Restoring the ancient Caledonian Forest | Alan Watson-Featherstone | TEDxFindhorn

NOTE FROM TED: We’ve flagged this talk, which was filmed at a TEDx event, because it appears to fall outside TEDx’s curatorial guidelines. The speaker makes claims about ecology and plant biology that are not supported by legitimate scientific evidence. TEDx events are independently organized by volunteers. The guidelines we give organizers are described in more detail here: storage.ted.com/tedx/manuals/t...
Nearly 30 years ago, Alan Watson-Featherstone stood in the Universal Hall and in front of 300 people made a life-long commitment to restore the ancient Caledonian Forest.
He started with no resources, no knowledge, no access to land, no funds, but his passion and inspiration have carried him forward and now his charity Trees for Life not only helps nature to restore the Scottish Highland - it also helps people reconnect with their spirit, with hope and with the land.
Alan's talk also includes a wide range of his photography illustrating both the damage to the land and the difference his work makes.
Alan is the Founder and Visionary of Trees for Life since 1989, with overall responsibility for the charity and its strategic direction. His work includes a special focus on media and public relations, major donor fundraising and biodiversity research at Dundreggan Conservation Estate.
This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at ted.com/tedx

Пікірлер: 61

  • @OnlyoneAlReid
    @OnlyoneAlReid7 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this absolutely wonderful and inspiring talk. I was moved to tears. For my 50th birthday in July I asked people to fund planting trees via Trees for Life rather than buy me "stuff", this video explains so well, why I chose this "gift".

  • @alanwatsonfeatherstone9676

    @alanwatsonfeatherstone9676

    7 жыл бұрын

    Many thanks for the feedback, Alasdair - I'm very touched by what you write, and by your support.

  • @bigtsunami2000
    @bigtsunami20005 жыл бұрын

    I joined one of the early work trips in 1991 to Glen Affric. It was so much fun! We cut down invasive pines, were mercilessly eaten by midgies (spelling?), swam in the rivers, slept in a bothy, and laughed a lot! I was 18 at the time. I accidentally came across this presentation - wonderful to see you again, Alan, and wonderful to see how the work has continued and bloomed. Makes my heart happy. All the best to you, the organisation, and the trees and communities of beings intermingled with them.

  • @raulcalderon9571
    @raulcalderon95716 жыл бұрын

    We should do this in every potential piece of land worldwide... congratulations!

  • @syedalishanzaidi1
    @syedalishanzaidi17 жыл бұрын

    Hello Alan, greatly obliged for your presentation, and for the great import of your message. Just to say that I am a writer in the Urdu language, and have written during the last 40 years both poetry and prose on the subject of the environmental challenges facing all of us everywhere. It is to people such as you that we owe our increasing awareness (through books, documentaries and TV media) for this gathering pace of awareness worldwide. Much good work has been being done in recent years by individuals and groups everywhere, in all countries. Many thanks on behalf of all of us from other languages and landscapes.

  • @dave8540
    @dave85406 жыл бұрын

    Alan,I am Scottish born and live on the other side of the world in Australia.and also a Watson.I first read about the Glen Affric project in a magazine distributed by the Australian Conservation Foundation,it was deeply moving.The work your team over the years has done is nothing short of astounding ,and inspirational,this was a well presented video documentary and thankyou for your passionate work cheers mate

  • @isabellosada6328
    @isabellosada63286 жыл бұрын

    The most inspiring and moving talk I've heard in a long time. Just wonderful. Thank you Alan.

  • @AshleyMillsTube
    @AshleyMillsTube7 жыл бұрын

    Amazing. What an inspiration. I'm with you buddy.

  • @alanwatsonfeatherstone8941

    @alanwatsonfeatherstone8941

    7 жыл бұрын

    Many thanks!

  • @JenniferLions
    @JenniferLions7 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful presentation, very inspiring, thank you.

