Church to review same-sex policy

Cross and clothing of Church of England bishopThe Church has been advised that it needs to adhere to equality legislation
Related Stories

The Church of England is to review its policy towards same-sex relationships and consider allowing gay clergy to be ordained as bishops.

It comes after a rise in the number of clergy entering civil partnerships.

There is also pressure on the Church to conform to laws guaranteeing equal treatment to gay people.

Lawyers have said the Church could not reject clergy as potential bishops on the basis of their homosexual orientation alone.

The Church of England told clergy in 2005 they could enter civil partnerships if they remained celibate, but uncertainty has arisen about whether such clergy could be nominated as bishops.

The review appears to stem partly from evidence that the gay cleric Jeffrey John, who is celibate, was recently rejected as a candidate for appointment as Bishop of Southwark because of his sexual orientation.

Church lawyers subsequently warned that new legislation prevented the Church from discriminating against celibate gay clergy when making appointments.

A statement from the House of Bishops of the Church of England said: “It is now nearly six years since the house issued its pastoral statement prior to the introduction of civil partnerships in December 2005.

“The preparation of that document was the last occasion when the house devoted substantial time to the issue of same-sex relationships.

“We undertook to keep that pastoral statement under review. We have decided that the time has come for a review to take place.”

BBC religious affairs correspondent Robert Pigott says the Church’s decision to extend the review to its approach to sexuality in general suggests that it could be on course towards a greater acceptance of active homosexuality.

That would be a move fiercely resisted by traditionalists, he adds.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Conker tree threat’s story recast

Horse chestnut leaf from Kew's herbarium (Image: David Lees)Closer inspection of Europe’s herbarium collections revealed some surprising results
Related Stories

Horse chestnut leaf miners were living on natural stands of trees in Greece a century before they were first described by science, a study shows.

The discovery was made by researchers who examined many of Europe’s historic herbarium collections.

They say it offers an insight to the history and origins of the tiny moths, which are blighting many of the continent’s horse chestnuts.

The findings will appear in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment journal.

“It is a moth that has been the target of a lot of research recently because it has been expanding [its range] so fast – much faster than other kinds of leaf-mining moths,” explained co-author David Lees from the French Institute for Agricultural Research (INRA).

The larval form of the Cameraria ohridellamoth feed inside the leaves of the white flowering horse chestnut tree (Aesculus hippocastanum), producing characteristic “mines” between the leaves’ veins.

The creatures do not kill the tree but infested trees may produce smaller conkers.

Dr Lees said C. ohridella was spreading its range by about 60km (40 miles) across Europe each year.

The small but highly invasive moth was first discovered in 1984, and first described by scientists as a genus new to Europe in just 1986. Since then, it has expanded its range across almost all of Europe.

The larvae produce characteristic mines on the white flowering horse chestnut tree’s (Aesculus hippocastanum) leaves. The creatures do not kill the tree but infested trees may, however, produce smaller conkers.

“We recently marked the first quarter century of this blight on horse chestnuts and it is quite amazing that during this time its origin has remained a mystery,” noted Dr Lees, a scientific associate with the Natural History Museum in London.

Unbelievable

“We decided to look at whether specimens of the moth appeared in herbarium collections, so I contacted (co-author) Walter Lack at Berlin Botanic Garden, who had been studying the history of this tree in Europe.

Leaf miners (Image: David Lees)

Horse chestnut leaf miners are spreading their range by 60km each year

Conker trees threatened by moth

“I asked him whether he had come across any mines in his historic herbarium collection. He wrote straight back and said that he did have some, which had been collected in 1928 in Albania. He said that there were spots on the leaves but he had no idea what they were.”

Dr Lees admitted he was very excited when he examined photos of the specimens and saw the outline of a caterpillar mine.

“That’s when we started to look more widely,” he went on. “I went to Kew Gardens (London) and as I was looking through the herbarium there I found a specimen from 1879 which had mines in it. We just could not believe it.”

They also found examples of leaf miners on collections in Paris.

