Oh Eun-Sun claims female 8000m record

    A South Korean climber has reached the top of Annapurna in Nepal and claimed a record for becoming the first woman to scale the world's 14 highest peaks.
    Oh Eun-sun was shown live on television planting a South Korean flag on the summit of the mountain.However, there is
    still a row over Ms Oh's 2009 ascent of another Himalayan peak, with some disputing whether she reached the top.
    She is due to be questioned about that climb on her return from Annapurna. Ms Oh threw her arms up in celebration after crawling on all fours for the final stretch to the summit, the Associated Press news agency reported. Poor weather last weekend prevented Ms Oh from reaching the summit of Annapurna, at 26,545 feet (8,091 metres). 
    Her nearest rival in the 14-peaks quest, Spanish climber Edurne Pasaban, has expressed scepticism about her claim to have reached the summit of Kangchenjunga in 2009. 
    Ms Oh has denied all the allegations. Her sponsors called a press conference in December 2009 to reassert her claim to have reached the summit.
    All climbers who make an ascent from Nepal report to Elizabeth Hawley, an 86-year-old American based in Kathmandu, whose research is recorded in the Himalayan Database.
    They have to answer her questions about the climb they have just undertaken.
    She is widely accepted as the arbiter of Himalayan climbs. There is no official body that authenticates claims.
    But Ms Hawley has marked Ms Oh's 2009 climb as "disputed" and says that Ms Oh and her Sherpa will have to be questioned again about that ascent when they return from Annapurna.
    Ms Oh's ascent of Kangchenjunga remains recognised in the Himalayan Database, so she can claim the record.
    If Ms Hawley's further investigations lead her to change the status of the 2009 ascent to "unrecognised" Ms Oh would not be internationally regarded as the first woman to have climbed all 14 8,000ers, as they are known. 
    AP:27-4-10

Post Title

Oh Eun-Sun claims female 8000m record


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/oh-eun-sun-claims-female-8000m-record.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

Black Grouse numbers plummet in cold winter

     The harshest winter for 30 years has caused populations of rare black grouse to fall to their lowest recorded level in northern England, conservationists said today.
    Male black grouse numbers have almost halved since last spring in a "huge blow" to the upland birds, which were recovering before two wet summers and the latest cold winter reversed their rising fortunes.Black grouse had increased from 773 males in 1998 to a peak of 1,200 in 2007, but cold and rainy summers in 2007 and 2008 led to poor breeding seasons, with just 730 males recorded in spring 2009.Scientists from the Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust were hopeful that a spell of good weather last spring had allowed the bird to bounce back with a more successful breeding season.But the "appalling conditions" this winter, with long periods of freezing conditions and deep snow, have badly damaged the birds in their North Pennines stronghold.
    According to the latest monitoring of their traditional "lekking" sites where they perform their courtship rituals, numbers of males have almost halved to 400 this spring, conservationists said.
    And the isolated black grouse population in north west Northumberland, which was already on the edge of extinction, now has just 15 males and will vanish unless major steps are taken immediately to help the bird, the Trust warned.
    Dr Phil Warren, research scientist for the GWCT, said: "We have been running the North Pennines Black Grouse Recovery Project for the past 15 years and we had stemmed the decline and increased numbers to a peak of 1,200 in 2007.
    "However the past two wet summers have badly affected the breeding success, and this has been compounded by appalling conditions this winter."
    The red-listed bird has witnessed "staggering declines" over the past 150 years as a result of a series of threats including habitat loss and increasingly intensive agriculture.
    Where once it was found in every county in Britain, there are now just a few thousand breeding males in northern England, Wales and Scotland.But conservation efforts under the 15-year recovery project in the North Pennines, funding for which has now ended, had enabled the black grouse to exceed targets of reaching 1,000 males by 2010 ahead of schedule - before numbers plummeted again.
    Dr Warren said: "Although this is a huge blow to all those that have been involved in black grouse recovery, it does underline the importance of conserving populations at levels which can withstand these periodic random factors such as weather.
    "Our work to improve the conditions on the fringes of moors has proved very important as the population in the Pennines has recovered sufficiently to withstand these extreme weather conditions." Conservationists have been encouraging moorland managers to establish small areas of native woodland on the edge of moors to provide food when other sources such as heather are covered by snow.
    According to the GWCT these habitats have proved crucial, with the numbers of males declining by just 15 per cent at leks where woodland was available but halving at sites where there was none. 

    The Telegraph: 27-4-10

Post Title

Black Grouse numbers plummet in cold winter


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/black-grouse-numbers-plummet-in-cold.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

David Attenborough warns of ecological disaster

    Sir David Attenborough has warned the Britain's wildlife is on the brink of destruction thanks to man's impact on the environment.The naturalist made his comments in the foreword to a new book, Silent Summer, in which 40 prominent British ecologists explain how humanity is wiping out Britain's wildlife.
    It comes fifty years after the publication of Silent Spring, Rachel Carson's acclaimed book on pollution of wildlife that helped the growth of the environmental movement worldwide and led to a ban of some pesticides in Britain. 
    The new book explains the negative impact of pesticides, population growth, farming and other factors on the plants and species that prop up Britain's ecosystems.
    Attenborough writes: "We tend to focus on the bigger animals and ignore the smaller ones – but small creatures like these are the basis of our entire ecosystems and they are disappearing faster than ever.
    "That loss is transforming our wildlife and countryside."
    The 600-page book, edited by Norman Maclean, emeritus professor of genetics at Southampton University, lays bare the grim reversal in the populations of many butterflies, bees, flies and snails, and the virtual extinction of some species of moth.
    Prof Maclean argues that "the evidence is that we could be in the middle of the next great extinction of wildlife, both globally and in Britain."
    The book details how three quarters of British butterfly species are in decline, thanks in part to the destruction of the plants caterpillars feed on, treated by farmers as weeds.
    Moth numbers were down by a third from 1968 to 2002 for the same reasons, with at least 20 species having seen populations decline by more than 90 per cent.
    Rivers in Britain have also suffered, with caddis flies, mayflies and stoneflies said to have badly suffered from the increased use of pesticides on sheep and cattle, which can wash off and poison the water if the animals enter a river or stream.
    The species are a key food source for birds, fish and other predators.
    Starling and swallow populations are down by two thirds since the mid-1970s, while it is feared that hedgehogs could be extinct by 2025.

