Poging GOUD - Vrij

Hope emerges

BBC Countryfile Magazine

|

August 2025

The felling of the Sycamore Gap Tree appalled and saddened millions. Yet, as Fergus Collins discovers, hope can spring from the darkest ecological tragedies

Hope emerges

It’s dark. The footage is grainy but you can see the silhouette of a tree with a horizon line swooping behind it. At the tree’s foot is a shadow, which unfurls into a man-shape. A chainsaw snarls into life and roars for many seconds while the shadow bends low to the tree. Then a moment’s silence and, with a violent cracking, the great silhouette falls.

Just 22 seconds of video but it captures the moment in September 2023 when the Sycamore Gap Tree, beloved by millions worldwide, was destroyed by two men – one cutting, one filming. It was an act of calculated vandalism that has baffled and angered locals, visitors and lovers of the countryside everywhere.

imageThe tree, a sycamore framed in a natural dip along Hadrian’s Wall in Northumberland, has been the star of movie scenes – most notably in Kevin Costner’s Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves – the Woodland Trust’s Tree of the Year 2016, and the backdrop to hundreds of marriage proposals and millions of Instagram photos. Until two men with little apparent motive beyond “a grimly male mix of bragging-rights, trophy-hunting” as writer Robert Macfarlane puts it, took a chainsaw to it in a “pseudo-military operation”. The men, Daniel Graham and Adam Carruthers from Cumbria, have been convicted on two counts of criminal damage and sentenced to four years and three months in prison.

BBC Countryfile Magazine

Dit verhaal komt uit de August 2025-editie van BBC Countryfile Magazine.

Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.

Bent u al abonnee?

MEER VERHALEN VAN BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

Growing pains

The Government has found itself the focus of angry protests over a number of its key conservation, planning and farming decisions. Has it misread the room or is it making necessary choices? Fergus Collins looks at a year of life under Labour

time to read

1 mins

August 2025

BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

Regional accents are a source of pride, but they're in danger of fading away

Regional accents and dialects are long-held loves of mine - vocabulary, grammar, idiom and slang, rooted in a particular place.

time to read

2 mins

August 2025

BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

Shareholders are paid billions but sewage still flows into our waters

On the River Nidd, as it flows through the Yorkshire town of Knaresborough, there is a large natural pool between two weirs that has been a popular spot for wild bathers for many years. Because of pollution, however, the water is sometimes not even fit for dogs to swim in.

time to read

3 mins

August 2025

BBC Countryfile Magazine

Inheritance tax controversy

The farming inheritance tax changes have faced some of the biggest protests of all Labour's new measures. But is the backlash justified? We crunch the numbers

time to read

2 mins

August 2025

BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

TREES ARE EVOLVING TO FIGHT DEADLY ASH DIEBACK

Natural selection is enabling trees to resist a fungal disease that has decimated forests across Britain and Europe

time to read

1 mins

August 2025

BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

SITE OF THE FIRST PURPOSE-BUILT PRISONER-OF-WAR CAMP SAVED

A little-known historic site where thousands of prisoners were held during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars has now been acquired for the nation

time to read

1 mins

August 2025

BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

Infrastructure and green spaces

Since the 2024 election, Labour has made no secret of its desire to kickstart the UK's sluggish economy and solve the shortage of housing. But at what cost to nature and our green spaces?

time to read

3 mins

August 2025

BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

The gorse awakens

Forty years ago, Greenham Common was home to 96 nuclear warheads and era-defining protests. Now, butterflies have replaced the B-47s, as Dave Hamilton discovers on a walk with a Star Wars twist

time to read

7 mins

August 2025

BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

Hope emerges

The felling of the Sycamore Gap Tree appalled and saddened millions. Yet, as Fergus Collins discovers, hope can spring from the darkest ecological tragedies

time to read

6 mins

August 2025

BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

BROTHER ON AN EPIC JOURNEY

Using only local buses, John Green travelled the length of Britain in aid of one of England's oldest almshouses

time to read

2 mins

August 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size