Wilding
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<span>Wielding tells the story of a remarkable experiment: the rebuilding of the knee estate in West Sussex, the restoration of natural ecological processes, and the stunning recovery of Flora and fauna. 'The most inspirational book I've read in years. In every br>Chapter, new species return.' - Caitlin Moran (on Twitter) winner of the Richard jefferies society and white horse book shop literary Prize highly commended by the Wainwright Golden beer book Prize in wilding, Isabella tree tells the story of the 'knee experiment', a pioneering rewilding project in West Sussex, using free-roaming grazing animals to create new habitats for wildlife. Part gripping memoir, part fascinating account of the ecology of our countryside, wielding is, above all, an inspiring story of hope. Forced to accept that intensive farming on the heavy clay of their land at knepp was economically unsustainable, Isabella tree and her husband Charlie burrell made a spectacular leap of faith: they decided to step back and let nature take over. Thanks to the introduction of free-roaming cattle, ponies, pigs and deer - proxies of the large animals that once roamed Britain - The 3, 500 Acre project has seen extraordinary increases in wildlife numbers and diversity in little over a decade. Extremely rare species, including Turtle doves, Nightingale, peregrine falcon, lesser spotted woodpeckers and purple emperor butterflies, are now breeding at knee, and populations of other species are rocketing. The burrells' Degraded agricultural land has become a functioning ecosystem again, heaving with life - all by itself. Personal and inspirational, wilding is an astonishing account of the beauty and strength of nature, when it is given as much freedom as possible.</span>
<div class="a-row a-expander-container a-expander-extend-container"> <h3><span>Review</span></h3> <div class="a-section a-spacing-small a-padding-small"> <span class="a-text-bold">This must be the most inspirational nature book of the year</span><span> . . . a narrative of conservation, courage, vision and miracles... The story of what happened is thrilling . . . the Knepp Conservation Project is world-famous: a beacon of hope . . . </span><span class="a-text-bold">Read this book and marvel</span><span>. -- Bel Mooney, 'The Year's Best Books on Nature' ― </span><span class="a-text-italic">Daily Mail</span><span><br><br>Particularly timely . . . an excellent primer, and </span><span class="a-text-bold">anyone who is interested in how we share the planet ― what it looks like, what we eat, and what nature can teach us ― should read this book.</span><span> ― </span><span class="a-text-italic">Sunday Times</span><span><br><br>A poignant, practical and moving story of how to fix our broken land, this should be conservation's salvation; this should be its future; this is a new hope. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Chris Packham</span><span>, presenter of The Really Wild Show<br><br>I recently read </span><span class="a-text-italic">Wilding</span><span>, by Isabella Tree, where she and her husband take their over-farmed, not-profitable estate, and rewild it. Thousands of species return. It will have you in tears. Life exploding again - the reverse of most stories today. </span><span class="a-text-bold">Hugely recommend</span><span class="a-text-bold">ed</span><span>. -- Caitlin Moran (on Twitter)<br><br>The remarkable story of an astounding transformation. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">George Monbiot</span><span>, author of </span><span class="a-text-italic">Feral</span><span><br><br></span><span class="a-text-italic">Wilding </span><span>shines brilliantly . . . . Isabella Tree writes [. . .] with infectious enthusiasm . . . The project she writes about so winningly . . . is </span><span class="a-text-bold">inspirational – and inspiration is needed</span><span>. ― </span><span class="a-text-italic">Evening Standard</span><span><br><br></span><span class="a-text-bold">A hugely important addition to the literature of what can be done to restore soil and soul</span><span> . . . Tree writes with grace about a legion of doubts, obstructions and delays. The book contains moments of lyricism and revelation. -- Caspar Henderson ― </span><span class="a-text-italic">Guardian</span><span><br><br>Close to my book of the year. </span><span class="a-text-bold">If there’s anything better, I haven’t read it yet </span><span>. . . An uplifting story and points towards a different sort of farmed future. -- Marcus Berkmann, 'Best Books for Summer Reading' ― </span><span class="a-text-italic">Daily