There's Over 4000 Giant Oaks in this Forest - heres why

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Leave Curious

Leave Curious

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 576
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
Becoming a member here on KZbin is one of the best ways to support Leave Curious at the moment! I'm working on some fun content to share there more regularly, just for members! Cheers! kzbin.info/door/MrYUtfJiZHN3iJKqrd8UhQjoin
@edwardfletcher7790
@edwardfletcher7790 10 ай бұрын
You need a lapel Mic mate. Your Audio is really low and buzzy in places... The visuals are spectacular 👍
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
yeah something happened with the audio in this one@@edwardfletcher7790
@indigenous7046
@indigenous7046 8 ай бұрын
Acute Oak decline = old age.
@edwardfletcher7790
@edwardfletcher7790 8 ай бұрын
@@LeaveCurious Boya do excellent $10 4 conductor lapel mics that work with any old phone with a headphone jack 👍
@pigeon_the_brit565
@pigeon_the_brit565 10 ай бұрын
in your head you can create an old england, filled with nothing but bird song, and the wisps of wind curling their way through the trees. I'd love to get lost in a place like this
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
What a wonderful description. It felt like it there 🙂
@pigeon_the_brit565
@pigeon_the_brit565 10 ай бұрын
@@LeaveCurious where is it, by the way? i don't think you mention in the video
@samsmom1491
@samsmom1491 10 ай бұрын
I do. In my imagination I can see, hear and smell it all and I've never been to England.
@bobtodd5623
@bobtodd5623 10 ай бұрын
I know this forest or one exactly like it, shame he didn't visit it when the blue bells are out, they cover the forest floor like a carpet. I hate to spoil the 'old England' vibe but it's in Scotland ( or one exactly like it). There's one section that was planted around the time of Mary Queen of Scot's
@Truth-And-Freedom
@Truth-And-Freedom 10 ай бұрын
Huge ancient oaks and other trees everywhere! Would be so beautiful!
@jaalittle2814
@jaalittle2814 10 ай бұрын
Living in Australia, it is easy to forget how lucky we are to still have many ancient places. There are at least three 300 year old trees on my property alone. So many were lost to forestry and clearing for agriculture, but many still remain. They are beautiful but also so important for biodiversity and ensuring genetic diversity.
@presidentxijinpingspoxdoct9756
@presidentxijinpingspoxdoct9756 10 ай бұрын
don't forget about the Woolemi pine
@kathy6803
@kathy6803 9 ай бұрын
In eastern usa, it was all clear cut at one time or another. The woods are still beautiful, but so different without the big old trees
@rabidL3M0NS
@rabidL3M0NS 9 ай бұрын
Same thing here in New Zealand. It’s a bloody shame that large scale deforestation is still ongoing in Australia though, you Aussies gotta get your shit together before it’s all lost.
@Matt-es1wn
@Matt-es1wn 8 ай бұрын
Aussies should listen to this guy, don't cut it all down before you regret it!
@DerekDerekDerekDerekDerekDerek
@DerekDerekDerekDerekDerekDerek 8 ай бұрын
We are very lucky here in Britain too
@Debbie-henri
@Debbie-henri 10 ай бұрын
I live in SW Scotland, and very fortunate to live near some ancient Oaks - and the generous supply of edible mushrooms they produce. I've not seen this condition they're suffering from elsewhere in the country, but we have lost too many from storms and riverbank collapse during more frequent flooding.
@lorrainegatanianhits8331
@lorrainegatanianhits8331 10 ай бұрын
Old trees die. You should be happy as more resilient vegetation takes its place.
@damionkeeling3103
@damionkeeling3103 10 ай бұрын
Trees are meant to grow in communities of interlocked roots and branches which help shield them from winds and slips. Too many have been left as specimen trees thanks to the earlier fashion of clearing out forests leaving only the larger trees and allowing huge lawns to replace the original forest floor.
@ottol265
@ottol265 10 ай бұрын
I personally love oak trees. Unfortunately, we don't have many of them in Finland, although according to researchers, they increased throughout the country during the transatlantic warming period. During the Swedish rule, they were declared "king's trees" and during the Great Northern War, the Russian occupiers destroyed them greatly. That's why I've planted oaks on my mother's plot, which has been in my family's possession since 1870. Likewise, with my father-in-law's permission, I've planted them on his cottage plot. This autumn I collected acorns from the parks and went to plant them with my own permission in suitable places in the forests of my hometown. I myself will never see them even in middle aged, but the thought of even one small acorn or seedling becoming the giant seen in the video makes me happy.
@erichard9999
@erichard9999 3 ай бұрын
Very nice project ! But, I assure you that in 15 years, they’l have a pretty good shape.
@HeXane666
@HeXane666 10 ай бұрын
Something similar is in Slovakia and it’s called Gavurky. It’s really amazing place with huge energy of this relicts of time. I totally love this type of old forest.
@kvincent5626
@kvincent5626 10 ай бұрын
For those wondering...Staverton Thicks, Suffolk's best kept secret
@tommul6078
@tommul6078 10 ай бұрын
Wow, such beautiful old trees, just a shame we lost so many. Heres to a hope we plant more native trees.
