Hi,
I have recently joined this forum after reading some of the postings on it. Many of the members seem to have an impressive, in-depth knowledge of many subjects that I need to research and ask questions about. Hopefully, the membership here can fill in a load of blanks in my understanding of woodland ownership and management.
I have always loved woodland, but never had the sort of familiarity with it that you would expect from someone who lives or works with it every day. For a variety of reasons, I want to own a piece of woodland, and I have started looking around many of the websites devoted to woodland sales, management and lifestyle. From what I have seen so far, there is a wide variety of woodland types, sizes and locations available for sale at a very wide spread of prices. I have seen some woodland for sale at under £1500 per acre in areas like Wales or Scotland, and some going for £10k-£15K per acre! So, the next questions I asked myself were, "What sort of woodland am I looking for?", "What do I want to do with it?". "What are my objectives and interests in woodland?". I have some of these answers, but to fill in a few blanks, it may help if readers of this thread knew a little more about me.
I am an engineer, born and raised in Derby, and have been involved in the off-shore oil and gas inustry for 20 years. Having travelled over much of the world, mainly to areas relating to petroleum activities, I have experienced a variety of places, people, cultures and mentalities that are not "everyday experiences" in the UK. Some of the contrasts to the lifestyle of people in the UK are very thought-provoking. This led to my interests developing in subjects such as renewable energy, climate change, excessive consumerism and wasteful consumption, pollution and the general "trash-the-earth" philosophy of globalised commercialism.
Subsequently, when I started considering such subjects as the whole "peal oil" situation, the inevitable oil crisis that will devolop sooner, rather than later, and the consequences to about 5 billion people when petroleum-based food production industry pushes food costs through the roof, and we can only produce enough food by non-intensive (i.e. non petroleum-based) agriculture to feed two billion on the earth...
That is another forum in itself. I am off on a tangent here. We were talking about woodland, right?...
...well, I was, anyway...
So, what sort of qualities am I looking for? These are some of the features of woodland that appeal to me:-
Preservation and conservation of traditional "British woodland", favouring the indiginous tree, plant and animal species.
Woodland management to promote a sustainable, renewable ecosystem, with broad-based bio-diversity.
Woodland density that provides a good cover of tree canopy without blocking out the sky altogether.
Sufficient light at ground level to enjoy the woodland vista, and not create a dark, dingy, overcast feel to it.
Tree canopy height being high enough to allow you to ”walk” through the woods, rather than duck-and-crawl through it.
Ground vegetation suitable for enjoying a "walk in the woods", rather than a "Sleeping Beauty" style impenetreable thicket that you have to hack down or climb over. This would be the sort of place that deer would graze and inhabit.
The possibilty for thinning the trees to yield some saleable timber, so the revenue could make the woodland self-sustaining financially. I would not be looking for "profiteering" from a wood, but I would also not want it to be a hole in the ground that swallowed my bank account...
Suitability for obtaining grants for assisting in woodland management would be a bonus...
I have also been reading on other woodland websites, (such as the Offwell Woodland site), that different (dominant) species of tree support very different numbers of species of invertebrates, and subsequently, other species further up the food-chain. For example, in the web link below:-
http://www.offwell.free-online.co.uk/woodland_manage/broadleaf.htm
... it states that oak-based woodland supports a huge number of invertebrate species, and consequently a lot of other wildlife that feed on them. Contrast this with the comments made (elsewhere) about chestnut trees, which are an "introduced" foreign species of tree, and support far fewer invertebrate species. Does this mean that any woodland dominated by chestnut trees (horse, or sweet) would be noticably less well inhabited by woodland wildlife? I found these facts surprising. I remember all of the conker trees being huge when I was a kid in the 70's !!
This is the sort of knowledge base that I need to expand on before I can make a decision as to what sort of woodland I want to buy. If anyone has any opinions, experience or links to useful websites that can fill in some of these blanks for me, all comments would be welcomed...
Many thanks,
Rob