     The Telegraph: 25-4-10. Photo PA


Post Title

David Attenborough warns of ecological disaster


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/david-attenborough-warns-of-ecological.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

Endangered Whales could be killed legally

    The body, set up to protect the species in international waters, banned the commerical hunting of whales outright in 1986.
    But whaling nations like Japan, Norway and Iceland continued to hunt the mammals using a series of loopholes, such as whaling for "scientific research".The IWC, which is due to meet next month to update the law around the protection of whales, has suggested the only way forward is to set up a series of quotas.It is argued that this will limit the slaughter because the killing of whales is controlled under international law.
    However the details of the proposals reveal that the quotas will be in the thousands and include endangered species. Papers issued by the IWC suggest thousands of minke whales could be killed in the Southern Ocean over the next ten years. Even fin whales and sei whales, that are officially in danger of dying out, are included.
    Environmentalists were outraged, arguing that the killing of whales should never be sanctioned under international law while the species is still under threat of extinction.
    Heather Sohl, species policy officer for WWF-UK, said it was "ridiculous" to allow hunting of whales in the Southern Ocean, which is a critical feeding ground for species including blue whales.
    "Some whales feed exclusively in the Southern Ocean - not eating at all during the winter months when they travel up to tropical waters," she said.
    "Allowing commercial whaling in an area where whales are so vulnerable goes against all logic."
    She also criticised the decision to include fin and sei whales in the quota.
    "Both fin and sei whale species were depleted to severely low levels by previous whaling that spun out of control, and they remain endangered as a result.
    "Allowing new commercial whaling on these species when they have yet to recover from previous whaling is management madness."
    Whaling nations like Japan back the IWC proposals and are arguing for even higher quotas.
    But critics, including the UK, US and Australia, are against any deal that could cause an increase in whale hunting.
    The IWC will meet in in Agadair, Morocco at the end of this month. Nations will decide on whether to set quotas and the catch that will be allowed. There are also proposals to promote whale watching as an alternative source of income for whaling communities and to protect whales from climate change and over fishing. 
    Louise Gray:© The Telegraph 24-4-10

Post Title

Endangered Whales could be killed legally


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/endangered-whales-could-be-killed.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

David Craig remembers 'Bradford Lad' Pete Greenwood.

    Bradford Lads in Action: Pete Greenwood on belay watches Harold Drasdo inch across the steep expanses of Gimmer Crag in the English Lake District. Photo Drasdo Collection©

    Peter Greenwood, who has died aged 78, was one of the boldest and most agile rock climbers in Britain in the 1950s. Joe Brown and Don Whillans, from Manchester, attracted the headlines,especially for their feats in Snowdonia and the Alps. The finest Lake District climbers – Greenwood and Arthur Dolphin, Harold Drasdo and Paul Ross – were their equals. They mostly came from Bradford and made it to Cumberland after hair-raising motorbike rides from Yorkshire.
    At that time, the hardest new routes up crags were rarely inspected beforehand from an abseil rope; they were climbed straight up with minimal protective gear and no specialised footwear. One of Greenwood's most direct lines, the well-named Angels' Highway on the Castle Rock of Triermain, near Thirlmere, was swarmed up on impulse when another possibility nearby looked too hard on the day. It is 120ft (36m) high, without a resting place, and so steep that from its foot you have to lean backward to focus on its summit. Greenwood pioneered it, with just one sling for protection on a creaking flake of rock.
    Greenwood was born in Bradford, and educated at the city's Belle Vue school. He trained as a motor mechanic and first climbed in the gritstone quarry at Ilkley. His hardihood was typical of his generation. Most of these men were on a working-class wage. Their Cumbrian predecessors, Jim Birkett and Bill Peascod, would sometimes travel hundreds of miles by pushbike to reach the fells. In Greenwood's words: "We were never turned back by much, however wet it was. We'd come all that way, so we had to have something to show for the hours and hours on the road."
    If the rock was wet and slippery, they put socks over their gym shoes. On the second ascent of Deer Bield Buttress, in Far Easedale, in 1951, Greenwood wore out his socks: "This solution came to me. Take off the dirty wet sock, hold it in my teeth, take off the plimsoll, hold it in my teeth, take off the sock, hold it in my teeth, put on the plimsoll, put the sock on top." It must have taken all his balance and persistence to manage such a feat on a nearly vertical rock wall, in drizzle.
    After putting up 28 new routes in the Lake District in six years, Greenwood abruptly gave up climbing. He was about to marry Shirley, a teacher, and he saw climbing as too dangerous for a husband and father-to-be. "When I gave up, I bought some pegs [pitons], and an ice-axe, and a peg-hammer, and a krab [karabiner] to hang on the wall of our new house" – which they named Deer Bield. For the next 25 years he worked mainly as a builder, with his own business based in Carlisle, and put up more than a thousand houses in north England. He was a devoted salmon fisherman and for years had a beat on the River Avon.
    In the late 80s he returned to the crags and still balanced up them with the old unhesitating placement of feet and hands, although "half a million fags and 50,000 pints later" (figures he worked out with some care) he found that "the strength and the drive" had waned. They still shone out from his straight and challenging look and the humour and candour of his talk.

    He is survived by Shirley, his children Susan, Denise, Paul and Shane, and six grandchildren.
    Peter Greenwood, rock climber and builder, born 29 September 1931; died 2 February 2010

    David Craig©: The Guardian 21-4-10

Post Title

David Craig remembers 'Bradford Lad' Pete Greenwood.


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/david-craig-remembers-lad-pete.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

Clever Crows show innovative behaviour

    A tooled up Crow !

    Crows have an advanced way of thinking that enables them to develop new behaviours, say New Zealand researchers.
    Dr Alex Taylor and colleagues at the University of Auckland report their study of New Caledonian crows today in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
    "It appears that the crows have some kind of complex cognitive mechanism that allows them to generate innovation," says Taylor. He says apes, parrots and crows all generate more new behaviours in the wild than other species.
    But scientists have long wondered whether this is because they are just faster at learning from their mistakes than other animals, or whether they are specially wired to do so.Previous research has suggested it is the later, but the subject is a matter of controversy, says Taylor.