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
Yeah we’ve lost a lot of course, but it’s lovely having spaces like these and many ancient trees in Britain.
@anemone104
@anemone104 10 ай бұрын
Yeah, we've lost a lot, but we've also kept more ancient trees than comparable European countries. We have also managed to keep areas of ancient non-treed habitats such as chalk grassland and heathland (both plagioclimaxes evolving from neolithic agricultural clearances) and peat bogs, ditto and important in carbon sequestration. Plant trees on these habitats and you lose them and, with peat bogs, you wind up releasing sequestered carbon. Plant trees, but be aware that it's not a panacea. And manage them after planting......
@chetisanhart3457
@chetisanhart3457 9 ай бұрын
Most of my family left England for the American colonies very early on. Some were literally on the Mayflower. In the early 80s I was stationed at RAF Chicksands. I always thought it was interesting that some of the trees I saw in the UK could have been seen by my forefathers. Amazing trees indeed.
@davesimpson85
@davesimpson85 10 ай бұрын
As someone who struggles to calm my brain and relax, I needed to find new ways of switching my head off. I don't always have the time to go out to the woods which has always helped me. So watching channels like yours really helps bring peace. Just want you to know that I really appreciate what you do not just for nature but those of us who don't have brains capable of switching off.
@jovice9867
@jovice9867 10 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for the vlog. The ancient oaks look staggering, so impressive. Really enjoy your work and I hope you go from strength to strength.
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
They immense and thank you, I appreciate this!
@emy923
@emy923 10 ай бұрын
Beautiful content on your channel! I am lucky to live in the Lake District and we have some amazing trees and the wildlife they support such as our beloved red squirrel. I find it mind blowing how forestry commission was ever allowed here or invasive species for that matter. I work in early years and I bring my love for nature into my classroom on a daily basis. The children love sowing and growing, making bird feeds and bug shelters, tree and plant identification. .. the learning is endless! Can't wait to show them clips of this video about giant , ancient and magnificent trees! " Now is the time. If we don't embrace nature in our children's hearts. We will lose it" Steve Irwin
@colinmaxwell4738
@colinmaxwell4738 10 ай бұрын
That's brilliant keep it up
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
Amazing! I hope they enjoy it and keep up the good work.
@damionkeeling3103
@damionkeeling3103 10 ай бұрын
Was it larch that was widely planted?
@M.Campbell
@M.Campbell 10 ай бұрын
The more people you show these habitats to, the more people will support the needed conservation. Thank you.
@THE_ECONNORGIST
@THE_ECONNORGIST 10 ай бұрын
Great stuff. The importance of deadwood cannot be understated, really important that people understand how important deadwood is for wildlife - whether it’s still standing or slowly breaking down in the woodland soil. I forget how lucky we are in Scotland with the right to roam, hellish that you couldn’t simply leap the fence and explore further!
@31Blaize
@31Blaize 10 ай бұрын
It's lousy below the border for that, and incredibly sad. Although... the population is also far higher, so if we had littering idiots going everywhere they wanted, it would probably cause damage on a massive scale so there may be something to it!
@Truth-And-Freedom
@Truth-And-Freedom 10 ай бұрын
Most English just walk where they like anyway. I've never let a fence stop me :)
@connorbutler5900
@connorbutler5900 10 ай бұрын
@@Truth-And-Freedom I know you think that’s cool and free and all but that’s not a good idea man. Most fences are there for a reason, whether you agree with it or not. Hopping fences can be dangerous.
@Truth-And-Freedom
@Truth-And-Freedom 10 ай бұрын
@@connorbutler5900 I care not for danger ......and the fun I've had jumping fences - well worth it. All 44 years of it so far worth ever second 👍
@HyrimBot
@HyrimBot 10 ай бұрын
staying in or outside the fence can also be dangerous. predators on both sides.
@davidhuth5659
@davidhuth5659 10 ай бұрын
Those trees are stunning! I have been researching old-growth forests in the eastern US. We only have 1% of our original forests left east of the Mississippi River. It's sad and it needs to be discussed more often. We are losing biodiversity when we eliminate these ancient forests. Thanks for sharing this story!
@on-the-pitch-p3w
@on-the-pitch-p3w 9 ай бұрын
Why did your place have lost so many trees?
@thetallweatherman2246
@thetallweatherman2246 10 ай бұрын
Yet another great video! 😀 I always feel oddly amazing when I’m around ancient trees like that.
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
You really do feel great. There’s something about them.
@SevCaswell
@SevCaswell 10 ай бұрын
@@LeaveCurious I believe that all living things have souls, including plants, and a tree that old, while still not a conscious being, would have a deep and complex soul.
@31Blaize
@31Blaize 10 ай бұрын
Were there many younger trees there - as in: is the forest regenerating or is it all ancient growth? Was difficult to spot saplings and it would be a terrible shame if that forest was essentially just a retirement home even though it's an amazing habitat.
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
Could see some young saplings walking around. More in the woodland. Not sure about the fenced area!
@31Blaize
@31Blaize 10 ай бұрын
@@LeaveCuriousThat's good to hear 😃 May those forests continue for another thousand years!
