Friday, 6 September 2019

Nature / nurture

As I've mentioned previously, the landscape we see and enjoy in the New Forest, like the landscape of much of these isles, is far from the natural environment we imagine. The hand of humans agency has been at play for thousands of years since before the first farmers settled. Many of the landscape types we're used to, such as chalk grassland or here in the forest, both woodland and heathland, are the direct consequence of human intervention and subsequent continuous management. Looking around the Duck Hole landscape this morning it was clear to see that left to her own devices nature will quickly return to her natural form. Every year, for the last few years, more and more saplings have become established over the heathland, predominantly conifers there are also numerous birch and fruiting shrubs, and in the wetter hollows willow too. I wonder how long it'll be before the forestry will clear them, or whether they will actually clear them, or just let them be. It's interesting to think that a reduction in EU funding may impact on the forest appearance, people really didn't understand what the EU 'did for us'. Further on our walk, now crossing Ober Water near Rhinefield, evidence of the forests current management programs is clear. Along the bank of Ober Water the thicket of willow, hawthorn and blackthorn has been cleared, opening up the stream-side woodland...purely cosmetic, to keep the 'nature' of the New Forest picturesque scenes. It's as if we don't like nature in her natural forms.

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