    Crow experiment
    In this experiment, Taylor and colleagues tested whether crows were able to combine different bits of previously gained knowledge to solve a new problem.
    The crows were presented with a short stick, hanging by a string from a perch near a toolbox containing a long stick, and some food in a hole.
    During a previous training period, the crows were given a chance to use a short tool to get food.
    They were constantly frustrated because the stick didn't reach the food and eventually ignored the tool altogether, says Taylor.
    The crows were also trained to pull up a string that had food on it.
    And they were given the opportunity of successfully getting food out of a hole with a long stick - something crows tend to do in the wild as well. 
    Abstract understanding
    Taylor says the group of crows, which had been trained, were able to use the short stick to get the long stick, and then use the long stick to get the food.
    "These crows had never pulled up a tool on a string before and they had never used one tool to get another tool," he says. Instead, he says, they used their previous experiences of pulling up a string and using a long tool to get food to innovate a new behaviour."They showed the ability to use behaviours in a new context," says Taylor.
    He says the crows behaviour showed they were thinking about what the short tool would allow them to do. "They were understanding about how tools can be used in a more abstract sense," says Taylor.
    Anna Sallah: ABC Science. 21-4-10

Post Title

Clever Crows show innovative behaviour


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/clever-crows-show-innovative-behaviour.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

Polish conservationist halts super-highway development.

    Malgorzata Gorska

    A Polish conservationist won a key environment prize Monday for leading a campaign that halted a giant expressway that would have sliced through one of Europe's last swaths of undisturbed wilderness.
    Malgorzata Gorska, 37, an activist with the Polish Society for the Protection of Birds, was one of six winners of this year's Goldman Environmental Prize, a $150,000 (euro110,000) cash award informally dubbed the "Green Nobel."
    She was recognized for her leadership in harnessing European Union regulations to stop the planned expressway from cutting through the Rospuda Valley, wetlands set amid a virgin pine forest that is home to endangered bird species, orchids, eagles, lynxes, wolves, elk, wild boars, otters and beavers.
    "Malgorzata Gorska's leadership in the fight to stop a controversial highway project led to a significant legal precedent for the environment that resulted in the protection of Poland's Rospuda Valley, one of Europe's last true wilderness areas," the Goldman Environment Prize said in a statement on its Web site.
    An award goes each year to six people for grass-roots struggles that inspire regular people to take environmental action.
    The awards are to be handed out Monday night in San Francisco, where the group is based.
    "It's an absolutely pristine wetland ecosystem. It's really a beautiful place but very unique in terms of its natural value," she said. "It's a kind of reference for scientists working on the restoration of wetlands which have already been damaged."
    Gorska herself lives near the pristine river valley, and adds: "I have an emotional link to those places."
    Developers began plans in 1996 to build the highway -- the Via Baltica -- that was to link Warsaw to Helsinki, Finland, by cutting through the Rospuda Valley. The highway has been rerouted to circumvent the pristine area.
    The Goldman prize said Gorska was "instrumental in fostering a citizens' movement and developing a case against the Polish government to protect the Rospuda Valley from construction."
    After efforts to persuade the government to stop its plans failed, Gorska took advantage of Poland's new membership in the EU, which it joined in 2004, making the case that the project violated environment regulations known as the EU's Natura 2000.
    The EU, as a result of her campaign, filed suit against Poland's government in 2007, forcing it to suspend work until the court could examine the case. While the European Court of Justice did that, a Polish court found the route violated national laws, and in 2009 the Polish government gave up its plans to build the expressway through the valley.
    Gorska said she plans to spend most of prize money on other environmental projects. She is currently trying to stop the construction of an airport in Tykocin, a town in the same part of Poland. Developers want to put the airport between two national parks and close to the same river valley that she has worked to protect.
    "There are a lot of migratory birds, which means there is a threat to nature and to planes," she said. 

    Associated Press © : 19-4-10

Post Title

Polish conservationist halts super-highway development.


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/polish-conservationist-halts-super.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

Sherpas to clear the Everest dead.

    The team also aims to remove tons of garbage left behind on the slopes under a Nepalese government program to clean up the popular tourist destination.
    The 20 Sherpas plan to begin the expedition May 1 and set up camp at the South Col, 26,240ft (8,000m) above sea level, team leader Namgyal said. Just above the South Col is the "death zone" area known as the toughest stretch for climbers because of low oxygen levels and rough terrain.
    The team said it plans to remove at least five bodies from a narrow trail between South Col and the summit, but has not identified them. In the past bodies have generally been removed only from lower elevations, because dangerous conditions have made removing bodies from the "death zone" nearly impossible.
    The team also plans to remove some 6,600lbs (3,000kgs) of garbage from the zone.
    "We will carry empty sacks and fill them with empty oxygen bottles, food wrappings, old tents and ropes from the area," Namgyal said.
    Garbage discarded on the mountain was a major environmental problem until the Nepalese government imposed strict rules about 15 years ago requiring visitors to return all of their gear and rubbish or risk losing a deposit.
    It is unclear how much trash is left on the mountain, but several clean-up expeditions have brought down tons of garbage.
    Namgyal, who like most Sherpa uses only one name, has climbed the 29,035ft (8,850m peak - the world's highest - seven times. One of the expedition's members, Long Dorje, has made the trip 14 times. All of the team members have visited the summit at least once.
    Sherpas were mostly yak herders and traders living in the Himalayas until Nepal opened its borders to tourists in 1950. Their stamina and knowledge of the mountains makes them expert guides and porters.

    Reuters 19-4-10©

Post Title

Sherpas to clear the Everest dead.