Mail</span><span><br><br></span><span class="a-text-italic">'Wilding </span><span>is </span><span class="a-text-bold">both a timely and important book </span><span>. . . Isabella Tree imagines the last migrating turtledove departing Knepp and flying over a Europe “that is being recolonized by beavers, wolves, wolverines, jackals and bears.” And it is in that changing landscape that hope resides.' -- Tim Flannery ― </span><span class="a-text-italic">New York Review of Books</span><span><br><br>Every farmer (and perhaps every conservationist) in Britain needs to go and spend a day at Knepp. The Knepp ‘wilding’ project is a vitally important experiment for working out what we can do to let Nature back into our farmed landscapes . . . This book tells this vital story and deserves to be widely read. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">James Rebanks</span><span>, author of </span><span class="a-text-italic">A Shepherd’s Life</span><span><br><br>Read </span><span class="a-text-italic">Wilding </span><span>by Isabella Tree . . . </span><span class="a-text-bold">Thrilling</span><span>. -- India Knight ― </span><span class="a-text-italic">The Times</span><span><br><br>This </span><span class="a-text-bold">honest, thoroughly researched and deeply hopeful</span><span> book will appeal to everyone - especially farmers - who is concerned about how intensive farming practices are degrading the environment and how to restore nature to ravaged lands. -- Ten Of The Best Books About Climate Change, Conservation And The Environment of 2018 ― </span><span class="a-text-italic">Forbes</span><span><br><br>This </span><span class="a-text-bold">inspiring and encouraging</span><span> book demonstrates how nature can shake off the ravages of industrial farming and heal itself. -- John Meadley, founder of Pasture for Life<br><br>A thrilling, inspiring and deeply moving story of a wildlife revolution on an ordinary English farm, </span><span class="a-text-italic">Wilding</span><span> shows us what we have lost and what we could regain if we change our relationship with the countryside. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Patrick Barkham</span><span>, author of </span><span class="a-text-italic">Badgerlands</span><span><br><br></span><span class="a-text-italic">Wilding </span><span>describes the inspirational story of a pioneering rewilding experiment that is changing the way we look at Nature, the countryside and conservation. Beautifully written, it marks the moment when the task at hand can no longer be about slowing down the inexorable decline of wildlife, but to begin the job of restoration. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Tony Juniper</span><span>, former Executive Director of </span><span class="a-text-bold">Friends of the Earth</span><span><br><br>Anyone with any interest in land – from a window-box to a National Park – needs to read this book. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Simon Barnes</span><span>, author of T</span><span class="a-text-italic">he Meaning of Birds</span><span><br><br>So often we read of the countryside in shock and so seldom to we learn of its recovery. This is a pioneering, wonderful book, blooming with humour, practicality, science and lessons learned; a story whose heart beats in the same neck of the woods as Walden. Read </span><span class="a-text-italic">Wilding </span><span>and restore your belief in the return of nature. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Nicholas Crane</span><span>, author of </span><span class="a-text-italic">The Making Of The British Landscape</span><span><br><br>Charming, inspirational and thought-provoking. Beautifully captures the magic and excitement of the Knepp rewilding project. -- Professor Dave Goulson, author of </span><span class="a-text-italic">Bee Quest</span><span><br><br></span><span class="a-text-italic">Wilding </span><span>is truly the most magnificent and inspiring book. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Adam Nicholson</span><span>, author of </span><span class="a-text-italic">The Seabird's Cry</span><span><br><br>Isabella Tree’s riveting book captures the excitement of an immensely powerful new idea: that to save our beleaguered wildlife, we should move beyond conserving what remains – we should restore what we have lost. Fascinating in its detail and thrilling in its sense of possibilities, this is essential reading for anyone concerned with the future of the natural world in the demanding times to come. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Michael McCarthy</span><span>, author of </span><span class="a-text-italic">The Moth Snowstorm: Nature and Joy</span><span><br><br>A compelling account of a brave and far sighted venture. At a moment when the future of our countryside hangs in the balance, Isabella Tree helps us understand how we become locked in by our personal experience and perspectives. A riveting, gloriously written read which expands our imagination, and fuels our commitment to reversing the cataclysmic decline of virtually all species, other than our own. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Helen Browning</span><span>, Chief Executive of </span><span class="a-text-bold">The Soil Association</span><span><br><br>I read </span><span class="a-text-italic">Wilding</span><span> at one go. It is both highly engaging and (equally important) very informative about a unique experiment in nature conservation, set in the context of the depressing decline in Britain’s wildlife. Wilding the Knepp Estate is one of the most exciting wildlife conservation projects in the UK, and indeed in Europe. It’s truly wonderful, and it fills me with hope. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Professor Sir John Lawton</span><span>, President of The Institution of Environmental Sciences, Chair of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution 2005-11 and author of the 2010 report </span><span class="a-text-italic">Making Space for Nature</span><span><br><br>Brilliantly researched and scripted, this riveting and powerful book will revolutionise farming and nature conservation. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Matthew Oates</span><span>, National Specialist on Nature at the National Trust and author of </span><span class="a-text-italic">In Pursuit of Butterflies</span><span><br><br>At a time when we’re hammering the environment, this is</span><span class="a-text-bold"> a hopeful book about how the natural world can be reborn </span><span>if we put the right creatures on our land, step back and let it flourish. -- Simon Reeve<br><br>An excellent book. -- Colin Tudge ― </span><span class="a-text-italic">Literary Review</span> </div> <h3><span>Review</span></h3> <div class="a-section a-spacing-small a-padding-small"> <span class="a-text-bold">This must be the most inspirational nature book of the year</span><span> . . . a narrative of conservation, courage, vision and miracles... The story of what happened is thrilling . . . the Knepp Conservation Project is world-famous: a beacon of hope . . . </span><span class="a-text-bold">Read this book and marvel</span><span>. -- Bel Mooney, 'The Year's Best Books on Nature' ― </span><span class="a-text-italic">Daily Mail</span><span><br><br>Particularly timely . . . an excellent primer, and </span><span class="a-text-bold">anyone who is interested in how we share the planet ― what it looks like, what we eat, and what nature can teach us ― should read this book.</span><span> ― </span><span class="a-text-italic">Sunday Times</span><span><br><br>A poignant, practical and moving story of how to fix our broken land, this should be conservation's salvation; this should be its future; this is a new hope. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Chris Packham</span><span>, presenter of The Really Wild Show<br><br>I recently read </span><span class="a-text-italic">Wilding</span><span>, by Isabella Tree, where she and her husband take their over-farmed, not-profitable estate, and rewild it. Thousands of species return. It will have you in tears. Life exploding again - the reverse of most stories today. </span><span class="a-text-bold">Hugely recommend</span><span class="a-text-bold">ed</span><span>. -- Caitlin Moran (on Twitter)<br><br>The remarkable story of an astounding transformation. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">George Monbiot</span><span>, author of </span><span class="a-text-italic">Feral</span><span><br><br></span><span class="a-text-italic">Wilding </span><span>shines brilliantly . . . . Isabella Tree writes [. . .] with infectious enthusiasm . . . The project she writes about so winningly . . . is </span><span class="a-text-bold">inspirational – and inspiration is needed</span><span>. ― </span><span class="a-text-italic">Evening Standard</span><span><br><br></span><span class="a-text-bold">A hugely important addition to the literature of what can be done to restore soil and soul</span><span> . . . Tree writes with grace about a legion of doubts, obstructions and delays. The book contains moments of lyricism and revelation. -- Caspar Henderson ― </span><span class="a-text-italic">Guardian</span><span><br><br>Close to my book of the year. </span><span class="a-text-bold">If there’s anything