As the hot, dry spell of weather continues, everywhere is becoming tinder-dry and the risk of fire increases. There have been some bad moorland fires, which are a real challenge. Added to the difficulty of getting firefighters, equipment and water onto the moors, when the heat gets down into the peat the fires can smoulder for weeks and keep reappearing.
There have been a couple of days recently when I've had to close my windows because of a smell of smoke. I'm assuming no-one is daft enough to have garden bonfires in this weather (though you never know!) so I guessed there were actual fires somewhere in the vicinity. Then one morning I was walking towards Salts Mill along the side of the railway line and I noticed the fire brigade were trying to extinguish a small fire. It was in a yard adjacent to the railway and seemed to be brush or woodchips smouldering. They had a hose and a small digger (presumably belonging to the relevant business in the yard) was shifting the piles of brush. It all looked to be under control by that stage, which is good because just over the wall is a school building and they wouldn't want the fire spreading to the trees or the school.
You do wonder what sets these blazes going... It's unlikely to have been a portable BBQ in this case (often the cause of moorland and woodland fires) so maybe it was the sun's rays acting on a piece of glass or similar. We can't blame steam trains and their sparks any more!
I could only see the action because all the trees and shrubs alongside the railway line have recently been felled. It makes this area look totally different and it's very bare, ugly and messy with brush and tree stumps now. I suppose they are trying to avoid leaves on the line or fallen trees blocking the route, but it seems sad to me to lose all the trees.
The picture below is what the same road looked like a couple of years ago.

















































