Wednesday 1 October 2014

Call from DEFRA

Received a call from DEFRA this morning asking whether I'd planted any sweet chestnut seedlings for nut production as they are monitoring them for blight. As mentioned before, I haven't planted any as they were out of stock but I have at least one that has self seeded:

 

Sweet chestnut seedling

One of my two mature chestnut trees is producing nuts, but not many:
 
First nut!
 
I've potted some local chestnuts from a nearby wood so hopefully they'll come up in due course
 
 

 

 

Friday 19 September 2014

The Grand Tree Survey

It's been a while since my last post, sorry about that!
As part of my agreement with the Woodland Trust, I have to replace lost trees (subject to an acceptable 20% loss) so thought it best to have a record of how my trees are doing.
I'd previously marked a few tubes with red flag, made from wire and tape, but the numbers didn't last and it wasn't a very organised approach.
Whilst looking for numbered tags, I found a company online that produces personalised cable ties so I ordered 200, hoping that I wouldn't need that many. They also had an option for a company name, which I took:
 
 

 

I constructed some survey tables and printed them off. In the space of a few days I'd looked down every tube and counted every spiral. It was a bit difficult identifying some of the trees now the leaves have fallen (and working out what the dead ones should have been was especially hard) but I finally finished surveying the lot (over 1500) and am proud to announce that only 65 didn't make it, a loss rate of about 4%. I'm planning on "beating up" those that need replacing, with sweet chestnut and wild pear. The latter liking heavy soil and the former being unfussy about soil types.

I'll publish the full data list in due course.

 

Sunday 20 July 2014

What's wrong with these leaves?

In addition to the whips in my woodland, we've also begun to establish an orchard closer to the house, using larger trees. We've already planted an apple, medlar, cobnut and damson, plus a few currant bushes. Whilst wondering past today, I noticed the apple had suffered a bit of damage and on closer inspection noticed this little fellow:

Can you see it?

 

 

Apparently it's a type of hawk moth (privet hawk moth, I think) caterpillar. An amazing camouflage and hope the tree will survive so we can have some fruit in years to come!

Further up in a willowherb weed, I spotted a scary looking character:

This is a different type of hawk moth, displaying in "snake mode" - they also have other modes of defence but nearly had me fooled

 
That said, not quite as convincing as this grass snake, which might have been playing dead but might have possibly have been damaged by one of the dogs. They grow to 6 feet in the UK but this was about 4 feet long. I've seen several around basking in the warmer weather and although I hope this one survived, they're not endangered
 

 

 

Monday 16 June 2014

Newts and nymphs

The little pond in our garden tends to dry up in hot weather and seeing all the rubber liner looks unsightly. We were also worried about dogs and children going into it so decided to get it filled in.

 

Fortunately, I had the pond I'd dug all ready so we moved the plants (a lily, an iris and something else) up there in wheelbarrows:

 

Water lily

I'd partially drained the pond so I could place the lily in the middle. The other plants were placed on the edges, where I'd not dug it out to full depth.

We then had to think about what to do with the wildlife in the old pond. We knew there were no fish but had been told there were newts in there. Some pond dipping with a small net brought up an impressive number of smooth newts, which were tipped into a bucket of water and taken up to the new pond. Included in the catch were a load of large dragonfly nymphs (some of them larger than the newts!):

 

Dragonfly nymph

The easiest way of finding them was to tip a bucket of pond water onto a perforated tray. The newts and nymphs could clearly be seen wriggling and were placed into the holding bucket

 

Smooth newt

I estimate about 25 newts were moved. They're now in a much bigger pond, fed by a spring so if shouldn't dry up.

 

Wednesday 21 May 2014

Willionaires

Willow gets me excited.

As a lazy man, planting and tending trees was a serious effort and the speed at which willow grows is amazing, which is why it’s planted for biomass in many parts of the World. To grow willow could hardly be simpler. For most species, you buy (or acquire) a stick, called a rod, about the size of a pencil. As the name suggests, you stick this in the ground and voila! A willow tree ensues. It’s so potent and ready to root that an infusion made from bits of willow wood soaked in water will stimulate many other plants to root, saving money on expensive hormone powders. It’s good for feeding livestock as well as having multitudinous other uses, such as weaving and forming living structures.

