Rewilding Broughton

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  • čas přidán 10. 09. 2024
  • The Broughton Sanctuary Nature Recovery Programme is a heartfelt commitment to address one of our deepest contemporary crises - our lack of harmonious co-existence with the Earth - an issue causing mass extinction of species across the globe as well as a deep lack of belonging for humanity.
    We feel it is our duty to leave the Broughton Sanctuary in a much healthier condition for generations to come and aim to demonstrate how humans can live in a more fruitful and positive partnership with the land, in a way which helps both nature and humanity to truly flourish.
    To achieve this, we are transforming our 1030 hectares of high intensity sheep pasture into a mosaic of different habitats that coexist and work together, to not only produce food, but also work towards helping nature recover.
    Within our land management plan we aim to migrate our intensive agriculture practices over towards a regenerative farming model that works to support nature. We have also dedicated some areas for rewilding, where we are working with nature, to get natural processes, the foundations of life, working again.

Komentáře • 26

  • @thepeopleschamp88
    @thepeopleschamp88 Před 4 dny +1

    So beautiful seeing children planting trees and healing the land from the damage of their ancestors.
    Keep up the great work!

  • @fredhayward1350
    @fredhayward1350 Před 7 dny +2

    Great project and yes good point we all expect Brazil to save its rain forests and yet we did a pretty good job of getting rid of ours here in New Zealand and also the UK etc. Hope is eternal....

  • @abbyhillman769
    @abbyhillman769 Před 22 dny +3

    So glad to hear of more and more rewinding projects around the world.

  • @Muxoll-Rocks
    @Muxoll-Rocks Před měsícem +6

    Awesome :) more of this please

  • @OneImmortalSun
    @OneImmortalSun Před 23 dny +1

    Absolutley amazing! I am so glad that there is growing awareness about rewilding in England. I was somewhat shocked to see how tiny the woodlands are there compared to the ones in Germany.

  • @user-cs2oo1qk9m
    @user-cs2oo1qk9m Před měsícem +5

    Great documenter

  • @naakatube
    @naakatube Před měsícem +1

    ❤❤❤❤

  • @dustinabc
    @dustinabc Před 26 dny +2

    I'd like to see a more regenerative agriculture approach personally, along the lines of Mark Shepard's project.

  • @user-sp3wd2nn3e
    @user-sp3wd2nn3e Před měsícem +7

    If the stocking density is dictated by the funding, it might not actually be ecologically fitting. It looks too crowded to me, no natural forest has that many trees in such close proximity. Because they have been planted in such a tight arrangement, it means they will have to grow upward quickly in a competition for light rather than putting their energy into bearing fruit and seed.

    • @thomvarey
      @thomvarey Před 29 dny

      agreed... maybe they get the funding and thin it out in a decade?

    • @veedebee
      @veedebee Před 28 dny +6

      Look up the Miyawaki method, very interesting results including here in the UK. Just because we are used to seeing sparsely populated and managed woodland doesn’t make it natural necessarily

    • @dustinabc
      @dustinabc Před 26 dny

      Ya, so many things about it are unnatural. Straight rows, consistent density of trees throughout, etc. It's almost like they're trying to maximize the money they can get from the gov't instead of doing what's best overall for the area.

    • @aaronkirk9529
      @aaronkirk9529 Před 5 dny +1

      I’ll be honest, from working on some tree planting projects myself, the reason for why they plant so densely is due to the fact that some of the trees just won’t make it. The idea is to maximise space so that the greatest number of trees have best chance of survival. As an example, for every 100 trees planted, only 60-70% on average will actually survive to maturity. Regarding planting in rows, I’m not too sure. The likelihood is that’s it’s a more efficient way of planting & allows for easier site access for any maintenance needed (cutting grass, weed removal, removing plastic guards, etc.) 👍

  • @bt3-skyreaper299
    @bt3-skyreaper299 Před 29 dny +3

    Tree planting is not rewilding... tree planting is primarily to get funding for carbon.

    • @abbyhillman769
      @abbyhillman769 Před 22 dny +2

      It really depends upon what you plant, and how. Monoculture planting is useless. But if you plant a diversity of trees and include understory species like shrubs, wildflowers, native vines, and other native species, planting does improve the land and in time will bring back biodiversity of animals as well.

    • @bt3-skyreaper299
      @bt3-skyreaper299 Před 22 dny +2

      @@abbyhillman769 passive rewilding better mimics nature, with reasonable numbers of semi-wild herbivores controlling plant growth. Knepp estate comes to mind. Planting in straight rows as shown in this video is a no-no.

    • @stevejoneswildwriter
      @stevejoneswildwriter Před 5 dny +1

      @@bt3-skyreaper299 Spot on

    • @alexcraven6756
      @alexcraven6756 Před dnem

      ​@bt3-skyreaper299 Well they explained in the video that they had to due to there being not many trees on site to disperse seeds. As it was historically a highly managed parkland estate many of the trees that are present are probably non native ornamental species anyway

  • @dustinabc
    @dustinabc Před 26 dny +1

    27:58 i don't know how someone can see this image and think, "wow, that's so natural." It looks like humans trying to impose their will on nature still, just in a different way.
    And all the plants growing up with plastic guards and stuff. Everything planted in parallel rows. Even if they're different plants it still creates some level of monoculture.

    • @alexcraven6756
      @alexcraven6756 Před 2 dny +1

      You won't notice the lines after a while. Not all the trees will survive, and they use a mix of species of different forms and lifespans. There's a woodland near me that was planted in a similar way 20 years ago and now it looks as if it was naturally regenerated

  • @stevejoneswildwriter
    @stevejoneswildwriter Před 5 dny

    Nice video. Couple of comments. First, it's a real shame you chose to plant wall-to-wall tree whips in tubes. This is absolutely the wrong way to do rewilding. Plant small clumps and allow them to then act as source populations for natural infilling between planting. You're just going to get an even-age stand which isn't all natural. And you also bypass the spectacularly important early successional open grassy shrubland phase. Second point: why talk about pigs with no mention of Wild Boar? Rewilding Britain especially should qualify all mention of pigs by stating that we'd far rather have a co-ordinated Wild Boar recovery plan for England but because Wild Boar has no such plan - it's a neglected native - we're forced to use domestic pigs for now.

  • @brenmuk
    @brenmuk Před 4 dny

    All I see is fields of plastic tree guards which will give rise to plastic pollution, no natural regeneration or succession. You do at least recognise the problem of an imbalanced ecosystem with too many herbivores. It's not rewinding its an artificial plantation that will be constantly dependent on human input. Not good

  • @Menown7
    @Menown7 Před 21 dnem

    As much as i LOVE rewilding projects i think its a terrible idea to make farmers reliant on government subsidies!
    The government doesn't give two sh*ts about famers and will F*** them over when ever it suits them

    • @geoffsimons3475
      @geoffsimons3475 Před 3 dny

      Many if not most farmers are already reliant on public subsidies via the basic payments which reward farmers for managing land is agricultural condition. The basic payment scheme is being phased out to be replaced with a scheme which aims to ensure that taxpayers money better benefits taxpayers, the soil and the environment.
      There’s no single solution for farming and land management in the UK but if you want to find out more the book Land Smart by Tom Heap is an excellent read and very thought provoking.