On the black hill
Coffee and cake at a Ukrainian fundraiser provided the impetus to climb Carn Ingli which, although not very high as mountains go, is quite a slog if you start from sea level.
The view over Newport and the estuary is superb on a fine clear day like this but it's a shame about the scorched zone. Acres of heather were accidentally set alight when local sheep farmers aimed to burn off the dead bracken and gorse on the lower slopes. It's a 'traditional' annual practice said encourage the growth of grass for the sheep that spend much of the year up here. But very often wind spreads the fire to the higher heather zone where by mid-March many ground-nesting birds are already laying, reptiles are emerging from hibernation and insects are hatching or on the wing. These established patches of scrub vegetation* also sequester carbon which is released into the air when burnt.
Traditions, especially rural ones, are hard to overturn. Best to lift your eyes away from the damage and admire the view.
* Heather, whinberry, moss, lichen etc
Title borrowed from Bruce Chatwin's memorable 1982 novel about two old Welsh border sheep farmers...
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