@Coherers
@Coherers 10 ай бұрын
@@31Blaize I was wondering exactly the same thing about regeneration as it looked more like an old folks home, but then I saw what looks like a youngster at 4:41 on the left near its mum.
@jameslawson5237
@jameslawson5237 10 ай бұрын
The fenced areas are too keep the cows in not to keeps people out btw. Some areas have conservation grazing with english longhorns at some times of year.@@LeaveCurious
@anemone104
@anemone104 10 ай бұрын
That's a key question. Typically oaks will not successfully regenerate under a canopy of oaks - they need a gap. Gaps can arise if a pollard collapses. Providing for replacement trees in a system which runs on a 'cycle' of many hundreds of years is fraught with difficulties when 'a week is a long time in politics', budgets are cast yearly (often in arrears) and if a management plan for a site is cast and funded for 5 years, that's unusually long.
@RobertSmith-km6gi
@RobertSmith-km6gi 10 ай бұрын
In southern Maine years ago I came across an ancient oak, almost completely hollowed out like the one at the start of this vid. It was easily 8’ in diameter. There was one section of live bark maybe 10” wide running up the side and terminating in a single live branch.
@anemone104
@anemone104 10 ай бұрын
There is a stob-cut (like a short pollard) oak in a scrubbed-up road verge (actually a strip of common land) in a place called Malden Rushett in Greater London. This tree has regenerated from a strip like this and has almost re-formed a circular trunk. The wreckage of it's former body lies all around. Thousands drive past it every day and never see it (and others like it).
@Davidpa79
@Davidpa79 10 ай бұрын
I love Oaks! Usually I gather acorns grow them and give away oak saplings. I've not had much luck finding acorns in my area this year so far.
@anemone104
@anemone104 10 ай бұрын
Nice. Thought I knew this site when the video first started, but quickly realised I didn't. Pretty clear it's ancient pasture woodland though. Glad you mentioned the oaks are pollards. Might be nice to mention that pollarding was done because of the overwhelming need for usable timber coupled with an overwhelming pressure for grazing. Coppice is easier for production of anything but saw logs (not forgetting standard trees in coppice), but you have to exclude stock. If you pollard, you can have your coppice 'on a stick' - sprouting above the height that cattle can reach (or deer). But pollards used to be known as 'widowmakers'. Think of getting up in the crown with a hand saw and maybe a single rope, even if the stems you are cutting are much smaller than the long-derelict ones you see in your excellent video. No harnesses, no mupe. Now try it with an axe. Overwhelming pressure.... Pollards can be of several species. Oak are most common, but poplar, crack willow, hornbeam, beech and ash can all be found. All those timbers had their place. They are a product of the high population density of the British Isles and England especially. Overwhelming pressure. Why have they survived? Various reasons. Difficulty in harvesting (widow makers). Easier/safer now, but very expensive and re-cutting oaks like those is probably going to be sectional fells leaving no usable timber. No high quality timber in the bollings (main trunks). They are hollow, rotten and gnarly. Tied into former 'prestige' landscapes so didn't get 'the chop' in WW1 or WW2. Not all pollards are tied to former hunting forests, not by any means. Some are in old farm hedges, so present scattered in small numbers. Where those hedges were also boundaries (like a Parish boundary) they were more likely to have been kept as a boundary marker. This vid is an ash (3 actually) in Somerset. Boot it off if you think my commenting a link is a liberty. kzbin.info/www/bejne/fIC7g5yvdq5_h68 Some are found in farmed fields or horse paddocks where they are crib-bitten. There's a vid on the channel showing both and what it means for their continued existence. Some are on grazed commons (several sites around London). Then there are stob-cuts in ancient hedges and assarts in woodland. Many of these hold similar value to pollards, they approach pollards of the same species in terms of age (if not in size) and many have no protection whatsoever or are even mapped. There is a very big question that arises: We have a huge wealth of biodiversity associated with ancient trees, with pollards featuring very strongly. Pollarding can induce ancient tree characteristics (the knots and rots and hollows) in a tree much quicker and in more variety and with more long-term structural stability and niche continuity than they arise in maiden trees. These characteristics are the niches that many rare species require and which are almost completely absent in (say) recent plantations or secondary woodland. But many of our pollards have not bee re-cut for many generations. So here is the question: How do we provide for continuity of these niches (and those species) when pollards are neither being managed nor replaced?
@lobster5782
@lobster5782 10 ай бұрын
Those trees need management if they are to survive for much longer: comparing to southern Iberia, with old Holm and Cork Oaks, they have been breaking large branches/forks regularly, specially after droughts and windstorms. These result in open trunks or a completely broken trunk below the 'Pollard' level.
@anemone104
@anemone104 10 ай бұрын
@@lobster5782 True. Resources? Even crown relief (reducing shading by felling younger, taller, older surrounding trees that are killing old pollards) is expensive.
@Coherers
@Coherers 10 ай бұрын
Another factor is surely the following: These trees would have been mature specimens when the sail fleet of the British Navy was at its peak Had they not been pollarded, they could have produced large enough timbers to be used for ships of the line and so would have been much less likely to survive
@anemone104
@anemone104 10 ай бұрын
@@Coherers True. But they (of course) wouldn't have been first pollarded as mature trees. Would have been first cut at 'waiver' size 'cos lopping the top out of an already-mature tree would have been dangerous and likely too much of a shock to the maiden tree.
