I woke to the distinctive smell of smoke this morning.
| "Fires in the distance", 2018 |
It had been there last night and at the time I put it down to someone close by burning unseasoned wood as part of a BBQ.
After all England were two hours away from playing Norway in the World Cup and across the country families were preparing for the event with a pre match get together over warm beer, singed sausages and sad looking salad.
But no, this was another of those Moorland fires which may have been caused by a spark from a careless BBQ, discarded cigarette or just the action of the sun on a piece of broken glass.
The Manchester Evening News tells me that "last night Emergency services are on the scene following reports of a huge moor fire near Dovestone Reservoir, in Oldham, this evening.
| Burning hills, 2018 |
Members of the public have been advised to avoid the area. And those living nearby should keep all doors and windows closed.
The cause and extent of the blaze are not yet known".*
We are in that season of such events, and I was reminded of that devastating fire above Stalybridge eight years ago which lasted for days.At first, it was just a hint of smoke but as that first day continued it became noticeable, and there was just a slight haziness, like looking out through a dirty window.
We were a full 16 miles away from Stalybridge and yet for days it was an ever-present reminder of the inferno which had taken over the moors.
There were many images of that fire, but Peter Armistead’s taken from Spinneyfields, a full ten miles away of the hills on fire to the east is a powerful reminder of those few days.
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| Dig, cut and burn, 1958 |
In the autumn into the winter back in the 1950s, every garden would have its share of regualr bonfires, when the dead branches and finished flowers would be burnt with piles of leaves.
And long before the use of coal, logs and branches and twigs burnt in the castles and halls of the great and the good down to the mean dwellings of the poor were essential for cooking and keeping warm.
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| Wood, peat and the smell, Middle Ages |
It will have lingered across the open living space giving off that pungent smell which stuck in your throat, stung the eyes and made it difficult to breathe.
Added to which it worked its way onto and into your clothes and followed you around.
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| Coming in to Manchester, 2019 |
The consolation is that the fire will eventually be brought under control through the work of the Greater Manchester Fire Service, and in the meantime leave you with a happier picture taken by Peter a year later, as he flew in from western Canada,
Enough said.
Location; Spinneyfields, Manchester, 2018
Pictures; fire on the hills, Stalybridge, June 29th, 2018, “Coming into Manchester”, August 19th, 2019, from the collection of Peter Armistead, Dig, cut and burn, 1958, Looking at Other Children, Jean and David Gadsby, from the series Looking at Geography, 1957 and Norman houses, from A History of Houses, R.J.Unstead, 1958
*Emergency services are on the scene in Saddleworth, Rachel Vickers-Price UK and World News Reporter and Ian Hughes, Manchester Evening News, July 11th, updated July, 12th, https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/greater-manchester-news/dovestone-moor-fire-live-huge-34277110


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