...some time in the future, when the RSPB announces that it is embarking on an ambitious campaign to make the world richer in nature, the NFU will respond as follows: 

'We welcome this campaign.   As stewards of the countryside, farmers are alarmed at the big declines in farmland birds that indicate wider declines in wildlife as a whole.  We are pleased that the RSPB works so closely with farmers carrying out free surveys for thousands of NFU members at the RSPB's expense, providing a network of advisors delivering free advice for farmers, working very closely with those farmers lucky enough to have the rarer farmland birds such as cirl buntings and stone curlews on their land and we often walk, almost hand in hand, into meetings with government ministers to ask for better designed and more effective agri-environment schemes so that millions of pounds of taxpayers' money can deliver more wildlife.  We will always be grateful to the RSPB and other wildlife NGOs for campaigning during the Comprehensive Spending Review to protect the funding for agri-environment schemes when the NFU was silent on the matter.  We recognise that the RSPB doesn't just talk about these issues, it puts its money where its mouth is and its Hope Farm project has shown beyond doubt that modern arable farming can deliver increasing farmland bird numbers if farmers do the right things.  Thats why NFU office holders are all implementing such proven measures on their own land and we are all hoping to win the prestigious Nature of Farming Award.  We are going to step up for nature with the RSPB.'.

A love of the natural world demonstrates that a person is a cultured inhabitant of planet Earth.

Parents
  • Mark would make a very fine fisherman as he knows which fly will tempt the biggest fish.  He enjoys seeing the fish charge his fly and get well hooked; he then plays the fish with great skill enjoying its enfuriated runs in an out of the troubled water.  He could try tickling the fish.  Nothing is black and white and there are arguments on both sides.  He will not make friends with farmers and encourage them to understand his arguments by using rod and line.  In addition he may not persuade them to do more for farmlands birds by his approach.

Comment
  • Mark would make a very fine fisherman as he knows which fly will tempt the biggest fish.  He enjoys seeing the fish charge his fly and get well hooked; he then plays the fish with great skill enjoying its enfuriated runs in an out of the troubled water.  He could try tickling the fish.  Nothing is black and white and there are arguments on both sides.  He will not make friends with farmers and encourage them to understand his arguments by using rod and line.  In addition he may not persuade them to do more for farmlands birds by his approach.

Children
No Data