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.
When I started out farming 7 years ago, it was with sheep, mainly black-faced Scotch but also Cheviot crosses.
It involved a pretty steep learning curve, but I never took to them, and in 2020 I sold off all 34 we had at the time and got Dexter cattle instead.
There were a few things I didn't like about the sheep, but I think by far the biggest was a constant awareness of just how very ecologically destructive they are, and of how that contradicted everything else I was trying to do.
Sheep graze very selectively, which means they seek out certain plants like tree seedlings or other important flora, and eat these preferentially, even if there's loads of grass and other vegetation.
I've seen this numerous times with my own eyes: let sheep into any ground where native trees are coming up, and they'll make a beeline for them first.
The result is they're extremely effective at repressing wild native woodland.
In fact, sheep are an ecological disaster.
Some will say: An ecological disaster? Poor sheep, isn't that a bit strong?
It's not their fault of course, they can't help how they feed. But it creates grass monocultures wherever they graze.
And as we saw yesterday, monocultures are useless to nature.
When I had the sheep, their damage was limited by the fact that they spent most of the time on the commonage, which is grazed bare by other people's sheep anyway.
I'd only bring them down into my own place in the winter, when the leaves had dropped from the many tree seedlings.
Even then, the sheep still had a tendency to strip the bark from young trees, killing them.
So I decided to replace them with Dexter cattle, a decision I've never once regretted.
They're great, and unlike the sheep (IMO), each one has her own distinct personality.
As opposed to sheep/deer/goats, cattle don't graze selectively. Instead of snipping with their teeth, they wrap their rough tongues around a bunch of vegetation and just yank it out.
This is why 'conservation grazing' is usually based on cattle.
However it's essential to add the caveat here that ALL herbivores, including cattle, will overgraze and hence damage wild habitat if overstocked.
Ideally, they should be in extremely low densities, and only let into ground periodically, eg only in winter if trees are coming up.
The Dexters still spend most of the year on the mountain, only coming down into our own place in winter.
It's not unlike the traditional practice known in Ireland as 'booleying', in which animals were grazed on the uplands in summer, then brought down for the winter.
Known as transhumance outside Ireland, it was still part of folk memory in this area into the 1950s. It likely went back millennia, right to the Neolithic, and the beginnings of farming in Ireland.
Eugene Costello, @Booleying, is our national expert on this subject.
Dexters were originally bred from small hardy local mountain cattle in Kerry by an Englishman named... Mr. Dexter.
Seemingly the breed almost completely died out, but a few survived in the UK, and were brought back to Ireland from there.
Other enthusiasts might add more info.
Our own ground where the Dexters stay during the winter is very 'sheltery' for them, as there are plenty of rocky escarpments and thick scrub.
And the Dexters generally don't damage the 1,000s of wild native trees coming up everywhere, since in the winter they're leafless.
In fact, the disturbance made by the Dexter's hooves probably creates the ideal conditions for tree seeds to germinate, actually helping speed the return of wild, native woodland.
Their trampling may also help repress the bracken, which is abundant in this piece of land.
And because they're organic, the cattle's dung is greatly appreciated by invertebrates, which are in turn greatly appreciated by badgers, who by digging them out spread the dung far and wide.
In the spring after the Dexters go back up onto the mountain commonage, this area explodes with wildflowers like bluebells, wood anemone, celandine, dog-violet, + wood sorrel.
This woodland ground flora has been hanging on under the bracken since it was forested, centuries ago.
And the wildflowers' long wait is set to pay off, with multitudes of self-seeded wild native forest coming up everywhere.
The elements of a natural ecosystem are reconstituting, naturally, spontaneously. All it takes is for us to not stand in the way.
As the habitat starts to form, all the other species are quick to move in too: insects, birds, fungi, mammals...
This is one of the ways we turn the death spiral of Irish nature around: farming in ways that leave space for the wild.
We borrowed a bull for 6 weeks until last week, and should have a few new calves later in the year.
As I said in my introduction on Monday, I accept that there isn't a whole lot of food being produced here, though we will be selling on a couple of animals each year.
But society has long understood that farming isn't solely about producing food, as reflected in the different strands (pillars) of farm subsidies.
Of course we need food, but we also need a healthy environment, a stable climate, and wild nature.
HNVfarming strikes that balance.
There are of course plenty of other ways of farming to benefit nature.
But in our case I'm certain that, given the sort of very rough land we have here in Beara, Dexter cattle in (very low densities) would be hard to beat.
Hope you found that interesting and enjoyable.
I'll be back with another topic altogether tomorrow, check in to discover what it is!
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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.
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…
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.
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.
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.
Good morning everyone, today I'm just going to introduce myself, give a general sense of who I am, the type of farming I do, and other related stuff that may be of interest.
So, first things first: my name is Eoghan Daltun, and my regular twitter handle is @IrishRainforest
I'm what people in places like West Cork call a Dublin 'jackeen', and in 2009 sold my house there (Kilmainham) to buy a long-abandoned 73-acre farm in Beara, West Cork.
The place came with 33 acres, plus a 40-acre share of mountain commonage, all *extremely* rough ground.
The farm is in a visually stunning location, with views out over the Atlantic, Skelligs, Deenish/Scarrif, and other islands like Inisfarnard.
To the east Carrauntoohill (the highest mountain in Ireland) and the MacGillycuddy Reeks range are visible.