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.
Across the world, epiphytes are the primary indicator of any sort of rainforest.

A single tree in a New Zealand temperate rainforest was found to have 28 different species of vascular epiphytic plants growing on it (ie not incl. mosses or lichens).
Irish rainforests are extremely special places. Everything is mantled in thick spongy carpets of mosses and other moisture-loving plants.

We have three species of filmy ferns in Ireland, all of which grow in our place. Below are Killarney fern and Tunbridge filmy fern.
As you might imagine, I was both thrilled and amazed in equal measure to realise that the native woodland covering much of the farm was actually rainforest.

None of it was planted; it all grew because the land was barely farmed for around a century, allowing wild nature back in.
Hear the word 'rainforest', and you naturally tend to think of the tropics.

But there's another type: *temperate* rainforest, and like NZ, that's what we have in Ireland.

Tragically, it was nearly all erased in the past, and that’s still going on.
Only about 1% of Ireland is now covered by native forest, virtually the lowest in Europe, and down from an estimated original of around 80%.

But, bad as that sounds, the situation is actually FAR worse, because most of those tiny surviving bits are utterly trashed ecologically.
Our forest here was no different. Firstly, it was very severely overgrazed by feral goats and sika deer.

By eating every last tree seedling, they were preventing the trees from reproducing, causing the woods to begin to die out. All the native wildflowers etc. were missing too.
As grazers go, goats win top prize as killers of native ecosystems across the planet.

Nothing else, not even sheep, comes close. Called 'desert makers' by ecologists, goats are an invasive species *par excellence*.

This video is funny, but the annihilation of life is not.
By eating all the native vegetation, the goats and sika had also opened the way for a whole host of non-native invasive plant species to start taking over.

And the very worst of the lot was rhododendron, of which there were already mature stands of plants in many areas.
A single rhodo can send out a million tiny airborne seeds per year.
If conditions are right, ie overgrazed, many germinate and in 10 years can be flowering and setting seed themselves.

The result is that huge areas can very quickly become choked if it's not dealt with urgently.
In fact, most surviving pockets of Irish rainforest are in exactly the same wrecked state: overgrazed and infested by rhodo.

Ireland's biggest, for example, Killarney National Park, is totally overrun by sika deer, feral goats, sheep, and rhodo.

Our last rainforests are dying.
Back in my own place, I set to work straight away eliminating the rhodo - pretty tough work.

The best plan is to start by killing the bigger plants, to cut off the flow of seeds. The stumps must be treated with Roundup, or they just regrow. The small ones can then be pulled out.
To resolve the overgrazing by goats and deer, I applied for the Native Woodland Scheme, which funded the erection of a 2m high fence to keep them out of 21.5 acres where most of the rainforest is.

The scheme also paid me a modest grant for 7 years.
teagasc.ie/crops/forestry…
The results of removing invasive plants and grazers have been nothing short of spectacular.

Everywhere, wild native self-seeded tree seedlings started sprouting: oak, birch, hazel, rowan, holly, sally, crab, ash, and others, creating new woodland.
This image of a boundary with neighbours gives some idea of the transformation.

When the fence went up less than a decade before the pic was taken, our place behind was the same as the foreground where the sheep are: just grass.

The forest came back by itself, full throttle.
Equally, an insane variety of native woodland wildflowers emerged, carpets of them. To witness the forest come to life was exhilarating in the extreme.

And it wasn't just the trees and plants: the whole place began to increasingly buzz with flying insects and ring with birdsong.
But seeing that magical rebirth unfold has made visits to places like Killarney NP, Uragh Woods (Beara), and other rainforests ever more painful and maddening.

They continue to languish and die of the very same issues resolved years ago in my own place.
And these aren't exceptional either, on the contrary: only 19% of Atlantic woodland is classed as being in a decent state.

Given that these are the last tiny remnants of an immensely rich and unique biome that once covered much of Ireland, that’s simply unforgivable.
These places are an important part of the heritage of every Irish citizen, indeed every citizen of the world, and we are abjectly failing to fulfill our responsibility, not just to protect them, but to allow them to expand back out.

That needs to change, *right now*.
The context to this thread, and all those I'm posting during my week on @IrelandsFarmers, is the fact that we're undeniably in the midst of a dire ecological emergency, as declared by the Dáil in 2019.

Yet we're letting our last few bits of rainforest just die out?

Shame on us.
So that's it for today.

Now there's no more excuses for not knowing that Ireland is - or least should be - a rainforest nation!

I'll be back tomorrow to talk about something else. I very much hope to see you back here too.

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More from @IrelandsFarmers

Feb 13
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. Image
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... Image
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
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%. ImageImage
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*. Image
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 10
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
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
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
Feb 7
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.

I just love it here.
Read 12 tweets

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