The bay tree where we are working is in flower, covered in theses buttery yellow fluffy flowers
Author Archives: David Bernstein
Blossom time
Lovely to see blossom blooming on so many trees, here’s a pic of the Chinese crab apple we pruned a couple of months ago now laden with pink blossom
Sambucus nigra
We pruned an elderflower yesterday , one of those fascinating trees that produces lovely sprays of flowers and intriguing multiple fruits that fascinated as a kid. It yields cordial, champagne, wine and cold and flu remedies yet is also poisonous, a curious little tree
Leaving some deadwood for habitat
Saw this lovely sculptural tree stump that has been left standing for many years and now become an important habitat for insects, mosses and fungi and helping to promote biodiversity .
What tree surgeons do when they’re not up trees
New shock absorbers fitted to the Land Rover to keep it going for another season
living willow hedge
This boundary hedge was planted with cut willow poles and woven willow and hazel rods. Where cut ends of willow are planted into the ground they take root and continue growing and by bending and weaving each season the living hedge grows.
Stump chair
After clearing the large multi stemmed silver birch we managed to push the root plate back over into its hole. The stump was carved into a seat in a spot to sit and enjoy this woods.
logs,brash and deadwood
We love a nicely stacked log pile! Here we are extracting the wood from the multi stemmed silver birch that came down in the last storms. We create dead hedges and brash(small branches) piles to be used as habitat, dead wood piles for insects and stacked logs that can be easily extracted later for splittingContinue reading “logs,brash and deadwood”
Windblown bench
Back in the woods today starting clearing the windblown trees, dead hedging the smaller branches, logging up the timber into log piles and made a bench soon to be surrounded by the bluebells.
lime pruning
We pruned these two Lime trees trying to encourage a better shape after they had been previously topped which had stimulated lots of new shoots that had grown vertically. All branches were chipped into the garden seen at bottom of photo to be used as mulch.