A Book of Britain: The Lore, Landscape and Heritage of a Treasured Countryside. Johnny Scott

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Название A Book of Britain: The Lore, Landscape and Heritage of a Treasured Countryside
Автор произведения Johnny Scott
Жанр Социология
Серия
Издательство Социология
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9780007412389



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landowner, experimented with using water from local streams to deposit silt on the fields through the winter on his estate in the Golden Valley, beside the River Dore. Vaughan is reputed to have got the idea of ‘water meadows’ from noticing water running from a piece of ground where a mole had tunnelled too close to a stream. This rivulet was ‘onepace broad andsome twenty in length’, and the grass where the water flowed over it was considerably greener than that on either side. He subsequently dug a channel, called the Royal Trench, from the River Dore across his estate and back to the Dore. Open conduits ran from the main channel to various fields and by using a system of sluices fields could be flooded either during dry periods or through the winter to both protect the grass from frost and provide fertiliser in the form of silt. Vaughan’s invention was a demonstrable success, increasing the value of his land from £40 to £300nd moving his kinsman, John Davis, to verse:

       ‘His royall trench (that all the rest commands Andholds the Sperme of Herbage by a Spring) In fuseth in the wombe of sterile Lands, The Liquidseede that makes them Plenty bring. Here, two of the inferior Elements (Joyning in Coïtu) Water on the Leaze (Like Sperme most active in such complements) Begets thefull-panche Foison of Lncrease: For, through Earths rifts into her hollow wombe, (Where Nature doth her Twyning-Issue frame) The water soakes, where of doth kindly come Full Barnes, to joy the Lords that hold the same: For, as all Womens wombes do barren seeme, That never had societie of Men; So fertill Grounds we often barren deeme, Whose Bow ells, Water fills not now and then.’

      Water meadows were brilliant in their simplicity and supplied the earliest hay, fed the best sheep and produced the finest milking cows. Following the publication of his seminal work in 1610, Most Approved and Long experienced Water Workes containing The manner of Winter and Summer drowning, Vaughan’s discovery was soon widely adopted along river valleys across the country. Remains of old water meadows and their irrigation systems can be seen at Harnham Water Meadows, in Salisbury; Fordingbridge, in Hampshire; the River Kennet Meadows, near Reading; Hurst, near Dorchester on Thames, Oxfordshire; Britford, in Wiltshire; Mere, Gillingham, Blandford Forum and Shaftesbury, in Dorset; Riddlesworth and West Lexham or Appleby, Measham and Austrey in Leicestershire, to name only a fraction.

      FERTILISER, OR THE LACK OF IT, WAS ONE OF THE MOST INHIBITING FACTORS IN MAINTAINING CROP PRODUCTION AND ON EVERY FARM A GOOD DUNG HEAP WAS REGARDED AS ONE OF THE MOST VALUABLE ASSETS, WITH ANYTHING DEGRADABLE ADDED TO IT.

      At much the same time, Sir Hugh Plat, one of Queen Elizabeth I’s courtiers and a keen horticulturalist, was advocating the more scientific use of marl (calcium-carbonate-rich clay) to fertilise fields. Fertiliser, or the lack of it, was one of the most inhibiting factors in maintaining crop production, and on every farm a good dung heap was regarded as one of the most valuable assets, with anything degradable added to it. On the chalk and limestone downs, chalk was dug, crushed and scattered on the loam. Near the coast, farmers gathered the seashell-rich sand that collected along the front of a shingle beach and mixed it in with manure. When a grass pasture was being ploughed out in counties such as Sussex or Surrey, the matted turfs were first shovelled off and burnt, and the ashes scattered in with the ploughing.