  • @alanwatsonfeatherstone9676

    @alanwatsonfeatherstone9676

    7 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the feedback Jenna!

  • @BeautifulNaturalDramatic
    @BeautifulNaturalDramatic6 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant! Motivational! Empowering! The Way Forwards - Healing Ourselves and the Planet.

  • @sayurikitamura7109
    @sayurikitamura71095 жыл бұрын

    I love the way he thinks and explains the relations

  • @sleepinglea7958
    @sleepinglea79587 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this amazing speech! I am definitely going for a volunteering week with Trees for life this summer,and am also making this part of my Countryside management diploma research. I think I just found my meaning of life& way out of disenfranchisement with the world...

  • @GlobalEarthRepair
    @GlobalEarthRepair5 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Universe for the beauty of this man; we are grateful to be hosting him (if we can raise the finds for air travel!) at our conference in May. Adding this to several playlists about reforestation and restoration.

  • @LisaSimpson2
    @LisaSimpson27 жыл бұрын

    100% agree with everything you said. This is why I love nature and will campaign tirelessly for nature, animals and tree planting. I love my garden and walking through the forest. It can be very healing and spiritual and makes you feel connected with the earth and land that we live rather than disconnected and distant from it. We need more environmental change. I hope people realise before it's too late. Just remember trees are kind of important, I mean they only help us to all breathe and live lol. Thanks for doing this talk and to all who love and help nature :-)

  • @angelharris69
    @angelharris697 жыл бұрын

    it is the loss of natural predators like wolves that has allowed the deer to destroy the land

  • @alanwatsonfeatherstone9676

    @alanwatsonfeatherstone9676

    7 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for your comment. The loss of wolves is part of the problem, but it's mainly down to people having cleared the forest in first place. Then subsequently, in the absence of wolves, deer numbers have both increased in numbers and have been undisturbed so can stay in ever smaller patches of forest and eat all the tree seedlings.

  • @tybaltmoon2082

    @tybaltmoon2082

    4 жыл бұрын

    One might consider eating the deer problem.

  • @Jack13001

    @Jack13001

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@tybaltmoon2082 unfortunately human hunters cannot replace lynx/wolves/bears. When we chase deer they don’t need to relocate often as humans are so slow. They can stay in one spot and overgraze the land comfortable in the knowledge that humans with guns are miles behind them and will likely take days to catch up. Also, when humans shoot a few deer they leave, so the deer lose some of the herd but are otherwise free to stay exactly where they are and destroy the vegetation in that spot.

  • @raulcalderon9571
    @raulcalderon95716 жыл бұрын

    Music to my ears!

  • @charlieneilson1239
    @charlieneilson12394 жыл бұрын

    Moving and motivating speech. Fully behind your work!! A1 on so many levels!

  • @iangpark
    @iangpark7 жыл бұрын

    Happy to say I volunteered for a week 2 years ago. Very much hope to return one day!

  • @ashanarchy7255
    @ashanarchy72555 жыл бұрын

    I was thinking recently about the old growth forests in America, specifically the gaint redwood trees, Scotland would be a perfect environment for those trees to thrive.

  • @LisaBeergutHolst

    @LisaBeergutHolst

    4 жыл бұрын

    Introducing alien species is always tricky. The Sitka spruce, for example, has become quite invasive in Norway.

  • @FBanit
    @FBanit3 жыл бұрын

    Amazing. I really would like to do the same in my country of birth, Morocco. Where once lions used to live in the Atlas montains.

  • @washserf2
    @washserf24 жыл бұрын

    great video with very interesting information about restoring devastated landscapes where people have made decisions which have meant the resilience and diversity of what was the natural habitat has gone, but NOT FOREVER ! Natural sysemts can be assisted to return and this video explains how this has been done in Scotland. Truly excellent video based on sound principles to restore the previous natural balance with all the possibilities of a diverse nature that once flourished there.

  • @et.5950
    @et.59506 жыл бұрын

    In addition to exclosure and plantation, you could think about reintroduction of natural predators of deer...