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
Thats a very good question. Is pollarding a practice which no longer persists, at scale, anywhere in the UK?
@RussTillling
@RussTillling 10 ай бұрын
Lots of Oaks were planted to grow wood for the British Navy over the centuries as well. Wasn't sure about the tash but it grew on me lol. Looks great but isn't it a bit monocultural? Interested whether it's got diversity of wildlife anywhere approaching Knepp? Although I guess it needs a complicated eco survey to establish that, but any rough idea? Thanks again for super views with your great commentary. 🤩😀
@helenswan705
@helenswan705 2 ай бұрын
Ha ha it sounds like you are describing the tash as monocultural! Well, who knows what he keeps in there!
@abarnybox
@abarnybox 10 ай бұрын
Honourable mention for the ferns! I love a ferny forest. With all those massive oaks that just looked 😍
@mox1578
@mox1578 10 ай бұрын
Please make a video on your beginnings! Will definitely inspire many passionate conservationists for the future! Your work is truly astounding thank you so much for providing us with such awe inspiring videos! Been a proud member of mossy earth for jus abiut over a year now, I encourage anyone with a spare fiver a month to sign up and join the cause. 😊
@moogdome2562
@moogdome2562 10 ай бұрын
I love trees, they are individual natural sculptures, I used to live, close to Sherwood Forest, and Clumber park Nottinghamshire. and the major oak, featured in the Robin Hood legend. Acorn coffee isn't bad. I loved Elm trees too.
@riceexperiment
@riceexperiment 10 ай бұрын
I'd love to hear more about your work with old trees!
@blacksmithe1
@blacksmithe1 4 ай бұрын
I wish our govt, in the US, actually wanted to protect large swaths of the 1% of the prairies, and at least 15-20% of the forests and such places still we have left. Not just for environmental reasons but for legacy of nature.
@katyaflippinov9197
@katyaflippinov9197 10 ай бұрын
I was taught that squirrels are responsible for 90% of the trees in the forest land of America. We have a lot of new growth trees, not enough, but more, I think, than we would have without squirrels cashing nuts. Do you have squirrels? I don't see much in the way of young trees there and I wonder why this is?
@krose6451
@krose6451 10 ай бұрын
I was told that in school as well. It was 2nd grade if I remeber right. They actually took us to a clump of trees by the school and pretended to be squirrels for the lesson. We burried marked stones then came back later to collect what we could remember or find of other classmate's stones (robberies were allowed and encouraged). Amounts were then totalled, and it was told to us that every stone missed, as it repressented an acorn, would become a tree and "this is why squirrels are good and important."
@veramae4098
@veramae4098 10 ай бұрын
Book "Man who planted trees" an American man died (legally) then was revived. He's firm in stating God sent him back to plant trees. So that's what he's doing.
@HughRawes
@HughRawes 10 ай бұрын
I've just recently discovered your channel and I'm loving it to bits! Is it possible you could consider doing a video about invasive species? My local area has quite a severe problem with Himalayan Balsam choking out native species and I'm sure similar situations are happening elsewhere in the UK. Many thanks for all the amazing stuff you do!
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
Thank you! This is a good idea and yes I will try and include this as its a real problem for many of our habitats.
@stevejohnstonbaugh9171
@stevejohnstonbaugh9171 10 ай бұрын
ACUTE OAK DECLINE I will look forward to your piece about acute oak decline. The syndrome exists across continental Europe and the US, east of the Mississippi with the biggest impact in the mid atlantic region. 👍
@lyall52
@lyall52 10 ай бұрын
Here in New Zealand we have kauri die back. Access is now limited as it was our feet spreading bacteria the problem
@elliotlane3225
@elliotlane3225 10 ай бұрын
Another great video. Mossy Earth is great for its breadth and depth of projects in many varied areas, but as someone in the UK its great to see content highlighting the wonders on our doorstep
@simonbarrow479
@simonbarrow479 10 ай бұрын
I live in SW France not far from the Pyrenees and there is lots of woodland. But there are very old trees so that whole section of plants, animals and fungi that live on old trees is missing. On the face of it with so much woodland it seems great, but it’s not as healthy as it could be. Thanks for sharing this video.
@helenswan705
@helenswan705 2 ай бұрын
Excuse me, do you mean there are NO very old trees? i wonder how that happened.
@simonbarrow479
@simonbarrow479 2 ай бұрын
@@helenswan705 there are very few old trees. A friend has a picture of a nearby hill (nearly 800m so not small) completely stripped in the early 1900s. The woodland has been growing since then but that makes the oldest trees only 100 years. The people responsible seem to carry out rotational clear cutting. So no trees older than about 100 years. That’s my observations.
@DuncanPepper
@DuncanPepper 10 ай бұрын
I couldn't see any wee ones coming up to replace the veterans. Are there any?
