Exploring an Oak and Hazel Coppiced Woodland in West Sussex - Pt 1

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 30 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 53

  • @lonefoxbushcraft
    @lonefoxbushcraft 5 місяців тому

    Your the most honest guy on youtube Richard❤

  • @felixreali7101
    @felixreali7101 2 роки тому +1

    doing this for future generations just shows how good people can be...

  • @MrGreatplum
    @MrGreatplum 6 років тому +5

    Fascinating- so pleased to see a woodland maintained properly.

  • @samt1705
    @samt1705 5 років тому +8

    Lots of love from a budding agroforestry farmer here in India. 💌 This concept of coppicing is quite fascinating! 👍🏼

    • @RichardVobes
      @RichardVobes  5 років тому

      That is interesting - do you not do that where you are?

  • @leefreeston3900
    @leefreeston3900 6 років тому +6

    Absolutely brilliant to see traditional Woodland being worked by a traditional farmer this video will be a Time Capsule.

  • @leehargreaves7473
    @leehargreaves7473 5 років тому +21

    I could watch this fella point his walking-stick and talk forever.

    • @RichardVobes
      @RichardVobes  5 років тому +1

      Ah yes, he is a lovely fella!

    • @jamesjohnmoss8130
      @jamesjohnmoss8130 3 роки тому +1

      My wife had a knee replacement. She was given a stick to help her more about. She very quickly learned to use the same to point at everything, It’s clearly a requirement, once you have a stick!

  • @realdiggerz6914
    @realdiggerz6914 3 роки тому +1

    Great video and really interesting.

  • @GappyPirate
    @GappyPirate 6 років тому +2

    Nice to see some productive oak standards with hazel coppice.

  • @gracegood3661
    @gracegood3661 4 роки тому

    We have just purchased two and half acres with plan to plant an English wood here in NZ. Thanks so very much for the post and if want to talk with this gentleman again on this topic it would great value. Thanks again.

  • @SidBonkers51
    @SidBonkers51 6 років тому +1

    Brilliant episode Richard , I look forward to part two...

  • @citic101
    @citic101 4 роки тому

    very interesting ! thanks

  • @johnfoster7996
    @johnfoster7996 5 років тому

    Only just found these two videos - wonderful stuff Richard. In another life, back in the 1980s, I coppiced and made charcoal in English Nature woods in Kent.

  • @georgetimperley8906
    @georgetimperley8906 6 років тому

    I love oak trees I love the thought of having nearly a hole wood of them

    • @RichardVobes
      @RichardVobes  6 років тому

      It would be lovely to own an oak wood. :)

  • @annosborne7365
    @annosborne7365 6 років тому

    Another good one Richard,

  • @mikepowell8611
    @mikepowell8611 11 місяців тому

    Want to try this with blight resistant American Chestnuts. Oak is dumb Chestnut FTW!

  • @Unknown-rw2ec
    @Unknown-rw2ec 3 роки тому

    I live in West Sussex:))

  • @Caleb_Evans32
    @Caleb_Evans32 3 роки тому +1

    I've seen so many people on other videos screaming about the trees. "Oh no don't cut down the trees" Most of them don't know anything about forestry.

  • @JakobFischer60
    @JakobFischer60 5 років тому +6

    Come to Germany. We can show you how forests are managed. We have huge areas of old oak and beech trees and earn a fortune by selling the wood all over the world. We are blessed by 70 percent of our country still beeing forest and we also did plant a lot of conifers, but now, the conifer forests are all destroyed by storms and climate change. So we reforest them now with more robust mixtures of broadleafs.
    The area you showed was maintained very well and narrow trees have to be cut to give space for the others. That is the way to go, but in my opinion the UK need to do reforestation more professional.

    • @RichardVobes
      @RichardVobes  5 років тому

      I agree. We need more trees here.

    • @pc2753
      @pc2753 4 роки тому

      Where can I learn more about the German methods? I think we need the forestry industry to put more focus into broadleaf management but there are no courses or qualifications in this in the UK

    • @danstadler3752
      @danstadler3752 3 роки тому

      The Germans invented Forestry

    • @spencersanderson1894
      @spencersanderson1894 Рік тому

      @@danstadler3752 don’t think Germany was a nation over 6000 years ago so they probably didn’t invent forestry.

    • @dungeonmaster6292
      @dungeonmaster6292 Рік тому

      ​@@spencersanderson1894 UK has a proud history of woodland management

  • @BP-qx7ux
    @BP-qx7ux 5 років тому +1

    I would love to know more about the way he is going about thining his woods. He pointed to an area and said there was another year of work there to thin it. Does he bring in loggers? Or does the man who is helping him do all the work?

    • @RichardVobes
      @RichardVobes  5 років тому

      I believe it is all manual. I can't see that loggers come in and do it.

  • @michaelwhite8031
    @michaelwhite8031 4 роки тому

    Verrell a very old East Sussex family of Anglo Saxon origin. Did you get any wood for your Essey Richard ?

  • @monkeymanwasd1239
    @monkeymanwasd1239 5 років тому

    pigs and goats can be used to deal with the brambles
    please look up permaculture, early retirement extreme, and the wim hof method

    • @RichardVobes
      @RichardVobes  5 років тому

      Sounds intriguing!

    • @monkeymanwasd1239
      @monkeymanwasd1239 5 років тому

      @@RichardVobes also Allan savory this is good stuff to make videos about if you have any questions please let me know

  • @RagingDong
    @RagingDong 5 років тому

    Do certain amimals eat the shoots?
    Would pollarding work?

    • @RichardVobes
      @RichardVobes  5 років тому +1

      Deer eat the shoots and the woodland is either fenced off or each sapling is wrapped in a plastic tube to protect it.

    • @jacobspranger1267
      @jacobspranger1267 3 роки тому +1

      Yes and no. I think pollarding is more chop and drop system. Foliage will add macro and micronutrients. Plus the regrowth will again shade the under storage. Coppicing iv read can be more geared towards wood or firewood production. With all of those shoots coming up you select the strongest growers and trim the rest. In 10-15 years or so the 4, 5, or 6 maybe more of those you saved would equal more wood growth then the one tree that had grown for 50+ years.

    • @spencersanderson1894
      @spencersanderson1894 Рік тому

      Pollarding is usually used when livestock is also grazed in the field or there is high numbers of deer in the area. Ash pollards where often used for handles, spears etc. and Coppice is where livestock and deer are kept out, therefore allowing the wood to be cut closer to ground level.

  • @bencrawshaw1227
    @bencrawshaw1227 3 роки тому

    Seems like a shame to coppice an oak tree. We stopped coppicing oak 100 years ago because there were hardly any trees. In 1900+ we had only 5 % tree cover, we have around 20+ % today.

    • @RichardVobes
      @RichardVobes  3 роки тому +1

      I understand he is coppicing hazel in the wood.

    • @spencersanderson1894
      @spencersanderson1894 Рік тому

      And by coppicing he is keeping the tree alive whilst still getting a crop. It isn’t cut every year, maybe every 20 years. There would be more forests if people carried this type of work out.

  • @zippitydoodah5693
    @zippitydoodah5693 Рік тому +1

    The miserable little man with a scruffy sense of style doesn't like those miserable little trees that are a bit scruffy.