Iranians are celebrating the confirmation that Ayatollah Khamenei was successfully eliminated.
No one is celebrating death.
They are celebrating that they finally, finally have the chance to live.
Iranians are celebrating the confirmation that Ayatollah Khamenei was successfully eliminated.
No one is celebrating death.
They are celebrating that they finally, finally have the chance to live.
Well done, Duchy of Cornwall, Natural England, Moor Trees, Woodland Trust. Dartmoor needs more rainforest!
duchyofcornwall.org/article/volu...
Exciting to see this major nature recovery project getting underway in Wales.
Rivers, peat bogs and ancient woodlands are set to be restored, locking in carbon, boosting biodiversity and reducing downstream flood risk.
www.theguardian.com/environment/...
Yesterday, the @nationaltrust.org.uk released a family group and a pair of Eurasian beavers at two sites as part of a wider release across the Holnicote Estate on Exmoor in Somerset. This is the second licensed wild release by the National Trust, following the first in Dorset last year.
Five volunteers proud of their work (after another ten finished earlier) surrounded by piled up dead Rhododendron Ponticum.
A huge bush of rhododendron being tackled with various hand tools.
A surprisingly tall tree of rhododendron being bow sawed to the ground by an extremely determined volunteer.
The amazing people of Ilkley, Otley, Harrogate, and slightly further afield all rocked up to smash the destructive invasive Rhododendron out of West Wood. Tomorrowβs crew are gonna have light work because this lot exceeded expectations drastically and left us with one or two out of 80!!
Thanks for sharing, this was a really interesting read.
Encouraging to see early signs of success from curlew headstarting, even if itβs still too soon to know whether itβs a conservation approach that should be scaled up.
A real success story showing how re-wetting upland peatlands by landowners and conservationists is helping one of the UKβs rarest birds, the dunlin, recover.
With peatland restoration gaining momentum in recent years, itβs vital to keep that progress going.
www.theguardian.com/environment/...
Kingsdale Head is restoring peatland, boosting biodiversity & repairing heritage features with Β£101k+ #FiPL fundingπ±
Find out more about the project and other FiPL case studies on our websiteπ https://ow.ly/XsZp50Y5iBL
#YorkshireDales #Defra #FarmingInProtectedLandscapes
Pool of standing water on North Pennines peatland with patches of green sphagnum
North Pennines peatland with large pool of water and peat bunds in gully. Bright blue sky with minimal cloud.
North Pennines peatland with large pools of standing water. Fells in the background. Cloudy sky.
π΅Today is #WorldWetlandsDay
Peatlands are wetland ecosystems and we have them across the uplands of the North Pennines National Landscape. #northpenninespeatlands #celebratingwetlands #peatlands #wetlands #peatlandsmatter
Witnesses tell of the brutality inflicted on those taking part in anti-regime protests
Iranians deserve our voice.
FREE IRAN
A good example is what Knepp Estate is doing - they use cattle, pigs and ponies to create disturbance and regenerate the landscape.
Even in wilder systems like that, itβs not a case of βjust leave it and see what happens", but actively engaging with the land.
knepp.co.uk/rewilding/gr...
Monks Wood is an interesting experiment, but it looked at arable land, not ancient grasslands - which are very different habitats.
In any event, biodiversity depends on a mosaic of habitats. Not just broadleaf woodland, but also glades and other open areas, which comes with having grazing.
Nonsense. Grassland has been a core part of Britain's ecosystems for millennia.
Long before livestock, it was grazed by aurochs (now extinct) and red deer, which helped maintain areas of open pasture.
Conservation grazing simply replicates these natural processes using cattle, ponies and sheep.
If you're restoring bog cattle makes more sense, especially where there's molinia.
But the uplands aren't, as you know, just bog. Sheep can be useful, too, particularly on slopes with waxcap grasslands.
Itβs about the right animal, at the right density, for the right time, in the right place.
Dame Barbara Hepworth was born #OTD 10 January 1903. Three of her nine 'The Family of Man' sculptures form a memorial to Benjamin Britten at Snape Maltings, Suffolk, the marshes beyond. They were installed here in 1976, the year after her death. That's the tower of Iken church in the target sights.
Iβm tired of this βjust leave the land aloneβ nonsense.
If you abandon a damaged habitat and let it βdo its own thing,β it doesnβt heal, it keeps getting worse.
Landscapes donβt fix themselves. You need active restoration: re-wet the peat, replant the woods, put grazing back on ancient grasslands.
The challenge, though, is that existing agri-environment schemes under CS and the SFI, particularly UPL2 (low livestock grazing on moorland) and UPL4 (keeping cattle and ponies on moorland), don't, on the whole, provide sufficient financial support to incentivise upland cattle grazing.
3/3
See, for example, what Hill Top Farm are doing in the Yorkshire Dales:
hilltopmalham.co.uk/farming-and-...
And similarly at Kingsdale Head, also in the Dales:
www.kingsdalehead.com
2/3
Itβs not really an either/or.
Thereβs lots of room for more upland cattle grazing - something that would help regenerate heathlands on the tops, as well as ancient grasslands and hay meadows on in-bye land.
1/3
A little late to the party, but this is next on my reading list. π
One of the defining moments for nature in 2025 has been the momentum building behind the @the-wildlifetrusts.bsky.social bid to buy Rothbury.
Ambition and decisive action like this is crucial for securing the restoration of the countryβs cherished landscapes.
www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2025...
Thanks for clarifying the article is inaccurate.
Habitat work in the South Pennines has been a real positive in recent years, but sadly it hasnβt stopped the decline of the existing population.
More research into the causes is evidently needed before reintroductions can be considered.
Close up photo of a small bonnet mushroom with a mossy background. Text on the image reads: 'Impact story: Kingsdale Head. Growing native mosses to restore and protect peatlands'. Photo credit: Andrew Wakefield
Kingsdale Head are restoring damaged peatland on their 607-hectare former sheep farm, supported by our Rewilding Innovation Fund π±
The Fund has helped Kingsdale to grow and transplant native sphagnum mosses which drive a lot of the processes on blanket bogs, including peat formations.
π§΅1/2
Some good news today. The UK Government has announced a major overhaul of animal welfare as part of its new Animal Welfare Strategy.
Some really positive commitments in there, including banning snares, ending trail hunting and giving greater protection to hares.
www.gov.uk/government/n...
A wholesome weekend woodland walk at @nationaltrust.org.uk Alderley Edge. ππ₯Ύ
Great to see the National Estate for Nature group commit to publishing estate management plans by April 2026.
Together, the group members manage 10% of Englandβs land, including vital upland habitats like peatlands, woodlands and ancient grasslands.
defraenvironment.blog.gov.uk/2025/11/18/l...
Business can be a powerful force for good in restoring nature.
This major investment in restoring degraded upland peatlands by Diageo will boost carbon storage, reduce flood risk for communities and support land-based jobs.
sustainabilitymag.com/news/why-is-...
Some beautiful shots of resident Lakeland Fell ponies Stan, Dan and Paddy. They have been really thriving on the rough hill pastures on Tarras Valley and doing a fantastic job helping to regenerate the grassland habitats!
π· Faith Garvey
Red poppies in a field with the sun dipping behind a hill
To all the fallen, we will remember them.β β
β β β
π· Emma Varley
π Lancing Ring
#LestWeForget #WeWillRememberThem #Remembrance