My Quiet Life in Suffolk

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Wednesday, 2 August 2023

The Shining Levels

 The Shining levels by John Wyatt was first published in 1973 and is the authors story of his time working as a forester in the Lake District.

My copy is a Little Toller Nature Classic reprint from 2012. The cover is from a detail from Lake Landscapes by L.S. Lowry.


John Wyatt was born in 1925 in among the factories and cotton mills of Lancashire but always felt like a country boy - escaping anytime he could to the fells and woods above the town. His first visit to the Lake District was with his Scout Group, where he found he loved the freedom and the closeness to nature. After leaving school aged 15 he spent a while working in a newspaper office, then as  telegraphist in the Navy during WWII. On leaving the navy he had a few jobs but  was desperate to get back to the countryside and took a job as a forest worker while doing a correspondence course on writing. He lived alone in a small hut working for the landowner and learning about the wildlife around his home. 

He became a campsite warden and then the first Park Ranger for the Lake District National Park in 1961 - working alone covering 866 square miles as the Park got busier with visitors. As more Rangers were hired he became Chief Ranger in 1973 and was awarded an M.B.E. for services to the National Park.


The Shining Levels is about the early days, before the National Park when he is working for one of the landowners at coppicing, hedging and ditching while living in a small rough hut - which comes with the job. 

I put my modest luggage on the bunk in the corner and leant my axe against the wall. I thought of tea. I followed the beaten path to the well, There was a frog in it , but it didn't bother me. If the water was good enough for him I would not object.........................

The only heat and way of cooking was from a wood fire which smoked terribly. Wyatt soon became an expert on wood-smoke and all the different fragrances. 

A lot of the story is about him taking in a tiny Roe Deer brought to him by some well meaning Scouts who had found it "abandoned". He manages to keep it alive and calls it Buck. Buck grows and thrives and follows him around - answering to his call.

My copy of the book has illustrations of wood engravings of the Lakes by Norman Ackroyd, which don't really add much to the book. I noticed on Amazon that the original had line drawings, which look much more relevant.

Stock Image



 


After retiring he wrote more books about The Lakes and wrote the first official guide to the national Park in 1987.

He died in 2006 and was buried in a green burial site in the Lake District  with a Yew tree planted over his grave.

A good read about a man who went back to nature before it became the in thing!




Back Tomorrow
Sue


Sue in Suffolk at 06:00
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25 comments:

  1. thelma2 August 2023 at 07:47

    It takes a lot of energy and strength to go back to nature. Now of course John Wyatt would probably have been evicted from his hut.

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    1. Sue in Suffolk2 August 2023 at 09:39

      Doubt anyone now would consider living in the hut even if it was free

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  2. jabblog2 August 2023 at 08:37

    That sounds a really interesting book. I wonder if Buck managed to lead a normal roe deer life. Possibly not.

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    1. Sue in Suffolk2 August 2023 at 09:38

      Saying what happened to Buck was giving too much away!

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  3. Tasker Dunham2 August 2023 at 09:35

    It sounds like a Gavin Maxwell kind of book. I always enjoy them.

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    1. Sue in Suffolk2 August 2023 at 09:45

      I think we did Ring of Bright Water at school - I need to read or re-read

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  4. At Home In New Zealand2 August 2023 at 10:26

    That book sounds like it would make a great read sitting by the fire on a blustery thunder-filled cold wet day like today has been :)

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    1. Sue in Suffolk2 August 2023 at 20:03

      or in England during a dismal sort of summer. :-) !

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  5. Anonymous2 August 2023 at 14:44

    The book sounds like such a good read. I was in London last week at Foyles on Charing Cross Road, where I have not been for many many years. I bought a truly wonderful book called Weatherland by Alexandra Harris which won the Guardian first book award. On the front the line is ..writers and artists under an English sky. I also just read The Paris Library which is set in Paris on the brink of war. Jean in Winnipeg.

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    1. Sue in Suffolk2 August 2023 at 20:06

      I've not read either of those books - I shall investigate

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  6. Debby2 August 2023 at 14:52

    I went off to look around Better World Books for a copy of that book. There is another book by 'a' John Wyatt called 'No Mercy from the Japanese'. I'm trying to discover whether this is the same John Wyatt. The books are linked together when you search by author. I see that this John Wyatt did serve during WWII, but find no mention of this in biographical notes. Do you know anything about this?

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    1. Sue in Suffolk2 August 2023 at 20:15

      Not the same man - I looked on Amazon at the details of the book you mention and that John Wyatt was imprisoned and worked on the Burma railway and was the only survivor of a hospital massacre . The John Wyatt of Shining Levels was only away serving on ships for a few years during the war and there's no mention of Burma in his Obituary in The Guardian Newspaper.

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  7. Brenda2 August 2023 at 15:13

    Reminds me f Walden by Thoreau

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    1. Sue in Suffolk2 August 2023 at 20:16

      Similar for sure

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  8. Sue 2 August 2023 at 16:04

    That sounds like a lovely book.

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    1. Sue in Suffolk2 August 2023 at 20:16

      It was a good read - a book to keep

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  9. Susan2 August 2023 at 16:11

    Living close to nature and the woodlands is always of interest to me. JW led an interesting life. JW seems to be one of the first to embrace land stewardship.

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    1. Sue in Suffolk2 August 2023 at 20:17

      He enjoyed that closeness to nature - and young enough to survive the spartan living conditions in his little hut

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  10. Marjorie2 August 2023 at 22:43

    Off topic but wondering why I can't get to read The Diary of a Nobody at its new location. I followed it for ages and miss her writing.

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    1. Sue in Suffolk3 August 2023 at 07:55

      It's now a private blog and I can't read either as I couldn't get the email to connect

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  11. Jackie3 August 2023 at 02:45

    I don't know if I could survive living that way. My husband can tell different woods from the smell when they are burning as well.

    God bless.

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    1. Sue in Suffolk3 August 2023 at 07:57

      The only downside of a wood-burner is you can't smell the wood

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  12. Jules3 August 2023 at 07:31

    It sounds like a fascinating read. Xx

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    1. Sue in Suffolk3 August 2023 at 07:57

      It was a good book

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  13. Sharon5 August 2023 at 03:50

    Sounds like a really interesting book!

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Sue in Suffolk
I've just reached 70 years old and proud of being Suffolk born and bred! After 38 years of happy marriage .....with 23 of those years spent on a self-sufficient smallholding near the Suffolk coast, we moved to an old cottage in very rural Mid Suffolk when my dear husband Colin was diagnosed with Mantle Cell Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma. He died in May 2018. Our 3 grown up children have given me 5 wonderful grandchildren. In 2021 I moved 3 miles from the old country cottage at the end of a lane to live in a modern bungalow on the edge of a village in Mid Suffolk. .
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