Save The Ribble

A blog dedicated to preserving the beauty and delicate ecosystem of the River Ribble, and opposing any 'vision' to build a barrage on our River and develop on our riverbanks, floodplains and green spaces, causing damage to wildlife and the environment and increasing the risk of flooding to our homes. Save the Ribble Campaign is not responsible for the content of external blogs or websites which link here.

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Central Park - official announcement

We are thrilled at today's official announcement by South Ribble Borough Council that the fabulous expanse of fields and woodlands and floodplains running alongside the River Ribble from Penwortham to Lostock Hall and Bamber Bridge is now OFFICIALLY the new Central Park


Cllr Cliff Hughes has announced that this area will now be preserved as a massive "green spine" across the borough, protecting and enhancing this fantastic green ecosystem for future generations. It will also link to the new Ribble Coast and Wetlands Regional Park along the Ribble Way, and connect across the River Ribble to Avenham and Miller Parks in Preston.

This is a real shout for people-power, and a fantastic cherry-on-the-top of the successful community campaign to save the River Ribble and its remaining green corridor from damaging barrages and inappropriate floodplain and green field development. 

A huge THANK YOU to Cllr Hughes and South Ribble Borough Council for listening!
~

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Monday, June 25, 2007

Urgent Narmada Appeal - Solidarity Needed From Ribblesiders

We received the following message from the International Rivers Network, it explains about how a local community in India is resisting the damming of their river, and who find their views and needs being ignored by those with political power (does that sound familiar?). - please click on the link now and send messages of protest about the treatment of the villagers of Gunjari to the Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh!

"On June 11, 2007, the government of the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh closed the gates of the Omkareshwar dam in the Narmada valley. Since then, dozens of villages have been flooded, and houses, fields and trees have disappeared under the water. Most families from the submerged villages have not been given new land -- they have nowhere to go.



Since the submergence started, the affected people have been doing everything in their power to protest their unjust treatment and the destruction of their livelihoods. People in semi-submerged Gunjari village in Madhya Pradesh are refusing to vacate their houses, and women are standing knee-deep in water for hours. In Khandwa, the district headquarters, 4,000 people have been sitting in protest, facing strong monsoon rainstorms, for more than two weeks.

Residents say that they will not vacate their villages until adequate rehabilitation is provided by the administration. Support the demands of the people in the Narmada Valley by sending a letter to the Chief Minister of the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh!


Visit the following website to send the letter:


http://www.irn.org/action/070622omkareshwar.php

In solidarity,

South Asia Team

International Rivers Network"

You can read our earlier coverage of the Narmada Dam protests (and other pro-river campaigns around the world) here.

Labels: , , , ,

Monday, June 11, 2007

Ribble Clean Up Success

Local residents, with help from the Action Ribble Estuary tributary of the Mersey Basin Campaign, plus South Ribble Borough Council, and Lancashire County Council, spent a very fruitful Friday litter picking and Balsam bashing by the Ribble in Penwortham and Broadgate.



After organising ourselves on the carpark on Margaret Road, 20 local residents, with help from local children from St. Stephens Primary School in Broadgate and Middleforth Primary School in Penwortham, kitted ourselves out with protective gloves and grabber sticks (kindly provided by Action Ribble Estuary) and got cracking!


We litter-picked along the riverbank in Penwortham, and over the wall along the bank in Broadgate...


...reaching what we could safely get to without actually getting wet.

Unfortunately, at the last minute, the Environment Agency were unable to come along to help us to remove the assorted junk off the mudflats with their grappling gear and winches, but with the help of Lesley from Action Ribble Estuary and Phil and Paul from the South Ribble Borough Council "Hit Squad", we got the junk off the mudflats that we could reach safely...






...and had quite an impressive pile of rubbish by the end of the afternoon, including a motorbike, a wheelbarrow, an office chair, and several car wheels and tires amongst the biggest items, with a large number of rubbish bags of more ordinary litter too, filling up the back of Phil and Paul's truck.



