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Bridgewood :
Weblog : "Completion Day"
Completion Day
Posted by Tanos on Mon 10 Mar 08, 6:53 PM
I completed the purchase of Bridgewood today, so the first part of my next
trip will be putting a new padlock on the gate. It also means I can start
cutting out the woodland tracks ("rides") which I roughed out using
last time's survey.
Part of the non-BDSM part of the management plan is to create more varied
habitats in the wood to encourage more wildlife and more plant/tree species.
Since all the woodlands in England have been managed by man to some extent,
it's not possible to preserve "natural" woodlands because we don't have any
left.
There's no agreement
about what "natural" English woodlands should look like for a start.
For instance, take sycamores. They do very well here and I've got a few which
were probably the result of "natural regeneration": that is, without human
intervention. But sycamores aren't counted as native species, since they
were introduced in the 17th century (or maybe by the Romans.) You can even
get Forestry Commission grants to replace them with native species in some
cases. But Britain
has been progressively recolonised by trees after the end of the treeless
Ice Age glaciation, so would we have had sycamores eventually anyway -
"naturally"?
So it's hard to find a "natural" woodland environment to aim for.
Instead, it's "diversity" which is the attainable goal.
This also leads to the idea that you might cut down trees (gasp!) to promote
wildlife. If you leave many species of tree to their own devices, they kill
almost everything else by denying them sunlight. This happens with both
broadleaf (eg beech) and conifer species, and is visible in many Forestry
Commission woodlands which have been managed to produce long, straight timber
planks. You get a high canopy with all the leaves up at 20 or 30 metres and
insects and birds living up there. Then you have a virtually dead space
around the nice straight trunks, a forest floor of leaves or needles, and
then some fungus
and insect life down to a few inches involved in the decomposition of that.
If you're lucky, flowering plants grab a couple of weeks in spring to grow
and flower before the canopy closes up again and it's like twilight even at
noon.
For this reason, opening up glades and rides with a gradient from grass, up
through undergrowth, shrubs and small trees provides a lot more habitats,
all ultimately fuelled by sunlight, rather than just letting the trees have their
head and let them try to create a monoculture.
And they're nice to walk or ride along too of course
Edited Sat 18 Apr 09, 1:21 AM by Tanos
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