Saturday 29 August 2020

Is this the most powerful man in Britain?

 

 

The next time you are scanning down a newspaper list of the nation's most powerful look for the name James Bevan. I’ll hazard that be it a list of the top 10, 50 or 500 you’ll not find his name amongst the politicians, royalty, celebrities, social media influencers, billionaires and their like. But it should be. For Sir James Bevan runs the Environment Agency (EA).

 

At first glance you might think, really? A few rivers. A bit of pollution here and there. But the truth is the EA has the most astonishing remit from nuclear waste to boating on the River Thames, with responsibility for the air, water and land quality for each and every of our 13 million English hectares of land, 22,000 miles of river and 3,100 miles of coastline seawards to the three-mile limit which includes 2 million hectares of coastal waters. It is fair to say that there is not a moment of your life that the EA does not touch.

 

 

Sir James Bevan

 

Is James Bevan qualified to run the EA? Frankly, knowing that he could be dealing with floods, nitrate vulnerable zones, issues with Hinkley Point, oil spills and landfill tax all before morning coffee it makes you wonder whether anyone might be qualified. But for the record, Bevan was a career diplomat with the Foreign and Commonwealth Office before taking up his current position as Chief Executive in 2015 having stepped down from his final posting as High Commissioner to India. In case you wonder at £185,000 a year he earns thirty grand more than the Prime Minster.

 

We don’t tend to hear much from Sir James, he is not exactly ‘the face’ of the EA, but from time to time he pops up with a keynote speech. Last week (19 August) was such a moment when he addressed a group of business leaders with proposals to reform the EU Water Framework Directive (WFD) post-Brexit. I know that sounds inestimably dull but WFD is the measure by which our rivers are determined as clean or not. Currently just 14% are. The Bevan proposal to move the WFD goalposts would raise that to 79% at the stroke of a legislator’s pen. Cue delight from the water (aka sewage) industry and outrage from environmentalists. In case you think the sewage mention is an aside, here are some statistics. Water (!) companies released 1.5m hours of raw sewage via storm outflows into rivers in 2019, in 204,000 discharges all of which are permitted by the EA.

 

Earlier in the week I joined a webinar hosted by the Cotswolds WASP group – Windrush Against Sewage Pollution. This once bright limestone river is regularly turned grey by sewage outflow; I’m told you can not only see it but smell it such is the volume. Now the EA might claim this is within the current regulatory guidelines but that is not really the point. The EA should be asking whether those guidelines are sufficient. Surely, we are past that moment in time when we allow our rivers to become open sewers? How is it that the fight against climate change (an EA core value) fails to include our rivers?

 

I don’t think Bevan had anticipated the whiplash against his words; a defence of sorts was quickly mounted on the EA web site with the suggestion that in Trump-style post justification he was just ‘floating’’ a few ideas. That may well be true, but I think the worrying aspect of this is that arguably one of the most powerful men in the country prefers less regulation to more when he is meant to be addressing the precipitous decline in the state of our rivers.

 

 

 

 

On the masthead with Joan Collins

 

Last week, the moment I clicked the send button for my The Spectator featuring Simon Cooper missive, I was overcome with hubristic angst. So, for that excessive indulgence, I do apologise but, as many of as you will have gathered, the beaver thing does rather get my goat to mix mammal metaphors.

 

 

All that said, I’ve become a great fan of The Spectator in recent years. Rod Liddle and Toby Young are my ‘go to’ columnists in every issue. You might not always like what they write. In fact, sometimes they appear undeniable prats. But you end each piece the better for the reading of it; it is a cranial work out for those little grey cells to which Agatha Christie’s Christie’s Poirot often alluded.

 

So, to get a piece in the magazine (and be paid for it!), plus a by-line on the front cover along with Joan Collins, was massively exciting. They also selected Beaver Fever as one of the three topics to be featured in the weekly podcast, which I had to narrate myself. My impromptu studio ended up being one of the spare bedrooms (least echo) with my iPhone perched on a tower of toilet rolls. Very rock ‘n roll.

 

I was rather dreading that the article might ignite a bit of a Twitter storm from the pro-beaver lobby but for the most part nearly all the comments I received, both on social media and by email, were supportive. Thank you to all who took the trouble to write.

 

On the more important issue as to whether Beaver Fever had any effect I’m delighted to say, probably yes, unless you are a believer in massive coincidences. The day after publication the River Otter Fisheries Association received a reply from environment minister Rebecca Pow to a letter they had sent her 23 June; the granting of further wild release licences in England is now suspended pending further consultations.