To give you an idea how rapidly it can grow, in my old house, there was a willow tree (I think it’s osier viminalis – common osier – but possibly hybridised with something as I’m sure the leaves were variegated) planted in the flowerbed next door. It provided too much shade for the occupants and I was asked if I could trim it in exchange for keeping the trimmings. Not the best deal in the World, you might say, and you would be right but I kept on top of it for a couple of years. One year, I was getting tired of individually sawing through the shoots that were too thick to cut with secateurs and knowing that it wasn’t a well loved shrub, I too my chainsaw and cut the thing down to a stump, about as flush to the ground as was possible. The sad stump sat there for the Winter. We has assumed that it was dead and weren’t particularly bothered. However, in the Spring, small green shoots started to appear and by the end of that year, they were up to 3m long and 30mm in diameter. IN. ONE. YEAR. I’ve taken many of these trimmings and planted them at our current property where they are doing very well, although as not coming from a well established stump, I don’t expect they’ll produce the same growth this year.


Osier viminalis

Some economics:
To buy a stick of willow on eBay, for example, costs around 50p. You can find it cheaper but you can pay a lot more.
Now. To encourage willow to produce straight shoots, it is desirable to plant them close together at, say, 50cm (0.5m) spacings. An acre is 4,047m2 which, if square, is roughly 63.5m along each side. Planting a stick at every half metre would give 128 plants along each side, a total of 16,384. If each of these plants put out 10 shoots (whips) of 2 metres each, and each shoot was cut into 25cm length that would mean 80 rods per plant. In one acre, that’s 1,310,720 rods, which at 50p each, is £655,360. Per acre. Per year. The willow I cut down produced many more shoots that this – I reckon I planted about 400 rods and had many longer whips left over which I stuck in the ground for want of something else to do with them. Now, I hear what you say, selling that amount in would not only be difficult but would also attract some sort of bulk discount. Let’s say you sold the lot at 10p each. That’s still £130,000. Obviously, you’d need some sort of harvesting and cutting equipment in addition to the handling/postage costs but you can see why I asked my father-in-law, after pointing out we owned 10 acres “What colour helicopter would you like?”*

* the difficulty being that we’d have nowhere to land them as all the land would be covered in willow

Regarding biomass, we are accustomed to burning logs in this country, either on an open fire or in a woodburning stove. With a quick growing species such as willow, you might get a reasonable sized log in about 4 years, which then should be dried for a year or so before burning. Why, then, should one not be able to produce meaningful heat from the smaller shoots that we could harvest every year? The solution lies in a device known as a rocket stove, but I have only found one commercially produced version – the Stick Stove, from Black Mountain Wood Fuels (see links). However, I don’t consider this to be a very attractive stove and it’s quite a lot of money, but you must admire the technology. I am working on a similar stove, designed to work inside an old oil-fired Rayburn that we were given. Hopefully I can be burning my own willow soon and heating my workshop (unless I can convince my wife to let me put it in the house).

Trailcam pays for itself

I've connected my trailcam up to a bigger battery so can leave it out for a long time

Had it out for about 10 days close to where something had been nibbling my willow and was rewarded with this fine chap. I thought deer would be most active at night but all the images/videos I've captured of him have been early in the morning:



Cheeky deer (roe deer)


Also caught lots of other critters who are also in danger of being eaten:

Crepescular rabbit

A marked man




Sometimes they don't come alone!

Future pair of slippers

 I notice that one has a torn ear - should make it easy to identify in future videos

Thursday 8 May 2014

New springs & micro swales

Found another very boggy patch today, right above one of the ditches. Closer investigation found a small spring right on the bank (I'm sure there are others) so I dug it out a bit to see if it would create some useful flow. Was pleased to note the presence of proper clay - it's the reason for the spring being there, of course but I'd not come across it before - the other spring is on green sand, which looks like white clay but doesn't form slip in the same way. I think it's still pretty impervious to water and if some leaks through the pond dam then the trees and plants downhill will benefit from it.

Just to the left of the outlet, you can see a ramson that I planted. It's one of many dotted around so we'll see if it thrives in such boggy ground.

New spring, dam and ramson


I then had the idea of using the spoil from this digging to form a small dam across the ditch in order to create a tiny pond. It struck me that although the ditch isn't dug on contour, it doesn't have much of a gradient and thus with a series of small dams, one could form micro-swales all the way down. This tiny pond soon filled up and considering my boots don't seem to be watertight, it wasn't especially comfortable working there. Added to the fact was the incessant rain and my waterproof trousers which keep coming down.

In order to access the ditch I had to clear a lot of brambles. I call this "therapy" as using a machete certainly takes some effort. Some of the old stems were 20mm thick - there's probably a use for them (blowpipe? flute?). 