Dr Lees said some of samples of leaf mines had been hidden, as the result of proud botanists attempting to disguise blemishes on their prized leaves.

He also felt there was another reason why the discovery had not been made before: “Disciplines stick to what they know best so entomologists would not necessarily would go to herbariums.”

He explained that the tree has been transported from its native Balkan range and planted throughout Europe since the late 16th Century, so mystery had surrounded why the moth had not “caught up with its dinner sooner”.

“We know that this moth has been distributing very fast since the last 1980s, ever since it somehow got to Austria,” Dr Lees said.

The arrival of roads in areas within the moths’ original range played a part, he suggested.

“The pupae hibernate in the mine (on a leaf), and they are able to be transported in trucks.”

Before this, the distribution was unlikely to have be widespread because the moths were not able fly far enough to extend their range.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Conker tree threat’s story recast

Horse chestnut leaf from Kew's herbarium (Image: David Lees)Closer inspection of Europe’s herbarium collections revealed some surprising results
Related Stories

Horse chestnut leaf miners were living on natural stands of trees in Greece a century before they were first described by science, a study shows.

The discovery was made by researchers who examined many of Europe’s historic herbarium collections.

They say it offers an insight to the history and origins of the tiny moths, which are blighting many of the continent’s horse chestnuts.

The findings will appear in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment journal.

“It is a moth that has been the target of a lot of research recently because it has been expanding [its range] so fast – much faster than other kinds of leaf-mining moths,” explained co-author David Lees from the French Institute for Agricultural Research (INRA).

The larval form of the Cameraria ohridellamoth feed inside the leaves of the white flowering horse chestnut tree (Aesculus hippocastanum), producing characteristic “mines” between the leaves’ veins.

The creatures do not kill the tree but infested trees may produce smaller conkers.

Dr Lees said C. ohridella was spreading its range by about 60km (40 miles) across Europe each year.

The small but highly invasive moth was first discovered in 1984, and first described by scientists as a genus new to Europe in just 1986. Since then, it has expanded its range across almost all of Europe.

The larvae produce characteristic mines on the white flowering horse chestnut tree’s (Aesculus hippocastanum) leaves. The creatures do not kill the tree but infested trees may, however, produce smaller conkers.

“We recently marked the first quarter century of this blight on horse chestnuts and it is quite amazing that during this time its origin has remained a mystery,” noted Dr Lees, a scientific associate with the Natural History Museum in London.

Unbelievable

“We decided to look at whether specimens of the moth appeared in herbarium collections, so I contacted (co-author) Walter Lack at Berlin Botanic Garden, who had been studying the history of this tree in Europe.

Leaf miners (Image: David Lees)

Horse chestnut leaf miners are spreading their range by 60km each year

Conker trees threatened by moth

“I asked him whether he had come across any mines in his historic herbarium collection. He wrote straight back and said that he did have some, which had been collected in 1928 in Albania. He said that there were spots on the leaves but he had no idea what they were.”

Dr Lees admitted he was very excited when he examined photos of the specimens and saw the outline of a caterpillar mine.

“That’s when we started to look more widely,” he went on. “I went to Kew Gardens (London) and as I was looking through the herbarium there I found a specimen from 1879 which had mines in it. We just could not believe it.”

They also found examples of leaf miners on collections in Paris.

Dr Lees said some of samples of leaf mines had been hidden, as the result of proud botanists attempting to disguise blemishes on their prized leaves.

He also felt there was another reason why the discovery had not been made before: “Disciplines stick to what they know best so entomologists would not necessarily would go to herbariums.”

He explained that the tree has been transported from its native Balkan range and planted throughout Europe since the late 16th Century, so mystery had surrounded why the moth had not “caught up with its dinner sooner”.

“We know that this moth has been distributing very fast since the last 1980s, ever since it somehow got to Austria,” Dr Lees said.

The arrival of roads in areas within the moths’ original range played a part, he suggested.

“The pupae hibernate in the mine (on a leaf), and they are able to be transported in trucks.”

