
Jeremy Roberts examines the root plate of a felled Scots pine. Photograph: Mark Hamblin/The Guardian
Rewilding looks different in earlier posts about Scotland’s pioneering projects. But here is an additional piece of the puzzle worth understanding:
Chopping, twisting, felling: the unruly way to rewild Scotland’s forests
Orderly pine plantations in the Cairngorms are being messed up as part of a plan to let nature thrive
The Scots pine plantations in Abernethy forest are the crème de la crème in forestry terms: tall, straight and dense. These plantations were created in the 1930s, and the wood had a variety of uses, from ships’ masts to trench timbers. Now, this woodland is being retrofitted for wildlife as part of the UK’s largest land restoration project because, although it is striking to wander in such a regimented landscape, nature prefers things to be less orderly. Continue reading
