Reforestation
All over Rowborough Downs many baby trees are springing up from the protective armour or Gorse, Bramble, Dog rose and/or Bracken. On its lower slopes and where it goes into part of the Walkham Valley; it is already woodland.
Succession
Reforestation happens in a succession, with one group of plants taking over from another group.
First its just grassland, Herbaceous plants add to the nutrient content, then small thorny shrubs arrive, then shrub trees, then big (what I call main-sequence)trees. And you can see it all here on Rowborough Downs.
I come here mostly for 2 reasons: Firstly to study Reforestation and secondly for tree collecting purposes. Mainly Hawthorn trees. They are very abundant here. I generally get them from where they've seeded themselves under bigger trees and cannot possibly reach maturity or from where they are causing an obstruction or blocking a foot-path.
What I am about doing is introducing the right ingredients (species) to where they are not naturally present. Rowborough Downs is surrounded by well wooded countryside and has ma
ny species close by, which can and do spread onto it. The high moor by contrast has Beech, Spruce, Larch and Sycamore. The Sycamore is an invasive North American weed. They are not yet out of control, on the high moor, but it would be awful if they alone formed the forest of DartMoor, as they have done at Boscastle, among many other places.
No comments:
Post a Comment