Burial depth - my last word
The natural burial ground at Sun Rising taken from their website - www.nrbgrounds.co.uk
For some time now I have been nagging natural burialists about the depth at which they inter their bodies. My concern has been that, beneath the topsoil, a body is not going to enjoy the ecologically positive rot envisaged for it.
I have had this response from Emma Restall Orr at Sun Rising. I think that what she says says it all. Thank you, Emma.
Our burial depth is a standard 4’ – 4’6 on very heavy clay. While I know that many local authority cemeteries bury now at a standard 5’ or 6’, to ensure the option for double interment, I am aware of burial in churchyards that is less than this on occasion, such as where a grave is being reopened for the second interment and the initial burial was not adequately deep. I cannot imagine us ever burying at less than 4’ however, particularly as we have no double graves at all.
While we acknowledge there is an image that our remains will feed the tree planted on top of us, this would require us to bury at 2’ and less. But at this depth, the deceased would risk bring disturbed by badgers or foxes. This is not a risk worth taking, nor is it necessary. The idea is poetic, not practical, and we make this clear to any families who enquire.
Though the sentimental images are valuable in the process of grieving and healing, the ethos of a natural burial ground is (for us) real, down to earth, practical care for the deceased, their families, and the environment, not poetry. First of all, most native trees don’t require rich soil, many preferring soil that is not well fertilised. Secondly, however, burial returns the body’s elements back into the cycles of nature, long term – in a way that cremation does not. The planting of the tree adds to the health of those cycles, and the richness of the environment generally. And this is enough.
Labels: natural burial
5 Comments:
I am curious about this matter of badgers and foxes. I have lived in the country most of my life and know the risks posed by these creatures. Foxes are opportunists and not much given to hard work, and a badger's diet is more snails and worms than anything else. Can anyone who runs a NBG give me a factual account of a grave being disturbed by them? I have heard it repeatedly from urban FD's who are looking for an excuse not to go to these sites, but not from an actual operator.
I too am sceptical of the danger posed by 'badgers/foxes'. When I worked as a carpenter in the old days, and a client questioned why we had left the offcuts of tanalised timber (treated with copper chrome arsenate) under her deck, my partner famously replied - "it will stop animals living under the deck".
This issue smacks of scaremongering in the same way as the lazy carpenter.
Personally, I just don't think that a fox or a badger would be bothered to dig down 2' and into a coffin to get into a tough old human body.
Is there any evidence of this happening - and at what soil depth and content i.e. a rocks/shale which I have seen dug out by a badger after sweet wasp grubs.
Couldn't any actual danger from real animals, if it exists, be obviated anyway by a simple but beautifully designed cage fixed over a shallow grave until the remains are decomposed beyond the scope of mammalian digestion? Possibly even a marketing opportunity for some bright funereal entrepreneur?
Ken West's solution is to put a layer of chicken wire over the grave a few inches below the surface. Devilishly simple.
I don't know what the outcome of this story was but obviously not just a problem just for NBGs. Chicken Wire sounds like a good idea.
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