Night of the living fields

by | Jul 4, 2013 | General, Just for Fun | 2 comments

Don’t look now, but the fields of the British Isles are up to something.

It seems that the UK has gained two million people in the past 10 years and lacks sufficient places to put them. Therefore, the Planning Minister has suggested that flats and houses be built on “low quality, environmentally uninteresting fields.”

To find out how this is being received on the ground, I conducted a boring-field study in the UK and Ireland. I offered to give my subjects pseudonyms, but to a field, they told me they’re proud of their historic names and urged me to use them.

(Note from November 2020: I’ve just tried to verify that these are genuine field names. I can’t find them online, but I’m sure they’re real because I’m not clever enough to have made them up.)

Murmurs of dissent

I started my survey in Buckinghamshire with an unexciting field called Calves Plat. “What about boring people?” he asked me. “I mean, have you seen the current Cabinet? John Major was spectacularly boring, and nobody built on him. Ted Heath — did he set any pulses racing? And a politician calls us boring?”

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“We’re not taking this lying down,” added Stockings, another dull field in Bucks. “Well, I mean, of course we’re lying down: we’re fields. But we’re not going to let ourselves be built on willy-nilly.

“We’ve formed a pressure group,” she added. “We call it ‘Fields United Committee On Fighting Fabrications,’ or FUC OFF for short. That was Crap Angry’s idea. He’s a field in Scotland. Well, you know what they’re like up there. Still covered with woad, a lot of those Scottish fields.”

Hints of a conspiracy

Near Lampeter, I spoke to Welsh spokesfield Waun O Flaen Ty. “We have a cunning plan,” he confided. “For starters, we’re making the case that ‘boring’ is in the eye of the beholder.

“Take me. In English, my name means ‘wet field in front of the house.’ Well, that’s interesting right there, isn’t it? What was in the mind of the person who said, ‘Right, here’s a bit of bog, I’ll just bung a house behind it. I’m sure my Bronwen will enjoy living adjacent to a wet field.’ It gets your mind going, does that. Boring, my aunt Myfanwy!”

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The plot thickens

In Somerset, a field named Twindix built on that argument. “So a field is boring: that’s no excuse for building on it. You couldn’t discriminate against me if I were gay, could you? (And it’s too bad I’m not, with a name like ‘Twindix.’) Well, then, you can’t build on me just because I’m flat, infertile, and lacking in character. It’s a landscape rights issue!”

“And a heritage issue,” declared Gortahork, a humdrum field in Ireland. “Haven’t we fields been here for centuries now, minding our own business? I personally have been growing oats since long before the Romans came, saw, conquered, and buggered off back to Rome. You can’t just pave over a history like that, no you can’t now.”

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The human angle

“We will also make the case that people have been interfering with us for centuries,” said a field in Nottinghamshire. “Take me for example. On June 16, 1487, a battle was fought on me between Lambert Simnel’s supporters and the forces of the King. They hacked at each other with swords, spears, and axes, and left me hedgerow-to-hedgerow in gore. That’s how I got my name, the Red Gutter. It’s too much to ask that, after absorbing all that blood, I should have to be covered with a housing estate.”

The not-so-phantom menace

A quartet of Scottish fields – Spittle Doup, Prior Inch, Moor o’Scare, and Gruggle o’ the Wood – is investigating the possibility of industrial action.

“Aye, we’re having a wee chat with some of the ‘interesting’ fields,” Gruggle told me. “They see the point of solidarity. Humans are aye chopping and changing, and today’s bonnie field is tomorrow’s clapped-out kilt.

“We’ve already secured our picket lines: march dykes, hedgerows, dry stone walls, they’re all behind us. By which I mean, of course, around us. And not letting anyone through.”

What would a British field strike look like?

“We’ll halt production,” threatened Gin Cock Hops, a monotonous field in Yalding, Kent. “Fields under plow will stop growing crops. Fields used for pasture will kick the animals off, and believe me, the animals are up in arms about it. Well, up in legs, anyway. Picturesque fields will refuse to have their photos taken, and fields with public footpaths won’t let people walk on them.”

Do fields really have that kind of power? “You’ll find out if you try to build on us,” said two of Gin Cock Hops’ neighbors, “or our names aren’t Mad Pit and Rebellion Meadow. Which they are. And there’s a field up in Scotland called Hell. Trust us: you don’t want to mess with her.”

So be afraid, people of the British Isles. Be very afraid. You don’t want to have to say, like George Harrison in A Hard Day’s Night (start at 2:54): “Sorry we hurt your field, mister.”

Note

Honey Pot Meadow in Bucks was also interviewed for this blog post, but all she had to say was, “I’m covered in bees!”