This was a fantastic haul, but the riverbank was suffering a more immediately dangerous problem which we also tackled with lots of hard work and determination...

Himalayan Balsam!


Himalayan Balsam is not a native plant but a garden import gone mad! On its own it is quite an attractive plant, growing anything between 1 and 3 metres tall and producing an abundance of pretty pink-mauve "snap-dragon" type flowers from mid-summer onwards, so it's easy to see why it was imported... but each plant also produces eight hundred easily-germinating seeds which literally explode out of the ripe seed pods and rapidly spread and swamp everything in their path...



...which means that native plant species and therefore the biodiversity of the riverbanks, where this invader spreads so rapidly, are seriously under threat...


...the diverse riverbank vegetation is crowded out by the Balsam...


...including the reedbeds...

...so we get cracking, pulling out the Balsam carefully so the native plant species are not disturbed...


...trampling it underfoot...


...pulling out mountains of the stuff...



...which has to remain on-site to rot down naturally. It CAN'T be removed from site as it might then spread elsewhere... just one seed would lead to thousands of plants within a couple of years. Uprooting just one plant will prevent 800 more next year, and 640,000 plants the following year!!

Himalayan Balsam, as an alien species, is just one of many threats to the health of our river...

Before we got cracking, the Balsam had swamped the Reedbeds near the railway bridge so that the reeds themselves could barely be seen...


...submerged in a sea of Balsam...

and after...

...the Ribble's reedbeds emerge...



... to breathe again!



The biodiversity of the riverbank is an irreplaceable wildlife corridor for countless plant, insect, and animal species...



...we met a large number of frogs, a wide range of insects - including the most amazing variety of beetles - with bees and butterflies and dragonflies also thriving here and not seeming to mind us rumaging in the undergrowth, plus moles, and someone very, very small and brown and furry scurrying away who will have been either a shrew or a field mouse but was too quick to identify!



The huge variety of riverbank plants are easier to spot as they emerged from the Balsam-cleared banks...



...from beautiful Buttercups...



...to Cow Parsley...




... to a huge range of different grasses, which grow here on the banks as well as in the meadows alongside...



...to Tufted Vetch.


The Ribble's biodiversity is a fantastic sight as well as a fabulous habitat for all that wildlife...



...and a large number of local residents pass by, many stopping for a chat, as we give a little something back to the River Ribble we love so well...




A HUGE THANK YOU to all of you who came to help the Ribble Spring Clean, with special thanks to Lesley of Action Ribble Estuary and Mersey Basin Campaign for co-ordinating the various parties involved as well as bringing bags and grabbers and gloves, to Terry of Lancashire County Counil's Environmental Services for bringing his van and trailer, and to Phil and Paul of South Ribble BC's "Hit Squad"...

...and extra special thanks to Barbara, Gerry, Aidan, Marion, Juliet, Ben and Jim, Danka, Hattie and Rachel, Chris, Sue, Isabel, Fiona, Tony, St. Stephens and Middleforth Primary Schools, and everyone else who came and helped Spring Clean the Ribble!

We have other exciting Ribble Events coming up this summer - including a Ribble Runner in the Run Preston event on Sunday 8th July, and an extra special Brockholes Walk as part of the Ribble Coast & Wetlands Walking Festival on 4th August - so come along and spend a fabulous day on the riverbank!

And don't forget to vote for Church Woods in the BBC Radio Lancashire - BBC Breathing Spaces "Weed it and Reap" Grot-Spot clean up! Voting closes Tuesday!

savetheribble@tiscali.co.uk

Labels:

Monday, June 04, 2007

Ribble Spring Clean!

What fantastic weather we are having, now a rather cold and wet May has given way to flaming June
- so why not take Friday off, have another long weekend while the weather lasts, and spend a few hours by the riverbank!

Our Ribble Spring Clean is this Friday, 8th June, so come down to the Ribble and give something back to our beautiful river!


And the Ribble is looking fantastic, lush greenery and cool water, bird song and butterflies...

