Welcome to Inkcap, a newsletter about nature, ecology and conservation in the UK, written and reported by me, Sophie Yeo.
This is the mid-week edition, featuring an original story. The recap comes out on Friday; read last week’s here: Nature Corps & Vanishing Terns.
This week, though, the story I’m bringing you isn’t quite original. With permission, I’m re-posting an essay by Claire Ratinon, an organic food grower based in East Sussex. It was originally published in her own newsletter, What A Time To Have A Garden.
The essay is about racism, plants and the countryside. I discovered it on the weekend and immediately knew I wanted to share it with you. It’s beautiful and painful and revelatory.
A couple of days later, I saw the horrifying reactions to a Countryfile segment on racism in the countryside, and it felt more important than ever to highlight Claire’s writing. I can bring you stories and resources but, as a white woman in England, I cannot tell you how it feels to be unwelcome because of the colour of my skin.
As ever, you can get in touch by emailing editor@inkcap.co.uk, or by replying to this email. If you liked this edition, please feel free to forward it to a friend.
We watched long-tailed tits skip from branch to branch of a holly bush.
We paused with held breath, unsure whether they were yet to sense our presence or were paying us no mind. Snub-beaked fluff balls with elegant tails, the rose blush of their bellies visible in brief glimpses afforded by the moments of sunlight breaching the woodland canopy.
These woods are all verdure and luminosity. Silhouettes of leaves perform like shadow puppets on the path as we pilgrims pass through gently in holy silence. It is temple, shrine and church.
I imagined, I hoped, that we were alone. Just us, our footsteps, our love, and no-one to remind us that we were walking trodden paths. But a man was coming our way, older than us by double and wearing a panama hat. I step off the trail and veer into the woods to give him two metres and I catch sight of that familiar old scornful glance.
I tried to greet him, to force him to acknowledge my existence but he refused. He received Sam’s hello with a squeezed out courtesy while I stood in the forest gutter.
It was a nearly-nothing interaction. One of many I’ve had with people who don’t want to look at me. A passing regard with a hint of suspicion, a quiet denial of my humanity. Easy to refute, to explain away, to minimise until I question my sanity, my memory, the symptoms of my wounding.
Yet my long-standing dance with unbelonging reminds me not to dismiss those grazes with the un-welcome party. It’s gotten ugly before and I’m never quite sure when it will again.
I don’t belong here. I don’t belong in the land upon which I was born. No matter what you say, I don’t belong. If it hurts your ears to hear it, imagine how much it has hurt my heart.
I’m reminded when I hear echoes of the old ‘go back to where you came from’ song or chance upon the sentiments of an ecofascist. I don’t know how to separate myself from the racism I see around the world, I certainly can’t separate myself from how it manifests in this country. Nor would I want to.
It’s often troubling to work in the mostly white world of horticulture and agriculture. We POC growers and gardeners are in the minority and are virtually invisible in the collective imagination of who is expected to work with plants, be outdoors and feel connected to nature in the UK.
When you scratch beneath the surface, the tentacles of colonialism can be found in abundance. From the prospecting of indigenous medicinal knowledge, to the appropriation of ancient agricultural practices and the historical pillage of the plants that filled botanical gardens, plantations and still inhabit our gardens to this day.
When you hear about the problems caused by a ‘non-native and invasive’ plant species, I urge you to find out how that plant found its way to these shores and interrogate the heavy language you use to describe where it came from and how it grows.
I didn’t become a food grower because I thought it was political. I did it because it was delicious and uplifting and because I had the privilege to chose to. And yet now, for me, growing food is a radical act. It has brought me to an understanding of my place in the natural world and allowed me to feel held and upheld when all else has left me unearthed.
I have turned towards the land, the site of my ancestors’ oppression and dared to plant seeds into the earth of a country that erases my history. I push my hands into the soil as an act of reclamation, of self-determination, of gesturing towards the possibility of establishing roots on my own terms because the land has chosen me and I have chosen her, no matter the prejudices of those who dwell here too.
I grow plants because I believe it is in my blood to do so. I grow plants to reclaim the space that slavery and indentured labour robbed us of.
Nature meant little to me until seven years ago. I grew up fearful of it, not understanding its relevance, never seeing anyone like me at ease with it.
Yet nature has become the source of my steadiness, my meaning, my power. It is my everything despite having fallen for it in countries stained with the labour and blood of my kin and those of many people of colour. It is my everything despite all the stories I believed that said it ‘wasn’t for me’.
It is not always safe, I rarely feel welcome.
My attempts to move towards nature with a heart yearning for communion are often clumsy and troubled but, through my uneasiness, I return again and again and again to take my place in her embrace as is my birthright – and yours.
Ensuring we can be safe and find peace in nature is not as important an issue as police brutality and murder. Denial of access to nature is nowhere near as grave an injustice as the Windrush scandal. But it is, to me, deeply important and if it continues to be proven that nature upholds our wellbeing then surely it’s about time we spoke honestly about what keeps it out of reach for some and not others?
I’ve finally stopped craving belonging on this island. I accept that, although it is the most familiar place to me, it will never be home.
But nature, even here, is mine because I am hers.
All image credits: Claire Ratinon
Many thanks for sharing this. I had a couple of quick comments. While in no way doubting the significance of your experiences, I think that everyone sometimes gets dismissive, reluctant acknowledgements when passing others out in the countryside. Partly I think it's the famous British reserve and partly it’s the incongruous situation of being out in the wilds, trying to escape from humanity, and then being forced to walk very close to someone else – often a total stranger, miles from civilisation. Do you look down at your shoes and ignore the other person? Do you attempt a quick matter-of-fact greeting or do you go for the opening gambit to try to start a friendly conversation? It can be awkward at best, especially for the type of person who often seeks solitude by walking in the countryside.
I also wanted to comment on the parallels you draw with the language about ‘invasive’, ‘non-native’ plants and racism because I think these are dangerous. Humans and wildlife are totally different things and language and attitudes that would be unacceptable when applied to humans are entirely appropriate when it comes to wildlife. Seeking to ensure that non-native, non-indigenous, invasive plants and animals do not take the place of native species is a legitimate concern and is completely separate from attitudes towards people. To give an even clearer example, killing a Mink is not ‘murder’ (though animal rights campaigners may seek to co-opt the term in order to further their cause). To turn the question around – would you be unhappy with the following language? ‘We must seek to eradicate the non-native, invasive American Mink in order to protect vulnerable ground nesting birds.’ And if so how would you suggest this could be re-phrased?
Beautifully written and thought provoking.