Making palings - note the the shelters they built to use while working:
Find about what we're up to in Rye, East Sussex, and what's going on in our wood, Chestnut Coppice.
Wednesday, 31 December 2008
Old coppicing photos
Making palings - note the the shelters they built to use while working:
Tuesday, 30 December 2008
Ice, birds and coppicing
The work's progressing nicely, there's not too much left to do between the junction and the pond now:
There's a lot of light coming in now:
Mike
'Rewilding'
Welcome to rewilding, a movement that is radicalising conservation biology, turning what had been a scientific backwater into one of its most controversial areas. What the rewilders want is nothing less than the reversal of thousands of years of domestication, returning vast tracts of countryside to the way they looked thousands of years ago. They believe the best way to achieve this is by bringing back the biggest and fiercest animals of all – the elk, wolves, lynx and even bears that roamed Britain 10,000 years ago at the end of the Pleistocene era.
It sounds extreme but some of Britain’s most respected wildlife and conservation organisations, including the National Trust, are buying into the idea.
This week the People’s Trust for Endangered Species, which already supports the reintroduction of beaver to Scotland, will suggest northern Britain could support about 450 lynx.
There's a related story on the BBC website about reintroducing lynx, one of the aims being to control the rapidly expanding deer population:
Until recently, the "big cat" was thought to have died out 4000 years ago, but new research shows it survived into medieval times and died out as a result of persecution by humans.
Professor Macdonald's report, co-written by his Wildlife Conservation Research Unit colleague, Dr Dawn Burnham, states: "The recently identified human involvement in its demise strengthens the case for reintroducing lynx in Britain.
"Lynx would most likely hunt roe, sika and juvenile red deer, supplementing their diet with hares and foxes."
The report highlights the growing population of "free-ranging" deer species in Britain as a major cause of damage to protected woodland.
Mike
Monday, 29 December 2008
Team effort
But first, you need to see how cold it was. This was the view down the wayleave:
Walking over to the area we're working in at present, Tracy noticed these tracks:
Before long our coppicing team turned up, and after a hot drink they got to work in the area we're calling "dead oak corner", after the dead oak that's near it.
Not only did they come to help us coppice, but they also brought lunch!
Harvey and Rosy came too, but they didn't do any coppicing.
We're up again tomorrow, hoping to to have a local retired forester visit, and also deliver some logs at the end of the day (taking advantage of the rock-hard ground to drive in to the wood we hope).
Mike
Sunday, 28 December 2008
Butterfly Conservation volunteer day
There's a short piece about it on the Butterfly Conservation sightings page.
Here's a few pictures:
As well as getting a bit of conservation work done we also got to meet lots of people, including John, a retired forester who lives near our wood - we're hoping he'll be able to visit us this week to see the work we're currently doing, and give us some tips from his years of experience!
When we got home we found that our cockatiels had deserted their expensive cage with all its ropes and toys to go and sit in a branch we brought back from the wood...
Mike
Friday, 26 December 2008
Birds and stuff
There was a bigger bird around today as well - a pheasant:
After all that we got a few jobs done, mainly tidying up some logs, building more racks and splitting off-cuts for firewood.
Couple of days off now, although on Sunday we're going to another wood nearby to do some volunteer coppicing for Butterfly Conservation. It'll be strange to go back to bow saws for a day - no chainsaws on volunteer days!
Mike