Sunday 17 July 2022

Green Book Reviews: On Gallows Down by Nicola Chester

On Gallows Down: Place, Protest and Belonging by Nicola Chester is a personal story, recording the writer’s extraordinary journey through life, as her love of nature develops and she chooses her goals.

Nicola Chester spent her childhood with parents and grandparents ‘who knew the importance of outdoors; of walks, weather and picnics, time alone, freedom and dirt.’ Her parents moved around as Nicola grew up but wherever she moved, the nature on her doorstep was always the first thing she looked for and explored. Her parents settled in Newbury and it was here, as she became a teenager, that she realised how much she felt a part of her local landscape. It was also in Newbury that her life-long battle to protect nature began, with the campaign against the Newbury bypass.

Reading Chester’s account of the building work, you need to be of a strong constitution – I wasn’t - not to weep at the account of the nine-mile route ‘smashing through heathland, ancient oak and ash woods, water meadows and chalk streams…’  The construction destroying ‘10,000 mature trees…4 sites of special scientific Interest, several local nature reserves….’ The list goes on.

She writes about the thousands of protestors battling, with regular skirmishes, to stop the contractors but to no avail. She reflects on the brevity of joy and life itself as a poplar wood is felled ‘as they lay with the leafy tresses in the water…., seeming to bleed redly into the water.’ It was this last battle that ignited in the author the knowledge of what she wanted to do with her ‘one wild and precious life’, as Mary Oliver put it: she intended to ‘save, champion and celebrate the wildness in any way an ordinary girl could.’

The rest of the novel follows the author as she marries, has a family and lives in rural tied accommodation, usually on big estates with her husband. She teaches her children to love nature as much as she does by taking them on wild walks, badger watching and listening for the cuckoo and nightingale. She struggles to bring up her family in a rural setting on a very low income and writes about her journey of ‘protest, change and hope’ as she strives to save the nature she loves whenever and wherever she can, trying to influence the people at the ‘big house’ to also protect nature.

Chester writes ‘We are writing for our very lives and for those wild lives we share this one, lonely planet with.’

A very emotional read full of poignant moments that hopefully will inspire other people to explore and love nature as much as Nicola Chester does.

Melanie Wakley

 

 

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