Western Daily Press

Prince urges nation to cherish trees

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THE Prince of Wales has called for the nation’s “dwindling” historic natural habitat to be renewed as he unveiled a collection of ancient woodlands and trees dedicated to the Queen to mark her Platinum Jubilee.

Charles said these “precious” assets, which support biodiversi­ty and provided materials for craft workers, needed to be preserved for future generation­s.

Among the 70 ancient woodlands and 70 trees dedicated to the Queen are some of the nation’s most natural features, from the Boscobel Oak in Shropshire, a descendant of the tree Charles II used to hide from parliament­ary forces in

1651, to Sussex’s Five Hundred Acre the inspiratio­n for 100 Acre Wood in the Children’s classic Winnie the Pooh.

Charles’s comments were made in a video message recorded under one of the 70 ancient trees, the old Sycamore at Dumfries House in Scotland, home to the heir to the throne’s Prince’s Foundation.

He said: “I believe it is absolutely vital that we do our utmost to nurture our historic inheritanc­e through careful management and, in the case of the woodlands, that we can expand them and link them to other natural features like our hedgerows.

“And if we are to create the ‘ancient’ trees of the future, we must plant more trees in hedgerows, fields, churchyard­s and avenues.

“Furthermor­e, I would suggest that some of those planted should be propagated from today’s ancient trees, thus helping to preserve their unique provenance and heritage.

“These working woodlands and magnificen­t trees span our nation’s amazing landscape and exist for everyone to enjoy.

“At the same time, they support biodiversi­ty, and help to provide us with the most versatile and beautiful of materials for our craftsmen and women.”

The prince went on to say: “But we need to replenish these precious, dwindling assets for future generation­s and for our depleted landscapes and townscapes.”

Charles is patron of the Queen’s Green Canopy, a tree-planting initiative which has been encouragin­g people to plant a tree for the Jubilee to create a legacy in honour of the Queen.

Among the trees dedicated to the monarch is the yew framing the North Door of St Edward’s Church, Stow-on-the-Wold in Gloucester­shire, which may have inspired JRR Tolkien’s descriptio­n of the Doors of Durin in the Lord Of The Rings trilogy, Fellowship Of The Ring. Another is Sir Isaac Newton’s apple tree in the orchard at Woolsthorp­e Manor near Grantham, Lincolnshi­re, which caused the mathematic­ian to question why apples always fell straight down to the ground.

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