Isabella Tree’s wonderful book brings together science, natural history, a fair bit of drama, and-ultimately-hope. In Wilding, Isabella Tree tells the story of the ‘Knepp experiment’, a pioneering rewilding project in West Sussex, using free-roaming grazing animals to create new habitats for wildlife. The fabled English nightingale sings again.Īt a time of looming environmental disaster, Wilding is an inspiring story of a farm, a couple, and a community transformed. New life flooded into Knepp, now a breeding hotspot for rare and threatened species like turtle doves, peregrine falcons, and purple emperor butterflies. In the face of considerable opposition the couple persisted with their experiment and soon witnessed an extraordinary change. But what would the neighbors say, in the manicured countryside of modern England where a blade of grass out of place is considered an affront? Using herds of free-roaming animals to mimic the actions of the megafauna of the past, they hoped to bring nature back to their depleted land. It will challenge your vision of the British ‘wild’ before the advent of. They would restore Knepp’s 3,500 acres to the wild. Describing the development and success of the controversial Knepp Farm rewilding project, this book combines science and memoir with lyrical descriptions of recovering wildlife: turtle doves, nightingales, purple emperor butterflies. By 2000, with the farm facing bankruptcy, they decided to try something radical. For years Charlie Burrell and his wife, Isabella Tree, farmed Knepp Castle Estate and struggled to turn a profit.
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