 

However, this is not really a moment for celebration as the subtext of the letter suggests that the pro-beaver lobby still holds most of the cards. They recently stepped up the rhetoric with a carefully crafted PR release that posited that now beavers were an accepted native species (sic) they should have full protection under the law, in much the same way as otters.

 

Us beaver sceptics are clearly playing catch up but there is some good news. An alternate report will soon be out to question the evidence of the previous report (largely a love ode to beavers) on which Rebecca Pow based her decision to allow the River Otter colony to remain in place. There is also a beaver summit being held in September at the instigation of the Beaver Trust. Yes, such a thing really does exist with the aim of nationwide reintroduction. Ironically, of the 40 or so invitees, 9 have stated their opposition to beaver introductions and as the news of the event has spread more beaver sceptic organisations have been applying for places.

 

Mysteriously, my invite has been lost in the post, but my mole will be reporting back.

 

 

Bank Holiday & September Special Offers

 

I have to tell you that you all rather knocked us down in the rush with the first tranche of special offers earlier in the month; the SOLD OUT shingle went out faster than I anticipated. However, we’ve picked ourselves up. Dusted down. And have four offers running over this holiday weekend and into September.

 

Avon Springs – River Avon

Free lake ticket with every river ticket

 

Compton Chamberlayne – River Nadder

2-for-1 on selected weekends

 

Deans Court – River Allen

2-for-1 until 6th September

 

Wimborne St Giles – River Allen

£20 off all day rods

 

Click here for details ....

 

 

Autumn Two Pack

 

You need to be armed and ready for both eventualities in the autumn; the fish on the surface. And the fish on the fin. My Autumn Two Pack with September/October dries and the Chalkstreams nymphs should cover just about every possibility and the 12f/6xt leader will give you an extra edge.

 

Click here to order ....

 

 

 

Quiz

A newsletter topic theme this week but as ever, it is all just for fun with the answers at the bottom of the page.

 

1) The Windrush is a tributary of which famous English river?

 

2) In what year did India become an independent nation?

 

3) Who was editor of The Spectator 1999-2005?

 

Bridge at Newbridge, at confluence of Windrush and river

in question and thought to be oldest bridge over that particular river.

 

 

Have a great Bank Holiday - the next is Christmas Day!

 

 

Best wishes,

 

 

 

Simon Cooper simon@fishingbreaks.co.uk

Founder & Managing Director

www.fishingbreaks.co.uk

 

 

Answers:

1)     River Thames

2)     1947

3)     Boris Johnson

Friday 14 August 2020

Time to cheer?

 

Greetings!

 

Plenty of cheers went up last week when news was released that the industrial scale ‘watercress’ plant on the River Alre, the main tributary for the River Itchen, was to close. In truth, the locally reared watercress had long become insignificant; the bulk of the operation involved processing salads grown in Spain and Portugal. This, and other similar operations, around Alresford have been subject to much scrutiny in recent years as insect life and water quality has declined precipitously on the Alre and Itchen.

 

The residents of Alresford, who famously ran a TRUCK OFF campaign 15 years ago when the banners were removed by the police, will be able, at least for a while, to sleep a little easier as the stream of European juggernauts, horribly unsuited to the Georgian High Street, disappear. But, on the other hand, 100 jobs will go and the business created by Hampshire man Malcolm Isaacs will be scaled back to the plant on the River Test.

 

 

Simeon Hay at Itchen Stoke for CHALK

 

The current owners, Bakkavor, of Icelandic origins but now listed on the FTSE, deny the closure has anything to do with pollution issues and all to do with the loss of a key customer. It is hard to judge the truth but with a share price currently trading at 60p compared to a 52-week high of 160p clearly not all is well.

 

It feels to me rather Luddite to join in the cheering. I doubt the processing plant will remain long mothballed. At worst, another similar company will take over the plant that has valuable water use licences. At best, the site will be snapped up as a distribution centre. Or maybe, with the new planning regime on the way, a prime rural brownfield site will become box standard housing. Which really brings me to the nub of the issue in the Itchen valley.

 

If I’d have been writing this a century ago light industry would have been to blame for the polluted rivers. Tanning plants. Fulling mills. That sort of thing. Fifty years on agriculture, and to a lesser extent the nascent aquaculture business, would have been in the dock. For back then Hampshire was a major farming county. It is no coincidence that the wide streets of both Alresford and Stockbridge evolved to accommodate the sheep trade.

