Barbara was one of the Great Britons who have enthusiastically contributed their knowledge, enthusiasm and time to local communities across Romania in many different ways. Barbara was a skilled biologist, a senior science policy advisor to the Royal Society of Biology, who fell in love, as many do, with the hay meadows and pastoral woodlands of Transylvania and who made a home in Harghita county. Working with local colleagues in the Pogany-Havas Association, she championed high nature value farming and pastoral woodlands, and the rural livelihoods necessary to sustain these remarkable ecosystems.
In the face of increasingly debilitating motor neurone disease she remained both extraordinarily brave and extraordinarily active – organising symposia at the European Parliament, championing the Natura 2000 designation for the Muntii Ciucului, setting up haymaking camps in Gyimes to raise awareness of and pride in traditional haymaking, and launching the Remarkable Trees of Romania project. My only meeting with Barbara was in the context of th
More than eighty of us stood in a ring on top of the peak, as Barbara’s ashes were scattered to the mountains, a local folk band somehow materialising amidst the wild flowers to play in her honour. May she rest in peace.