Britain | Trees and history

Britain still has a few patches of rainforest, which need help

Rewilding is not the solution

Last year is dead, they seem to say

WHEN JOHN HOWELL’S grandfather purchased 550 hectares of land nearly a century ago in what is now Dartmoor National Park in Devon, he also acquired a patch of a vanishing ecosystem. On his land was an eight-hectare wood where oak trees perched on a steep hillside of moss-covered granite along the River Erme–a temperate rainforest.

This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “The wood and the trees”

Beware the bossy state

From the January 15th 2022 edition

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