  • @douglasconnery55
    @douglasconnery557 жыл бұрын

    Excellent talk there Alan superb stuff, I have been so inspired with this, I have now donated and became a member of Trees for life now and I urge everybody else to do so :)

  • @alanwatsonfeatherstone9676

    @alanwatsonfeatherstone9676

    7 жыл бұрын

    Hi Douglas, Many thanks for your feedback and appreciation of my talk - that's great. Thanks also for joining us as a member - that's wonderful!

  • @starboardside2400
    @starboardside24006 жыл бұрын

    We need to be caretakers and not destroyers. Thanks for the insight.

  • @janetbedford7562
    @janetbedford75626 жыл бұрын

    I am with YOU GOOD - HEARTED and sober-minded.........GOD-LOVING' TREE HUGGING.....&/or just praying for and 'voting' with your KIND AND STRONG WORDS.

  • @janeymckay1966
    @janeymckay19662 жыл бұрын

    What a fabulous talk. Thank you for making a difference.

  • @annamcquillan3994
    @annamcquillan39944 жыл бұрын

    I’m a big fan of your work, thank you for everything you’re doing. I’m currently studying (well not literally, thanks corona) zoology so I can join in conservation soon :)

  • @michaelkendall2075
    @michaelkendall20752 жыл бұрын

    Me and my wife say the same things about parts of Yorkshire and places like the lakes too, we have even taken Hawthornden other tree saplings and planted them over the years, it's a small step but?🤞🙏❤

  • @alastairleith8612
    @alastairleith86123 жыл бұрын

    hey @TEDx Talks specifically what of this content do you take exception to on scientific terms? Flagging it without specifics is a bit unfair.

  • @thedruiddiaries6378
    @thedruiddiaries63786 жыл бұрын

    Im with you.

  • @nk53nxg
    @nk53nxg3 жыл бұрын

    It takes people like Alan Featherstone to see and understand what was under threat and take action. It was a very careing and unselfish act to start a charity to save the remains of an ecosystem nobody else at the time knew about or cared for. I hope someone else picks up the responsibility to save the Caledonian Forest when he retires.

  • @lieveguastavino6356
    @lieveguastavino63564 жыл бұрын

    Unfortunately there is a big problem in Scotland: only a very few landowners posses a huge part of the land, mainly for hunting! Scottish people would like to chance that but there is a long way to go! Wish them all the best!

  • @Chongmolangma
    @Chongmolangma6 жыл бұрын

    Very encouraging. I'm grateful. Thank you. Just a little idea here. Perhaps there could be a gathering of scientists, environmentalists, ecologists, farmers, government officials, corporations to form a task group to bring about a dedicated area/region for conservation - bringing the area back to perhaps a thousand years ago when it was still wild. With apex predators such as bears, lynx, eg that were native to the region before going extinct. See the Yellowstone example in the US. Even in China, the Kubuqi desert project in Inner Mongolia and various projects on the loess plateau have brought about astound results. Large areas of degraded lands, denuded of vegetation have become forests, wetlands teeming with wildlife. Current numbers of elks and stocks are obviously not helping at all.

  • @Less1leg2
    @Less1leg22 жыл бұрын

    so how did the Elk fit in with the old forests of Scotland. Seems to be that deer are not good for the forest health, but post Ice Age Retreat, elk loved the old forest.

  • @richardnolan27
    @richardnolan275 жыл бұрын

    Anyone can do this start by going to a local nursery and get native species of trees bring them home and plant them start an ecosystem are micro climate in your own yard . I did slowly but Shirley got tree trimmers to drop off chips in my yard instead of them paying a landfill went to Starbucks they gave me lots of free coffee grounds great for nitrogen stop raking up all your leaves and burning them that’s your trees way of fertilizing itself and the ground around it . And if you do burn wood or leaves the ground needs the ashes spread a little around very good replicating nature . I know most of you know what I’m talking about this is for the people that don’t thank you !🌎💕

  • @ashanarchy7255
    @ashanarchy72555 жыл бұрын

    Bring back the wolves! The wolves eat the deer. The trees grow. If you watch the documentary about reintroducing wolves to yellow stone you see wanderous results.

