On a cold spring morning, heat rises from the heath whereas a lizard carves sleek curves underneath the dry, dormant heather. Lillian Watts’ bench has fallen into disrepair, prompting a seat on Arthur’s Seat overlooking the widespread. This present day coincides with each her birthday and mine, although she handed away in 1989 at age 93.
Pioneering Naturalist and Campaigner
A 1975 recording from the village historical past society captures Lillian’s measured, tender voice with its clipped vowels. As a poet, potter, English trainer, naturalist, and decided campaigner, she collaborated with residents like Arthur Cooke (1898-1980) to defend the widespread from improvement pressures.
First Encounters and New Beginnings
Lillian first visited the widespread in 1907 throughout a birthday biking outing to listen to its famend nightingales, encountering a big Romany encampment. She returned in 1935, married, to reside at Crumplehorn Cottage on the widespread’s edge. By then, many Gypsy households—as soon as revered group members—had been relocated, although some remained as neighbors or in new council homes on a part of the heath.
The remaining heath served as a Poor’s Allotment for grazing and harvesting gorse bundles, referred to as “furzy bavins,” which fueled bread ovens with their fast, crackling warmth. Lillian rented 12 acres amid neighbors’ geese, pigs, and horses, clearing scrub to uncover uncommon vegetation together with the scarce pale canine violet (Viola lactea), petty whin, bathroom asphodel, lousewort, milkwort, and dodder.
Securing the Widespread’s Future
Going through a improvement menace in 1970, villagers invited the Wildlife Belief to lease the widespread, and the group agreed. Upon Lillian’s departure from the belief and her cherished Crumplehorn Cottage, it bought the land outright, fulfilling her imaginative and prescient.
Echoes of Nightingale Songs
The recording concludes with Lillian guiding listeners onto the widespread to listen to a nightingale—its loud, lovely name now absent. Background birdsong stuns with richness. Right now, silence reveals gaps amid the remaining refrain of willow warblers, backyard warblers, blackcaps, chiffchaffs, and the season’s first cuckoo, usually detected right here forward of elsewhere. What persists holds a profound, if diminished, vitality.