Fortunately, I started this task on an overcast, but dry, day and my heavy cotton smock (Titan) and leather gloves kept me scratch free. I piled the brash up as best I could to form a natural barrier and wildlife refuge. The field beyond is also ours so it doesn't have to be very secure but anything to stop the dogs from destroying the local fauna is a good thing in my book! You can see the dam and tiny pond in this picture with the brash pile on the far side. Plenty more brambles around for blackberry picking in the autumn and I imagine they'll soon shoot up through the brash pile anyway. I do need to get in there with a saw & open the ditch up a bit as lots of small trees have begun to invade. I can use the cut brush to reinforce my barrier and may get a bit of firewood from it too (it's mainly willow). Might be best to wait until Winter in case any birds are nesting there, I suppose.


Micro swale, brash barrier and mint


Now the bank was clear, I took the opportunity to plant some mint that we'd bought the other day from a garden centre. Planted black peppermint, ginger mint and apple mint. They'd doubled in size in the pots in under a week and this site should give them a decent home. It's quite shady but will get some direct sunlight and plenty of water. You may just be able to pick them out in the picture on the left hand side (the new spring is at the bottom of the image which is taken from the top of the bank)

Paddy field part one

As can be seen in my posts about the pond (to come, sorry!), I'm planning on digging an overflow down to the ditch. This line is currently marked by some white tape that the previous owner had left lying around (it's electric horse tape). I recently had the idea from watching some permaculture video on YouTube to use this surplus water more effectively. A bit of research indicated that a Japanese rice variety, oryza sativa, can grow in the UK and establishing it in a paddy field would help to keep weeds to a minimum as few other species thrive in water (aquatic plants aside).

With that in mind, I hacked out a 5m circle with the machete to mark where to start digging. I'm hoping to get a mechanical digger in here but it's so wet that might not be possible. Going to be a big task to dig out by hand but I've done it before so I'm sure I can do it again!


The flow from the spring upstream of this should stop the water from getting too stagnant and the overflow from this will still flow into the ditch where I can pipe it into the lake as planned.

Tuesday 6 May 2014

List of tree species at The Old Farm

Species Latin Name Approx number Notes
Ash Fraxinus excelsior 6 Only young saplings
Alder Alnus glutinosa 375 Introduced 2014
Apple Malus domestica 4
Aspen Populus tremens 50 Introduced 2014
Balsam poplar (we think) Populus balsamifera 2
Bay Laurus nobilis 3
Beech Fagus sylvatica 126 most introduced 2014
Birch Betula pendula 50
Blackthorn Prunus spinosa 50 Introduced 2014
Cobnut Corylus avellana 1 Introduced 2014 (if you count it as a different species to hazel)
Common osier Osier viminalis 100 Introduced 2014
Copper beech (2014) Fagus sylvatica 1 Introduced 2014
Crab apple Malus sylvestris 51
Damson (2014) Prunus institia 1 Introduced 2014
Elder Sambucus nigra 15
Eucalyptus Eucalyptus gunnii 1
Field maple Acer campestre 100 Introduced 2014
Willow, goat Salix caprea 3
Gorse Ulex europaeus 50
Willow, grey Salix cinerea 30
Hawthorn Crataegus monogyna 300 200 introduced 2014
Hazel Corylus avellana 201 200 introduced 2014
Holly Ilex aquifolium 30
Hornbeam Carpinus betulus 76 Introduced 2014
Leylandii Cupressus × leylandii 10
Medlar Mespilus germanica 1
Oak (Pedunculate) Quercus robur 150 Possibly some sessile
Pear Pyrus communis 3 Not sure of exact species
Plum Prunus domestica 2
Privet Ligustrum vulgare 1
Rhododendron Rhododendron ponticum 3 Behaving at the moment
Rowan Sorbus aucuparia 5
Scots pine Pinus sylvestris 26
Spindle Euonymus europaeus 50 Introduced 2014
Sweet chestnut Castanea sativa 1 more planned for 2015
Sycamore Acer pseudoplatanus 2
Wild cherry Prunus avium 125 Introduced 2014
Yew Taxus baccata 3 One of which is c. 400 years old
That's 38 different species (if you count hazel as two), well over 2,000 trees (if you count them all as trees - they're all taller than I am). There are some further ornamental trees that I've yet to identify and I seem to discover new trees every day tucked inside the hedgerows. Can't wait for most of them to grow bigger!

