Another 600 trees in the ground in Northamptonshire with amazing volunteers from Acer and Google.

At the end a dog walker stopped for a chat. They’ve got about three acres of unused land they’d like to plant nearby, so were gonna do it. 🙌🏻

@Philsturgeon I'm curious about why all those plots haven't regrown trees naturally? When left alone, isn't a piece of land supposed to get back to its defaults based on what usually grows in the area?

@vincentbiret natural regeneration requires is brilliant and we use it where it’s got a chance of working over a relevant time period.

If there’s a good seed source, you can just fence it off to exclude stock and it’ll do it’s thing.

The seeds have to come from somewhere, and I’d they’re not in the ground already (they’d have germinated and been eaten already here) or aren’t nearby then it’s not gonna happen.

@Philsturgeon ah so you're effectively trying to fast track the process then? Thanks a lot for the explanation!

@vincentbiret yeah “it’s quicker” I’d a bit of a simplification but sure we’re trying to get an effective ecosystem going on a timeframe relevant to the crises going on. Sometimes nature has been too knackered to be able to recover this century so getting a canopy up will let it do it’s thing from there.

Sometimes we do both. Plant some. Leave gaps for nature to fill in. Make sure we’re adding species that would arrive on their own, or aren’t in the area but should be. 🙌🏻

@Philsturgeon thanks for taking the time to explain. Do you also work with other organizations to reintroduce animal species as well?

@vincentbiret for these smaller patches of unused farmland there’s no point. We plant in a way that will welcome wildlife, but there’s no reason to introduce anything into an acre.

For larger sites, especially the ones we own, that are 60 acres and above, there’s stuff we can do. Starting with bird/bat boxes, adding more fruit trees, ponds, etc.

On sites even bigger than that and we can start talking about beavers and pine martins.

First we build the structure, then we see what happens.

@Philsturgeon thanks! I do have plenty of other questions for you, but they are more related to your lifestyle and I'd perfectly understand if you don't want to answer. I've followed you for a couple of years now, my understanding is you used to bike and sleep in nature, and you've "upgraded" to EV. I'm under the impression you're not staying in a specific area and you're doing it alone. With that in mind, how easy is it for you to maintain friendships with sedentary people?

@vincentbiret leaving the bike behind has been sad but I had a few serious injuries and had to keep working. Cycling a bag of spades through the Welsh mountains is hard enough in winter but if you add a hernia to that… well, e-van helps a lot. Got more of a team now but still need a lot of help.

People who only worry a bit in passing about the climate crisis confuse me so much I cannot sit around and listen to their trivial nonsense.

My best friends plant trees with me when we’re near.

That said I’m getting back to the bike now my pneumonias have gone, so I’ll be able to go ride with friends again too. Planning a “cycle to every site in the country and see how they’re all doing” adventure soon, and that will be amazing.