IrelandsFarmers Profile picture
Dec 4, 2021 14 tweets 6 min read Read on X
How to increase the number of trees on your farm?

Hopefully I made the case yesterday that there is a place for trees on every farm.

Shelter and forage✅
Income ✅
Biodiversity✅
Water quality✅
Nutrient cycling✅
Biosecurity✅
Carbon✅
Flooding✅
Woodchip or firewood✅
The first step is deciding what exactly you want to achieve.

One-off trees amongst pasture? Agroforestry? Small woodlands? Fruit or nut producing copses? A combination of all the above?

I am a fan of planting near waterways & woodland corridors through the farms.
There is always the inclination to plant the most unproductive area. However it is important not to displace already important habitats on your farm, for example a wet corner may already be rich in biodiversity and should be let alone, likewise a meadow rich in wildflowers.
A good rule of thumb is the more species you see in the sward the less suitable it is for trees.

Also, as a general rule peat soils should be avoided.
Getting the trees

There are tree nurseries throughout the country and many deliver to your door. I would go with native species and native provenance.

No need to buy big trees. Ask for "bareroots" in the 60-90cm range available each year from around October, through to March.
Free trees?

It's worth considering that trees can plant themselves, they’ve been doing so for millions of years. You can facilitate this process by fencing off an area. It can be beneficial to let some stock through to break up ground vegetation to allow for windborne or bird-
distributed tree seeds to come in contact the soil. Its important that there is a seed source nearby. You can also cut foot long rods from a willow tree and push them into the ground, they will root themselves. Excellent for stabilising riverbanks
Generally, most native trees will work well in most soils, although there are a few exceptions which require somewhat specific conditions.

Alder, willow and Guelder rose are good choices here wet ground. Sessile oak will do reasonably well on heavy soils.
Dryer alkaline/acid soils- most trees will do fine in these conditions, although the trees listed above may struggle.
For coastal/windy areas Willow, blackthorn, Whitehorn & hazel are good. Once a shelter belt has been established, most species will do fine near the sea
A few more trees to consider- wild cherry can be a fabulous tree producing excellent timber - if managed well. Scots pine are a wonderful native conifer which can grow into impressive specimens. Ash is sadly no longer available to buy as a result of ash dieback disease.
Planting trees.

In soft soil with good moisture levels, you can simply sink the spade in, prise open a slot, slide the sapling (up to the top of the roots) in and firm up around it with your boot.

Alternatively, dig a small hole.

There is no need to stake bareroot trees.
Aftercare-

Exclude stock for first few years.

Mulching with woodchip or compost is not essential but will have multiple benefits - supress competitive weed growth & supply beneficial nutrients, fungi and bacteria.

No need to water, aside from drought #stitchintime
Trees like willow & alder planted can reach ten or fifteen feet in fours years. Oak may still be waist height in the same duration. A hedge of whitethorn will become stock proof in 5 years
As the mature they can be thinned, pruned,coppiced, pollarded, grazed beneath or left alone
So that's it....get out there and be ambitious!

Trees are cheap- a bag of 100 hawthorns can be as little as forty euro, alder or oak can be fifty cents to a euro a tree.

Get the family and friends involved. You would be surprised how quick five hundred trees can be planted!

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More from @IrelandsFarmers

Feb 13, 2022
Good morning all.

Today is my (@IrishRainforest) last day curating this account, and I'm going to use it to talk about the other essential side of the coin in turning around the ongoing death spiral of Irish nature (along with High Nature Value farming):

Rewilding.
You've probably already heard various things about rewilding, some of them true, some less so.

But I want to say straight off that rewilding is NOT anti-people, anti-farmer, anti-rural communities, or any other rubbish of that sort.

Quite the opposite. Let's look deeper...
What is rewilding?

Since the concept was borne in the 1990s, there's been a lot of debate about what it means exactly.

A welcome advance in this respect was the 2021 publication by the @IUCN of @LandEthics et al.'s 'Guiding Principles of Rewilding'
iucn.org/commissions/co…
Read 25 tweets
Feb 12, 2022
On my (@IrishRainforest) second last day on this account, I want to talk about the big lie that is Irish 'forests'.

One of these below is a forest, one of them most definitely is not.

One covers around 1% of Ireland, the other 10%.
It would be easy to think of a forest as a big bunch of trees, but nothing could be further from the truth.

A real forest is instead made up of thousands of different species that coevolved over very long periods of time to function cohesively as an *ecosystem*.
So what do I mean by the big lie that is Irish 'forests'?

Here's a good example: "Irish forest cover at its highest level in 350 years."

Sounds wonderful, except around 90% of that is monoculture plantations, mostly of alien species like sitka spruce.
m.independent.ie/business/farmi…
Read 25 tweets
Feb 11, 2022
Hi everyone, today I'll be talking about something very close to my own heart, as revealed my twitter handle: @IrishRainforest.

It's something many - or even most - people are still totally unaware of: the natural ecosystem of much of Ireland is actually rainforest.
When we first came to the farm in 2009, I was blown away by the wild forest that had developed naturally over much of the land.

The trees were full of plants living on the trunks and branches, like ferns, mosses, and a host of other types of plants.
It soon dawned on me that these were what are called epiphytes: plants that grow on trees without being rooted in the ground, so excluding ivy and honeysuckle, for eg.

They can only live where there are high levels of rainfall and other precipitation. Beara sure fits that bill.
Read 23 tweets
Feb 10, 2022
Good morning folks, it's me @IrishRainforest back again.

Yesterday I talked about the desperate and worsening state of nature in Ireland, and the role the industrialisation of farming is playing.

Today, let's look at one of the solutions: High Nature Value farming (HNVf).
Small numbers of farmers all over Ireland are moving towards HNVfarming, and you can follow @farmfornature to get an idea of who's doing what.

Also, I'd highly recommend reading @isabella_tree's 'Wilding: The Return of Nature to a British Farm'.
bookworm.ie/wilding/
Now I'm going to launch straight into a description of the sort of farming I do myself.

As I said the other day, this farm came with 33 acres of ground, plus 40 of mountain commonage; 21.5 acres (mostly rainforest) of the 33 isn't farmed at all; the other 51.5 is all HNV farmed.
Read 25 tweets
Feb 9, 2022
Morning folks. I'd like to talk about nature today, and how it's doing on our generation's watch.

The answer is unequivocal: it could scarcely be worse. Nature is rapidly blinking out all around us.

And no, that is NOT hyperbole.

All the science confirms it.
There are so many statistics I could hit you with to show how nature is being killed off, but statistics tend to wash over us, so here's just one.

In 1970-2016 alone, global populations of wild vertebrates like mammals and birds plummeted by 68%.
theguardian.com/environment/20…
There are many reasons why we're losing nature at such a catastrophic speed, but the primary one across the world is conversion of natural habitat to farmland.

When this happens, only a small minority of species are able to adapt to the new conditions.
smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/agr…
Read 18 tweets
Feb 8, 2022
Good morning all.

Today I'd like to explore a subject that for me is both fascinating, and deeply relevant to the present.

That is: ecological and human history, how they're interconnected, and how we have so completely transformed or eliminated natural ecosystems over time.
I'll be focusing on what I've been able to learn of this immediate locality, the rest of the Beara Peninsula, and southwest Ireland.

While some of it is area-specific, examining one place in more detail can act as a lens through which to understand a much bigger picture.
In prehistory, like most of Ireland, Beara was covered in thick, extremely species-rich old-growth forest, in this case temperate rainforest.

We know this from pollen analysis of peat cores and other evidence, such as actual remains of ancient trees preserved in the peat.
Read 21 tweets

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