Monday 5 May 2014

Ramsons & bees

Whilst at Michelham Priory yesterday (4th May, 2014), I noticed a huge amount of wild garlic, allium ursinum, known as ramsons, flowering around the watermill. Every part of these is edible, but it's the leaves that are easiest to use. Was given permission to dig some up so came home with a good few large clumps. These are easy to separate into individual bulbs and I took the opportunity to plant them in various locations around the property to see where it will thrive. If it doesn't survive, we drove past a huge population along the Sussex country lanes on the way home so there's plenty to harvest, even if it means travelling a little way.

Planted some in sunny spots...

Allium ursinum

and some in shadier places...

Allium ursinum


I've also put some on the ditch banks (see "Springs and Micro-Swales") , others in pretty waterlogged soil & others in dry, sandy soil


I planted one particular batch next to a small goat willow seedling I was given. Whilst clearing the grass away from the chosen site, I heard what sounded like escaping gas. Thinking I had just dislodged a pocket left over from the tree planting, I ignored it and carried on, but the noise grew louder and I soon realised I had stumbled across a nest of bees underground. As far as I can tell, they are a species of bumblebee but wasn't able to get a decent picture on my 'phone.

Friday 2 May 2014

Willow deer damage

Here is some common osier willow, osier viminalis, that I think has been damaged by a deer. Need to set up the wildlife camera in case they strike again!

Common osier willow deer damage

These were shoots I had pruned from our next door neighbour in our old house. She had asked me to trim the shrub as it was blocking out quite a bit of light. I eventually got bored with cutting each individual stem and cut the entire thing to the ground with a chainsaw. Within a year, the new shoots were up to 3m long and 3cm thick - remarkable stuff and good for weaving/structural work. I've stuck a load of 25cm cuttings into the ground and most of them have taken, the tallest being about 60cm high. The gloves in the picture are Tegera 17 cut resistant gloves, available from Cromwells, they're the best all round gloves I've found so far.

Osier viminalis


We also planted some in an organised plantation in spirals and they seem to be doing very well indeed. As from today, 4 plants (out of 64) had grown taller than the 60cm spirals. We've also planted some yellow willow but it's not doing so well as yet.

Osier viminalis


It's so easy to propagate that I'm not worried about the damage - I'd only stuck the damaged shoots into the ground as had got tired of planting the individual sticks but didn't have enough to build anything meaningful with


Emergency mulching

I had become to suspect that some of my trees had died. After some discussion on various forums, I decided to have a closer look at the victims.

Whilst looking down the tube showed no growth, taking the tube off revealed a small amount of growth from the base of the tree (all alder, so far):

A barely living alder


To try and remedy this, I ripped out all the grass and weeds that were growing around the stem and shading it out. I then laid these down around the stem, making sure to keep the new growth uncovered. The tube is then replaced to hold the mulch in place and marked with a flag so I can keep tabs on it.

Can you see the flag?


Unfortunately, some of the trees that had been showing great growth have been attacked by some beastie and are now looking a bit sorry for themselves. This wild cherry, for example:



Wednesday 23 April 2014

Willow Progress


The willows I pollarded in the Winter are covered in newgrowth and the dead hedge is anything but...

 

 

 


Pollarded willow

 

 

...

 

Dead hedge
 
 

 

The willow plantation is beginning to show some decent progress too (it seems that the yellow willow sticks we planted didn't make it* but the osier is doing well and should make for some decent weaving/structural material)

 

Willow plantation

* actually, they were a bit slow on the uptake but grew quite well in the end

Wednesday 16 April 2014

The Epiphany

Despite wanting a woodland, for fuel and somewhere to wander about in, I hadn't given the subject much thought after that.

It was during a bored moment that I was surfing YouTube and stumbled across a video that changed my life:


I don't normally watch videos that are that long but this one scared me. Scared and inspired. For the next few days, all I did was watch video after video and read countless pages of information. I've been introduced to the work of Martin Crawford and Geoff Lawton, amongst others.

For those of you who don't want to watch the video, I can try to précis. The presenter, Rebecca Hosking, is trying to see how her family's farm can survive well into the future, a future where the oil is running out. She points out that the UK is a net importer of food and that supermarkets hold on average 3 days worth. Add panic buying into the equation and that makes for some rapidly hungry people.

As the title of this blog suggests, I'm no hippie. I have a job, run several cars and heat my house (partly) with fossil fuel. I shop in supermarkets and buy a lot of stuff from China and elsewhere. I eat meat, processed foods and imported coffee. I wash fairly often (through laziness rather than design) but have my hair cut, by Donna.

