Some people are concerned that interventions such as rewilding have gone too far. But a recent UN report shows that for every £1 that is spent on nature recovery, £30 is being spent on its destruction. We have a long way to go in both increasing the recovery and reducing the destruction.
Engaging people with restoring biodiversity can be a challenge. The term biodiversity can seem too technical. Whereas the word rewilding can be polarising.
This can be a challenge. How do you engage people and communities in work that many associate with taking people off the land?
Here are three interlinked approaches that will be critical in how we tackle the biodiversity crisis. I have seen these work in practice in my role as a founder of a rewilding business [www.wildmosaic.eco] and in our partnership with Radnorshire Wildlife Trust.
These steps are often smaller and easier than you might think. None of them involve releasing wolves on townsfolk, or even abandoning land.
Myths, Preconceptions and Online Disconnection
Headlines fight for our attention. They often need to have quick appeal and create a strong emotion to get us to click. This lends itself to exaggeration and extreme examples.
So, rewilding in the news tends to focus on charismatic animals, controversial topics and large-scale plans. Wolves and beavers; huge expanses of land; dramatic changes; emotional stories of hope and tragedy.
The reality is usually much more prosaic, but in many ways more interesting because of it. It’s the less aggressive hedge cutting that helps bring back butterflies. It’s wilder gardens that reduce the decline in pollinators. It’s small shifts in farming practices that bring multiple benefits.
These smaller examples are more practical and accessible for most of us, especially if we don’t happen to own hundreds of acres! They also show the power we have when we come together, creating transformative change, by looking to the small and everyday steps.
The online world creates a misleading picture of wildness. We regularly see the spectacular on our screens – a stalking lion, blue whales diving, birds of paradise courting. Then we look outside and it can feel underwhelming. But once you step out and start to engage in the work going on around us, and the signs of wildness returning, it becomes more real and accessible.
Building Connection to Wildness
Making it possible to get people closer to wildness is powerful. Some great work is probably happening near you, in your local wildlife trust. The wildlife trusts are a network that cover the UK. There are five in Wales and there is likely to be an area they manage near you.
Radnorshire Wildlife Trust is one example. They are exploring nature-friendly farming. The Pentwyn site is both a showcase and an experiment.
The aim is to use nature restoration as a way to re-engage people rather than as an excuse to exclude them from the land. An old public right of way is being restored and runs through the site. This includes rest stops and information points.
Visits are regularly arranged for schoolchildren and farmers curious about new nature friendly approaches. Livestock are actively used in the restoration process. The site has had Welsh hill ponies, Tamworth pigs, Belted Galloways and Welsh black cattle grazing and helping enhance biodiversity.
A network of local volunteers are actively involved in helping identify and record the wildlife that returns.
The partnership with my rewilding business means that more people can follow the progress of the site. I share how these interventions work and the wildlife that returns. Subscribers choose their own 3 metre by 3 metre tile of land to follow. This allows the land to reach people who want to do something to tackle the biodiversity crises and learn more about the process of rewilding in practice.
There are also reintroductions here but not those you might expect if you only follow rewilding in the news.