Tuesday, 18 June 2024
Hackfall Woods: 18-06-2024
Tuesday, 11 June 2024
Old Spring Wood: 11-06-2024
This week was one of yet more prickly holly removal - this time in Old Spring Wood in Summerbridge. Regular readers will know that this has been an ongoing process over the last few years in order to try to prevent the bluebell lake from disappearing. This week they were clearing over by the boundary wall.
Once again the holly removal rules, mentioned in last week's blog, were followed. So, visualising baked bean tins, the volunteers sallied forth with their loppers, bow saws and bill hooks to clear more of the offending vegetation, and here they are in action.
Tuesday, 4 June 2024
Low Laithe: 04-06-2024
With this ring,
(I thee wed.)
you'll be dead!
The NCVs are used to planting trees, laying trees and cutting trees down when they are growing where they shouldn't. However - this week they were ringing them. No - not attempting to sound out a tune, but trying to hasten their demise by removing a ring of nutrient carrying tissue around the trunk. They used this process on the large, invading holly trees in the ancient woodland at Low Laithe. Doing this will create standing deadwood - in effect constructing a number of high rise flats for invertebrates (a great source of sustenance for woodpeckers and other woodland birds). Of course, there was a good deal of holly removal and the creation of dead hedges going on too.
The rules were as follows:
- If the stems are less than the size of a baked beans can, then cut them down.
- If larger than this, then ring bark them.
- Only remove 50% of the holly in the area you are working on to avoid 'shocking' the woodland. (Ring barking will avoid sudden loss of leaf cover.)
So - let's see this process in action shall we? My glamorous assistant, Osian will demonstrate it most ably.