Isabella Tree
Author of Wilding: The Return of Nature to a British Farm
About the Author
Image credit: Photo: Charlie Burrell
Works by Isabella Tree
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1964
- Gender
- female
- Nationality
- UK
- Agent
- Georgia Garrett (AP Watt)
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Statistics
- Works
- 15
- Also by
- 4
- Members
- 773
- Popularity
- #32,918
- Rating
- 4.1
- Reviews
- 21
- ISBNs
- 49
- Languages
- 5
Of particular interest is the detailed explanation of challenges and difficulties that the project faced, some practical (how to move wild deer), some institutional (Natural England were wary), some cultural (local objections to the ‘mess’ and ‘waste’ compared to arable land), and some philosophical (allowing control of the land to lapse). Tree devotes time and careful discussion to the academic theories and popular perceptions that make rewilding especially hard to achieve in Britain, relative to other parts of Europe; George Monbiot also observed this peculiar tendency. Defining ‘wildness’ is fraught with difficulty, as is deciding which species have lived here long enough to be considered ‘native’. I found the argument that Britain was not covered in closed-canopy forest during pre-history convincing, as well as useful. Tree also points out (as I’d recently read in this Citylab article) that the changing climate is forcing species to relocate, so rather than try to replicate the past we should allow wild space to accommodate whatever species can find a niche. In short, stop over-managing for the sake of single species and instead interfere as little as possible. Counter-intuitive in such a heavily managed landscape as Britain, yet the results are incredible.
I was particularly struck by this commentary on shifting baseline syndrome within living memory:
I hope that in the future more of it looks this way. As a child in East Anglia, I remember vast fields of oilseed rape, with isolated snippets of uncultivated land sheltering wild species. How much more diverse, useful, and beautiful the countryside could be if our values and perceptions of land use shifted a little. The possibilities of rewilding are spectacular and I can only hope this book inspires other farmers to give it a try.… (more)