REWILDING BRITAIN LAUNCHES AMBITIOUS PROJECT IN WALES
Rewilding Britain has announced the launch of its first landscape-scale restoration project, which aims to “restore flourishing ecosystems and a resilient local econ- omy, on a scale never before seen in Britain”. The project will create a continuous, Nature-rich area stretching from the Pumlumon massif – the highest area in Mid Wales – down the Dyfi estuary and out into Cardigan Bay. Within five years it will comprise at least 10,000ha of land and 28,400ha of sea.
O’r Mynydd i’r Môr, or Summit to Sea, has secured £3.4 million from the Endangered Landscapes Programme – one of only eight projects across Europe to receive this funding. Others include the Danube Delta and the Carpathian Mountains in Romania, the Cairngorms in Scotland, and the Greater Côa Valley in Portugal. The project hopes to restore natural processes, bring communities together, and support the local economy to diversify and establish new Nature-based enterprises.
“It’s a call for renewal of wild Nature and rural communities in Mid Wales,” says Rebecca Wrigley, CEO of Rewilding Britain. “Summit to Sea offers hope. I can imagine standing on the slopes of Pumlumon in 20 years and looking out towards the sea across a rich mosaic of forest, glades and wild pasture, that can shift and change in response to natural processes.
“I’ve been involved in conservation and community development programmes around the world for over 25 years now. More than at any other point I feel that we have a moment of opportunity to demonstrate that renewal and hope are possible, for us, for the places we live in, and for wild Nature.”
Rewilding Britain is leading the formation of the project in collaboration with The Woodland Trust, local people and other organisations from farmers’ representative bodies to local conservation projects, and the Welsh Government. Report by Kara Moses www.summit2sea.wales www.endangeredlandscapes.org
Photographs by Ben Porter / Summit to Sea
PERMACULTURE MAGAZINE PRIZE
Bentley Urban Farm, UK, is a place of refuge, learning and fresh organic produce in a food desert where there are ample takeaways on every street but not one independent greengrocer. Bentley teaches people how to grow, cook and eat fresh local food and builds community in a fractured society with high unemployment. The farm was a runner-up in the £25,000 Permaculture Magazine Prize, first launched this year. The prize aims to showcase the best examples of ecological, social and economical regenerative permaculture projects in the world. The winner was Ghana Permaculture Institute. www.permaculture.co.uk/news/ permaculture-magazine-prize-winners
Issue 312
Resurgence & Ecologist
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