Resilient Woodland Creation: Wood For The Trees, Film #3: Feb2020

The third in a series looking at the future of forests in the UK. Tom Barnes meets Jez Ralph of Timber Strategies, and talks about how to create vibrant and resilient woodlands for the future.
Filmed at Dartington Estate in February 2020, where Jez shows Tom around experimental plantations of eucalyptus. (Unfortunately our film is unable to capture the amazing aroma of this place.) Jez briefly outlines the history of forestry in the UK, noting that 'timber was the plastic of the past, we used it for everything.'
Tom and Jez talk about 'native' and 'novel' species of trees, and how foresters can plan and manage resilient woodlands that will thrive in the future. Climate change and disease are real risks, and woodlands with different light levels, different ages of trees and a range of different species will have more resilience to these challenges.
00:00 Resilient Woodland Creation
01:06 Jez Ralph of Timber Strategies
01:33 Dartington Estate Woodlands
01:48 Brief history of UK forestry; deforestation and reforestation
02:52 What are Resilient Woodlands and why are they important?
03:47 Should we plant 'native' or 'novel' species of trees? Well managed mixed woodlands.
05:47 Creating healthy resilient woodlands for our future generations
06:42 Do we have the right skills for the future of Silviculture? Young people in forestry.
07:59 Is it going to be more difficult and expensive to process timber?
09:07 Hopes and fears for the future of UK forests and forestry
10:12 Policy suggestion for resilient UK forests of the future: combining forestry and agriculture
10:54 Summary and lessons learnt

Пікірлер: 18

  • @nicolebarley3944
    @nicolebarley3944 Жыл бұрын

    Great video and great channel. Thanks for sharing!

  • @dolphinliam888
    @dolphinliam888 Жыл бұрын

    I'm rewilding a 5 acre wood in Sussex, part of a 12 acre wood. There are so many native trees and shrubs to choose from. My wood was a plantation of spruce too thickly planted so it's a lifetime project to restore it.

  • @ashleycullen.933

    @ashleycullen.933

    Жыл бұрын

    your living my dream good luck

  • @AutoMattOn
    @AutoMattOn3 жыл бұрын

    Jez took the thing that was in my head and said it in words: "stop silo-ing... land use". Agroforestry, forest gardens, mixed use, mulit-revenue stream agri/sylvi-culture is the only way that both environment and business will become sustainable and resilient and break the ever-diminishing returns of intesive monocultures. change is coming and only a madman would bet all his money on one outcome, crop, species etc. mix it up just like nature does.

  • @Gibbons3457

    @Gibbons3457

    2 жыл бұрын

    It'd certainly make our industries more resilient if they were more diverse, but they'd be less profitable and that might make them none viable in the cutthroat world that is capitalism, it'd require the government to be very protectionist of British industries, which I'm all for I just don't reckon any government right now has the vision or spine to do it.

  • @Stettafire

    @Stettafire

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Gibbons3457 Increasing diversity should not make companies less profitable. In fact time and time agian gas shown that companies benefit from multiple income streams.

  • @Gibbons3457

    @Gibbons3457

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Stettafire You're right in the long term. The problem comes from the race to the bottom forced on us by the "need" for short term growth. Unless you're careful some hyper capitalist vulture will swoop in and run you out of business by making a lot of money in a short amount of time, doesn't matter that the bubble will burst on them in a year or too, the long life, resilient, competition died already and they made of with the bank.

  • @Gibbons3457
    @Gibbons34572 жыл бұрын

    I would challenge the idea that the species doesn't matter, there are a lot, possibly many thousands of species that are very dependent on specific native species, and introducing a new foreign species is likely only to benefit our already quite content generalist species like GSW, crows, buzzards, common garden birds, and leave our vulnerable specialists out in the cold.

  • @lilianazalokar7886
    @lilianazalokar78863 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for very good films. Torben Gram from Denmark

  • @WoodForTheTrees

    @WoodForTheTrees

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you very much!

  • @stephenfranklin525
    @stephenfranklin5252 жыл бұрын

    the sustainable way to build healthy forests is to plant native species the fact that we have so little of the native canopy coer left is the reason the diseases have been successful by planting natives in clusters it guards against pests and makes it harder for disease to take hold of every tree the single planted exposed oaks and ashes are more susceptible obviously

  • @DonegreaghConnemaras
    @DonegreaghConnemaras Жыл бұрын

    Surely harvesting from a multi-age mixed forest needs old skills, not just new ones ? How did people do this in medieval times ? With a strong horse in harness, and minimal colateral damage.

  • @warrioressmistress3505
    @warrioressmistress35052 жыл бұрын

    I'm using instead of plastic sapling spiral guards, biodegradable green coloured spiral guards.

  • @dolphinliam888

    @dolphinliam888

    Жыл бұрын

    I've gone for 1" Square wire mesh to create tubes of one foot diameter to keep the deer off the new trees. The metal can be used time and time again for new planting.

  • @raphlvlogs271
    @raphlvlogs2713 жыл бұрын

    Britain has so many native deciduous trees because of the lack of natural wild fires.

  • @theoroth3669
    @theoroth36692 жыл бұрын

    theres almost no Forest in the UK. Learn from Germany.....

  • @raphlvlogs271
    @raphlvlogs2713 жыл бұрын

    is the UK some how benefiting from climate change?

  • @Stettafire

    @Stettafire

    2 жыл бұрын

    No. Our summers are hotter, our winters are colder and there have been more instances of extream weather