It struck me that when I hear of people using the term "organic", it conjures up images of patchouli scented, pot smoking hippies who say "man" a lot whenever they're not hugging trees. Why should someone who doesn't wish to spread chemicals on the ground be labelled like this? By the way, if you've never hugged a tree, I can recommend it - it was a surprise to me how wonderful it feels, you can really sense the permanence of this huge, living thing. To love nature isn't a bad thing. 

I realised that what I really wanted in life was a forest garden. I'm very fortunate to have the land available and hopefully the time too. Being a prepper is all very well, but how much food can one realistically stockpile? To survive long term, we need to grow more food locally. England is well placed to take advantage of this. We have plenty of water, as most of us experienced this Winter, the Winters are generally quite mild - no snow this time around, in the South East - and the Summers aren't too hot. 

As Martin Crawford and others have pointed out, any piece of land in this climate is trying to revert back to forest. It's only by putting in large amounts of effort (using oil based machinery & fertilisers) that we can stop this process. By taking advantage of this inclination towards lush woodland, we can live more in harmony with the natural world, whilst still taking advantage of what it can provide.


Tuesday 18 February 2014

The trees arrive

After what seemed like an age, the trees were delivered. Was a bit daunting to see how many tubes and stakes the order comprised! Thank goodness I didn't order 4,500 as suggested

The plants themselves didn't look too bad, how wrong I was:


Thought I'd better get cracking before my help arrived the following morning so planted 50 wild cherry trees. The first ones will form an avenue down the drive which should make for a beautiful arrival when in blossom.

First one!



I then continued planting the avenue



Once this was done, I moved into the upper paddock, where the real planting was going to take place. My wife suggested an avenue leading up to the pond would look nice, so that's what happened:



You can see how wet it is




Thursday 16 January 2014

Woodland Plans

As I alluded to before, I had always wanted my own woodland, for various reasons, amongst them being a source of fuel, a place to camp and a place to reconnect with nature. My interest in bushcraft had only increased my want for a place of my own that I could manage to my own ends. Unfortunately, apart from the small orchard and numerous trees around the perimeter, there was no woodland associated with the property. With little money spare and with the neighbours being in no mood to sell me their woodland, I had no option but to plant one from scratch.

 

Some searching around for assistance led me to the Woodland Trust MOREWoods scheme (see Links). This is an initiative set up by the Woodland Trust in order to create more woodland in the UK and comes in the form of a substantial discount on the purchase prices of young trees and the necessary protection they would need to avoid predation by deer, rabbits and other creatures.

 

A few e-mails and phone calls later, I had a visit scheduled by one of their representatives who would survey the site and advise on species and quantity of trees for my new woodland.

 

The Woodland Trust representative, Luke, arrived and we walked the pasture together. He had a fair knowledge of tree species but explained that there was only a limited number of species available, all native trees. He promised to come back with a quote in a few days.

 

The quote duly arrived and was for 4,500 trees, including a lot of willow and birch. As much as I like birch, the wood rots very easily and there was plenty around, including a huge one that had recently fallen down (conveniently it was one that was leaning on another and I was going to have to pay a tree surgeon to drop it but the storms over the Winter pushed it to the ground and I spent a few days clearing up the remains with a chainsaw). Willow, of many species at least, takes root extremely easily from cuttings and I was reluctant to pay for bareroot cuttings  - especially for Goat willow (salix caprea) that is not of great value either for timber or for weaving/ living structures. The inital plan was to blanket the entire upper paddock with trees, as well as planting some clumps in the lower paddock. Discussions with family, colleagues and on-line made me reassess my plans and leave a significant amount of pasture free from planting, in order to graze animals if required. A few unexpected large bills also made me nervous to commit to such a large order and the Trust was happy to amend the quote to 1,500 trees, as well as amending the selected species.

 

The species selected were as follows (numbers in brackets were final figures):

Species

Number

Notes

Alder

300 (375)

I selected alder because it thrives on damp ground, grows quickly, coppices easily and provides excellent firewood once dry. The charcoal is said to make the best gunpowder and the roots form nitrogen fixing nodules that will help to improve soil conditions. The lack of sweet chestnut and whitebeam is the reason for the increased order

Aspen

50 (75)

The Latin name for Aspen is populus tremens – the trembling poplar. This is because the cross section of the leaf stalk is rectangular and thus makes the leaf flutter from side-to-side in the wind, a very attractive sight on a mature tree. I had also read that as a pioneer species, aspen is not fussy about soil type and grows rapidly. The whitebeam order was split between alder and aspen

Beech

125

Not traditionally associated with damp soils but there is an enormous beech tree over the fence on a neighbouring property. Makes for an attractive tree and provides good timber when mature. I had originally wanted copper beech for the pretty foliage but these weren’t available.