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/sherpas-to-clear-everest-dead.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

Coldest weather in 30 years marks the start of a series of extreme winters

    Scientists are warning that Britain can expect to endure a series of extreme winters - the like of which have not seen for more than 300 years.
    Researchers have found that low solar activity - marked by a decrease in the sun's magnetic field - influences the weather conditions across northern Europe.
     The last time the sun showed similar behaviour, between 1650 and 1700, temperatures dropped so low that Londoners were able to skate and hold fairs on the iced-over River Thames.
    According to a study published today, we are moving into "an era of low solar activity which is likely to result in UK winter temperatures more like those at the end of the Seventeenth Century."
    According to Mike Lockwood, one of the main researchers, the latest winter marks the start of a Maunder minimum - when solar activity falls for a prolonged time.
    The sun's magnetic field is thought to influence the jet stream - a fast-moving, high altitude current of air which moves eastwards at 35,000ft over the Atlantic.
    During the famously cold winters of the late 1600s the mild westerly winds were blocked and replaced by much colder blasts from the north-east - bringing Arctic conditions with them.
    The link between weaker solar activity and cold winters was made after experts found similarities between early weather records and this year's data.
    "This year's winter in the UK has been the fourteenth coldest in the last 160 years and yet the global average temperature for the same period has been the fifth highest," said Prof Lockwood, a space physicist at the University of Reading's department of meteorology. "We have discovered that this kind of anomaly is significantly more common when solar activity is low," he added. "Temperatures should not fall as low as they did in 1684 but we can expect an increased number of cold winters."
    Experts from Germany, Korea and the UK's Science and Technology Facilities Council also contributed to the paper published in the journal Environmental Research Letters.

    Laura Roberts©: The Telegraph 15-4-10

Post Title

Coldest weather in 30 years marks the start of a series of extreme winters


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/coldest-weather-in-30-years-marks-start.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

Julia Bradbury elected as Ramblers Assoc President

    The divine St Julia goes a rambling in Cumbria!

    The traditionally staid and sober Ramblers Association have defied convention and eschewed a wooly bearded male as its figure head and chosen  the popular TV presenter Julia Bradbury as its new President. Chief Executive Tom Franklin declared,  " In the Ramblers 75th year, our mission is to revamp walking and restore it to its proper place at the heart of everyday life, leisure and transport – no matter who you are! We want to break down the barriers to walking, whether it’s blocked paths or lack of motivation. There is no better expert at this than Julia Bradbury.”

    Julia herself comments....“My ambition with the Ramblers over the coming year is simple: get Britain on its feet. The country is stuffed with beautiful walks and a 130,000 mile footpath network – I want everyone to get out there and enjoy it!......Walking is for everyone; young, old, families, partners and mates can all enjoy a good walk around the hills. Get out there for an urban walk, a hike across the fells or just walk the dog!"
    Julia's TV CV includes fronting Countryfile; Wainwright’s Walks; Around the World in 80 Days; Climb Britain and Watchdog. 
    She was recently voted No 1 Walking Celebrity of the year by the Ramblers Walk Magazine readers, sealing her position as one of the most trusted and popular walking experts in the country.

Post Title

Julia Bradbury elected as Ramblers Assoc President


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/julia-bradbury-elected-as-ramblers.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

Toffs and Turbines

    Should consumers be subsidising wind farm construction? Michael Jefferson, professor of International Business and Sustainability at the London Metropolitan Business School, believes the system has gone too far.


    A great deal of acrimony has been stirred up by those wishing to place huge wind turbines in the countryside. Those whose views suffer severe intrusion, whose sleep is disturbed and property values undermined can justifiably be furious. Yet wind turbines, despite the intermittency of wind, can contribute positively to electricity generation and carbon emissions avoidance. So where should we draw the line between what is acceptable and what is not?
    The Sunday Times has opened up the debate by pointing out that far too many wind energy developments in the UK under-perform in relation to what is claimed for them. This means we have to compare their theoretical maximum output with what they actually achieve - their so-called capacity factor. However the numbers here can be confusing. For example RenewableUK, the industry body, claims on its website: “Over the course of a year windfarms typically generate about 30% of the theoretical maximum output.”
    The government in its main planning document for renewable energy goes further. Its main renewables planning document says: “Capacity factors in the UK may generally fall anywhere between 20% and 50%, with 30% being typical in the UK.” However the real range of performance is even wider than this, according to data released by Ofgem, the government’s energy markets regulator, which is also the official source of data for wind turbine performance.
    The Ofgem data showed that in 2007 only three onshore wind developments in the UK (out of 152 operating throughout the year) achieved 50% load factor. That's about 2% of the total. Meanwhile 26 developments, or 17% of the total, achieved less than 20% of their maximum capacity.
    Even in 2008, a very windy year, only two developments (out of 162) achieved 50%, while 23 developments achieved under 20% (14.2% of the total). The worst performing wind farms in both years achieved under 8%. This means that British power consumers are subsidising a lot of wind farms that produce relatively little power but which have a big impact on the landscape.
    This raises two powerful questions about those wind developments with low capacity factors. Why should electricity customers subsidise poorly performing developments through the Renewable Obligation (ROC) scheme, especially when this roughly doubles the cost of every megawatt hour of electricity produced? Surely poorer performing developments should receive little or no subsidy. Yet developers or operators of even poorly-performing ones can expect to receive over £200,000 of our money per turbine per year.
    The second question is: who benefits? A Scottish landowner who is prepared to have 48 turbines on his land will see the developer getting a total income of around £30 million a year, but he will be lucky to get more than £700,000. A Northumbrian one, prepared to have 10 turbines, sees the developer getting £7 million a year, but will receive about £150,000 a year.
    Meanwhile residents living near these developments will see property values suffer and perhaps have their sleep disturbed by noise from the turbine blades swishing through the air. But even though they are suffering all these impacts they get nothing in compensation.
    The ‘toffs’ and landowners do make decent money out of these deals, but the real beneficiaries are the developers and operators who are handed huge rewards from us electricity customers through government policy. In really windy areas this may have some merit, but in those parts of Britain where average wind speeds are low, such as Central England, there is little justification for such lavish support, especially when treasured landscapes are damaged.


     Michael Jefferson©
    First published in The Times: 04-10. 

Post Title

Toffs and Turbines


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/toffs-and-turbines.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

YHA may allow mixed sex dorms

    Bogart Hole YHA hostel near Robin Hood Bay, Yorkshire.