@jasond7229
@jasond7229 10 ай бұрын
Because it was protected, and wasn't logged off for profit
@allaboutperspective650
@allaboutperspective650 10 ай бұрын
I'm not from the UK however, even I know that fences are there to be scaled!
@MiddleEast-o4f
@MiddleEast-o4f 8 ай бұрын
Oak tree is the King of the trees !
@reverseuniverse2559
@reverseuniverse2559 10 ай бұрын
It’s comforting to hear the medieval had the feeling we do today with forbidden of cutting certain trees. Some amazing old trees here in QLD Oz at an ancient dormant volcano “Mount Warning” when you walk through this ancient nature wonderland you see huge insects, cicadas lizards with ancient preserved massive logs laying down with colourful layers of fungi
@toddwaring1897
@toddwaring1897 10 ай бұрын
Hey, so with what you asked (if we’d like to know how you began the channel), I think it be an interesting video. I’ve just started collage (applied science, but I’m finding that difficult)I know I’d like to work with the environment, I see the work you do and I think, “wow you’re lucky, wish I could do that”, it be amazing to help the environment, most of all the wildlife. Love your channel 🍁
@user-tm8jt2py3d
@user-tm8jt2py3d 10 ай бұрын
It's easy to see how old religions sound so much value in these kinds of trees
@teen-at-heart
@teen-at-heart 10 ай бұрын
I’d love a video about your background. 😊
@Maritafeb15
@Maritafeb15 10 ай бұрын
Love your videos, thanks so much. I’d love to know more about these trees
@gammock4026
@gammock4026 10 ай бұрын
This is an inspirational video! I do notice that you seem to avoid saying where it is and for someone like me who would absolutely delight in photographing these trees it is very frustrating. Nearly ten years ago now I visited Bradgate Park in Leicestershire having been similarly inspired by photos taken by a local guy and shared on the internet. This was a wonderful place for oaks. I live in South Manchester and, although my native Cheshire is known for its oaks, there are no ancient woodlands to the best of my knowledge, that stand compare with wherever you were. I only learnt of the existence of Staverton Park in Suffolk by reading your viewers comments. If I've got to do a long drive to reach such a woodland I need to know where to go.
@ComancheWarrior63
@ComancheWarrior63 10 ай бұрын
He doesn't give away the location of endangered species in order to protect them. Some idiot would absolutely try to destroy the area for their version of fun.
@westaussie965
@westaussie965 8 ай бұрын
Exactly! I think some people get off knowing where it is and you don’t, completely pointless video.
@westaussie965
@westaussie965 8 ай бұрын
@@ComancheWarrior63rubbish. I live near Sherwood Forest, probably the most famous forest or in the top 3 in the world, it’s never “overrun”
@ComancheWarrior63
@ComancheWarrior63 8 ай бұрын
@@westaussie965 College and High School students in the USA have deliberately poisoned historically important trees as a "prank". It happens.
@Gamling80
@Gamling80 10 ай бұрын
Wonderful looks like the oak forest around the shores and on the Islands of lake Mälaren that begins at Stockholm and goes inland. There are many very old ones. The oaks of Sweden was also protected by the king, and oak forest used to cover much of Southern Sweden historically. During the bronze age when it was warmer the oak forests stretched much more far north beyond todays limits around the River Dalaälven. Further north the spring comes to late for them to bloom properly but there are planted oaks.
@jeraldbaxter3532
@jeraldbaxter3532 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video! I have a particular fondness for oaks, magnolias and redwoods, among others.
@TheBonsaiZone
@TheBonsaiZone 10 ай бұрын
Awesome trees!!!
@thestevenjaywaymusic7775
@thestevenjaywaymusic7775 10 ай бұрын
You keep going. Tell people about these habitats. I support your work absolutely.
@steveparkes-po8qs
@steveparkes-po8qs 10 ай бұрын
Amazing...where is that? Is it Staverton Park in Suffolk?
@Westwoodii
@Westwoodii 10 ай бұрын
My thoughts exactly. Staverton is probably unique in having so many giant oaks together, as in the video. A magical place indeed!
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
You're right, I'm typically torn about sharing the names of places I feature.
@westaussie965
@westaussie965 8 ай бұрын
@@LeaveCuriouswhy? I watch videos like yours to get inspiration of where to go. No point watching
@markosullivan6444
@markosullivan6444 10 ай бұрын
What an amazing place! Brilliant presenting as usual, Rob.
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
It was very special, thanks ☺️
@paulvandenberg5341
@paulvandenberg5341 9 ай бұрын
Twisted, hollows, gnarled. They survive because they aren’t useful for building ships. Rejects. Stumps that survived, but stock for regeneration.
@semperfidelis2970
@semperfidelis2970 10 ай бұрын
In the forest I never feel alone, I always feel a presence. I feel heard and I feel seen
@jackluedtke6432
@jackluedtke6432 10 ай бұрын
estee-efyou traany
@peasinourthyme5722
@peasinourthyme5722 8 ай бұрын
And you are :)
@eckosters
@eckosters 10 ай бұрын
I’m in Canada so I won’t become a member but I want to just say how much I like your videos and respect your work. Keep it up!
