Here's a series of pictures from west coast hazel. The catkins make hazel the stand out tree at this time of the year. The catkins elongate and change colour as they get more mature.
When the sun strikes a hazel full of catkins the result can be a mass of flaming gold or silver, there for a day or two and then gone till next year.
We've just heard that one of our partnership groups, the Atlantic Hazel Action Group, has secured additional funding from EU Leader.
Friday, 26 March 2010
Thursday, 25 March 2010
Monday, 22 March 2010
firewood
Several Scottish Native Woods staff members use firewood as the main source of heat for their homes and offices. This is some of next winter's supply stored away under cover to dry out during the summer. The wood is beech, and it featured in this blog in February 2009: http://scottishnativewoods.blogspot.com/2009/02/clearing-beech-tree-from-old-track.html
Wednesday, 17 March 2010
Tuesday, 16 March 2010
Dumb Dumpers
Dumping your garden rubbish in the countryside like this risks introducing plants that can spread to woodland habitats and in time might come to dominate the ground flora. The main invasive plant species such as himalayam balsam and Japanese knotweed started as garden escapees, but there are a number of lesser species as well. Although there does not appear to be anything other than cypress and juniper cittings in this pile, you can see below that a garden escapee is already growing at this spot.
The consequences...
Monday, 15 March 2010
Remember the autumn?
Saturday, 13 March 2010
Timber stack in Glenlyon
This pile of timber in Glenlyon is going to be milled by Tom Beels from the Glenlyon Woodfuel Initiative. It is a mixture of native oak and conifers. These odds & sods have been left behind from a bigger felling operation in the Glen, and although they might not lok like much here, they can be turned in to some very impressive furniture, see below.
New desks.......
These desks have been made out of single slabs of Douglas Fir. Native woodland restoration very often means making the best of all timber produced, be that native or exotic, if that is what is required to finance the overall operation. Here, some odd-sized timber that no-one wanted has been turned in to some very simple but useful and stylish furniture. Well done Tom. Very impressive for an afternoon's work.
Big larch butts
Friday, 12 March 2010
Looks a long way down
Waste not want not
Is this a native woodland site?
This is Ruth Anderson, ex-trustee of Scottish Native Woods, who is helping us to organize a one-day conference in May looking at restoration of Plantations on Ancient Woodland Sites (PAWS). This site is on Forestry Commission land at Craigvinean, just off the A9 north of Dunkeld. There are no native tree remnants left on this particular site, the only ancient woodland remnants being elements of the ground vegetation. However, when managed as continuous cover forestry, the ground vegetation will be encouraged to develop and this ancient woodland characteristic of the site will be preserved. Over time, it would be hoped that native woodland tree species can also be gradually re-introduced. When was the last time you saw a native woodland advisor standing proudly in a stand of Douglas Fir?
And another one.....
Oak in the middle
Wednesday, 10 March 2010
Tuesday, 9 March 2010
Scottish Native Woods Sites
Scottish Native Woods currently manage 225 different sites totalling almost exactly 18,000 acres. The following photos give you an idea of the approx site distribution in each area, although these are now a bit out of date.
These black pins represent our Central Lowland area, where the priorities include access provision, and PAWS (Plantations on Ancient Woodland Sites) restoration, also a key consideration in all our other areas. In the central lowlands, individual sites tend to be smaller, and we have more off them. Sites in Fife have quickly multiplied recently, with many more than are represented here.
Scottish Native Woods are very nearly a national organization, with only the far north and the Borders being outwith our range. The North Highland Forest Trust and Borders Forest Trust operate in these areas, and we see little point in competing with them in these areas.
West Highlands
Highland Perthshire
In recent years, the priorities in Highland Perthshire have shifted from individual woodland management responsibility, to providing specific functions over a wider area, often in areas where other people are the primary woodland managers, including in some cases public agencies such as the Forestry Commission. These functions include capercaillie counts, being secretary to the local deer management group, water vole surveys and riparian conservaton programmes along the Tay. Aspen and PAWS restoration are also important themes. We still have 43 sites of our own as well. The big pin here in the middle is our base in Aberfeldy.
North Highland
The North East
Our North -east sites tend to be quite large with ongoing work opportunities at each. Over the past 6 months or so, we now have a greater number of sites that are represented here, numbers of small RDC planting schemes having either been implemented or are in preparation. Priorities in the north east include small planting schemes for farmers, riparian woodland management, aspen and a wide range of environmental audit work, including recently for the Cairngorms national Park/ Dee District Salmon Fisheries Board.
Monday, 8 March 2010
Loch Earn Today
These two great photos have been forwarded by Mike Williamson, head greenkeeper at Aberfeldy Golf course and Chairman of Aberfeldy Community Council. The photos were taken with a mobile phone, which just goes to show that having a bit of an eye for a photo and being in a position to take them are just as important that the actual technology used.
Well done Mike. Now, away off and do your own blog...!!
Thursday, 4 March 2010
Wednesday, 3 March 2010
Horse's hoof fungus
Here are a couple of pictures of horse's hoof fungus growing on a dead birch tree in Argyll. This bracket fungus is named for its shape, which is reasonably obvious in the first picture, where the fungus is growing on the mainstem of the tree.
In this second picture, higher up the tree, the fungus seems to be taking over, wrapping itself around the thinner branch.
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