Owing their existence to agriculture, hedgerows have been shaped by centuries of human activity. However, the last century has seen a large decline in their presence and quality due to the loss of a direct economic value, agricultural intensification, and the abandonment of traditional management practices such as coppicing and hedgelaying. As a valuable resource within our rural landscapes, hedges need to be managed in a way which is sustainable, both economically and ecologically, and allows them to continue being healthy and vigorous so they persist for generations to come. The coppicing of hedges for woodfuel or other products has the potential to not only reduce the cost of managing hedges but to provide local communities with a renewa...
The UK aim of achieving 15% renewable energy by 2020 has resulted in a greater emphasis being placed...
Hedgerows are a long-standing component of British landscape, support a diverse range of wildlife an...
This time we re not talking about hedging risks, as we have of late, but of real, live, green hedges...
Existing landscape features, such as field boundary hedgerows, can contribute to food, fodder, mater...
Ross Dickinson, a commercial farmer and wood fuel supplier in Dorset, explains "I changed the manage...
Here we outline the results of trials carried out in Southern England to assess the efficiency, cost...
Hedges are very important elements of the French landscape, especially to maintain the "bocage" (pas...
Hedgerows provide key wildlife habitat in intensive agricultural landscapes, but are declining in le...
Hedges and hedgerows occur around the world, are part of a range of ecosystems, from agricultural to...
Hedges are very important elements of the French landscape, especially to maintain the "bocage" (pas...
Hedgerow systems are one of the more prominent agroforestry systems in temperate European agricultu...
Hedgerows are as dynamic as the plants that make them, which means it would be fighting a losing bat...
Presentation given at the UK Organic Congress 2018, organised by the Organic Research Centre. Ross D...
The aim of this paper is to present the historical and geobotanical characteristics of the hedges wh...
protection—changing paradigms and the conservation ethic D. McCollin1 The aim of this special editio...
The UK aim of achieving 15% renewable energy by 2020 has resulted in a greater emphasis being placed...
Hedgerows are a long-standing component of British landscape, support a diverse range of wildlife an...
This time we re not talking about hedging risks, as we have of late, but of real, live, green hedges...
Existing landscape features, such as field boundary hedgerows, can contribute to food, fodder, mater...
Ross Dickinson, a commercial farmer and wood fuel supplier in Dorset, explains "I changed the manage...
Here we outline the results of trials carried out in Southern England to assess the efficiency, cost...
Hedges are very important elements of the French landscape, especially to maintain the "bocage" (pas...
Hedgerows provide key wildlife habitat in intensive agricultural landscapes, but are declining in le...
Hedges and hedgerows occur around the world, are part of a range of ecosystems, from agricultural to...
Hedges are very important elements of the French landscape, especially to maintain the "bocage" (pas...
Hedgerow systems are one of the more prominent agroforestry systems in temperate European agricultu...
Hedgerows are as dynamic as the plants that make them, which means it would be fighting a losing bat...
Presentation given at the UK Organic Congress 2018, organised by the Organic Research Centre. Ross D...
The aim of this paper is to present the historical and geobotanical characteristics of the hedges wh...
protection—changing paradigms and the conservation ethic D. McCollin1 The aim of this special editio...
The UK aim of achieving 15% renewable energy by 2020 has resulted in a greater emphasis being placed...
Hedgerows are a long-standing component of British landscape, support a diverse range of wildlife an...
This time we re not talking about hedging risks, as we have of late, but of real, live, green hedges...