    They have stopped forcing guests to do chores, abandoned curfews and even started serving booze at some of their ritzier establishments. Now, in the latest stage of its modernisation programme, the Youth Hostel Association (YHA) is considering whether to finally allow men and women to share a dorm.
    The strict gender division has existed since the YHA was formed 80 years ago, with no exceptions made for married couples, families or platonic friendship groups.
    But amid increasing competition from antipodean-style backpackers' hostels that cram anyone and everyone into gargantuan dormitories where anything goes, the YHA has had to think about the hitherto unimaginable in order to stay in the game. By the end of the year, the association hopes to have started a pilot scheme offering mixed dorms in some of its inner-city hostels, a YHA spokeswoman said.
    "We are obviously aware that a lot of people come to us and do want to share with members of the opposite sex, whether friends or partners," she said. "At the moment we don't offer it, but it's something we are looking into. One of our corporate managers is going to put a proposal together to suggest trialling it at one or two of our inner-city hostels, most likely in London.'
    The move is sure to polarise opinion among those seeking a cheap bed for the night, said Tom Hall, travel editor of Lonely Planet. "Some people like segregated dorms because they don't want to feel uncomfortable getting undressed, and there is also the chance of being disturbed by potential naughtiness – I know that has happened to me," he said. "But I think that is probably cancelled out by people travelling more and more in mixed groups, or couples going on city breaks, who all want to be in the same room. These places are often now treated more like budget hotels than traditional hostels."
    Plus, said Hall, British customers' expectations are very different nowadays. "Most young people's first experiences of hostels now are in New Zealand or Australia, where mixed dorms are the norm," he said. Among the backpacking community, opinions vary, with women most likely to oppose any change, fearing an increase in snores and smells from sleeping men, as well as worrying about security.
    But outside the Journeys hostel – a non-YHA establishment – in King's Cross in London last week, some backpackers welcomed the move. Student Hannah Adler, 21, said: "It'd be a good thing, because it'll change the atmosphere for the better, and it certainly wouldn't make me feel unsafe. At the moment, the YHAs are too strict, and when you stay there, it sort of feels like you're back at school."
    Martin Balaam, 40, said: "I think it's a great plan, because mixed dorms are the best things about independent hostels. Conversation is much easier in a mixed dorm – you get to meet both men and women, and so there's a much friendlier and more social atmosphere. I'm surprised they're thinking about it, though, because the YHA have always wanted a different sort of clientele."
    But Jennifer Ridge, 65, was more wary. "I don't like the idea initially, because I think it'll be bad for the atmosphere," she said. "But if it helps the hostels stay open, if it helps them financially, then I think they've got to do it." Currently, all dorms in the YHA's 200 hostels in England and Wales are single sex, though an increasing number of hostels offer twin or double rooms for couples, as well as family rooms.

    The Observer: 12-4-10

Post Title

YHA may allow mixed sex dorms


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/yha-may-allow-mixed-sex-dorms.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

Geese tagged to examine threat posed by wind farms

    Barnacle geese heading to the Arctic for the summer were tagged with satellite trackers to find out more about their migration amid concern planned wind farms could get in their way.The Svalbard barnacle goose, which overwinters in the Solway Firth, saw numbers plummet to just 300 by the 1940s but the population recovered to some 30,000 today.But now experts at the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust (WWT) are concerned planned offshore wind farms in the Firth of Forth and off the UK coast could prove an obstacle for the birds. 

    Dr Larry Griffin, WWT principal research officer, tagged 25 geese in the past with GPS tags and tracked their spring migrations over four years.He said the bird's main flight corridor takes them into sites earmarked for new turbines as part of the UK's planned massive expansion in offshore wind power.Dr Griffin is concerned the geese arrive in the area in the hours of darkness and are flying through in low light or resting on the sea for a few hours.
    So he tagged five adult male geese this year at Caerlaverock Wetland Centre on the Solway Firth before they head off this month to the High Arctic Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard.
    He is hoping to fill in gaps in his data to find out the altitude the birds are flying at and whether they are resting on the sea in the areas, using improved solar-powered GPS which could have enough battery to track them at night.
    By tracking the birds online during their migration, he also hopes to see how they cope with existing wind farms they encounter on the Norwegian coast.
    "If they are flying through there in the darkness or in sea fog conditions, my concern is there is potential of a collision," he said. "It may well be that they spot these things easily and use them as a navigational marker, but it just concerns me a bit the time of day they are going through that area and that they have quite a narrow route." The data gathered from the barnacle geese could be used to steer exactly where turbines under "round three" of the Crown Estate licensing process for new wind farms in UK waters are placed.
    And for those farms potentially being developed in Scottish territorial waters, where the sites are more fixed, Dr Griffin suggested mitigation measures might be put in place.


    Emily Beament© Press Assoc

Post Title

Geese tagged to examine threat posed by wind farms


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/geese-tagged-to-examine-threat-posed-by.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

Kashmir peaks to be opened to foreign tourists

    Kashmir was once dubbed the Switzerland of the east. It was once a mecca for climbers, skiers, honeymooners and film-makers drawn to the state's soaring peaks, fruit orchards and timber houseboats bobbing on Dal Lake in Srinagar, the summer capital. As many as 60 per cent of Kashmiris are dependent on income from tourism.But the number of visitors began falling after a revolt broke out in 1989, and the separatist rebellion has killed more than 47,000 people over the past two decades
    Pakistan and India have fought two wars over Muslim majority Kashmir, which is divided between the South Asian neighbours who both claim it in full. India accuses Pakistan of backing separatist militants fighting its forces. Pakistan says it only offers them political backing.
    The peaks to be opened for trekking and mountaineering are situated at an altitude ranging from 9,842 feet to 7,800 meters 25,590 feet, mostly in the Eastern Karakoram mountain range of Ladakh.
    "This summer 104 peaks in Ladakh region will open for trekking and expeditions which would pave the way for adventure tourism and attract foreign tourists in a big way," Nawang Rigzin Jora, Kashmir's tourism minister, told Reuters.
    "The defence ministry, which had earlier expressed reservation on throwing open the peaks, has given its nod."
    The mountainous Ladakh region along India's border with Pakistan and China, which has been largely free of rebel violence, is a heavily militarised zone.
    "The situation is fast improving in the state and tourism is picking up, we hope a very good (tourist) season ahead," Jora added.
    Officials say violence involving Indian troops and separatist militants has declined since a peace process began in 2004 between India and Pakistan.
    But people are still killed in daily shootouts and occasional bomb attacks.
    Many foreign governments still advise against travel to Kashmir, where six Western tourists were abducted while trekking in 1995. Of the six, a Norwegian was beheaded, an American escaped and the rest are presumed dead.
    Tourism operators say opening new peaks will help Kashmir tourism but they remain sceptical about a lasting peace in the region.
    "Climbers will definitely find plenty to love in this remote and stunningly beautiful region, and this will help our business in a big way," Umar Tibatbakal, a tour operator said. "But Kashmir is unpredictable, violence can break out any time." 