Before this, the distribution was unlikely to have be widespread because the moths were not able fly far enough to extend their range.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Conker tree threat’s story recast

Horse chestnut leaf from Kew's herbarium (Image: David Lees)Closer inspection of Europe’s herbarium collections revealed some surprising results
Related Stories

Horse chestnut leaf miners were living on natural stands of trees in Greece a century before they were first described by science, a study shows.

The discovery was made by researchers who examined many of Europe’s historic herbarium collections.

They say it offers an insight to the history and origins of the tiny moths, which are blighting many of the continent’s horse chestnuts.

The findings will appear in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment journal.

“It is a moth that has been the target of a lot of research recently because it has been expanding [its range] so fast – much faster than other kinds of leaf-mining moths,” explained co-author David Lees from the French Institute for Agricultural Research (INRA).

The larval form of the Cameraria ohridellamoth feed inside the leaves of the white flowering horse chestnut tree (Aesculus hippocastanum), producing characteristic “mines” between the leaves’ veins.

The creatures do not kill the tree but infested trees may produce smaller conkers.

Dr Lees said C. ohridella was spreading its range by about 60km (40 miles) across Europe each year.

The small but highly invasive moth was first discovered in 1984, and first described by scientists as a genus new to Europe in just 1986. Since then, it has expanded its range across almost all of Europe.

The larvae produce characteristic mines on the white flowering horse chestnut tree’s (Aesculus hippocastanum) leaves. The creatures do not kill the tree but infested trees may, however, produce smaller conkers.

“We recently marked the first quarter century of this blight on horse chestnuts and it is quite amazing that during this time its origin has remained a mystery,” noted Dr Lees, a scientific associate with the Natural History Museum in London.

Unbelievable

“We decided to look at whether specimens of the moth appeared in herbarium collections, so I contacted (co-author) Walter Lack at Berlin Botanic Garden, who had been studying the history of this tree in Europe.

Leaf miners (Image: David Lees)

Horse chestnut leaf miners are spreading their range by 60km each year

Conker trees threatened by moth

“I asked him whether he had come across any mines in his historic herbarium collection. He wrote straight back and said that he did have some, which had been collected in 1928 in Albania. He said that there were spots on the leaves but he had no idea what they were.”

Dr Lees admitted he was very excited when he examined photos of the specimens and saw the outline of a caterpillar mine.

“That’s when we started to look more widely,” he went on. “I went to Kew Gardens (London) and as I was looking through the herbarium there I found a specimen from 1879 which had mines in it. We just could not believe it.”

They also found examples of leaf miners on collections in Paris.

Dr Lees said some of samples of leaf mines had been hidden, as the result of proud botanists attempting to disguise blemishes on their prized leaves.

He also felt there was another reason why the discovery had not been made before: “Disciplines stick to what they know best so entomologists would not necessarily would go to herbariums.”

He explained that the tree has been transported from its native Balkan range and planted throughout Europe since the late 16th Century, so mystery had surrounded why the moth had not “caught up with its dinner sooner”.

“We know that this moth has been distributing very fast since the last 1980s, ever since it somehow got to Austria,” Dr Lees said.

The arrival of roads in areas within the moths’ original range played a part, he suggested.

“The pupae hibernate in the mine (on a leaf), and they are able to be transported in trucks.”

Before this, the distribution was unlikely to have be widespread because the moths were not able fly far enough to extend their range.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Regiment presented with Colours

Queen inspects Royal Regiment of ScotlandThis will be the first time that six battalions from any regiment have been on parade at the same time
Related Stories

The Queen is due to present new colours to The Royal Regiment of Scotland, later.

Her Majesty will present the colours to the six battalions of The Royal Regiment of Scotland for the first time since the regiment’s formation five years ago.

The regiment will then march through Edinburgh.

The occasion marks the first time six battalions from any regiment have been on parade at the same time.

The parade, which will include marching contingents from six of the seven battalions of The Royal Regiment of Scotland, will take place in Holyrood Park.

The 4th Battalion is currently deployed on operations in Afghanistan.

The parade will also include several hundred veterans from the regiment’s antecedent units.

