Thirty years ago I started writing a weekly column in my local newspaper, the Strathspey and Badenoch Herald. The owner of the newspaper recognised there were many outdoor enthusiasts living in the Aviemopre area, and plenty of climbers, walkers and skiers visited the area, so he asked me to write a column describing some walks and climbs, making the occasional comment about local environmental issues.
In that time I think I’ve missed less than a handful of weekly columns and while the amount the paper paid me wouldn’t buy a round of drinks I was happy to write the column on the basis it was a local paper and it was good to be involved in the community in such a way.
Over the years I guess I’ve upset some and maybe delighted others with some of those comments, but generally speaking much of the stuff I’ve written received an enthusiastic response in the letters pages and a lively letters page is a good sign of a successful newspaper.
I was a little surprised then, and more than a little disappointed to get an email from the editor of the paper a few weeks ago saying the owners of the paper had decided they couldn’t afford to pay freelance contributors any more. Gavin, the editor, suggested I might like to write the column for nothing, or he might be able to find a sponsor, but after thinking long and hard about it I decided to call it a day. As a professional journalist, and a paid up member of the NUJ, I wouldn’t write the column for free, and I wasn’t to keen on the idea of a sponsor telling me what or what not to write. This week’s edition of the paper will be the last to carry the McNeish byline.
Am I angry? No, not really, just a little sad that an era of my working life has come to an end and a little disappointed that 30 years of loyal service to a newspaper should end in such a way. I would have thought that someone from the newspaper’s management team might have had the decency to pick up the phone and, at least, said thanks for 30 years service. Ho-hum. I guess that’s the way modern management conducts itself - faceless and cowardly.
Anyway, I’d like to thank editor Gavin Musgrove for his support and encouragement over the past few years and for his sake, and for all the Strathie team and all readers, I offer my very best wishes and hopes for a successful future.