    The Telegraph 9-4-10
     

Post Title

Kashmir peaks to be opened to foreign tourists


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/kashmir-peaks-to-be-opened-to-foreign.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

How High is Mount Everest?- It depends which side you are on.

    China and Nepal have settled a 150-year-old dispute over the height of Mount Everest, agreeing that the "snow height" of the world's highest peak is 29,029 feet.

    The great mountain lies on the border between the two countries and they have disagreed for years over its exact height, which Nepal had put at 29,029 feet (8,848 metres) - nearly 13 feet more than the measurement used by China. However, officials revealed in talks in Kathmandu this week that the two measurements referred to different things - one to the height of Everest's rock and the other to the height of its snow cap.The Chinese side - led by Li Qingyuan - accepted Nepal's claim that the snow height of Mount Everest is 8,848 metres, while the Nepali side recognised the Chinese claim that the rock height of the mountain is 8,844.43 metres," a senior official at Nepal's Department of Surveys told the Kathmandu Post daily.
    Thousands of people have climbed Mount Everest since the first ascent in 1953 by Sherpa Tenzing Norgay and Sir Edmund Hillary, but its exact height has been a source of dispute ever since the first measurement was made in 1856.
    The broadly accepted height of 8,848 metres was first determined by an Indian survey in 1955, and measured the mountain's snow cap, rather than the rock beneath it.
    To complicate matters, geologists believe Everest is growing as India is gradually pushed beneath China and Nepal by the shifting of the continental plates.
    In May 1999 an American expedition used GPS technology to measure a height of 8,850 metres and this figure is now used by the US National Geographic Society, although it has not been officially accepted by Nepal.

    First published in the Telegraph: 9-4-10.
    Photo: Getty Images© 

     

Post Title

How High is Mount Everest?- It depends which side you are on.


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/how-high-is-mount-everest-it-depends.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

Ravens invade eastward from the wilds of the 'Celtic Fringe'.

    A new study shows one of the most remarkable British wildlife phenomena of the last 20 years, the advance of the common raven (Corvus corax).
    For most of the 20th century Britain's largest crow, the great black bird of morbid legend, was confined to the "Celtic fringe" of Britain. Persecution by Victorian gamekeepers had extinguished it in the English lowlands and driven it to the hills and moors of the West Country, Wales, the Lake District and Scotland. With the gamekeepers mostly gone, it is returning. 

    During the last 20 years the birds have begun to spread eastwards from the Welsh borders into the Midlands, and by 1995 they were in Cheshire, Derbyshire, Staffordshire, Worcestershire and Wiltshire. By 2005 they had spread as far south as East and West Sussex. Last summer, for the first time in more than a century, a pair nested on the White Cliffs of Dover in Kent, and successfully raised two young. 
    The fieldwork study, which maps the raven frontier and the great migration has been produced for The New Atlas of Breeding Birds in Britain and Ireland: 2007-2011, to be published in 2012.
    "Birdwatchers will be thrilled to see them re-colonising central England and pushing into the South-east," said Dawn Balmer of the British Trust for Ornithology, publishers of the atlas. 

    Michael McCarthy©. First published in The Independent: 6-4-10

Post Title

Ravens invade eastward from the wilds of the 'Celtic Fringe'.


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/ravens-invade-eastward-from-wilds-of.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

Sherpa to scatter Hillary's ashes on Everest


    A 49-year-old Nepalese Sherpa guide who holds the record for the most conquests of Mount Everest will make his 20th climb this spring and scatter the ashes of Edmund Hillary, one of the first men known to reach the top nearly six decades ago.
    Apa, who like most Sherpas goes by one name, first climbed the 29,035-foot mountain in 1989 and has repeated the feat almost every year since. His closest rival is fellow Sherpa guide Chhewang Nima, who has made 15 trips to the summit.Apa announced Thursday his intention to make his 20th ascent in May. He and his fellow climbers — 17 other Sherpas and 12 Westerners — also plan to collect 15,400 pounds of garbage, a growing environmental problem on the Himalayan peak. They plan to pay porters hired by several expeditions to help bring down the refuse.
    Apa, who moved to the United States in 2006 and lives in the Salt Lake City suburb of Draper, said he would scatter the ashes of Hillary at the summit. Hillary conquered Everest in 1953 with Sherpa Tenzing Norgay. He died in 2008 in his native New Zealand.
    "I will pray for Hillary once I reach the summit," Apa told reporters in Katmandu.
    He said he also wants to promote Nepal's campaign to attract half a million tourists in 2011, as the country recovers from years of instability and communist insurgency.Apa grew up in the foothills of Everest and began carrying equipment and supplies for trekkers and mountaineers at age 12.
    Sherpas were mostly yak herders and traders living in the Himalayas until Nepal opened its borders to tourists in 1950. Their stamina and knowledge of the mountains makes them expert guides and porters.

     Apa:Prakash Mathema/AFP/Getty Image









    Associated Press: 1-4-10

Post Title

Sherpa to scatter Hillary's ashes on Everest


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/sherpa-to-scatter-hillary-ashes-on.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

Climbers Club guidebook bonanza

    Two of the UK's most popular and eagerly anticipated guidebooks will soon be released in time for a hopefully balmy summer in the traditionally wet west!  The Climbers Club Ogwen guidebook which remains the best selling guide in the CC range and the ever popular Tremadog area have both been thoroughly updated under the rigorous editor/authorship of Bob Moulton/Mike Bailey and Pete Sterling/Steve Long respectively.
    In the case of Ogwen valley which remains the club's spiritual home,the guide comes exactly 100 years after the very first guide to the area written by Archer Thomson.As befits such an important guide,author Mike Bailey and his team have undertaken a unique re-assessment of the area which has seen new crags developed and old lost crags rediscovered. With the number of routes which have never appeared in a guidebook before in three figures and with the introduction of a revolutionary new guidebook element, the Ogwen guide promises to be something of a humdinger!
    Having seen some of the Tremadog guide in preparation then its fair to say that like Ogwen it comes across as visually stunning guide.