The Queen has been Colonel-in-Chief of The Royal Regiment of Scotland since its formation in 2006.

Colours are important to any army unit.

They consist of two large brocade and embroidery flags and were originally carried into battle so that soldiers of a particular unit could see where the rest of their unit was located at all times.

The infantry units of the British army each have two colours; the Queen’s Colour, which is a union flag, and a Regimental Colour, which has all the unit’s battle honours inscribed on it.

Colours are no longer carried on the battlefield but are held in the greatest esteem by the soldiers and officers.

They are brought out on important parades and regimental occasions and are escorted by a ‘colour party’.

When new colours are presented, the old ones are not destroyed but are laid up in a regimental museum, church or other military building with significance to its particular unit.

Colours are normally presented only every 20 to 25 years.

The Royal Regiment of Scotland consists of seven battalions, five regular and two territorial army.

One of these was formed by the amalgamation of the Royal Scots and King’s Own Scottish Borderers, while the others are each formed from one of the remaining single-battalion regiments of the Scottish division.

Along with The Rifles, it is currently the largest infantry regiment in the British army.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Regiment presented with Colours

Queen inspects Royal Regiment of ScotlandThis will be the first time that six battalions from any regiment have been on parade at the same time
Related Stories

The Queen is due to present new colours to The Royal Regiment of Scotland, later.

Her Majesty will present the colours to the six battalions of The Royal Regiment of Scotland for the first time since the regiment’s formation five years ago.

The regiment will then march through Edinburgh.

The occasion marks the first time six battalions from any regiment have been on parade at the same time.

The parade, which will include marching contingents from six of the seven battalions of The Royal Regiment of Scotland, will take place in Holyrood Park.

The 4th Battalion is currently deployed on operations in Afghanistan.

The parade will also include several hundred veterans from the regiment’s antecedent units.

The Queen has been Colonel-in-Chief of The Royal Regiment of Scotland since its formation in 2006.

Colours are important to any army unit.

They consist of two large brocade and embroidery flags and were originally carried into battle so that soldiers of a particular unit could see where the rest of their unit was located at all times.

The infantry units of the British army each have two colours; the Queen’s Colour, which is a union flag, and a Regimental Colour, which has all the unit’s battle honours inscribed on it.

Colours are no longer carried on the battlefield but are held in the greatest esteem by the soldiers and officers.

They are brought out on important parades and regimental occasions and are escorted by a ‘colour party’.

When new colours are presented, the old ones are not destroyed but are laid up in a regimental museum, church or other military building with significance to its particular unit.

Colours are normally presented only every 20 to 25 years.

The Royal Regiment of Scotland consists of seven battalions, five regular and two territorial army.

One of these was formed by the amalgamation of the Royal Scots and King’s Own Scottish Borderers, while the others are each formed from one of the remaining single-battalion regiments of the Scottish division.

Along with The Rifles, it is currently the largest infantry regiment in the British army.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Regiment presented with Colours

Queen inspects Royal Regiment of ScotlandThis will be the first time that six battalions from any regiment have been on parade at the same time
Related Stories

The Queen is due to present new colours to The Royal Regiment of Scotland, later.

Her Majesty will present the colours to the six battalions of The Royal Regiment of Scotland for the first time since the regiment’s formation five years ago.

The regiment will then march through Edinburgh.

The occasion marks the first time six battalions from any regiment have been on parade at the same time.

The parade, which will include marching contingents from six of the seven battalions of The Royal Regiment of Scotland, will take place in Holyrood Park.

The 4th Battalion is currently deployed on operations in Afghanistan.

The parade will also include several hundred veterans from the regiment’s antecedent units.

The Queen has been Colonel-in-Chief of The Royal Regiment of Scotland since its formation in 2006.

Colours are important to any army unit.

They consist of two large brocade and embroidery flags and were originally carried into battle so that soldiers of a particular unit could see where the rest of their unit was located at all times.

The infantry units of the British army each have two colours; the Queen’s Colour, which is a union flag, and a Regimental Colour, which has all the unit’s battle honours inscribed on it.

