Tuesday 17 July 2012

Traffic free cycling with children in Cumbria

Traffic free cycling with children in Cumbria
One Sunday recently saw us seeking out more miles of traffic free cycling. Despite being sparsely populated, North Cumbria is actually a little light on options for learner cyclists. The South Tyne Trail – Slaggyford to Haltwhistle – has some great sections. It mostly follows the line of the Alston branch railway (trains still ran until the beginning of the hot summer of 1976) but if I was being picky I would say there were too many gates. The access to the stupendous Lambley Viaduct is seriously marred by the imposition of a private garden across the southern approach. The old Lambley station and platform have been fenced off, requiring you to deviate from the line either up the hill into Lambley village, or down the narrow, stepped path almost the River South Tyne, and then back up the embankment. The line scores high though on parking and access – on the Haltwhistle side of the viaduct there’s loads, and at Slaggyford you can park near the village green if there’s no space at the old station.

The good cycling here is all in Northumberland – a shame for those of us who want to sing the praises of our own patch of the north, so on Sunday we stayed in Cumbria to try out the Dalston to Carlisle cycle route. This is proper rurban fringe stuff. At times you could think you were in Hertfordshire, or on the edge of any other conurbation. Beginning in the residential outpost of Bridge End (there’s not really enough to call it suburban, but there are pavements and street lights and bungalows and semis), we overcame the opaque signposting with some timely map reading (for those of us at the front), or some questioning of random strangers (those at the back) – an impressive feat of division in a party of three.

Clinging to the Caldew

The route clings pretty much to the River Caldew, first through the mill yard of Cowen’s (‘experts in safety, health and environment’). Ironically, here we had our only mishap, little D discovering that sometimes you have to really concentrate on your line to wedge between a fencepost and a wall. But soon you’re back over the river and running the gauntlet of moving cars in the centre of Dalston village, before squeezing down a snicket by the school to make the cycle path proper. Again, for learner cyclists just discovering how to control their handlebars, this section proves challenging, and the road section is terrifying for any parent with a dim recollection of 1970s public information films. (Shouldn’t they just have said ‘look out you bastard!’?: 

From a cycling point of view, what comes next is an easy and at times almost pleasant romp, right into the centre of the city. The route finding is easy, the gradient barely testing any of your lower gears, but with plenty of opportunity to brake, steer and avoid dogs - three of the very basic skills for learners. We did encounter the inevitable dodgy, edge of the city, towpath type characters, seemingly conjured up to continue the PIL theme. Charley says ‘that bloke in the red car with the air rifle and the long hair probably can’t be trusted to actually own any puppies’. But Cumbria is a quiet county, and on my return journey (at speed) to fetch the car, I encountered two of Cumbria Constabulary’s finest investigating for possible badness.

Bitts Park Pay off

Sadly, at the end of the route, at the moment, you are splurged out into a car park just off Castle Way. You have to figure out a safe route to Bitts Park yourselves (NB you can’t really get three bikes and their riders in the lift to the Millennium Bridge). But the options are fairly clear, and the reward is still one of the county’s better play areas, though it’s interesting to note how your child’s interest in such things may have waned since they discovered the joys of speeding along independently at 15mph.

Wednesday 11 January 2012

Managing Radioactive Waste in the English Lake District
It's important to put those two phrases together – 'radioactive waste' 'Lake District'. The Managing Radioactive Waste Safely (MRWS) Partnership talks of 'West Cumbria' as if this was some form of off shore zone away from the teashops of Keswick and Buttermere. But the expression of interest in MRWS came from the borough councils of Copeland and Allerdale, and from the county council for Cumbria as a whole, though expressed only for the districts of Copeland and Allerdale. Significant parts of both boroughs are in the Lake District National Park.

Any facility for the geological disposal of radioactive waste, if it is built in Cumbria, will probably be built in a narrow strip between the LDNP boundary and a geological boundary protecting aquifers and coal reserves and the like drawn by the British Geological Survey. If you're standing in the westernmost reaches of the National Park, perhaps on the summit of Ponsonby Fell, or by the Viking-age cross in Gosforth, the distinction as to what lies within the park, and what lies without will feel pretty moot.

Now consider that the same authorities were also very supportive of the Lake District bid for World Heritage status in recent years (www.lakeswhs.co.uk/partners.html).

A dilemma emerges on the one hand for the Cumbrian authorities to shout out to the world that the landscape they occupy is of international significance – on a par with the pyramids of Giza and Machu Picchu, Stonehenge and Venice, whilst on the other hand suggesting it is an excellent spot for Britain to dispose of the detritus of 60 years of nuclear experimentation and power production.

It's a dilemma Cumbrians have been grappling with ever since Calder Hall demonstrated that power generation didn't necessarily mean the death of their young men. Remember the Windscale site development began at almost the same time in 1947 that over 100 miners were killed in William Pit, Whitehaven. The scale of death at William Pit  – the 1947 disaster came on the back of a 1910 explosion at nearby Wellington Pit which killed 137 men and several smaller but no less fatal incidents in the region's collieries – demonstrates why West Cumbria could love nuclear power. Add death by pneumosilicosis (340 cases in 2010 alone according to HSE (www.hse.gov.uk/statistics/causdis/pneumoconiosis/pneumoconiosis-and-silicosis.pdfand you can see that even with an estimated 240 extra thyroid cancers caused by the major catastrophe at Windscale in 1956, nuclear looks pretty good from the streets of Moss Bay or South Whitehaven.


The dilemma for the rest of Britain remains how to keep the lights on. In the circumstances, the Lake District may well become collateral damage.


You can comment on the work of the Managing Radioactive Waste Safely partnership by completing their consultation document. You'l find it at http://www.westcumbriamrws.org.uk/. You'll also see there is a chance to attend a public meeting to learn more. And if you don't believe the government spin, you can always seek out Professor David Smythe (www.davidsmythe.org). The former Rezillos bassist and latterday nuclear-know-it-all makes his impassioned case for the 'No' camp at Cockermouth School's Eco Centre on 2 Feb (7.30). 
(Rezillos?, oh for goodness sake www.youtube.com/watch?v=V2krmvOCBJI&feature=related)