    Both guides will receive a thorough review at the release point so watch this space.

    Tony Pearson on Basil Brush VS and Diamond Slab E1: Clogwyn y Gelli. One of the many 'new' crags which will be making a first appearance in the forthcoming CC Ogwen Guidebook.

Post Title

Climbers Club guidebook bonanza


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/climbers-club-guidebook-bonanza.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

M John Harrison's favourite books on climbing

    Photo Charles N Brown©
    M John Harrison's books include Viriconium, Signs of Life, Light, and the short story collection, Travel Arrangements. He was born in the Peak District and, while living for a time in Yorkshire, was a keen climber and fell runner. His 1989 novel, Climbers, won the Boardman Tasker Memorial award when it was first published, and has just been rereleased in paperback by Phoenix. It tells the story of a man who, running from a failed marriage, becomes increasingly addicted to the adrenaline, folklore and camaraderie of rock-climbing.
    1 On and Off the Rocks by Jim Perrin (Gollancz)
    People climb for thrills. They climb to get away from the failed or boring bits of their lives. Most British climbing journalism skirts this point. Perrin doesn't, so these pieces have an unexpected liveliness. Most notable is his 1978 account, Street Illegal, the first paragraph of which contains the joyful admission, "I had been on Romney Marsh for a few days, trying (and failing) to get into the bed of a girl with large sensual hands and a calm manner." What can you do after that, Perrin implies, but drive to the Cheddar Gorge, cut yourself two lines of coke, eat all the speed - including the silver foil it came in - and solo a climb called "Coronation Street"? The climbing establishment of the time was not amused by this honesty, but you will be.
    2 Touching the Void by Joe Simpson (Vintage)
    Film hasn't treated climbing with much dignity over the last 30 years, Hollywood's basic assumption being, "That's really great, guys, now let's have the machine guns!", so Kevin MacDonald?s documentary reconstruction was welcome if only because it had the confidence to tell an undiluted climbing story. But the book is better. 1985: Simpson splits the bones in his leg in a fall near the top of Siula Grande in the Peruvian Andes. Simon Yates lowers him 3000 feet by increments, belaying on nothing much at all, then loses control and cuts the rope. Simpson wakes up in a crevasse, puzzled to find himself still alive. The rest is history.
    3 Against the Wall by Simon Yates (Jonathan Cape)
    Yates became known as the man who cut the rope. Some years later he found himself back in South America with Sean Smith, Noel Craine and the legendary Paul Pritchard, attempting a new route in Patagonia. They were less than prepared. Paul forgot to bring a tent, though he found one later on a train. The team binoculars belonged to Noel's mum. Faced with cruel weather and an exhausting daily commute up decaying fixed rope, they soon saw that their intention to "laugh their way up the wall" wasn't neccessarily going to see them through.
    4 Rock Jocks, Wall Rats and Hang Dogs by John Long (Simon & Schuster)
    Subtitled Rock Climbing on the Edge of Reality. Subsequent to his adventures here, Long wrote the premise of the film Cliffhanger. He can't be held responsible for the result, and anyway you forgive him after reading this collection of short, primarily autobiographical sketches, set in Yosemite's legendary Camp 4, which usher in the era of sport climbing in America.
    5 Rock Climbs in the Peak District, The Bleaklow Area ed Paul Nunn (The Climbers' Club)
    This was the first guidebook I ever bought. Bewildered by its weird grammar, repelled by its fuggy obsession with local climbing history, and sandbagged by approach instructions which, if you followed them, led you into the middle of a soaking wet empty moor, I soon discovered a frightening discrepancy between the difficulty of the climbs as described and the difficulty of the climbs as actually climbed. Impossible to follow if you are not a climber, it makes strange reading even if you are.
    6 Into Thin Air by John Krakauer (Macmillan)
    Mountains are defined by their use to us. People still think of Everest as an almost metaphysical destination. In fact it's as used as a bus stop in Leeds, and a lot less tidy. On May 10, 1996, there were 141 people on the mountain - quite a few of them 'adventure tourists' (who had paid $68000 each to be there) and their guides - eight of whom died in the worst storm in Everest's history. Krakauer, commissioned by the US magazine Outdoors to report on the commercialisation of high altitude climbing, watched the tragedy unfold. This simply-written, genuinely harrowing account was his attempt to come to terms with it, and with the new use to which we're putting our tallest mountain.
    7 Space Below My Feet by Gwen Moffat (Penguin)
    Gwen Moffat deserted from the Auxiliary Territorial Service in 1946 to go climbing (and incidentally became the UK's first female mountain guide in the 1950s). She hated the army. She was bored with Stoke on Trent. Cader Idris had captivated her with its wildness. Climbers had captivated her because there was "no consistency" to them: they went where they wanted and did what they did. Her prose is beautiful, frank, tentative, full of the mountain landscape, and she demonstrates eloquently that a book about climbing can easily be a book about people too.
    8 One Step in the Clouds compiled by Audrey Salkeld & Rosie Smith (Diadem/Sierra Club)
    A seriously comprehensive collection of climbing fiction, including short stories by Al Alvarez, Dermot Somers and David Craig, as well as curiosities like Kim Stanley Robinson's Mother Goddess of the World. It is also notable, if you haven't had enough after over a thousand pages, for its exhaustive bibliography. But the peach of this collection is the whole of James Salter's psychopathically focused Solo Faces, the best climbing novel ever written, yet somehow not a climbing novel at all.
    9 Teach Yourself Mountain Climbing by Godfrey Francis (University Press)
    If you're bored with indoor climbing competitions, insurance policies and shiny, insanely expensive bits of equipment with stupid names like Cardiac Arrester, or if you yearn for a time when the words "spirit of climbing" were not automatically linked to some manufacturer's marketing effort, track down this book, and learn how to tie on to the rope with a waistband of "Italian hemp line (five eighths of an inch circumference) wrapped six or seven times round the waist," which would kill you if you dangled from it for more than twenty minutes. You?ll soon feel better.
    10 www.climbing.com My 10th choice isn't a book, it's a magazine website. Books are always behind the game. I go here if I want to know what's happening. The current issue has Tommy Caldwell's account of his successful attempt to free climb the Dihedral Wall of El Capitan. "My arms were seizing every time I lifted them above my head. Blood was seeping from holes in my fingers, knees, elbows, shins and forehead. I had been abusing my body on this climb for over two months." Really? Tell us more.
    www.climbing.com


    First Published in The Guardian.

