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Monday, 2nd November 2009 Change Date Latest Issue

Blitz spirit revived for the climate change war

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Published Date: 11 June 2009
DURING the Second World War it was a campaign to prevent Britian going hungry, but now the city's tenement dwellers are being urged to "Dig For Victory" once more.
The Edinburgh Community Backgreens Association (ECBA) is set to revive the wartime spirit that turned thousands of green spaces into temporary allotments in a bid to battle global warming.

The project is the brainchild of ECBA founder Greig Robert
son, 39, who started the ECBA with a small pilot project in Gorgie/Dalry in 2005, and has recently expanded into Shandon, Polwarth, Marchmont, Newington, Easter Road and Leith Walk.

The aim of the association is to turn Victorian tenement backgreens – many of which are used as drying areas or bin stores and are overgrown with weeds – into mini-village greens.

Boosted by lucrative grants from community charities and green groups, including £80,000 from the Tudor Trust and £73,000 from Climate Challenge, the association hopes to revive another ten backgreens by the end of the year.

In keeping with the wartime theme they are now currently recruiting for the "Backgreen Blitz", a bid to attract more than 100 people from every community to transform their backgreens.

Mr Robertson said: "The original Dig For Victory campaign was a necessity when the trade routes were blockaded and shipping was reserved for the transport of armaments, so the government turned gardens, lawns, parks, bowling greens and sports pitches into allotments.

"The world is under threat again, not from war but from global warming, and one of the main causes of this is the obscene amount of food miles racked up by supermarket products.

"As well as providing the means to help people grow their own food, which has become very popular in recent years through chefs like Hugh Fernley Whittingstall, we give advice on buying locally grown produce."

The funding the group has received so far will allow it to install and equip ten community sheds – known as Co-Sheds – in each of the backgreens, with all the tools the community needs to create and maintain the area.

The ECBA will supply soil and timber to create a raised bed to grow vegetables, provide help with landscaping and may eventually see the installation of picnic tables and barbeque areas.

Mr Robertson added: "Some of these tenements have up to 300 families living in them, and if you were to flatten them out and transport them to the suburbs they would resemble small villages.

"We'd like to see these backgreens turned into the tenement equivalent of village greens, where the community can come together to maintain and enjoy a beautiful green space."

The ECBA is already running classes for greenfingered residents every week in each of the backgreen areas, and has also started a monthly "grow your own" class on the last Saturday of every month.



Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 11 June 2009 9:33 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: World War II , Climate change
 
1

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 11/06/2009 12:08:34
Growing your own vegetables makes a lot of sense and is an excellent hobby.

Pretending that somehow by doing so, is going to change the weather is the most categorically stupid, insane suggestion I have ever heard in my life. Is nothing safe from the propaganda of these inane King Canute politics?
2

simonp,

11/06/2009 12:13:34
This sounds a great idea. My wife has been on the short list for an allotment for 5 + years!!!

I am not sure why it would take £15k "to revive another ten backgreens". Anyway full marks for trying
3

alfonsa pedrosa,

embra 11/06/2009 12:21:39
All i grow in my large side garden are the best of veg,and i sell them i dont give them away.
4

bluehead,

edinburgh 11/06/2009 12:59:14
people ,nowadays don't understand the meaning of the Blitz spirit ,you would have had to be around when that situation was with us,politics has corrupted people to a degree that they would not know where to start
when I think of it as it was then and see what is going on nowadays,I am filled with disgust
this country is no longer recognizable to the once great country it was
5

Climate change is real,

11/06/2009 13:12:46
In answer to the first poster. Shop bought food has a high energy input and hence greenhouse gas emissions; for tractors, chemicals, transport and the shop itself. Growing your own eliminates nearly all these energy inputs and so reduces greenhouse gas emissions.

Reducing greenhouse gas emissions in line with the science gives us a chance of avoiding the worst effects of climate change. http://www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/ar4-syr.htm

It won't do this on its own, but nobody has suggested that it will. People growing their own food is part of the solution, not the whole solution.



6

Peter - very disappointed/concerned,

Edinburgh 11/06/2009 13:13:43
While I think vegetable growing is to applauded, where is this Green nonsense going to stop. With backgardens under crops, where does one dry ones' washing?
7

Bill MacD,

11/06/2009 13:15:44
Great to see someone taking a really positive initiative.
8

PeterPete,

11/06/2009 13:28:31
#6 - it is perfectly possible to grow crops AND dry your washing! Crops have a tendency to grow just above ground level, whilst clothes are normally hung aloft in the breeze.

The only exception is maybe runner beans - but it would be sensible not to plant those directly under a washing line.

Or is that too complicated?

This is a great initiative to revive back greens and get neighbours meeting each other once again and socialising.
9

Climate change is real,

11/06/2009 13:37:15
For some "green nonsense" on food see http://www.foe-scotland.org.uk/resources/ecoliving/eating/
10

Mince Pie Supper,

11/06/2009 14:19:03
I'm all for growing your own food but climate change is nonsense.
11

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 11/06/2009 15:06:50
'4:

Spot on.

If anything like the "Blitz Spirit" existed nowadays, articles like this wouldn't exist.

Back then people knew what they wanted, were prepared to make decisions for themselves and accept the consequences of them---and woe betide anyone who tried to interfere.

Most of the insane legislation we have to put up with today would have caused a riot in the 1940s.
12

Peter - very disappointed/concerned,

Edinburgh 11/06/2009 15:14:51
#8

The average back green is far too small for any reasonable cultivation.

Just another daft suggestion from the daft eco-green mob.

13

tumshie heid,

11/06/2009 21:01:53
What a load of pi#h. Carrots and turnips in backgreens to save the enviroment. Most folk in tenements couldn't care less about the back green so how will they suddenly turn into Percy Thrower at the drop of a potato?
To mention climate change is nothing but a pathetic cynical ploy to help secure funding for this bampots hare brained schemes.
14

bluehead,

edinburgh 18/06/2009 09:45:13
you would have needed to be around during the period that the blitz was on to really appreciate just how bad everything was,
If the people who suffered and died during during this terrible time were to be able to come back and see what this labour goverment have done to this once great country,the would be shocked beyond belief
the whole pile of them should be marched into the tower
of London
the labour goverment are now this countries national disease!!!!!
15

Snoghoj1,

Edinburgh 18/06/2009 10:08:46
No.1 & 13 Climate change deniers/refuseniks abound as we trash the planet with unbelievable irresponsibility. Of course growing a bed of potatoes in your back green will be as a drop of rain in the Amazon river; however the Amazon is entirely made up of rain drops. We are trying to change a culture which considers using 10 calories of fossil fuels for every calorie of food eaten quite ok, while thousands of generations of our forebears ate only local food and used no fossil fuels at all. The choice is to be part of the change, or remain a smug cynic without answers or hope. I know which side I'd rather be on.

 

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