Wilding Returning nature to our farm

Isabella Tree, 1964-

Book - 2018

"For many years Isabella Tree and Charlie Burrell struggled to make a go as farmers, doing everything they could to make the heavy clay soils of their farm at Knepp in West Sussex as productive as possible, while rarely succeeding in making a profit. By 2000, facing bankruptcy, the couple decided they would try something new. They would restore their 3,500 acres, farmed for centuries, even millennia, to the form that they had had before human intervention. They would bring back the wild. This was no simple matter. What form did the land have before it took on the form that human beings have given it? The answer to that question was controversial and required real, and fascinating, research. And then the land had once been open to whole... hosts of animals that had since been prevented from running wild, if not killed off or made extinct. These had been a crucial actor in the landscape and its ecology, and how were they, or their likes, to be reintroduced into it? And finally there were the neighbors, often appalled at the sight of once tidy fields now running riot with what they considered dangerous weeds. The experiment however, was a success. With minimal human intervention, and with herds of free-roaming animals stimulating new habitats, Knepp is now full of new life. Rare species such as turtle doves, peregrine falcons and purple emperor butterflies breed there. The fabled English nightingale, heard less and less in modern times, sings again"--

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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 333.9516/Tree Due Dec 5, 2024
Subjects
Published
New York : New York Review Books [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Isabella Tree, 1964- (author)
Physical Description
xxii, 362 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), map ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [329]-331) and index.
ISBN
9781681373713
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Let land lie fallow, and things begin to happen. Let 3,500 acres lie fallow, and the world is remade.The lands around Knepp Castle, in the English district of West Sussex, have been farmed intensively for centuries, and the estate was exhausted and was losing money. Enter the aptly named Tree (The Living Goddess: A Journey Into the Heart of Kathmandu, 2015, etc.) and her husband, Charles Burrell. Three decades ago, they came to the land with a pronounced fondness for mycorrhizaethe invisible, microbial life that teems in healthy soil, fed by decaying plant life, sheltered by tree snags, and the likeand a commitment to do something about the declining populations of species such as the turtledove, whose numbers are "an almost vertical dive" thanks to the wholesale industrial remaking of the British countryside. Tree describes the long, laborious process of turning back time, abandoning deep plowing and mass production in the effort to allow the land to regain some of its former health. And how it does: As she writes, triumphantly, just one sign is the "sixty-two species of bee and thirty species of wasp" that now buzz around locally as well as 76 species of moths and battalions of birds, including herons that "deserted their tree-top roosts in the heronry and were nesting a few feet above the water." The author writes without fear of binomials and with long asides into hard science and deep descriptions of things like soil types and the characteristics of heritage pig species, and fans of Roger Deakin, Robert Macfarlane, Nan Shepherd, and other British naturalists will follow right along. Tree describes a success that she began to chart nearly two decades ago but that has been flourishing since: "The land, released from its cycle of drudgery, seemed to be breathing a sigh of relief. And as the land relaxed, so did we."A fine work of environmental literature that demands a tolerance for detail and should inspire others to follow suit. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.