This is excellent. Ive been to a ghost pind restoration in Norfolk, great to see it happening in my home county of Essex :) Are there plans for more here? Would love to come do a survey in one!
@FWAGeast4 күн бұрын
Thank you Pond Lab - we have created and restored over 200 ponds in Essex so far and several have been ghost ponds. Do get in touch via the website - would be good to chat! Jilly
@TyJeffriesComposerLyricist11 күн бұрын
This is fascinating and good for the soul to see.
@peternycАй бұрын
At 3:48, when you introduce the 5th point, Lay a Section a Year, it looks like you are going to put the hedge in the bottom of a ravine. Is this true? It seems interesting to me and I'm hoping you are going to tell me "yes" because it might solve a drainage problem I have. Perhaps including nitrogen fixing plants would make a ravine work for hedge laying. Just speculating though.
@naturestimeline2 ай бұрын
Beautiful video. Best wishes, Tony.
@QuantumologyUK2 ай бұрын
Great video, I'll be sharing this a lot!
@threeriversforge19972 ай бұрын
I love seeing the traditional hedgerows being brought back. I think one of the biggest issues, though, is that we seem to always miss the mark a bit. The talk about "grants" from the government seems to skip over the fact that we made tending the hedges so very expensive with a thousand rules, laws, policies, taxes and regulations. We talk about the cost of the hedge-laying, but never what drove up those costs in the first place. And instead of getting rid of those things that drove up the cost, we now want to give "grants" which is basically just refunding people for all that they've paid out over the years. Secondly, I'd like to see more people talking about the human factor in this equation. Hedges are a very old tradition, but so are the wonderful things people used to make from the hedges. The bodgers once worked every year to thin and maintain the hedges, then took that wood and made wonderful products for the local market. Cups, bowls, trays, saucers, gates, hurdles, the list is nearly endless, really. Sadly, the bodgers dried up when the people turned their backs on the culture and tradition, opting instead for cheap chintz made in some factory. Today, the country has become so hostile to small businesses that it's literally cheaper to produce things on the other side of the world, ship them all the way across the face of the earth to a store near you, where you can buy them for a pittance. How does that make sense? How did that come to be? As noted in the beginning of the video, policies in the 50's saw mile after mile of hedgerow destroyed because they thought they had a good idea. Only now that time has passed do they see that the idea wasn't so very good at all. And that makes you wonder how many other ideas that we're currently living under are also bad ideas that cause more harm than good. Everyone talks about the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back, but never the million straws that came before. I hope more people start thinking along this line of thought.
@SarahPalmer-tr4ju2 ай бұрын
Most informative and well presented.
@IanGould1592 ай бұрын
Great video, well done all!
@FWAGeast2 ай бұрын
Thank you. We're glad you enjoyed it.
@DejanIlic-ni6lf16 күн бұрын
@@FWAGeastПоздрав из Србије🇷🇸! Импресивно! Молим вас, реците ми, које врсте дрвећа су најбоље за ограђивање имања?