We will be litter-picking and removing the invasive Himalayan Balsam - before it seeds! - and the Ribble Basin Campaign, Environment Agency and Lancashire County Council will be helping by providing grabber sticks, gloves, bags and skips - and bringing grappling equipment to remove that old metal junk off our fabulous mudflats!



We are meeting at 10am on the riverbank behind Margaret Road in Penwortham - on the opposite bank from the Continental and the cricket ground in Broadgate - and Spring Cleaning until 2pm. Bring your own lunch, plenty to drink - and sunblock and a hat if it's as hot as it is today!

If you can come along and join other Ribbleside residents with our Ribble Spring Clean, please email us at savetheribble@tiscali.co.uk or just turn up on the day - see you there!

And as well as our Spring Clean, we have other exciting Ribbleside events coming up this summer - including a "Ribble Way Walk to Brockholes Wetland" in August as part of the Ribble Coast & Wetlands Walking Festival - so watch this space for how you can join us messing about by the river...

Just yesterday, many dozens of Ribbleside residents were lazing by the river - and we counted over 30 swimming in the river between Fishwick Bottoms and Avenham Park!



We would lose all this if a barrage was built on the Ribble, preventing our river from following its natural tidal behaviour and encasing miles of riverbank in concrete for boat moorings... and we would have to go elsewhere for our peace and tranquillity, and quality time with our families, leaving our beautiful river to be spoilt by the noise and pollution of a water sports facility.
Speedboat sports are fine - in the right place: the Ribble is NOT the right place!

The Ribble IS the right place for walking, fishing, cycling, canoeing, horseriding, birdwatching - and swimming! - but not for jetskis and speedboats.

Just yesterday by the riverbank...






Long Live the Ribble Wild!

...or as a certain League of Gentlemen would have it...


thanks Aidan!

Labels:

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Spend a Beautiful Spring Day on the Ribble Riverbank

Fancy spending a Spring day messing about by the river instead of cooped up at work?

Then we have just the thing for you!



Local residents in South Ribble and Preston are spending Friday 8th June Spring Cleaning the Ribble's riverbanks in Penwortham and Broadgate.

Come along and give something back to our fantastic river, and have a Grand Day Out at the same time!

We will be meeting at 10am on the riverside green area behind Margaret Road, Penwortham - opposite the Continental pub and riverside BAE cricket ground, between Penwortham Old Bridge and the Preston Station railway bridge ->



- and Spring Cleaning the riverbanks until 2pm.
We will be litter-picking and removing the alien plant species Himalayan Balsam (which suppresses native British plant species), and the Environment Agency and Ribble Basin Campaign will be helping out too, and will be using special lifting gear to remove that old metal junk off the Ribble's fabulous mudflats!



If we get enough helpers, we hope to clear up good stretches of both the Penwortham and Broadgate banks, so come along for a couple of hours for a spot of messing about on the river! Bring a packed lunch and plenty to drink - and a sunhat or a raincoat, depending on the weather that day.

If you would like to join us, please email us at savetheribble@tiscali.co.uk to let us know so we can have a good idea of the numbers of people to expect.

Click here for details about more Ribble Events.

Spend more time lazing on the riverbank at The Ribble Cycle Diaries...

Labels:

Sunday, May 06, 2007

Another Preston Is Possible: Mayday, Preston Flagmarket 2007

Save the Ribble enjoyed a wonderful Mayday on the Preston Flagmarket this year.

In contrast to the 'Preston FM I Care Day' we did not need to hold the stalls down against the force of a huge gale, and the ink on our posters did not bleed as the rain pelted down against them.



Instead we gently warmed ourselves in balmy Lancashire sunshine and gave out leaflets to hundreds of people, who were overwhelmingly supportive of our cause.

We were buoyed up by the poll result on the Ribble Riverworks Barrage in today's Lancashire Evening Post which showed that 81% were opposed to any barrage across the Ribble, with only 19% in favour. We made a special poster to remind Preston City Council of exactly what Preston people think:


The day was supplied with socially conscious music by Independent Labour Councillor Terry Cartwright's suppporters.