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
Becoming a member just supports the channel and enables me to keep making videos… hopefully one day in Canada! But either way, I’m hugely grateful for the encouragement, thank you!
@philmcdonald6088
@philmcdonald6088 10 ай бұрын
book recommend: THE HIDDEN LIFE OF TREES by peter wohlleben.
@frenchboi446
@frenchboi446 10 ай бұрын
I love the vids keep it up
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
Ah thank you! I’m working on it!
@joycestempa5647
@joycestempa5647 9 ай бұрын
Enjoyed this video - thanks. I also found Judi Dench’s 2017 video “My Passion for Trees” quite fascinating too. I have always loved trees (all types, all sizes), especially as a child. I often talk to them and run my hand across the trunks of large ones to see if I can pick up any thoughts or bits of sentiments….. it’s rarely a two way street but on the odd occasion it is, it’s magical!!
@myliminalelement7835
@myliminalelement7835 5 ай бұрын
Thank you for making me soooo & €&) & & % jealous - love this. We Dutch seriously lack ancient trees or, as happened about 15 years ago in the village we were then living in, they cut down yews that were planted when the school was built around the 1550's, just to clear out maybe two parking spaces. The wife and me were in mourning for a couple of weeks
@robertbooth3699
@robertbooth3699 10 ай бұрын
Is the Holley a problem? Here in the American Pacific Northwest it has invaded stands of Douglas Fir, Western Hemlock and Western Red Cedar.
@christianefleurant7089
@christianefleurant7089 9 ай бұрын
Well, it's very impressive to see those very old oak trees. Unfortunately we don't have those because the British conquest of Canada + the appropriation of the territory after 1763 alowed the english to cut down all of our oak trees to build a naval fleet, beautiful solid furniture and incredible woodwork to beautify the homes of aristocrats. That's what colonization allows. From Québec, Canada.
@Lanclasscan
@Lanclasscan 9 ай бұрын
Stunning beauty. We must protect what is left world over. All the White Pines in Ontario Canada were decimated for the World Wars. Love your video. Carry on ! Brit in Canada, 🌲🌳🎄
@voyager6731
@voyager6731 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video. Where's the beautiful cello soundtrack from?
@philfluther2713
@philfluther2713 10 ай бұрын
1:40 'I shall be like that tree, I shall die at the top' Jonathan Swift.
@glenmorrison8080
@glenmorrison8080 6 ай бұрын
6:19 Here in California we have a very similarly named oak disease - sudden oak death. Caused by a *Phytophtora* species, a fungus like organism, whose name means "plant destroyer". Same genus that caused the Irish potato famine, actually.
@falfield
@falfield 10 ай бұрын
There's AN oak tree over there (singular - one tree). In this sentence, "There's" is a contraction of "there is" and the apostrophe lies where the missing letter would otherwise be. There ARE over 4000 giant Oaks in this forest - here's why (plural - many trees). "Here's" is a contraction of "here is". This punctuation rule is not tricky to learn.
@Hobbit_libertaire
@Hobbit_libertaire 10 ай бұрын
Do not, ever, take me there. I would not be able to leave this place, and I would fight anyone trying to take me away from it
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
Haha yes, it does have a very magical feel!
@mlr4524
@mlr4524 9 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for taking us to this magical forest! I hadn't considered William the Conqueror as an environmentalist lol, but that's quite the silver lining to a thousand year old invasion lol. Sadly the English came to America and continued the practice of land clearing and deforestation. I know of only a handful of old growth forests here in Massachusetts, and a few sacred ancient tree survivors.
@susanfarley1332
@susanfarley1332 10 ай бұрын
In Mexico City in the Chapultepec Park there is an avenue of humongous old oaks that were planted by the last Aztec ruler before the Spaniards conquered them. They are still alive and the roots are massive. Beautiful trees. In the town of Tule which is somewhere south of Mexico City (i think). There is a very old and very big tree. It is not an oak. I dont know what it is. While not really tall (like a Sequoia) it is really big around the trunk. Tremendous. And near it is a beautiful fountain decorated with a mosaic of broken porcelain plates. The plates were used as ballast in the ships coming from the orient. The plates were cheap over in asia and saleable in any port in America or Europe. But there was some breakage. And the pieces tiled every surface on the fountain. It was fascinating to see all the designs.
@gabrieleangelo4488
@gabrieleangelo4488 10 ай бұрын
Hi, I'm an highschool student and I'm near the end of it, but I'm not sure what to study and which university to choose, I'm very passionate to these topics but I don't know which university could get me there to do what you are doing. Can you pls help me by telling me what have you studied or which uni (if you've done it) has brought you to do this job? And if you want some information about this topics and some suggestion if you have them? because I love the idea to do this job. (I'm from Italy btw, but every information can help)
@Jessica-ul6me
@Jessica-ul6me 9 ай бұрын
There's something special and magical about ancient trees. We have some left in the US but not as much as we should. I'm growing a sapling from the elder tree (100 year old or more white oak) of my last home. Had to sell but I'll be planting the sapling when it gets bigger at our new home.
@steffenfrost995
@steffenfrost995 10 ай бұрын
What part of the country is this?