 

But today it is us, people who are to blame. Our houses. Our pollution. Our lifestyle. Our relentless pressure on a fragile ecosystem. In living memory, the population of the Itchen catchment has more than doubled. It is set to grow further. If the Itchen, and for that matter many of our chalkstreams, are to be preserved it will require an end to the government led transformation of the rural into the semi-urban.

 

 

Late note: never usually my favourite environment 'campaigner' George Monbiot wrote a great article (12/Aug) about the latest river disasters in Wales and polluted rivers generally for The Guardian. Read it here.... And read here about the greatest water scandal of the last decade.

 

 

Of Fish and Foe

 

The names Heike Bachelier and Andy Heathcote popped up on my Google news alert; something about fish was flagged. The names bugged me. They seemed familiar but it was not until I followed the link to the just released documentary Of Fish and Foe all became clear. I had helped out Heike and Andy with their 2008 film the Lost World of Mr Hardy, a triumph for us fly fishing gear heads. Not quite the same triumph for those unsuspecting in search on Thomas Hardy’s Wessex.

 

Of Fish And Foe | Trailer | Coming Soon

 

 

The PR release succinctly reprises the Of Fish And Foe plot: The Pullars are one of the last families using traditional methods to fish for wild Atlantic salmon off the coast of Scotland. When these methods involve killing seals, the salmon's natural predators, conflict erupts. Animal activist groups Sea Shepherd and Hunt Saboteurs oppose the Pullars at every turn, despite the legality of the fishermen's actions and the consequences to their livelihood. Challenging preconceptions, this ambiguous film puts modern environmentalism under the microscope.

 

It is not a cheerful 91 minute watch but it may well change your view of salmon netting; it is a fascinating slice of a disappearing life. The film is available on Amazon TV (free for Prime subscribers) and Apple TV.

 

 

 

Photo of the Week

 

I have an idea this might just be my photo of the year, young Isla Spears, loving (I think?) the wading at Bullington Manor on the Kids Fish Camp. If you are interested in enrolling your child, either 8-11 years or 12-15 years, drop me an email and I’ll let you know when we have dates for July 2021.

 

 

Just having fun ......

 

 

Special Offers

 

The half price special offer for Kanara on the River Itchen sold out in double quick time. Maybe the thought of being able to wade in the chalkstream cool of 10C was just too tempting …..

 

There are a few 2-for-1 days left at Bullington Manor and plenty of opportunities for the free lake ticket (value £20) at Avon Springs.

 

Click here for details ....

 

 

Keeping up with Frankel

 

I have to mention this because my pal Frankel (the horse) would have been very disappointed had it been otherwise – he doesn’t entirely understand the concept of coming second.

 

Frankel: The Greatest Racehorse of All Time and the Sport that Made Him (I know, modest title ….) is firmly at No. 1 in the Amazon bestselling charts for the sport. Sorry if you tried to order a signed copy last week and the link failed: all rectified now.

 

It is available in all bookshops, via Amazon in Hardcover, Kindle Edition or Audiobook. For a signed copy visit the Fishing Breaks web site.

 

 

 

That was July .......

 

It is hard to imagine, after our recent run of 30C+ days, that last month was one of the coolest July’s on record. It was also a very dry month, following on an equally rain-free April, May and June. Fortunately, the super wet winter has kept the chalkstreams in good stead with only the headwaters in any sense ‘suffering’. The August weed cut, that starts next week, will be brief and insignificant.

 

As Covid continues to disrupt holidays and trips abroad, it seems plenty of you have disconnected Zoom and headed for the river. July has been our busiest ever at Fishing Breaks not only on the river but here at Nether Wallop Mill. I think we have just done 11 days straight; the fish have been issued with tin helmets.

 

The monthly July Feedback Draw winner is Michael Jones, a client since 2009, who fished at Whitchurch Fulling Mill, winning a bottle of the meadow sweet River Test gin.

 

 

 

Quiz

A newsletter topic theme this week but as ever, it is all just for fun with the answers at the bottom of the page.

 

1)     Which colourful annual plant, often used in tubs and hanging baskets, produces an oil similar to that of watercress?

 

2)     What is the origin of the name Alresford (pictured)?

 

3)     August used to be 29 days. Who added the extra two?

 

 

 

Have a good weekend.

 

 

Best wishes,

 

 

 

Simon Cooper simon@fishingbreaks.co.uk

Founder & Managing Director

www.fishingbreaks.co.uk

 

 

Answers:

1)     Nasturtiums.

2)     Ford across the River Alre.

3)     Julius Caesar.