It’s sometimes called Strawberry Lee Plantation, though
within it the trees and shrubs planted are well outnumbered by those that have grown
from wild seed. It has been an excellent case of rewilding which has taken the
neglected interventions of previous years and turned them into something special
of its own. For many years nothing was done to this woodland and it has been
much the better for it. Near the main
road it was at some time in the distant past the site of a house of some sort.
Rhododendron was planted in the gardens plus Sycamore and Scots Pine. The Sycamore is
mostly fringing the road, the Pine fairly well scattered and the Rhododendron
has managed to circle the whole woodland enclosing the wilder inner parts of it
in a protective shelter from wind and noise.
This inner part is a delightful unmanaged mix of alder, pine and birch
underlaid with bilberry, grassy area and bramble and at this time of year
plenty of wood sorrel. In some places the bilberry can be seen growing in alder
crevices 6 feet from the ground.
How
long it has gone its own way is not known. It is part wild and part secret
garden a haven for wildlife who seek out its spaces within the shelter belt of
rhododendron when the cold winds blow. Undeniably the rhododendron spreads and
would continue to do so. But its value is also immense to the area. Having lived
this way for many years it has become an established network of wildlife links
with foxes, deer and unusual bird species patronising its environs and enjoying
the encircling shelter belt it provides.
There have been some magical moments
when wildlife has been seen through the writhing boughs of trees that could
have come from a story by Grimm or an illustration by Rackham.
Only the most sensitive and imaginative people should be
trusted with the management of this site and true to form and expectation we’ve
got anything but that. The sensible approach would be to declare ‘as far as
this and no further’, firmly stopping the spread of rhododendron and checking
it once a year. Instead SWT have done the opposite. Tempted by seeing pound
signs flashing and the prospect of grants and the needs of their organisation
they decided to go to war laying waste to large sections of the growth. The
mess and the devastation has managed to destroy the magic of yet another special
place. And the debris has been left around in many places for over a year. It’s enough to make you wonder if we belong to the same species when you
read the words ‘it will take some time to recover’.
Meanwhile in fine woods further east there are several rhododendron shrubs which ought to be dealt
with before they spread any further. Nobody
would have complained. But it’s too small a job. It is typical of the way that
SWT operate that they respond to grants rather than consider priorities or the appearance
and character of the site they’ve been given to manage.
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