Margi Bryant
@margibryant.bsky.social
83 followers 83 following 47 posts
Researcher and writer on people and nature, focusing mostly on the Peak District and the (Derbyshire) River Derwent. Formerly journalist, aid worker, educator and accidental academic, now trying to draw these strands together in my writing.
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margibryant.bsky.social
I was thrilled to see one of the Peak District pairs this summer, but didn't talk about it in case I accidentally gave away their location. Good that they nested on land managed by @nationaltrust.org.uk but I wish the NT didn't still lease some of its land to grouse shooting tenants!
margibryant.bsky.social
Yes, it was good! I liked your blog notes but you missed out Steven Lipscombe from @rewildingbritain.org.uk who came up with my fave phrase of the week "people and the rest of nature". Although "love your bogs and scrub" from @ianthewildside.bsky.social was a close contender.
margibryant.bsky.social
Stimulating time last week at www.ukeconet.org/wilder-future-for-the-uplands.html. Inspiring work going on but I'd like more focus on people as part of the process. Great wording from Steve Lipscombe @rewildingbritain.org.uk, not "people and nature" but "people and the rest of nature" #naturewriting
margibryant.bsky.social
That's good to hear! That kind of wall/fence (of which there are lots around here) isn't good for deer. Should be either a proper high angled deer fence or a traditional drystone wall. They often knock a hole in walls but I've helped repair many such holes, glad they got through without injury.
margibryant.bsky.social
Did the stag jumping the fence get over all right? I've seen them not quite make it and get stuck on that kind of wall/fence combo.
margibryant.bsky.social
Happens to us all! Reminds me of the year when all teaching went online in 2020-21. Nightmare!
margibryant.bsky.social
Looks lovely, whereabouts were you? I look forward to reading your new book!
Hope to say hello to you at the Paper Boats "Refuge for Nature?" meeting in Callander next month.
margibryant.bsky.social
My brilliant daughter-in-law created a triptych of erasure poems for part of her MSc. The underlying text is Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations, but the poems and images subvert and critique growth-based economics, referencing #1 colonialism, #2 degrowth and #3 reciprocity. Thoughtful and beautiful!
margibryant.bsky.social
Yes of course, "the century's corpse outleant". Thanks! I must have been thinking of "In time of the breaking of nations", which is actually more positive re continuation of basic human activities and emotions.
margibryant.bsky.social
I've known this poem since my teens but not reaiised how much it represents right now! Was it written around the time of the outbreak of WWI? How great that you're teaching it. I just wish I could be party to the "blessed hope" that the thrush knows.
margibryant.bsky.social
Really heartfelt congratulations! You kindly signed a copy of this last year for me to give to my son and daughter-in-law, who had followed "Lost Rainforests" up and down the west coasts of Wales and Scotland! They loved "Lie of the Land" just as much.
margibryant.bsky.social
Isn't Restore Trust associated with the collective of far-right think tanks based at 55 Tufton Street, which draws on support from various disreputable forces incl the fossil fuel industry? I know that sounds a bit like a conspiracy theory, but sometimes conspiracy theories are, well, conspiracies!
margibryant.bsky.social
True, housing cost less, if you had access to it. But if you were a single woman it was virtually impossible to take out a tenancy agreement or mortgage. And if you were a single women with a child, god help you!
margibryant.bsky.social
Well you're a poetically gifted writer already, so unless you fancy the other option...
But I think I'll definitely risk it one day!
margibryant.bsky.social
Loved this! Cadair is my favourite Welsh mountain. I've always meant to spend a night up there, which is reputed to make you either mad or poetically gifted. I wonder which I'd be?
margibryant.bsky.social
I've always thought of them as a complement to my cats! Not as cute when young, not as independent from the get-go (but they get there eventually), but they can (also eventually) unload the dishwasher.
margibryant.bsky.social
Finally quit my university job and spent the week helping out with a survey of moorland vegetation. I can now confidently distinguish between bilberry, cowberry, crowberry, cranberry, assorted heathers and multiple grasses, sedges and rushes. Nice transition to a life more focused on #naturewriting
margibryant.bsky.social
Definitely a listening priority for me. When I worked for Pembrokeshire Coast National Park, we were negotiating with farmers to protect the coastal heath and its insect populations, which are choughs' main food supply. Looks like it worked, with nearly 100 breeding pairs last year!
margibryant.bsky.social
Looks wonderful! "Weeds" are a cultural construct.
margibryant.bsky.social
But there's a clear recent uptake in city-dwellers wanting to "be in nature", especially since the pandemic My own research in the Peak District shows that the vast majority of visitors come from nearby cities - not travelling far, not spending lots of money, and feeling very connected to place.
margibryant.bsky.social
Excellent protest walk today across part of the Duke's trashed moorland. The mismanagement is not just "alleged", it's glaringly obvious. And it's not only about wildlife: degraded peat moorland releases carbon and contributes to climate change, and heather burning causes the majority of wildfires.
margibryant.bsky.social
Trying to convince these two that this is #internationalcatday but they're not too impressed. With their very different personalities, it took some cunning (and strategically placed treats) to lure them into the same space for a photocall. But they're a roller-coaster delight every day of the year.
margibryant.bsky.social
I was by the river a while ago with an elderly lady who loved kingfishers. She had prints of kingfishers on her walls, stone kingfishers on her gateposts, but had never seen one. We paused by a bend, and there was that flash of blue. But she was looking away, and missed it. I felt so bad for her!
margibryant.bsky.social
Very wise words from you, Nic, about transaction and tropes. Just before the Salt Path furore, I decided that the nature memoir I've been sporadically working on for a year was uncomfortably formulaic. Now exploring other approaches, drawing inspiration from other peoples' work, including yours!