{"id":2437,"date":"2020-12-01T14:48:31","date_gmt":"2020-12-01T14:48:31","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/writersrebel.com\/?p=2437"},"modified":"2020-12-03T16:10:19","modified_gmt":"2020-12-03T16:10:19","slug":"trees-breathe-out-we-breathe-in-what-happens-when-theres-only-one-tree-left","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/writersrebel.com\/trees-breathe-out-we-breathe-in-what-happens-when-theres-only-one-tree-left\/","title":{"rendered":"Read: Trees breathe out. We breathe in.<\/span>Katie Holten<\/span>"},"content":{"rendered":"

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Tell us about what’s happening at Ardee bog, and why you are campaigning to stop it.<\/strong><\/p>\n

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Ardee Bog, in Ireland\u2019s County Louth, is threatened by an absurd infrastructure project. If a proposed road, the N52 Ardee Bypass, is allowed to proceed in its current form it will cut through Ardee Bog and its surrounding buffer zone habitat, violating many local, regional, and European directives. The damage this would cause is inconceivable. An Environmental Impact Assessment was never carried out. The \u201cplanners\u201d drew a line on a map, connecting two existing roads by slicing through the bog. What they saw as a blank space on the map is a real, living, breathing ecosystem.<\/p>\n

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Ardee Bog photographed by Katie Holten in 2019<\/em><\/p>\n

I grew up on the edge of Ardee Bog and spent a lot of time there when I was younger. I made my first artworks in and about the bog; a series of drawings, photographs, and strange musical manifestations called Bog Awareness. <\/em>I love the bog but hadn\u2019t appreciated just how unusual it is until a few years ago. As Ireland\u2019s most easterly raised bog it\u2019s a rare gem, not only locally, but globally. A proposed Natural Heritage Area, it\u2019s a sanctuary of heather, a living carpet of psychedelic greens and reds of sphagnum moss, lichen and sundew, with yellows and pinks of bog orchids, and whites of bog cotton. Otters, cuckoos, owls, hares, bats, frogs, deer, and snipe call it home. Curlews too! They appear to be nesting nearby. Their haunting call fills the air. We\u2019re trying to monitor and confirm their presence. Curlews may become extinct as a breeding species in Ireland within ten years, so it\u2019s vital that we protect them and their habitat.<\/p>\n