Colours are no longer carried on the battlefield but are held in the greatest esteem by the soldiers and officers.

They are brought out on important parades and regimental occasions and are escorted by a ‘colour party’.

When new colours are presented, the old ones are not destroyed but are laid up in a regimental museum, church or other military building with significance to its particular unit.

Colours are normally presented only every 20 to 25 years.

The Royal Regiment of Scotland consists of seven battalions, five regular and two territorial army.

One of these was formed by the amalgamation of the Royal Scots and King’s Own Scottish Borderers, while the others are each formed from one of the remaining single-battalion regiments of the Scottish division.

Along with The Rifles, it is currently the largest infantry regiment in the British army.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Banking centre

It is the second oldest central bank in the world – after Sweden – and the place where key decisions are taken that affect how much mortgages cost, and what financial return savings offer.

The public now have a chance to look inside the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street, as the building is known. Take a look at a few of the highlights, and see how the bank started life, with the Curator of the Bank of England Museum – John Keyworth.

To see the enhanced content on this page, you need to have JavaScript enabled and Adobe Flash installed.

The Bank of England will be open for public tours on Saturday 2 July and Saturday 9 July 2011 as part of the City of London Festival.

It will also open for Open House London Weekend on 17-18 September 2011.

Some images courtesy Bank of England and Getty Images. Music courtesy Reliable Source Music.

Slideshow production by Paul Kerley. Publication date 2 July 2011.

Related:

Bank of England Museum

City of London Festival

Open House London

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external websites.

More audio slideshows:

Butlins: 75 years of holiday history

Plant pictures at Kew with Kate Adie

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Banking centre

It is the second oldest central bank in the world – after Sweden – and the place where key decisions are taken that affect how much mortgages cost, and what financial return savings offer.

The public now have a chance to look inside the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street, as the building is known. Take a look at a few of the highlights, and see how the bank started life, with the Curator of the Bank of England Museum – John Keyworth.

To see the enhanced content on this page, you need to have JavaScript enabled and Adobe Flash installed.

The Bank of England will be open for public tours on Saturday 2 July and Saturday 9 July 2011 as part of the City of London Festival.

It will also open for Open House London Weekend on 17-18 September 2011.

Some images courtesy Bank of England and Getty Images. Music courtesy Reliable Source Music.

Slideshow production by Paul Kerley. Publication date 2 July 2011.

Related:

Bank of England Museum

City of London Festival

Open House London

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external websites.

More audio slideshows:

Butlins: 75 years of holiday history

Plant pictures at Kew with Kate Adie

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Banking centre

It is the second oldest central bank in the world – after Sweden – and the place where key decisions are taken that affect how much mortgages cost, and what financial return savings offer.

The public now have a chance to look inside the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street, as the building is known. Take a look at a few of the highlights, and see how the bank started life, with the Curator of the Bank of England Museum – John Keyworth.

To see the enhanced content on this page, you need to have JavaScript enabled and Adobe Flash installed.

The Bank of England will be open for public tours on Saturday 2 July and Saturday 9 July 2011 as part of the City of London Festival.

It will also open for Open House London Weekend on 17-18 September 2011.

Some images courtesy Bank of England and Getty Images. Music courtesy Reliable Source Music.

Slideshow production by Paul Kerley. Publication date 2 July 2011.

Related:

Bank of England Museum

City of London Festival

Open House London

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external websites.

More audio slideshows:

Butlins: 75 years of holiday history

Plant pictures at Kew with Kate Adie

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Niagara fools?

Maria Spelterini and Charles Blondin (with his agent)

The New York state assembly has made an exception to a century-old ban on stunts at Niagara Falls, to allow a renowned tightrope walker to cross from one side to the other. But is this the right way to revive tourism?

Little more than half a century ago, few tourist attractions in North America could rival the Niagara Falls. Travellers journeyed from all over the world to marvel at the three waterfalls that cascade into the lakes separating New York State and Canada’s Ontario Province.

A couple at the falls in 1955Honeymooners once flocked to the majestic falls

The 1952 film Niagara, starring Marilyn Monroe, played on the falls’ reputation as a romantic honeymoon location.

