Category: Sustainability

  • Building biodiversity and resilience at Knepp Estate’s Walled Garden

    Building biodiversity and resilience at Knepp Estate’s Walled Garden

    Back in June I had the pleasure of visiting Knepp Estate, made famous in Isabella Tree’s book ‘Wilding’.

    I’m a huge fan of Wilding and the Estate’s pioneering conservation initiatives, so I was curious to see the project close-up.

    I joined a tour of the brand new re-wilded walled garden, and heard the transformation story first hand from the Head Gardener and some of the team.

    I heard a tale of a classic, large lawn (read: green desert) inside the old brick walls of the Estate, re-imagined into a new biodiverse and climate change-ready ecosystem.

    Then I took a turn around the newly re-wilded walled garden and saw a mediterranean planting scheme – many from the mint family – scattered naturally throughout a newly undulating gravel terrain.

    The heavy clay soil of East Sussex I learned, bakes rock hard in the summer sun then turns to sodden, heavy mud in the winter making the terrain incredibly challenging to both farm and tend as a gardener.

    Designing with not against these challenges is the key here.

    With the magic addition of gravel built on and mixed with recycled concrete and aggregate recovered from old buildings on the Estate, you get good drainage and the right conditions for the right plants to thrive.

    As the path meanders through terracotta hues, I saw small mounds and ponds carved to create a range of different and unique habitats. 

    Everything was designed with this mindset: create the space and a diversity of insects, plants and animals will arrive and thrive. And when they do, everything mingles and builds a balanced, resilient garden ecosystem.

    I’m eager to see what this newly re-wilded walled garden looks like in 5 years when it’s truly established. And I’m eager to hear about the experiments, failures and lessons that will inform and evolve the team’s thinking and approach each year.

    I get the sense that Knepp’s owners do not take their immense privilege lightly. If you were given the job of caretaking such a huge Estate in the context of the climate emergency and global biodiversity loss, would you do the same?

    The garden team’s passion, friendliness and knowledge was next level. My head’s been buzzing with ideas ever since. Inspirational.

  • Why I started a blog about living sustainably

    Why I started a blog about living sustainably

    It’s easy to feel overwhelmed by the climate emergency, so I’ve started this blog to lift my spirits and share ways people are taking action and making change happen.

    Sometimes I find myself thinking about all the things I’m personally failing at. Like the amount of items that somehow, unconsciously find their way into my home covered in single use plastic. 

    Now, I’m an Australian-British person living a modestly eco life just outside London, but when I total up my average emissions each month, I’m definitely living on ~1.5 planets.

    Last year I was listening to one of my favourite podcasts, How to Save a Planet and their episode ‘Is your Carbon Footprint BS’. They quoted a stat that reframed the issue for me: an average American’s carbon footprint is 15 tons, and overall the global carbon emissions is 50 billion tons. This means the average American’s contribution to the total global problem is 0.0000000003.

    Even if you are the perfect, zero-waste, low-carbon footprint human being, that doesn’t change the world unless you do something bigger than yourself. Because if you disappear tomorrow, we would still be facing exactly the same magnitude of climate crisis because you’re just a rounding error to global carbon emissions.

    Dr Ayana Elizabeth Taylor – How to Save a Planet: Is your Carbon Footprint BS?

    Given my new understanding of my own minuscule impact, I more often find myself despairing at all the work our society needs to do urgently to address global heating.

    Like shifting to renewable, clean energy sources to power our homes and transportation. Like drastically reducing industry’s reliance on fossil fuels. Like governments outright banning single use plastic. Like transforming agriculture and improving soil health. Like setting more ambitious targets for a carbon zero future…

    Photo by Markus Spiske on Unsplash

    The list feels endless. The politics are often nasty and complicated. The subject is divisive. My thoughts can wander down that rabbit hole and suddenly the problem feels huge and hard. It’s a bit of a downer.

    But then I try to remind myself there are tonnes of inspirational ways people are already making change happen. From little things, big things grow. There are easy, small, impactful things I can do now that can (maybe, possibly) turn into bigger, impactful things later. We’ve got to start somewhere.

    There are amazing people around the world who are transforming their homes, communities, cities and countries. These initiatives can start as very small changes – maybe just in one’s own backyard or community group – then have great ripples of influence. If enough of us make a change and take action, the effect is felt in the offices of policy makers and in the strategy rooms of big fossil fuel consumer companies. Systems are changing, one ripple at a time.

    Photo by Anders J on Unsplash

    To avoid that feeling of climate emergency despair, I want and need to feel like I’m working on making a difference every single day.  

    So I’m setting myself a mission in 2022 to find inspirational people who are making change happen and share their stories. I want to learn how I can transform my own world and share that journey, but most importantly I want to learn how I can make changes that ripple out and have an impact greater than just myself. 

    I want to share these stories with anyone else who’d find it helpful to follow along too. So here we go…

    Featured photo by Markus Spiske on Unsplash