Save the Ribble Campaign explained the magnitude of the threat to wildlife posed by the Ribble Barrage and Housing proposals to a number of interested residents, and throughout the whole day we only met one person who was initially in favour as he felt it was a shame that there were no longer so many boats on the Ribble - but who had not realised the impact a barrage would have...


And it is course the case that boats CAN use the Ribble - they either have to wait for the tide or be prepared to wait for it to come back in if they don't want the hard work of rowing when having a lazy day on the river...



No barrage in Broadgate... Spring 2007


The Save The Ribble stall was busy all day...




Jane Brunning, Spokesperson for Save The Ribble Campaign, talked at length with Councillor Terry Cartwright. Terry said he was very worried about the implications of the Riverworks proposals to local residents and would be asking lots of questions about the democracy of the Vision Board.





Jane also discussed the threat that the Ribble Barrage poses to local residents with Riversway Councillor Jack Davenport, who said he was deeply concerned about the Riverworks proposals, and the Ribble Barrage, and that he would be organising consultation meetings very soon with residents of both Broadgate and Middleforth.



We also had the pleasure of seeing a number of local residents who have been emailing us and sending in their thoughts and pictures, including Barbara (hi Barbara!) and Bob, who has already shared his fascinating story of his Ribble connections with Save The Ribble blog readers, and who brought with him more of his beautiful pictures - he has been taking photos of the Ribble from Penwortham Old Bridge for many years on the first Tuesday of every month...



The Ribble in glorious Spring on May Day - thanks Bob, it's great to meet at last!



Other groups at the Mayday celebration included the National Union of Teachers, who were campaigning againts SATS, and all unneccessary testing of children:



Also there were Greenpeace, raising public consciousness about global warming and the threat to the seas:



Lots of people were signing up to the Greenpeace petitions:



Also present at the Mayday were supporters of Falun Gong, a religious group suffering vicious repression in China:



They put on a demonstration of their meditation techniques - the spiritual disciplines that have led to the persecution of their followers in China:


The Socialist Party were there, this group was campaigning against the presence of British Troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, against the privatisation of the NHS and for a New Mass Party of the Working Class.


The Socialist Party members said that Preston City Council should not be kowtowing to rich property developers, but should defend ordinary people and the environment, and certainly should not barrage the Ribble. They said that capitalism was the biggest danger to our environment, and that socialism was the only way to save the planet from the disaster of global warming.



The Free Tibet campaign was there, raising the issue of a country occupied by foreign troops.


The Hunt Saboteurs had a presence, fighting to ensure that Fox Hunting never comes back.

Fairtrade were there, calling for justice for primary producers in the ex-colonial countries:


as were the Solidarity Federation, calling for a return to the real traditions of Mayday - workers solidarity and independence from any form of hierarchy or exploitation,


The message of Mayday is that 'Another world is possible' - we do not have to have a world where big business calls the shots. Ordinary people should have power, and be listened to. Save The Ribble believes that this is true about Preston, and the River Ribble too.

We feel that another Preston is possible, one where the wishes of local people matter more than the pockets of greedy property developers, one where our environment is seen as more precious than the portfolios of speculators. The message of Mayday is that when ordinary people unite together, they can achieve amazing things, this could include the defeat of Preston City Council's Riverworks Ribble Barrage proposals and the defence of local people's homes and environment from the depradations of profit-hungry developers, and their friends on the council.

savetheribble@tiscali.co.uk

BTW: Click here for some great images of 52 arctic terns spotted by Bill Aspin on the Ribble near Warton on 2nd May, he also saw: 2 Common Tern, 20 Bar-tailed Godwit, 15 Black-tailed Godwit, 15 Dunlin, 5 Ringed Plover and a Greenshank, a bonus was seeing a female Hen Harrier heading NE over fields near Naze Farm.

Labels: ,

"The care of rivers is not a question of rivers, but of the human heart" Tanako Shozo Save The Ribble Logo