better, I haven’t read it yet </span><span>. . . An uplifting story and points towards a different sort of farmed future. -- Marcus Berkmann, 'Best Books for Summer Reading' ― </span><span class="a-text-italic">Daily Mail</span><span><br><br></span><span class="a-text-italic">'Wilding </span><span>is </span><span class="a-text-bold">both a timely and important book </span><span>. . . Isabella Tree imagines the last migrating turtledove departing Knepp and flying over a Europe “that is being recolonized by beavers, wolves, wolverines, jackals and bears.” And it is in that changing landscape that hope resides.' -- Tim Flannery ― </span><span class="a-text-italic">New York Review of Books</span><span><br><br>Every farmer (and perhaps every conservationist) in Britain needs to go and spend a day at Knepp. The Knepp ‘wilding’ project is a vitally important experiment for working out what we can do to let Nature back into our farmed landscapes . . . This book tells this vital story and deserves to be widely read. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">James Rebanks</span><span>, author of </span><span class="a-text-italic">A Shepherd’s Life</span><span><br><br>Read </span><span class="a-text-italic">Wilding </span><span>by Isabella Tree . . . </span><span class="a-text-bold">Thrilling</span><span>. -- India Knight ― </span><span class="a-text-italic">The Times</span><span><br><br>This </span><span class="a-text-bold">honest, thoroughly researched and deeply hopeful</span><span> book will appeal to everyone - especially farmers - who is concerned about how intensive farming practices are degrading the environment and how to restore nature to ravaged lands. -- Ten Of The Best Books About Climate Change, Conservation And The Environment of 2018 ― </span><span class="a-text-italic">Forbes</span><span><br><br>This </span><span class="a-text-bold">inspiring and encouraging</span><span> book demonstrates how nature can shake off the ravages of industrial farming and heal itself. -- John Meadley, founder of Pasture for Life<br><br>A thrilling, inspiring and deeply moving story of a wildlife revolution on an ordinary English farm, </span><span class="a-text-italic">Wilding</span><span> shows us what we have lost and what we could regain if we change our relationship with the countryside. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Patrick Barkham</span><span>, author of </span><span class="a-text-italic">Badgerlands</span><span><br><br></span><span class="a-text-italic">Wilding </span><span>describes the inspirational story of a pioneering rewilding experiment that is changing the way we look at Nature, the countryside and conservation. Beautifully written, it marks the moment when the task at hand can no longer be about slowing down the inexorable decline of wildlife, but to begin the job of restoration. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Tony Juniper</span><span>, former Executive Director of </span><span class="a-text-bold">Friends of the Earth</span><span><br><br>Anyone with any interest in land – from a window-box to a National Park – needs to read this book. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Simon Barnes</span><span>, author of T</span><span class="a-text-italic">he Meaning of Birds</span><span><br><br>So often we read of the countryside in shock and so seldom to we learn of its recovery. This is a pioneering, wonderful book, blooming with humour, practicality, science and lessons learned; a story whose heart beats in the same neck of the woods as Walden. Read </span><span class="a-text-italic">Wilding </span><span>and restore your belief in the return of nature. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Nicholas Crane</span><span>, author of </span><span class="a-text-italic">The Making Of The British Landscape</span><span><br><br>Charming, inspirational and thought-provoking. Beautifully captures the magic and excitement of the Knepp rewilding project. -- Professor Dave Goulson, author of </span><span class="a-text-italic">Bee Quest</span><span><br><br></span><span class="a-text-italic">Wilding </span><span>is truly the most magnificent and inspiring book. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Adam Nicholson</span><span>, author of </span><span class="a-text-italic">The Seabird's Cry</span><span><br><br>Isabella Tree’s riveting book captures the excitement of an immensely powerful new idea: that to save our beleaguered wildlife, we should move beyond conserving what remains – we should restore what we have lost. Fascinating in its detail and thrilling in its sense of possibilities, this is essential reading for anyone concerned with the future of the natural world in the demanding times to come. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Michael McCarthy</span><span>, author of </span><span class="a-text-italic">The Moth Snowstorm: Nature and Joy</span><span><br><br>A compelling account of a brave and far sighted venture. At a moment when the future of our countryside hangs in the balance, Isabella Tree helps us understand how we become locked in by our personal experience and perspectives. A riveting, gloriously written read which expands our imagination, and fuels our commitment to reversing the cataclysmic decline of virtually all species, other than our own. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Helen Browning</span><span>, Chief Executive of </span><span class="a-text-bold">The Soil Association</span><span><br><br>I read </span><span class="a-text-italic">Wilding</span><span> at one go. It is both highly engaging and (equally important) very informative about a unique experiment in nature conservation, set in the context of the depressing decline in Britain’s wildlife. Wilding the Knepp Estate is one of the most exciting wildlife conservation projects in the UK, and indeed in Europe. It’s truly wonderful, and it fills me with hope. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Professor Sir John Lawton</span><span>, President of The Institution of Environmental Sciences, Chair of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution 2005-11 and author of the 2010 report </span><span class="a-text-italic">Making Space for Nature</span><span><br><br>Brilliantly researched and scripted, this riveting and powerful book will revolutionise farming and nature conservation. -- </span><span class="a-text-bold">Matthew Oates</span><span>, National Specialist on Nature at the National Trust and author of </span><span class="a-text-italic">In Pursuit of Butterflies</span><span><br><br>At a time when we’re hammering the environment, this is</span><span class="a-text-bold"> a hopeful book about how the natural world can be reborn </span><span>if we put the right creatures on our land, step back and let it flourish. -- Simon Reeve<br><br>An excellent book. -- Colin Tudge ― </span><span class="a-text-italic">Literary Review</span> </div> <div data-expanded="true" class="a-expander-content a-expander-extend-content a-expander-content-expanded" style="overflow: hidden;"> <h3><span>From the Back Cover</span></h3> <div class="a-section a-spacing-small a-padding-small"> <p><span>Shortlisted for the Richard Jefferies Award for Nature Writing<br>‘Excellent . . . Anyone who is interested in how we share the planet – what it looks like, what we eat, and what nature can teach us – should read this book.’ </span><span class="a-text-italic">Sunday Times</span><span><br>‘A hugely important addition to the literature of what can be done to restore soil and soul’ </span><span class="a-text-italic">Guardian</span><span><br>‘This must be the most inspirational nature book of the year . . . a narrative of conservation, courage, vision and miracles . . . Read this book and marvel.’ Bel Mooney, </span><span class="a-text-italic">Daily Mail</span><span>, ‘The Year’s Best Books on Nature’<br><br>‘This joyful, poignant memoir tells the story of exhausted land becoming a rich ecosystem again, and in doing so, forces us to rethink farming’ </span><span class="a-text-italic">The Times</span><span>, ‘Books of the Year: Nature’<br><br>‘A passionately personal, robustly argued and uplifting book . . . One of the landmark ecological books of the decade.’ </span><span class="a-text-italic">Sunday Times</span><span>, ‘Books of the Year’</span></p> </div> <h3><span>About the Author</span></h3> <div class="a-section a-spacing-small a-padding-small"> <span>Isabella Tree is an award-winning author, travel writer, and owner of the the Knepp Wildland Project, together with her husband the conservationist Charlie Burrell. She is the author of several books, including The Living Goddess and The Bird Man.</span> </div> </div> <div class="a-row"> <a data-csa-c-func-deps="aui-da-a-expander-toggle" data-csa-c-type="widget" data-csa-interaction-events="click" aria-expanded="true" role="button" href="javascript:void(0)" data-action="a-expander-toggle" class="a-expander-header a-declarative a-expander-extend-header" data-a-expander-toggle="{"allowLinkDefault":true, "expand_prompt":"Read more", "collapse_prompt":"Read less"}" data-csa-c-id="b7loto-fg4hmt-1swv64-yk2mxo"><i class="a-icon a-icon-extender-collapse"></i><span class="a-expander-prompt"></span></a> </div> </div>
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