By then it had already been a major tourist destination for 150 years – first for wealthy travellers who could afford long journeys by carriage, then after the advent of the railway, for the middle classes.

At the same time, it flourished as a hydro-powered centre of industry, luring workers from all over the nation.

But eventually the manufacturers and chemical companies left, and other honeymoon destinations – such as Las Vegas and Orlando, Florida – put Niagara in the shade.

There are hopes today that New York’s recent vote to legalise gay marriage may revive the wedding business.

But it is a different vote by the state assembly, to grant a licence to a world-famous tightrope walker to cross the Horseshoe Falls, that optimists think may do most to put the falls back on the map and boost flagging tourism revenue.

A century and a half has passed since Jean Francois Gravelet – known as Blondin – became the first person to to make the tightrope walk. He repeated it more than once – on one occasion he carried his manager on his back, on another he cooked an omelette on a small stove.

The artist now biding to cross the high wire is Nik Wallenda – from a family famous for circus stunts and wire walking without safety nets.

Nik Wallenda 2011Wallenda completes a walk in Puerto Rico that led to his grandfather’s death

“There is a need to boost tourism on the American side of the falls,” Assemblyman John Ceretto, co-sponsor of the bill allowing the stunt, told the BBC News website by e-mail. He said that the event, which could take place as early as this summer, would be the first of a series of events to help draw more attention to the region.

“I don’t anticipate this one-time event to be a long-term solution,” he said. “Nik’s performance needs to be seen as a catalyst that will spark attention to the region and help ignite a long-term strategy to rehabilitate the Niagara Falls region as a pre-eminent tourist destination.”

Blondin’s exhibitionism

The following is a report from the London Times, 1859, on Monsieur Blondin’s fourth crossing of the Niagara Falls.

Niagara Falls was a swarming hive again yesterday (August 3) filled and overflowing with an immense throng of people…he suspended himself by the legs, and by one single leg, hanging head downwards, whirled around the rope, turned more somersaults, stood upon his head again – and, in fact, performed nearly all the most reckless feats attempted by tightrope performers under ordinary circumstances. Twice again before reaching the bank, he halted and repeated some of these antics, seeming determined to fatigue himself to the last point of endurance and thoroughly satisfy the spectators with his exhibition of daring and skill.

The approval of the Canadian side is needed but Assemblyman Ceretto said the Americans had received “positive feedback and co-operation from Canadian officials”.

But not everyone is happy with what they describe as the “carnival atmosphere” that such an event would create.

An editorial in Canada’s Niagara Falls Review reminds readers that the parks commission was created in 1885 precisely to “protect the Niagara Falls and deliver it from the crass commercialism, stunting and hucksterism that dominated the 19th Century”.

Paul Gromosiak, who has written a number of books on the falls – including a history of the daredevils who have gone over in barrels and other contraptions, or swum, or jumped over on jet skis – agrees.

“The falls will become nothing but a backdrop to circuses to entertain people. We should be celebrating our history,” says the retired chemistry teacher.

“This is a natural wonder we should be celebrating – not putting up ferris wheels.”

Evel Knievel at the Grand Canyon in1974Evel Knievel failed to cross the Snake River canyon by rocket during a televised event

He admits, though, that the proposed stunt may be popular with residents who have become “desperate for work and to see the area return to its glory days”.

“Some two-thirds of the population of the city of Niagara Falls are retired, they are nostalgic for the past, if they perceive this as offering prosperity they will be behind it,” he says.

A local newspaper has described him and other opponents as “relics from the past”.

Assemblyman Ceretto, also, is unmoved by their objections.

“I understand that people are concerned about ‘carnivalising’ of the Falls and bringing it back to the days of daredevils going over the Falls in barrels,” he says.

“Everybody that walks a tightrope is very highly skilled, whereas you could pretty much put anyone in a barrel and push them over the edge of the fall”

Nik Wallenda

“Fortunately, more and more people are beginning to realise and appreciate the value of this exciting tourism opportunity. This is not a stunt. This is a professional, world-class performance that the world will be watching.”

