Awesome job. We need more people working in the natural surroundings all over the UK indeed the world. It is an employment opportunity Governments are missing out on. I feel these projects suffer lack of funding because they do cost a lot of money and unfortunately the people who run our lives are only interested in short term gains to boost popularity and not long term benefits. The long term benefits of rewilding and habitat management are absolutely enormous and have very far reaching consequences. If done properly everyone wins. I wish your project all the very best and hope you get funding for more and more of these projects in the future.
@PeopleAreFish2 ай бұрын
Well produced video credit to whoever shot / edited this
@kayayala90915 ай бұрын
I love the work you are doing restoring one of the most important keystone species. It gives me hope seeing natures architects return to the land. I’m so excited to see the effects on other species as well as the water table in the coming years!
@RussTillling5 ай бұрын
Awesome project and YT production! I hope it exceeds expectations! 🤩🤩🤩
@TC-dy4zr4 ай бұрын
Rewilding is one of the most important opportunities here in the uk. Not only are we returning swathes of the countryside back to its original habitats but also it’s a huge boost to jobs. Scotland reported a 400% increase in jobs because of Rewilding. It’ll become a booming sector creating hundreds if not thousands of new jobs while also restoring vast areas of habitats from forests to wetlands. More investment needs to be done to allow this while making sure protection of the environment is a high priority.
@DavidRose-m8s5 ай бұрын
Well done. Also. For pastural land the key is to rein in the use of ruminant animal drench's to encourage natural population levels of dung beetles , both to soften the soil to depth, and to increase the soils organic matter level so much more effectively than a worm alone approach. For every 1% of soil organic matter increase the land will hold back 25mm more water from runoff. Beavers can catch water from that point, but keeping it out of the streams in the 1st place for slow subsoil release is part of a catchment systems approach. Do not underestimate the catchment water load, and fluvial pressure applied by pharmaceutical approach's to parasite control on stock, and the absence of stock in the 1st place destroying the soil sponge. Yes and avoiding unsustainably high stocking rates as too much of a good thing.
@PeopleAreFish2 ай бұрын
I LIVE SO CLOSE TO HERE had no idea they had just been released this is fantastic. I'll definitely be going looking for felled trees and dams soon :)
@colleeneggertson21173 ай бұрын
Hope they get well established and their ponds benefit the landscape and other wildlife.
@jazy13u5 ай бұрын
This is amazing!
@philipbutler66083 ай бұрын
What makes you think you can fence a beaver in?
@AD-gi9zg13 сағат бұрын
Nobody suggested that. What makes you think so?
@愛莎-l4w2 ай бұрын
Protect Biodiversity is important👍 Nature Positive Sustainability 🌎♥️🌼🦋🕊️
fencing will stop the beavers spreading but that will cause over crowding, what then.
@anniehill99093 ай бұрын
My hope and aspiration is that some of the kits will escape!! It's insane treating them as though they are a threat. They belong in Britain. So much fuss and bureaucracy over something that should be quite straightforward. I'm a great believer in soft release, but after that, open the fence and let them do their own thing. They will make their own - correct - decisions on where the best places are for building dams. Honestly, it's probably easier to import lions to a safari park than it is to release beaver BACK into the wild!!
@motherofnewts36963 ай бұрын
Young adult offspring often act as founders for other re-wilding projects.
@Kingsaxxy387218 күн бұрын
Fencing could just be to keep them from getting killed by local predators, once the population grows in the areas they’ll be set free. Happened in Scotland I believe, fence em in for a bit then let em out when population is big enough.