?? Main picture Rebecca Marr ?? Cal Flyn, left, in an abandoned house in Yesnaby, Orkney; above, a wild fox in the ghost city of Pripyat, near Chernobyl, and a burned-out home in Detroit, top
Main picture Rebecca Marr Cal Flyn, left, in an abandoned house in Yesnaby, Orkney; above, a wild fox in the ghost city of Pripyat, near Chernobyl, and a burned-out home in Detroit, top

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