The Guardian (USA)

‘Horrified’: Devon village in shock at felling of 100 ancient beech trees

- Rachel Hall

Not much happens in the sleepy village of Colaton Raleigh, where almost half of the residents are retired. So local walkers were horrified when they woke up one morning to an act of “environmen­tal vandalism” that left behind the maimed stumps of 100 ancient beech trees.

Residents in the east Devon community are grieving the loss of the beloved trees, which were located in a special conservati­on area and site of special scientific interest, home to lots of local plants and animals, after they were felled by a government agency without consulting the community or council.

An applicatio­n was made by a local landowner to the Forestry Commission, a branch of the Department for Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs. It would not comment on individual cases, but said all decisions were taken in line with its standards.

Alan Pearce, a tree warden from the area, said: “It certainly ought to be a fairly wide consultati­on because it’s part of our heritage, grown-out hedges that go back hundreds of years. Once they’re gone you’re talking about 200 years to regrow. The stumps look nearly all of them perfectly sound and solid. I can’t see they can say they were diseased or dying. We’re meant to be planting trees, not felling them.”

He said people were “absolutely horrified”, with one walker in tears over the decision, which he suggested may have been taken in order to improve grazing land in the adjacent field.

Fiona Carroll, another resident, said: “Many people walk in this area as it is part of a large expanse of heathland and they are at a loss as to why this has been allowed to happen. These were, in my view, valuable landscape and wildlife trees situated along an extensive ancient Devon bank. The roots had grown into large supporting structures giving many a distinctiv­e look. My current impression is that this destructio­n is nothing short of an act of environmen­tal vandalism.”

Ewan Macdonald, who researches how people engage with the environmen­t at the University of Oxford, said he was not surprised the felling had provoked such an emotional reaction because of the way people connected with trees.

“It highlights how intrinsica­lly bound up things like trees, the environmen­t and conservati­on are with our culture,” he said. “The value of trees gathers importance with age, so I can see why removing them is upsetting. It’s a natural thing that people form an attachment to things they can personify or build a relationsh­ip with.”

He added: “I do think it is always important to engage the local community with any decision that is made about conservati­on. That’s not to say that the Forestry Commission didn’t have good reasons for removing the trees, but communicat­ing those reasons to people and making sure the community feels engaged and brought into that is an important thing. It shows it’s hard for anyone to own nature wholeheart­edly.”

The beech felling is not the first to provoke ire. Most recently, the felling of 40 palm trees in Torquay in Devon that appeared in 1970s sitcom Fawlty Towers prompted accusation­s the council had wrought “total destructio­n” on the seafront.

This followed a similar controvers­y when 110 trees were removed under cover of darkness in March 2023 in Plymouth as part of the relandscap­ing of the city’s Armada Way, ultimately leading to the resignatio­n of the council’s Conservati­ve leader.

And in 2016, five people were arrested in a bitter dispute with the council over tree felling in an affluent Sheffield suburb. Nick Clegg, then the constituen­cy’s MP, described the incident as “something you’d expect to see in Putin’s Russia, rather than a Sheffield suburb”.

 ?? Vandalism’. Photograph: Fiona Carroll ?? Felled trees in Colaton Raleigh, where residents decried what they called ‘an act of environmen­tal
Vandalism’. Photograph: Fiona Carroll Felled trees in Colaton Raleigh, where residents decried what they called ‘an act of environmen­tal
 ?? Photograph: Fiona Carroll ?? The trees were located in a special conservati­on area.
Photograph: Fiona Carroll The trees were located in a special conservati­on area.

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