      There is evidence that lime was being burnt for fertiliser towards the end of the sixteenth century, a practice which was to become common two centuries later. The limitation with chalk, lime and seashells was transportation, and even dung was rarely seen in fields other than those immediately conterminous to the farmhouse. Marling was more feasible since it was simply a matter of digging a pit in the vicinity of the field or fields to be fertilised and extracting the clay. ‘Marl’ or ‘Marl Pit’ are common in field names across the country and many of the ponds seen where the corners of three or four fields meet are old flooded marl pits.

      The problem with any fertilising in those days was that farmers did not appreciate the difference in soil types relative to the quantity of fertiliser, or the duration of effective applications before it had a detrimental effect. Barnaby Googe, the Elizabethan pastoral poet observed, ‘In some counties they make their land very fruitful with laying on of Chalke … But long use of it in the end, brings the ground to starke nought, whereby the common people have a speech, that ground enriched with Chalke makes a rich Father and a beggarly Sonne.’ This comment is as true today when farmers force a succession of crops from the same field by increasing the application of fertiliser. Plat, who was a prolific author on such matters as making candied fruit or ‘suckets’ and the art of distilling scented water, wrote a detailed treatise in 1594 entitled Diverse new sorts of soyle not yet brought into any publique use, for manuring both of pasture and arable ground, which was the first textbook on the correct proportion of fertilisers for different soil types. The pressure to create more arable hectares led Charles I to commission Cornelius Vermuyden, the Dutch drainage engineer, to reclaim around 40,000 hectares of the Royal Forest at Hatfield Chase in the Isle of Axholme, Lincolnshire, in 1626. This was spectacularly unpopular among the local people who stood to lose their common rights and led to vigorous opposition. Dykes were destroyed and, until troops were sent to protect them, the camps of the Dutch and Walloon workmen were attacked at night, and several workmen killed.

      Much more damaging to the sinking status of the King was granting the Earl of Bedford a charter in 1632 to undertake the immensely ambitious project of draining 750,000 acres of the Norfolk, Lincolnshire and Cambridgeshire fens, round the Ouse Wash, River Welland and River Nene. Bedford and thirteen ‘Gentlemen Adventurers’, as venture capitalists were called in those days, were promised 40,000 hectares each for funding the project, with the King taking a backhander of 5,000 hectares. Drainage was met with furious resistance from the local population, many of whom made their living from grazing the marshes or by fishing and wildfowling. ‘The Powte’s Complaint’ (a powte being a lamprey) was a popular protest song lamenting the loss of the wild marshland landscape, sung by the ‘Fen Tigers’, marsh men who sabotaged the construction work whenever they could.

      Come, Brethren of the water, and let us all assemble, To treat upon this matter, which makes us quake and tremble; For we shall rue it, if it be true, that Fens be undertaken And where we feed in Fen and Reed, they’ll feed both Beef and Bacon. They’ll sow both beans and oats, where never man yet thought it, Where men did row in boats, ere undertakers brought it: But, Ceres, thou, behold us now, let wild oats be their venture, Oh let the frogs and miry bogs destroy where they do enter. Behold the great design, which they do now determine, Will make our bodie spine, a prey to crows and ver mine: For they do mean all Fens to drain, and waters overmaster, All will be dry, and we must die, cause Essex calves want pasture. Away with boats and rudder, farewell both boots and skatches, No need of one nor th’other, men now make better matches; Stilt-makers all and tanners, shall complain of this disaster, For they will make each muddy lake for Essex calves a pasture. The feather’d fowls have wings, to fly to other nations; But we have no such things, to help our transportations;

       We must give place (oh grievous case) to horned beasts and cattle, Except that we can all agree to drive them out by battle. Wherefore let us entreat our ancient water nurses To show their power sogreat as t’help to drain their purses, And send us good old Captain Flood to lead us out to battle, Then Two penny Jack with skales on’s back will drive out all the cattle.

      The project was seen by many people as a device for already wealthy men to benefit by dispossessing others and had much to do with hastening the Civil War. In the summer of 1637, the engineers announced that, despite all the difficulties, the work was complete. However, it proved to be a complete failure during