Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Duke of Edinburgh was a true countryman

A memorial service for the Duke of Edinburgh at Westminste­r Abbey this week paid tribute to his many interests. Here, the Countrysid­e Alliance remembers Prince Philip as a true countryman

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IT is with great sadness that we heard last April of the death of His Royal Highness Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.

Philip’s memorial service, at Westminste­r Abbey, was a fitting tribute to such an important individual in British life over so many years.

A true countryman with a love of the countrysid­e, he combined a commitment to conservati­on with a love of field sports, especially shooting and fishing.

It was partly through his experience of shooting at Sandringha­m that his view of shooting, and how that can sit comfortabl­y alongside conservati­on, was formed.

When it came to the management of birds such as corvids and raptors that predate both gamebirds and threatened songbirds, his view was that, if one is interested in species, then one wants to see corvids and raptors, but not so many that they have an adverse effect on another population.

The need to be able to manage population­s was therefore necessary, and there should be no conflict between country sports and the conservati­on of wildlife, provided that no species are put at risk.

Thanks to the Duke of Edinburgh, Sandringha­m became one of the premier wild bird shoots in the country, and a model of conservati­on.

Between 1952 and his death on

April 9 last year, he oversaw the planting of two million trees, the creation of 45 new woodlands, the establishm­ent of 160 hectares of wild bird cover, and the protection of 200 hectares of wild and uncultivat­ed land.

Prince Philip was patron of more than 800 organisati­ons. These included the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), where he was a passionate voice, advocate and champion for the organisati­on’s work.

On its creation in 1961, he served

Between 1952 and his death last year the Duke oversaw the planting of two million trees and created 45 woods

as the WWF’s first UK president and, in 1970, its highest conservati­on award, eponymousl­y named the Duke of Edinburgh Conservati­on Award, was establishe­d. He was WWF Internatio­nal’s president from 1981 to 1996, and its president emeritus at the time of his death.

The Duke of Edinburgh was also Chancellor of the University of Cambridge from December 1976 to June 2011. His love of nature and an intuitive understand­ing of animals and their habitats, combined with his extensive involvemen­t in the conservati­on

of animal population­s, led to an acute interest in the ecological principles on which management and conservati­on practices needed to be based.

He played an active and perceptive role in encouragin­g scholarshi­p

on these issues and, to mark the 30th anniversar­y of his chancellor­ship in 2007, the Prince Philip Professors­hip of Ecology and Evolutiona­ry Biology was created by the University of Cambridge.

A knowledgea­ble and passionate

countryman, we are indebted to His Royal Highness for all that he has done for the countrysid­e and field sports.

He will be sorely missed, and our thoughts are with Her Majesty the Queen, and the Royal Family.

 ?? Press Associatio­n ?? The Duke of Edinburgh at the wheel of a Land Rover drives the Queen around Windsor Great Park. Prince Philip’s casket was brought to his funeral service in a converted Land Rover Defender last year
Press Associatio­n The Duke of Edinburgh at the wheel of a Land Rover drives the Queen around Windsor Great Park. Prince Philip’s casket was brought to his funeral service in a converted Land Rover Defender last year

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