African Blackwood & Bagpipes

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Feb 27, 2003
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Scots W'hay?

I guess knife handles are next....

Bagpipes a threat to the environment.

THEY were once outlawed for being used as seditious weapons of war. Now, bagpipes have been blasted as an environmental menace.

Over-intensive logging means that the African wood used to make Scotland's national instrument faces being wiped out.

Conservation groups are letting out skirls of protest, urging musicians and instrument manufacturers to make sure their pipes come from eco-friendly sources.

As part of the campaign, Scots are being asked to fund the planting of "bagpipe trees" in a bid to atone for the environmental damage.

Traditionally the chanter on the bottom of Highland pipes, which is used to create the melody, was made from native woods such as bog oak.

But Scottish mariners who travelled to Africa in the 18th century returned with supplies of African Blackwood, which proved to be far more resilient and produced a sweeter sound.

Since then the species, known as Mpingo in Swahili, has been a staple component of most quality pipes.

Conservation group Fauna & Flora International (FFI) said urgent action is needed to prevent the species being lost.

"With its beauty, fine grain, durable structure and natural oils no other wood looks - or sounds - the same as African Blackwood," said its campaign co-ordinator Georgina Magin.

"But it has been heavily exploited for woodwind instruments like bagpipes and stocks are now seriously depleted.

"If woodlands and the valuable timbers they contain are managed unsustainably, species such as African Blackwood will become extinct.

"Already in northern Tanzania, where unsustainable logging occurs, Blackwood and other species are threatened with commercial extinction.

"This is a pivotal time for Blackwood, and musicians can play a crucial role in ensuring this unique timber remains available long into the future."

It is believed that as much as 70% of Blackwood trees in Tanzania have already been felled.

The African-based Mpingo Conservation Project (MCP) is working with Tanzanian residents to create, own and manage sustainable supplies of the timber.

"When managed in this way communities, who previously received a pittance, can earn one hundred times more per log of Blackwood harvested from the forest," said spokesman Andrew Gordon-Maclean.

"In this way, Blackwood, which is one of the most valuable hardwoods in the world, could provide an economic incentive to local people to protect and sustainably manage their neighbouring forests. The increased revenue will make a significant difference to rural livelihoods and help alleviate extreme poverty in some of the poorest communities in East Africa."

The MCP and FFI are hopeful that by 2009 sustainably certified Blackwood will be on the market.

"This will mean that musicians will be in no doubt that the wood in the instrument they are buying has been legally felled and a fair price has been paid to its local custodians," said Gordon-Maclean. "We would urge concerned pipers to demand their suppliers explain where they source their Blackwood so it is not at the expense of poor African farmers and the global environment."

In the meantime, people have been flocking to help reforest parts of Tanzania.

Ethical present firm Good Gifts is urging people to plant bagpipe trees.

It is pledging to plant 21 Blackwood saplings for £15, 50 for £35 and 60 for £42.

Spokeswoman Kirsty Thomson said: "The response so far - particularly from Scotland - has been incredible.

"The gift of bagpipe trees is becoming an unlikely best-seller this Christmas.

"It is helping to rebuild forests, conserve water, reduce soil erosion, generate income and keep musicians skirling."

But pipe major and manufacturer David MacMurchie, who uses Blackwood, was less than impressed by the campaign.

"I for one am not going be made to feel guilty by a bunch of misguided environmental do-gooders," he said. "I am sure that the communities in Africa use a hell of a lot more Blackwood than bagpipe manufacturers.

"It is unfair and misleading to try to blame it all on us."

MacMurchie, a former member of the band of the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards, said he was happy to make pipes from plastic, but said the overwhelming public demand was for traditional wooden instruments.

Other alternative woods, such as ebony, are vulnerable to splitting and, in some areas, are themselves under threat.

Most pipe manufacturers believe that no other wood has the same durability and resonance as the Blackwood. The African tree takes 80 years to reach just 40cm in height.

The pipes were outlawed as an "instrument of war" after the Hanoverian forces crushed the Jacobites at Culloden in 1746.

A SCOTTISH SYMBOL INVENTED ABROAD
The origins of the bagpipes are lost in the mists of time with both China and the Middle East staking claims. But what is certain is that the instrument that is synonymous with Scotland originated far outside our shores.

