Episodes

  • Series 5 Episode 5 - Peter Livingstone Part 2
    May 27 2025

    Part 2 of our conversation with Peter Livingstone at his not for profit tree nursery near Glasgow. We hear more about about the other species Peter is working on and more about his motivations, people and projects.

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    39 mins
  • Series 5 Episode 4 - Aspen with Peter Livingstone of EADHA
    May 12 2025

    As a younger man Peter got involved with remediating derelict land in Scotland's central belt. His work eventually exposed him to using trees to aid restoration and before long he discovered that aspen was used all over Europe for restoration but not at home. Research and grant aid later finds him collecting and growing aspen clones for planting on remediation sites and then a journey into trees.....

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    1 hr and 25 mins
  • Series 5 Episode 3 - Willow Legend and Basket Maker Phil Bradley
    Apr 24 2025

    Mention Phil's name in West Cumbria and many folks will know him. He has created a wonderful community of people around him through his work as a basket maker and willow weaver. Phil grows willow and makes baskets but he also shares his knowledge widely and engages in many other willow related things - including river restoration! Phil is a complete gem and is great spend time with.

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    1 hr and 4 mins
  • Series 5 Episode 2 Archaeologists Rose and Anwen
    Apr 4 2025

    Rose, Anwen and I met at a farming conference and very quickly hit it off. We were all wondering why a tree lover and two archaeologists would spend a weekend talking about mob grazing and soils. Yet it is obvious really - learning about how we manage land reflects on where we have come from and how we might restore nature to farming once more. Rose and Anwen have such life and energy for their chosen subject!

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • Series 5 Episode 1 Neil Heseltine
    Mar 17 2025

    Neil and Leigh Heseltine farm in the North Yorkshire village of Malham - famous for its amazing geology and beautiful setting. Neil's journey into farming with nature, in fact farming nature, is fascinating. He has moved from farming sheep to farming cattle. He loves the landscape he has farmed all his life and it comes across in this episode.

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    1 hr and 6 mins
  • Series 4 Episode 10 Glen Finglas Woodland Restoration
    Feb 25 2025

    In this episode of Tree Amble we head up to Loch Lomond and the Trossachs National Park in Central Scotland to meet Hamish Thompson the Estate Manager of the Woodland Trust's largest single site Glen Finglas. Hamish and his team are responsible for managing over 4000 ha / 10,000 acres of ancient woodland, wood pasture, peat bog and mountain. This is tree management on an epic scale and a day's walk around the tracks or up one of the Glen's hills is hardly enough to take in the scale of this landscape. Hamish's work crosses many disciplines but we meet him in a stand of ancient hazel talking about the importance of this species to ecology today and people in the past.

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    1 hr and 3 mins
  • Series 4 Episode 9 Caring about our Cows with Lindsay Whistance
    Feb 10 2025

    Have you ever thought about beef or dairy from the cow's perspective? In this episode of Tree Amble we meet Dr Lindsay Whistance who has a life long passion for cows and is deeply concerned about our relationship with them. She works as the senior livestock researcher at the Organic Research Centre and has 4 themes to her work:

    * Farm animal behaviour

    * Participatory research and facilitation

    * Health and welfare planning and assessments

    * Role of trees and shrubs in landscapes and food systems for farmed animals

    I hope you enjoy this conversation!

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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • Series 4 Episode 8 Kate Hanley - Peat Restoration
    Jan 23 2025

    We met Kate Hanley down at Dovestones just east of Oldham on a very wet day in 2024. Kate works for the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) and manages a brilliant project on land above Dovestones which is owned by water company United Utilities but leased to the RSPB for nature recovery. Kates work here is really drilling down into how we restore very degraded peat bogs - essential for carbon storage, water management [keeping water back for both flood prevention and droughts] and for nature. Our upland peat bogs have been hammered by pollution, extraction and drainage. But Kate's work is truly inspirational even if it is turning a few heads - birds are flooding back, insects galore but also trees are seeding into her project and this challenges the peat / tree dogma. This is one site visit which is well worth the walk!

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    55 mins
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