Post Title

M John Harrison's favourite books on climbing


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/m-john-harrison-favourite-books-on.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

Limited free internet Ordnance Survey Map access begins



    British wildernesses may be few and far between nowadays, but the urge to experience nature in the raw remains a primal impulse among the nation's hikers, bikers and fitness enthusiasts. And for anyone looking to venture into the great outdoors this weekend, an Ordnance Survey (OS) map remains the prerequisite piece of kit to be packed alongside an apple, a cagoul and a box of corned beef and pickle sandwiches to ensure a safe return from a day yomping across hill and dale.
    Yesterday campaigners calling for greater availability of official data were joined by lovers of the British countryside in hailing a partial victory against the venerable state-mapping company, after it agreed to offer free and unrestricted access to most of its maps online.
    The landmark decision by the OS followed a long public consultation designed to open up information sources gathered at the taxpayer's expense and to make them available to a new generation of users without charge. Among those welcoming the initiative was the creator of the World Wide Web, Sir Tim Berners-Lee, who has been advising Gordon Brown on ways to liberate the Government's vast data banks to a new wave of entrepreneurs who, it is hoped, may be able to use them to create cutting-edge industries.

    Ministers were forced to waive the long-guarded copyright in response to the huge amount of mapping information already available on the internet free of charge. Services such as Google Earth, Street View and Multimap have revolutionised the way that the public perceives and pays for cartographical information. OS OpenData, which went online yesterday, will exist alongside an earlier data-sharing scheme called OS OpenSpace, which is also free to groups looking to create and reproduce their own maps. It has brought an end to the absurdity of schoolchildren having to write for permission to photocopy a map from their public library.
    The popularity of the service was immediately evident as the OS website became locked up with users rushing to download maps of their area for the first time. But not everyone was entirely happy. The Ramblers, a charity which represents Britain's army of hikers and walkers, criticised the omission of the most popular scale paper maps after it was confirmed that the free datasets would not include digital versions of 1:25,000 Explorer and 1:50,000 Landranger series.

    The charity's chief executive, Tom Franklin, accused the Government of "losing its nerve". He said: "We know one of the reasons people don't walk more is that they don't know good places to walk, and access to mapping is essential in overcoming that barrier. And more people walking more often is something the Government agrees is a good thing, helping tackle obesity and even climate change."
    The OS said the decision to leave out the best-selling paper maps, which retail for anything up to £15 each, was "in the national interest" and could "undermine the continued provision of a nationwide paper map series".Today, the geographically curious among us love nothing more than poring over the exquisitely drawn contour lines and triangulation marks of an OS map. Yet while modern-day OS maps may be viewed as documents of peace, beneficial to health and the environment, their origins are soaked in the blood of Jacobite suppression.
    According to Dr Richard Oliver's A Short History of the Ordnance Survey of Great Britain, the first modern maps took shape between 1747 and 1755. Their instigator was an ambitious military officer named Colonel David Watson, who served with the Army and also the Engineers of the Board of Ordnance. The painstaking work was carried out by the Lanarkshire-born surveyor William Roy, who went on to become the father of modern cartography, and the pioneering water colourist Paul Sandby, who helped turn the first maps into beautifully realised artworks. It was a primitive process by modern satellite-driven standards. The contour line was yet to be invented, and all distances were measured by 66ft lengths of chain.
    The Jacobite uprising of 1745 had caused consternation to King George II, who urgently commissioned the Highlands survey as a means of pacifying the insurgent clansmen north of the border. Overseeing the project was the formidable figure of the Duke of Cumberland, later to achieve notoriety as the "Butcher" of Culloden, architect of the murderously one-sided battle where 2,000 Jacobites were killed or wounded at the cost of just 50 government lives.
    Perhaps inevitably, however, it was to be events across the Channel that were to drive the next stage in development. A dispute between the Royal Societies of London and Paris saw the great and the good of the learned bodies try to resolve a long-running disagreement over the relative positions of their astronomical observatories. The system of triangulation settled the debate – a process whereby distances across water and other obstacles were measured for the first time using the angles of a fixed point.
    Yet throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, conflict continued to fuel the need for ever more accurate and detailed maps. In England, the first charting of the rolling farmland of Kent and the marshes of Essex appeared amid mounting concern over the prospect of invasion by Napoleon's forces.
    By the time that the Battle of Waterloo was won, everywhere south of Birmingham was mapped. The work was physically demanding and progress was slow. It was not until 1823 that the survey had inched its way northwards armed with the advanced Ramsden theodolite for measuring vertical angles. Thomas Colby, the longest serving Director General of the Ordnance Survey, walked 586 miles in 22 days during one reconnaissance journey.
    In 1841, at the time of the railway boom, officials were granted the right by Parliament to enter property in order to measure it. But disputes over which scale to adopt and the distractions of mapping Ireland failed to stem the advance of the theodolite-wielding geodesists, who continued to press ahead with their task and who have been carefully measuring, mapping and remapping the whole of the UK on a near-constant basis ever since.

    Dr Christopher Board, chairman of the Charles Close Society for the Study of Ordnance Survey Maps, said the process of mapping the UK would never be complete and needed to remain largely state-funded. "If you left it to private industry you would find the most popular tourist areas would be mapped regularly and kept up to date, but there would be huge areas of agricultural land, moor or croft that would be left untouched," he said.

    Jonathan Bowen©: First published in The Independent: 2-4-10

Post Title

Limited free internet Ordnance Survey Map access begins


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/04/limited-free-internet-ordnance-survey.html


Visit National-grid-news for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

Popular Posts

My Blog List

Blog Archive