General outlook


Wurthymp Wood is a 17 acre / 6.9 hectare plot, divested from a mixed woodland 30 acre farmland project planted by others in 2006.

From 2014 it has stood as a stand-alone woodland conservation project in a wider landscape mosaic.
The woodland is privately owned and funded and is run on a break-even sustainable basis, resources are shared with the Meadowcopse Orchard Project a few miles to the north.

The primary objectives are mixed:-
a, Wildlife habitat conservation (trees, grassland and ponds).
b, Rotational coppice woodland management (thinning, regeneration, rural craft materials and firewood).
c, Selective long-term forestry tree management (coppice with selected standard trees left long-term).
d, Community, education & research engagement, (the promotion and understanding of wildlife & sustainable conservation in a wider landscape context).

Sunday 15 January 2017

Mid-January 2017

A damp and dark time of year, but fortunately not as damp as winter 2016 in respect to ground conditions!
For days when being outside isn't great, a chance to catch up on some admin and activities for the year ahead.

Woodland Management has cropped up in various contexts over the last couple of weeks with various people.
Firstly, I was reminded of a half day course put on by Plumpton College at their Flimwell Woodland Centre a few times a year. Excellent value at £30.

The dark winter nights gave me a push to update some guidance notes to my own Management Plan. These form part of a rating system on the well thought out myForest web pages, hosted by The Sylva Foundation.

Having replaced the gates on the plot before Xmas, some attention to the roadside hedge and replanting gaps is the next step, particularly around the entrance with some fresh grass seed and wildflowers.



Maelor Forest Nursery is a preferred choice for the hedging plants (and any tree restocking).

Unfortunately a sizeable existing hawthorn tree appeared to have become unsound...


Various degrees of decay in the upper branches, but it will (should...) sprout again from a shorter (and safer) stump.

  Another aspect of winter is being able to look around and through the tree canopy whilst the leaves are off.
A few instances of grey squirrel damage amongst the willows.


A leading shoot ring-barked where a squirrel has perched...


2 inches diameter where the bark and growing layer has been chewed, 8 feet long that has come down overall.

For the more welcome wildlife, I've seen a couple of hares again, but they are elusive when deliberately looking with a camera to hand.