@forestknowledge
@forestknowledge 10 ай бұрын
In Oregon (USA) I live near a ton of white oak stands, not as big and ancient as yours, but I also love walking through those beautiful trees!
@davidkeitel5967
@davidkeitel5967 10 ай бұрын
Where in oregon.?
@MrSmegfish
@MrSmegfish 10 ай бұрын
Hearts of Oak are our ships....
@BeaulyHolidayPark
@BeaulyHolidayPark 8 ай бұрын
Lovely, we are lucky enough to have some amazing oaks which are about 300 years old on our site :)
@petercrossley1069
@petercrossley1069 10 ай бұрын
Your grammar is bad. There are 4,000 ancient oaks. Not “is”.
@ger5956
@ger5956 10 ай бұрын
6:03 make a video on it, please! 😅
@JackSardonic
@JackSardonic 10 ай бұрын
New favourite channel
@09conrado
@09conrado 10 ай бұрын
If you'd map out all the tree diseases and the time when they suddenly increased, I think you'l see a massive, massive increase in many tree diseases and even the rise of new tree diseases over the last 20 or 30 years. Some will blame 4G and 5G, some will mention the fallout from chemtrails, others blame modern agriculture or chemicals in the environment by other human factors. The diseases are all different but I suspect there is a common underlying stressfactor at play here. Perhaps this same factor or combination of factors are also what causes the fall in insect life. Would love to hear your thoughts and findings on this. Greetings from the Netherlands, love your work
@paulbragg7618
@paulbragg7618 10 ай бұрын
"More ancient oaks in England than the rest of europe"🙄 Not even nearly. I'm sorry mate, you are barking up the wrong tree
@thatundeadlegacy2985
@thatundeadlegacy2985 4 ай бұрын
Im watching everyone of your vids, your growing so fast thanks to this mossy earth partnership
@mariusHGV2
@mariusHGV2 6 ай бұрын
Never seen so much exited and passionate person talking about trees😂 good job, you love what you do🤝
@jonnyjaywick
@jonnyjaywick 10 ай бұрын
I think I know this place.
@racheltaylor6578
@racheltaylor6578 10 ай бұрын
I grow tree saplings in the garden and then take them out and plant them in the wild.
@RCSVirginia
@RCSVirginia 10 ай бұрын
To @racheltaylor6578 Kudos! You are doing something positive and constructive. I used to do something similar in an area of pasture and fields that was being allowed to go back to nature. I would gather walnuts from the surrounding areas, and as I would hike, I would toss them into those fields. It was quite pleasing to hike through the years and see young walnut trees' growing up through the grasses with the knowledge that they had sprung from ones that I had thrown out.
@AhJodie
@AhJodie 10 ай бұрын
I love Oaks, they have been my friends since childhood.
@Gilly9244
@Gilly9244 10 ай бұрын
Wow beautiful, where about is this. Would love to take a walk round
@sarcasmo57
@sarcasmo57 10 ай бұрын
Yep, rad looking trees.
@biffa1234100
@biffa1234100 10 ай бұрын
new subscriber so glad i found your channel, im a real treehugger myself . oh and love your movember- stache
@Peter-m2u
@Peter-m2u 10 ай бұрын
I just love tree's, Beautiful things
@jamierobinson3349
@jamierobinson3349 9 ай бұрын
I grew up in Sonoma county California which is home to the largest remaining Oak forests on earth. Some of them are a thousand years old and are protected by law. My home county was also one of Ansel Adams favorite places to photograph because of the ancient Oak forests. I live in Astoria Oregon now about 800 miles north in the land of ancient Douglas Fir forests, but I always miss my old Oak trees of my home state and county. 🌳
@tonisee2
@tonisee2 10 ай бұрын
Impressive old oaks! But: movember? :-)
@insAneTunA
@insAneTunA 10 ай бұрын
Those trees are beautiful. And indeed here in the Netherlands we do not have many ancient trees, if any at all. I would love to hear more about your background. You are a natural born teacher. I love to listen to you and to learn from you. Your passion for the preservation and restoration from nature is contagious for all the right reasons. 👍
@anthonymason385
@anthonymason385 10 ай бұрын
You guys are to efficient. Old trees look "untidy."