Stunts can go wrong, though. Daredevil Evel Knievel attempted a televised jump across the Grand Canyon’s Snake River Canyon in 1974 with a rocket-powered motorcycle.

Amid a series of malfunctions, an emergency parachute opened prematurely and he floated back down to earth.

In this case, any hitches could be fatal.

Nik Wallenda, however, views it as a walk in the park.

“For me walking a wire is very peaceful believe it or not – it’s not very nerve-wracking – it’s amazing the solitude that I get,” he told the BBC World Service this week. “[The Niagara] walk is just under 2,500ft (760m) across and 200ft (61m) above the water – it will probably take me about 45 minutes.”

He said he had been training since the age of two for such a challenge.

Rainbows over the fallsThe falls are famed for their rainbows that arc above the water in the mist

“I also have a permit to walk across the Grand Canyon, which is another huge one. But this is one of the biggest for sure – the complexity of it – the fact that I’m walking over water, which could be a distraction, the fact that I am so high up. It’s going to be extremely humid. It’s just an amazingly beautiful walk. It’s the beauty of everything underneath me and the water flowing behind me.”

Wallenda, whose German-born grandfather Karl died trying to walk between the two towers of the 10-storey Condado Plaza Hotel in San Juan, Puerto Rico, says tightrope walking is safer than other illegal stunts that have taken place at the falls.

“Everybody that walks a tightrope is very highly skilled, whereas you could pretty much put anyone in a barrel and push them over the edge of the fall. There is a lot of training involved in what we do,” he said

“To me life is on the wire and everything else is just waiting.”

Officials backing the act will be crossing their fingers – and hoping it can provide a safety net for the area’s local tourism.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Niagara fools?

Maria Spelterini and Charles Blondin (with his agent)

The New York state assembly has made an exception to a century-old ban on stunts at Niagara Falls, to allow a renowned tightrope walker to cross from one side to the other. But is this the right way to revive tourism?

Little more than half a century ago, few tourist attractions in North America could rival the Niagara Falls. Travellers journeyed from all over the world to marvel at the three waterfalls that cascade into the lakes separating New York State and Canada’s Ontario Province.

A couple at the falls in 1955Honeymooners once flocked to the majestic falls

The 1952 film Niagara, starring Marilyn Monroe, played on the falls’ reputation as a romantic honeymoon location.

By then it had already been a major tourist destination for 150 years – first for wealthy travellers who could afford long journeys by carriage, then after the advent of the railway, for the middle classes.

At the same time, it flourished as a hydro-powered centre of industry, luring workers from all over the nation.

But eventually the manufacturers and chemical companies left, and other honeymoon destinations – such as Las Vegas and Orlando, Florida – put Niagara in the shade.

There are hopes today that New York’s recent vote to legalise gay marriage may revive the wedding business.

But it is a different vote by the state assembly, to grant a licence to a world-famous tightrope walker to cross the Horseshoe Falls, that optimists think may do most to put the falls back on the map and boost flagging tourism revenue.

A century and a half has passed since Jean Francois Gravelet – known as Blondin – became the first person to to make the tightrope walk. He repeated it more than once – on one occasion he carried his manager on his back, on another he cooked an omelette on a small stove.

The artist now biding to cross the high wire is Nik Wallenda – from a family famous for circus stunts and wire walking without safety nets.

Nik Wallenda 2011Wallenda completes a walk in Puerto Rico that led to his grandfather’s death

“There is a need to boost tourism on the American side of the falls,” Assemblyman John Ceretto, co-sponsor of the bill allowing the stunt, told the BBC News website by e-mail. He said that the event, which could take place as early as this summer, would be the first of a series of events to help draw more attention to the region.

“I don’t anticipate this one-time event to be a long-term solution,” he said. “Nik’s performance needs to be seen as a catalyst that will spark attention to the region and help ignite a long-term strategy to rehabilitate the Niagara Falls region as a pre-eminent tourist destination.”

