A FEW WEEKS ago, my wife Sithabiso and I embarked on a multi-day hike along the Limestone Way, a 74-kilometre trail winding through the idyllic White Peak landscape of the Peak District National Park in central England.
Our wanderings offered a heady mix of rich British history, picture-book natural beauty and lovely summer weather – until the very last day of our adventure, when the UK decided to tax our pleasures with a proper soaking.
Despite all that pleasantness, we couldn’t ignore the sobering effects of centuries of grazing, monoculture, mining, encroaching urban development and, perhaps most notably, climate change on the English countryside. It served as a reminder that not all industrial practices should be adopted indiscriminately, particularly in less touched parts of the world.
The fact is, very…