Couverture de Ancient Woodlands with Luke Barley

Ancient Woodlands with Luke Barley

Ancient Woodlands with Luke Barley

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Tree Lady Talks: Ancient Woodland, Coppicing, and the Future of British Woods

This episode explores how Britain’s ancient woodlands evolved from bustling, managed landscapes into the darker, neglected woods many people know today — and why restoring woodland management could be key to biodiversity, timber security, and human wellbeing. It works because it pairs nostalgia with hope: listeners get a vivid sense of loss, then a practical path forward.Episode summaryTree Lady talks with Luke B, author of Ancient and Senior Advisor for Trees and Woodlands with the National Trust, about the deep history of British woods and the urgent need to bring woodland management back. The conversation covers ancient woodland definitions, coppicing, wood pasture, selective felling, deer pressure, ash dieback, plantations on ancient woodland sites, and the cultural value of reconnecting people with woods.

Key topics covered

  • What qualifies as ancient woodland in England, Wales, and Scotland

  • How wood pasture, coppicing, and pollarding shaped historic woodlands

  • Why today’s dark, dense woods are a relatively recent development

  • How coppice restoration creates vital habitat for butterflies, birds, and other wildlife

  • Why coppicing is culturally important but economically difficult at scale

  • The role of continuous cover forestry and selective felling

  • Horse logging and low-impact timber extraction methods

  • How plantations on ancient woodland sites can be restored

  • The impact of deer browsing on woodland regeneration

  • Ash dieback, ecological change, and opportunities for regeneration

  • Why native lime trees are a living link to deep woodland history

  • The future of woodland culture, local timber, and human connection to nature

Notable moments

  • Luke shares how stories like Robin Hood, Star Wars, and The Lord of the Rings drew him into the woods as a child.

  • The discussion explains that many ancient woods were once open, busy, and highly managed rather than dark and untouched.

  • Coppicing is described as a habitat engine: different regrowth stages support different species at different times.

  • Luke explains that most coppice products are likely to remain luxury items, so broader subsidy and support are needed.

  • The episode highlights the value of restoring neglected ancient woods and removing conifers to let native woodland life return.

  • The conversation closes on a vision of woods that are alive with people, wildlife, and new woodland culture.

GuestLuke B — Senior Advisor for Trees and Woodlands, National Trust; author of AncientTakeawayAncient woodlands are not museum pieces. They are living systems that need active, sensitive management to support wildlife, people, and the next generation of woodland culture.Suggested quote


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“The wood is the special thing — the trees come and go, and it’s the woodland ecosystem that we need to look after.”




Resources mentioned

  • Ancient by Luke B

  • The Wood Age by Roland Ennos

  • Kathy Willis, Good Nature

Keywordsancient woodland, coppicing, wood pasture, selective felling, woodland restoration, biodiversity, ash dieback, deer management, native lime, timber security, nature connection

For more episodes in the Tree Lady Talks Archive click here.

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