Blondin’s exhibitionism

The following is a report from the London Times, 1859, on Monsieur Blondin’s fourth crossing of the Niagara Falls.

Niagara Falls was a swarming hive again yesterday (August 3) filled and overflowing with an immense throng of people…he suspended himself by the legs, and by one single leg, hanging head downwards, whirled around the rope, turned more somersaults, stood upon his head again – and, in fact, performed nearly all the most reckless feats attempted by tightrope performers under ordinary circumstances. Twice again before reaching the bank, he halted and repeated some of these antics, seeming determined to fatigue himself to the last point of endurance and thoroughly satisfy the spectators with his exhibition of daring and skill.

The approval of the Canadian side is needed but Assemblyman Ceretto said the Americans had received “positive feedback and co-operation from Canadian officials”.

But not everyone is happy with what they describe as the “carnival atmosphere” that such an event would create.

An editorial in Canada’s Niagara Falls Review reminds readers that the parks commission was created in 1885 precisely to “protect the Niagara Falls and deliver it from the crass commercialism, stunting and hucksterism that dominated the 19th Century”.

Paul Gromosiak, who has written a number of books on the falls – including a history of the daredevils who have gone over in barrels and other contraptions, or swum, or jumped over on jet skis – agrees.

“The falls will become nothing but a backdrop to circuses to entertain people. We should be celebrating our history,” says the retired chemistry teacher.

“This is a natural wonder we should be celebrating – not putting up ferris wheels.”

Evel Knievel at the Grand Canyon in1974Evel Knievel failed to cross the Snake River canyon by rocket during a televised event

He admits, though, that the proposed stunt may be popular with residents who have become “desperate for work and to see the area return to its glory days”.

“Some two-thirds of the population of the city of Niagara Falls are retired, they are nostalgic for the past, if they perceive this as offering prosperity they will be behind it,” he says.

A local newspaper has described him and other opponents as “relics from the past”.

Assemblyman Ceretto, also, is unmoved by their objections.

“I understand that people are concerned about ‘carnivalising’ of the Falls and bringing it back to the days of daredevils going over the Falls in barrels,” he says.

“Everybody that walks a tightrope is very highly skilled, whereas you could pretty much put anyone in a barrel and push them over the edge of the fall”

Nik Wallenda

“Fortunately, more and more people are beginning to realise and appreciate the value of this exciting tourism opportunity. This is not a stunt. This is a professional, world-class performance that the world will be watching.”

Stunts can go wrong, though. Daredevil Evel Knievel attempted a televised jump across the Grand Canyon’s Snake River Canyon in 1974 with a rocket-powered motorcycle.

Amid a series of malfunctions, an emergency parachute opened prematurely and he floated back down to earth.

In this case, any hitches could be fatal.

Nik Wallenda, however, views it as a walk in the park.

“For me walking a wire is very peaceful believe it or not – it’s not very nerve-wracking – it’s amazing the solitude that I get,” he told the BBC World Service this week. “[The Niagara] walk is just under 2,500ft (760m) across and 200ft (61m) above the water – it will probably take me about 45 minutes.”

He said he had been training since the age of two for such a challenge.

Rainbows over the fallsThe falls are famed for their rainbows that arc above the water in the mist

“I also have a permit to walk across the Grand Canyon, which is another huge one. But this is one of the biggest for sure – the complexity of it – the fact that I’m walking over water, which could be a distraction, the fact that I am so high up. It’s going to be extremely humid. It’s just an amazingly beautiful walk. It’s the beauty of everything underneath me and the water flowing behind me.”

Wallenda, whose German-born grandfather Karl died trying to walk between the two towers of the 10-storey Condado Plaza Hotel in San Juan, Puerto Rico, says tightrope walking is safer than other illegal stunts that have taken place at the falls.

“Everybody that walks a tightrope is very highly skilled, whereas you could pretty much put anyone in a barrel and push them over the edge of the fall. There is a lot of training involved in what we do,” he said

“To me life is on the wire and everything else is just waiting.”

Officials backing the act will be crossing their fingers – and hoping it can provide a safety net for the area’s local tourism.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.