  • @ilvibos3512

    @ilvibos3512

    4 жыл бұрын

    Or just let people hunt em

  • @user-mm7ll4lb6i
    @user-mm7ll4lb6i3 жыл бұрын

    U.k needs to bring back wolves link's bear.

  • @joydeepghosh1781
    @joydeepghosh17813 жыл бұрын

    Caledonia, from Cale Cailleach Kali.

  • @matijevz
    @matijevz3 жыл бұрын

    Introducing wolfs back into forest would protect the forest from deer’s overgrazing. Have you explored that idea?

  • @karlinasplantkitchen669

    @karlinasplantkitchen669

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm sure they would love too but that takes a whole different level of getting acceptance. That's why he proposes the Lynx. Smaller predator with greater public appeal.

  • @matijevz

    @matijevz

    2 жыл бұрын

    Lynx is not sufficient if you want to control deer population. Have hunting deer been allowed?

  • @alex29443
    @alex294437 жыл бұрын

    I would bring back the national service and include stuff like this, you could do your military bit so you'd know how to shoot... at deer, then improve the land for nature and farming. I'd also have them help build wave and tidal power stations, roads etc. to say Scotland is under-utilising its land and sea resources is the understatement of the century.

  • @WilliamFergusMartin
    @WilliamFergusMartin3 жыл бұрын

    "We’ve flagged this talk... The speaker makes claims about ecology and plant biology that are not supported by legitimate scientific evidence." I find this statement disingenuous. it is an opinion stated as if it's a fact. There are plenty of scientists who would completely agree with what Alan Watson says in his video.

  • @karlinasplantkitchen669

    @karlinasplantkitchen669

    2 жыл бұрын

    I had to look up if they flagged Alan Savory's talk too and am somewhat relieved to find that they did. They even went so far as to add a bit of explanation for the most glaring problem with Savory's method.

  • @RayDoeksen
    @RayDoeksen5 жыл бұрын

    What are the specific "claims about ecology and plant biology that are not supported by legitimate scientific evidence" I would like to know?

  • @Simple_Simian

    @Simple_Simian

    5 жыл бұрын

    I would too. Odd that Ted flags that but doesn't explain why.

  • @jimmyfrench

    @jimmyfrench

    4 жыл бұрын

    I wouldn't be surprised if it were spurious objections from the crowd that supports grouse moors and overgrazing. Like how fossil fuel and prescription drug companies produce research that attacks activities that would hurt their market value.

  • @gingerandthetramp
    @gingerandthetramp2 жыл бұрын

    We ain’t bringing back lynx, if the firearm and hunting regulations weren’t so strict then I’d be for it, but reinstating an apex predator alongside a human population without the ability to protect its self and its children from said monster is a bad idea. Unfortunately, I’d love to see his vision realised but we need to find a substitute for the big predators

  • @Jean-vz8co
    @Jean-vz8co6 жыл бұрын

    J'ai vécu 30 dans les grandes forêts primaires ........ le problème est que certains (peu) arbres se reproduisent naturellement et d'autres bien qu'émettant des graines de bonne qualité germinative ne se reproduisent pas du tout!!!!..... on n'en trouve que quelques générations!!! (très) anciennes.....Le semis par l'homme donne des résultats très limités!!!...... j'ignore si aujourd'hui on trouvé une quelconque explication à ce douloureux phénomène..... By

  • @Jean-vz8co

    @Jean-vz8co

    6 жыл бұрын

    je crois que les commentaires sont mélangés!!!...

  • @AB-vb2mm
    @AB-vb2mm Жыл бұрын

    Where did all the woods went gone? Building ships for the British empire?

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