@insAneTunA
@insAneTunA 10 ай бұрын
@@damionkeeling3103 Well, I think that here in the Netherlands it is a bit more complicated than that. Large parts of the Netherlands used to be a swamp, or to be more exact a river delta that would be influenced by the tidal wave action from the sea before humans made dikes and all sorts of barriers to keep the sea out. But It had many swampy areas and river tributaries. So I am not sure if those conditions were the best conditions for oak trees to grow old to begin with, or to grow at all for that matter. I do know that every centimeter from our land has been touched and modified by humans. And that over centuries of time the rivers have been tamed with dikes and other barriers and that all the swampy areas have been pumped dry and most of it became agricultural land or cities or an industrial zone. So we do not have any ancient forests to begin with, the forests that we have, have been planted by humans at some point in time. And I suppose that the trees were used for commercial purposes such as building ships. I can also imagine that they bought wood from other countries, such as Germany and the Scandinavian countries. But I am not sure if that were indeed the case. We are also one of the most dense populated countries in the world. Both with humans and cattle and pigs and goats. 60% of the land is agricultural land, 18% of the surface area is water, and what is left over must be shared by all the people and the companies and the wildlife animal species that are not extinct yet. On top of that we had the war with big bombardments and battles, and during that time we also had the hunger winter where people were starving to death, most dominantly the smaller farmers but also people in the cities who had no money, and they had to warm themselves with wood or coal or oil stoves, depending on what was the most accessible and cheapest fuel for their situation. Many trees did not survive that time. And preservation of nature and natural ecosystems did not exist either at that time. So it is easy to see why ancient forests do not exist in the Netherlands and why ancient trees are rare or of none existence in the Netherlands. I live near a forest where the planting of trees was started many hundreds of years ago, and that lasted over centuries of time in an attempt by multiple generations of people to prevent the desertification from their local area of land that was caused by over grazing from the land. It swallowed and buried a small village and and a local homestead with big sand dunes. And over centuries of time people were desperate to stop the desertification by planting trees. And it worked. However, the still moving sand dunes that it created are still there. It even has its own very own local desert type of micro climate. With relative cold night during hot summer nights. But those trees have also been selectively used for commercial purposes. Most of the trees in that small forest that are alive today are not that old. And most trees are pine trees. But I am not a historical expert by any means. The things that I mentioned are just some general things that I have picked up and learned over time out of personal interest. And I could be very wrong with my conclusions.
@RCSVirginia
@RCSVirginia 10 ай бұрын
To @insAneTunA Though no-one could claim that it is natural, the Netherlands has one of the most beautiful landscapes anywhere. People are ofttimes surprised when I tell them that after Switzerland, I think that the Netherlands is one of the loveliest countries in Europe in terms of the countryside.
@insAneTunA
@insAneTunA 10 ай бұрын
@@RCSVirginia I could not disagree more with you. It is green and very well organized, and not a single inch of land has been untouched, but the Netherlands was a disaster for the wildlife that used to live here before we started applying all the destructive farming practices and changing the landscape and destroying the habitat for wildlife. It is flat and boring, and once you have seen one polder, you have seen them all. (A polder is how we call all the combined pasture land that is surrounding the villages and cities and each region has their own polders, and in total the polders make up about 60% of the total land surface from the Netherlands) We do not have a single mountain or valley, and compared to Switzerland the Netherlands is as flat as a pancake. We don't have bedrock either. Only a small portion of the land has some sandstone. So how you can make the comparison between Switzerland and the Netherlands is a complete mystery to me. At the end of the day beauty is in the eye of the beholder. One can consider the Dutch landscape as beautiful, but once you know more about it, and when you understand how biodivers the plants and animals used to be, and how much we humans have destroyed over the most recent past centuries, it becomes increasingly difficult to call it beautiful. I do not blame or shame you, because if I did not know any better, I probably would call it nice too. But now that I have learned more about it I see a lot of pure destruction for greed when I look at our countryside.
@nancysmith-baker1813
@nancysmith-baker1813 10 ай бұрын
This is wonderful , had know idea about this or yhe history .thought all the old was gone . Would love to know sbout you . Thankhou for yhe vidio.
@karim1387
@karim1387 10 ай бұрын
4:09 that's literally an Ent
@jacktheomnithere2127
@jacktheomnithere2127 10 ай бұрын
so remember what i said in the temperate rainforest video? and of what an Enchanted Forest is? combine both of the temperate rainforests from the previous video, then combine them with this woodland you visited, and you get - in my eyes - the PERFECT forest. picture this: a large - and i do mean large - forest (part temperate rainforest, part woodland with trees like in this video; let's say spanning *100.000 square kilometres),* usually overcast, some fog and the odd gloomy weather with the accompanying rain... *now THAT'S a forest!* and i say again: monsters like Fairies - including Elves, Dwarves, Trolls, Goblins, Talking Animals and Trees, Kelpies, Unicorns and Dragons (Celtic ones, too)... all of them would be right at home there.
@Miamcoline
@Miamcoline 10 ай бұрын
Amazing. And a really interesting and helpful video! Thank you. And cool background, let us know more!
@oquemaur
@oquemaur 7 ай бұрын
I’d definitely love to hear your back story as my son is considering a career in this field.
@deborahlea5669
@deborahlea5669 10 ай бұрын
Hi I was born in the Ancient Forest of Dean, Glos. Love the Ents!
@carterhicks7441
@carterhicks7441 10 ай бұрын
Theres something so magical about the cinemaphotography in this video, the big trees towering over you in every direction kinda makes you feel like a kid again.
@jdjones4825
@jdjones4825 10 ай бұрын
No acces is a little bit sad
@levon3194
@levon3194 20 күн бұрын
This forest is really Brilliant. I adore this forest 🌳!
@jwornell2114
@jwornell2114 10 ай бұрын
Great video as always! Would find your journey very interesting personally :)
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
Thank you! Ok cool, I’ll consider making it!
@bessiemann7468
@bessiemann7468 10 ай бұрын
I live in SW Virginia an in my back yard there's two giant Oak trees They are the last to shed their leaves. I love the trees
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