Blackthorn

50

I wanted this for the sloes (sloe gin anyone?) and the blossom.

Crab apple

50

There was a single, mature crab apple in the hedgerow and as well as providing a useful fruit, full of pectin for jam-making, it has pretty blossom

Field maple

100

I had queried why sycamore wasn’t on the list but was told it was an invasive species. Subsequent research doesn’t really support this theory but the field maple is an attractive tree nonetheless and I have since been offered no end of sycamore seedlings should I want them. I’m hoping once mature the sap may prove to be a good source of maple syrup, although the species used for this in Canada is the sugar maple, acer saccharum

Hazel

150 (200)

The Woodland Trust considers this to be a shrub rather than a tree, which surprised me as a friend’s woodland has some very large examples. Selected for the many uses of coppiced product, pea sticks, hurdles etc. and also for the nuts. Makes excellent firewood which is why I increased the numbers at the expense of hawthorn

Hawthorn

150 (125)

I must admit to being a bit sneaky here. I like hawthorn, it has pretty blossom, the fruits are edible (as are the new leaves in Spring) and it provides some of the best firewood although you don’t see many large examples around. I wanted to extend the hedge along the road up alongside the drive. The thorns on hawthorn make for excellent security and it’s most often found in hedgerows. There are some larger examples on the property that I presume grew from unmanaged hedges. As it turned out, my calculations showed that I would need far more than this for a high density hedge so I ordered and planted a few hundred before these ones arrived

Hornbeam

50 (75)

A great firewood and also used to make cog teeth in water mills. Like beech it often keeps its leaves on in the autumn which is why it’s often planted as a hedge. There is a single example in the hedge already

Pedunculate oak

125

What tree symbolises England more than the mighty oak? There are many large examples around the perimeter but many have been cut down nationwide to provide timber for building ships and houses. Although taking an age to season (3 years is best), the firewood is great. We’ve got some different species of oak on the property which I’ve yet to identify and have many seedlings sprouting up from the bumper crop of acorns in the past autumn

Scots pine

25

The road on which our property sits used to have a long plantation of Scots pine along it (over the road). They were cut down before WW2 and we have a single example dominating the corner of the lower paddock. My fancy was to grow two circles of pine trees, to provide a focal point should we be holding camps here in the future. The remaining tree will be planted somewhere else.

Spindle

50

The berries of the spindle tree look delicious but sadly they’re poisonous to humans. Pretty, though, and the birds can eat them. Planted for this reason. It’s listed as a shrub

Sweet chestnut

125 (0)

We have 2 on the property and although it’s one of the best trees to coppice, I am reluctant to chop them down. Sadly, the nursery was out of stock for the final order but there are plans to plant many more next year, for timber and nuts

Whitebeam

50 (0)

Initially ordered for variety and the attractive berries, subsequent reading made me nervous that they wouldn’t like our acid soil, preferring alkaline, dry conditions so I subsequently changed the order

Wild cherry

125

Planted for the blossom as well as the fact it likes damp ground and provides good firewood

 

The Woodland Trust initially suggested quite large number of dog rose (rosa canina) but I’ve always seen this as a climber in hedgerows. I’m hoping to propagate some later in the year for planting in the hedges. The blossoms are beautiful and it helps to make an impenetrable hedge – not what I’d consider suitable for a standard tree. They also suggested holly but as we have plenty already, I decided not to plant any more. It’s certainly attractive throughout the year and supplies pretty berries for Christmas but I am reluctant to have spiky species in my woodland – there’s enough brambles around for that!

Other trees I wanted included ash, fraxinus excelsior, but due to the risk of hymenoscyphus pseudoalbidus (formerly known as chalara fraxinea) in the UK, this fast growing firewood species was not offered, and wild pear, for the blossom and fondness for damp ground. This wasn’t on offer for some reason but hopefully I can plant some next year.

A note on firewood

A cursory search on the Internet for firewood suitability will bring up variations on an old poem which gives erroneous information on which wood is best to burn. The fact of the matter is, any wood, once dry, will burn and give out plenty of heat. Willow and alder, for example, have a high water content so take a bit more drying and since they grow fast, they won’t burn for as long as, say, oak, but there are plenty of tree surgeons out there who heat their homes on wood considered low quality. Green oak burns like asbestos (i.e. doesn’t) but biomass plants use predominantly willow