Essayer OR - Gratuit
OUR HEDGE FUND NEEDS TOPPING UP
Sunday Express
|June 01, 2025
Conservationist and hedgelayer Richard Negus reveals why our ancient hedgerows, created as boundaries and for the protection of crops, have become havens for wildlife - and why Labour's shortsighted cuts to farming grants have put them at dire risk
-
EDGEROWS are a construct of man. You cannot rewild a hedge because they were never wild. Archaeology reveals that by 2500BC, Britain’s earliest farmers were planting rows of shrubby thorn plants, then cutting and laying them to form livestock retaining enclosures.
The traces of these early hedges can still be seen today.
After harvest, when the summer sun bakes the stubbles dusty yellow, the land can reveal ancient secrets to a drone’s questing camera. Dark lines, the memories of hedgerows long gone, spread out like the veins on the back of an old man’s hand.
The more we Britons mastered agriculture, the more hedges proliferated.
They kept livestock in place and gifted tender crops some protection from the elements. Hedges acted as a visible boundary moreover, between parishes, estates, farms, fields and cottages.
When they grew too large and shaded out growing crops, they were coppiced to the ground and allowed to regrow.
If gaps appeared, enabling cattle or sheep to escape, they were filled by laid lengths.
Trees grew within the hedgerows, becoming mighty black poplars, cracked elms or curlicued oaks.
Many of the lonely trees we still see standing incongruously in fields of crops, remind us that a hedge once ran there.
The farmers of yesteryear were never driven by the notion that hedgerow planting and management provided habitat for wildlife. The hedge for them was an agricultural tool, no different to a plough or hoe.
The idea our forebears were somehow at
'By 2500BC rows of shrubs were planted'
one with nature seems a little romantic.
More mundanely, farmers twigged that the hedge was simply yet another example of a natural phenomena that they could harness and then master for their own ends.
Hedgerows are filled with hawthorn, blackthorn, field maple, hazel, dogwood and spindle. All happily grow together in jumbled profusion, jostling for dominance.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition June 01, 2025 de Sunday Express.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Sunday Express
Sunday Express
EL OF A TALENT BUT HE'S NO GAZZA!
JOHN CARVER has warned against comparing Elliot Anderson with a young Paul Gascoigne.
1 min
October 12, 2025
Sunday Express
Meghan posts rare footage of daughter Princess Lilibet
THE Duchess of Sussex has shared a heartfelt message about her daughter alongside a video of her- providing a rare glimpse of the King's grand-daughter.
1 min
October 12, 2025

Sunday Express
Top Of The Pops said we had to mime ...we couldn't stop laughing
IT WAS THE first, and so far the only British chart hit sung in Latin. Steeleye Span's ethereal rendition of Gaudete, a half-forgotten 16th century Christmas carol, soared into the charts in December, 1973, surprising everyone - including the band.
5 mins
October 12, 2025

Sunday Express
'Cosying up to the EU is just an act of despair...
John Longworth was enjoying a comfortable life at the heart of the UK establishment, a successful entrepreneur happily leading the British Chambers of Commerce. Yet he decided to blow it all up to help Britain escape the European Union...
5 mins
October 12, 2025
Sunday Express
TON-DERFUL STUFF AS NAT PUTS ON RECORD RUN TO STUN CUP RIVALS
NAT SCIVER-BRUNT'S record one-day international century propelled England to an 89-run victory over Sri Lanka in Colombo.
1 mins
October 12, 2025

Sunday Express
Ronnie's job Satisfaction
Stones guitarist Wood on how he joined the band and why he’s so determined they keep on rolling
2 mins
October 12, 2025
Sunday Express
Gilmour moves from 'Cuppy' to real thing
HIS trademark touch and control of a football was first mastered playing 'World Cuppy' on a public park in Ayrshire.
1 mins
October 12, 2025
Sunday Express
'Life-saving' needle-free vaccinations
SCIENTISTS are developing a needle-free way for patients to vaccinate themselves against diseases by using dental floss coated with medicine.
1 mins
October 12, 2025
Sunday Express
Uni leaders 'must end antisemitism or lose funding'
UNIVERSITIES have been told to crack down on campus antisemitism or risk losing government funding.
1 min
October 12, 2025
Sunday Express
Bon Jovi hails Def Leppard 'brothers'
STARS: Def Leppard at the Hollywood Walk Of Fame. Below, Jon Bon Jovi
1 min
October 12, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size