The oldest references to it appear in Alexandria, Egypt, in about 100BC. The instrument is believed have travelled west through Europe and both Roman and Greek writings mention it in about AD100. Pictish carvings from the eighth century confirm the pipes, which were probably made of sheep or goat skin, took hold in Scotland. They became increasingly popular and Robert the Bruce's troops were stirred by the tune Hey Tutti Taiti as they marched to battle at Bannockburn. The tune was later revived by Robert Burns' Scots Wa' Hae.

The British army later recognised that the skirl of the pipes was a formidable way of motivating troops, and bagpipers led the charge in conflicts from the Crimea to the Second World War.

Shakespeare also mentions the pipes in The Merchant Of Venice.

The bagpipes were a key part of the feared Highland charge technique used by clansmen and following the defeat of the last Jacobite rebellion they were banned as an instrument of war.
 
Kind of makes you wonder how many bagpipes are manufactured in a year?

Must be a lot more than one would think to have that much impact on the African continent's supply of Blackwood trees.
 
Kind of makes you wonder how many bagpipes are manufactured in a year?

Must be a lot more than one would think to have that much impact on the African continent's supply of Blackwood trees.

That's exactly what I was thinking.

Roger
 
I find it hard to believe that the bagpipe industry has much effect on the sustainablity of the African Blackwood lumber industry.
 
no doubt, Keith! kinda like ancient blacksmiths were blamed for the deforestation of Europe... YEA RIGHT! FFI is just a bunch of (pardon the pun) tree huggin hippies! I'm all for conservatism, we definatly need to be concientious of our footprints, but we dont need organizations who it seems their sole purpose is to sow dissent and cast blame and then hide behind a philanthropic shield.

yea friggin jerks
 
Something doesn't seem right. :confused:

I know there are other musical instruments that use african blackwood in their construction. Why single out bagpipes? I suspect there is an agenda behind the story.

Trees are a renewable resource. Plant more blackwood trees and manage the harvest. The solution is that easy. I wonder if MCP, FFI and/or Good Gifts are getting some of the money from the replanting? Could some people be trying to generate money by making other people feel guilty?

The African tree takes 80 years to reach just 40cm in height
Eighty years to grow to under 16 inches!?!?! I strongly suspect this was overstated, misrepresented or misquoted! I measured the growth rings on several blackwood blocks and the rings were .050" to .070" apart. Lets use .060" as an average. If the growth ring is .060" the tree has increased .120" in diameter in one year. In eighty years the tree would be 9.6" in diameter. An eighty year old tree that is 16" tall and 9" in diameter is a funny looking tree!

We knew a man who until recently owned teak plantations in several Asian countries. He was very careful to practice sustainable harvesting more than twenty years ago. He said it made good business sense. He also told us he was harassed for creating a "mono-culture" environments. One group of protesters suggested he cut down all his trees let the plantations go back to the wild. Some people are never satisfied. :(
 
If true, then it can be said, "it's happened before." Twice that I know of. Pernambuco used for stringed instrument bows and Brazillian Rosewood used in accoustic guitars.
 
I'm really hoping it's about greed and kickbacks versus sincere belief. The owners and some priviliged workers in "Fair-Trade" shops get higher than market wages for their efforts, but most of the workers in such shops don't get more money than workers in other shops and the owners have no economic incentive to make the shops safer or labor less back-breaking for their employees.

And as has been said before, there's an understatement of the growing time and overstatement of blackwood's use by pipers. For there to be enough pipe players around to threaten the blackwood tree with extinction, veteran bagpipe players would have to be emulating The Who and The Jimi Hendrix Experience to please the ever youthful baby boomer crowd or there would be an epidemic of suicides in Scotland and other Scot enclaves if several forests' worth were being purchased by new students on a yearly basis.

Guilt-based gifts... :barf:
 
If the Mpingo tree is threatened, it is less so because of musical
instrument use (or other crafts), and far more so because the
locals burn off large areas of the trees range, to create grazing
land for cattle.
 
God I hate blackwood. It makes my entire body burn when i come in contact with it while grinding. Without a resperator it burns my nose throat and lungs....with a resperator it makes me itch like ive been using fiberglass all day. I must be allergic. I hate it with a passion and decided not to use it at all if i can avoid it.
 
Honestly..........it's crrrrrrrap!

I herd the same rumor 15 odd years ago when I started piping. That gives them 15 years of bitching, and not fixing the problem ( more like looking for a handout..ie, free saplings)
Reminds me a bit of when we went to St.Thomas on our honeymoon 16 years ago. All the jewlry stores wee selling Tanzanite, and urging us to "BY Now" because the sourse of the uber rare je was aboutto run out...ya right:jerkit:
 
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