Your friendly neighbourhood Wood Mouse will be appearing in the local paper soon. The reason for this is my obsessive-compulsive behaviour of growing Oak Trees.
It all started when I was first out walking in the wood and I first encountered the ranger. She told me that the forest had a friends group and they carried out practical work in the wood. So I decided I would become an acquaintance of the Friends of Chopwell Wood.
Well you know how these things can escalate; I was foolish enough to offer to plant up the acorns that were gathered during last year’s tree seed collections. If only I had realised that there were nearly six hundred of them. I then had to go out, on the scrounge, to garner enough pots together to put them in. Fortunately the local community helped and soon I had all the pots I needed.
It was not easy, as I had to fight off all manner of birds, mainly the jackdaws but also the odd Jay and several magpies as they were constantly trying to eat their future perches. Eventually in the spring my compulsive, others would say eccentric, behaviour paid off and about two hundred and fifty baby oaks emerged.
It was as a result of doing this that this morning I had to take some of the trees back into the wood so that the Press Officer from the Forestry Commission could take some pictures of me with these trees. Now while I know that some people love performing in front of the camera, I don’t relish it, as I am very much like an oil painting, an old master in fact, cracked and flaking! However I did my duty, I don’t know how the images came out, as I haven’t seen them, but I felt a complete idiot standing there holding pots of trees in contrived poses. Even the Dog walkers were laughing at me, I think even the dogs were too.
Well there was I thinking that this is just for the staff magazine or some obscure place where no one would see them, like my Blog, then I get a call from the biggest paper in the region and it’s the environment editor, and before I know it, I will be in the local paper.
Well at least it will not be saying “Don’t Approach this Mouse” I just wish that the Ranger had not beguiled me when I first met her. It’s all her fault really.
All joking aside there is a serious point to all this, as these trees will be planted so that we can regenerate the ancient wood here in Chopwell. In doing so we can directly aid over one hundred species that are on the UK at risk list of flora and fauna. The reason for the publicity is so that we can encourage other people to become actively involved in collecting seed, helping to plant the trees and do their little bit.
As it was such a great morning it was worth, well almost, the humiliation of having my visage captured on film.
I got my own back by snapping this picture of the photographer!
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2 comments:
Lovely photos! esp the one of the deep ravine!
I am one of those who feel that things should be left alone-however, the progression from field, to fast-growing sun lovers such as birch, fir and pine here, to their decay and the gradual overtaking of oaks and beech-can take centuries!
However, I will be the first to admit that I feel you brits take the cake in landscaping, as what you have now after living on the isle for at least a millenium, shows testament to the fact! The wood appears so lovely in your photos!
So I bow to your centuries of expertise and can only hope my small lot can look as grand someday!
I remember Prince Charles on show here bemoaning the conservationists who block any type of activity, even the pruning of deadwood.
heheh see, I vote for leaving the dead limbs as winter shelter for the tiny birds and flying squirrels that inhabit our lands.
you made into todays journal oh how smart you look lol
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