January Field Report, 2022

2021 was the most impactful year we had, celebrating a new headquarters and a site in Wicklow, a huge year, have a look back through these field reports for a month by month run down. Moving forward to 2022, what's on! What we will definatly do is plant over 50,000 native trees across our three sites, we'll work with Farmers for the EIP in Miltown Malbay and we know we will deliver over 100 tree-related workshops, our team have all settled in together and we are clear on the plan.

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Field ReportBaiba Šustere
Illaun Farm-Forest Alliance: Fieldwork Results by Meadhbh Costigan

We had heard of Continuous Cover Forestry, which would allow some Spruce to be removed while leaving the rest in place to provide a protective canopy for new saplings. But introducing a massive disturbance like this to an ecosystem is bound to have both positive and negative effects on biodiversity. So we needed a way to measure these effects over time, in order to ensure our actions are as restorative and healing as possible.

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Illaun Farm-Forest Alliance EIP

Last autumn we got the fantastic news that Hometree has been approved by the Department of Agriculture to receive funding for a year-long European Innovation Partnership (EIP). Hometree’s EIP will be known as the Illuan Farm-Forest Alliance and will foster an alliance between landowners committed to enhancing on-farm biodiversity throughout the Glendine Valley in County Clare.

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Illaun Continuous Cover Forestry Project

Native woodlands are among the most biodiverse ecosystems in the Irish landscape. A new temperate woodland in Europe can take 100 years to reach similar levels of species richness. Plus, up to 80% of a woodland's plant diversity is found in its understory, which doesn't develop in a new temperate woodland as it does in native woodland.

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Hometree HQ

In August 2020, we made our first offer on the land in Ennistymon, and in May 2021 we got the 'keys'. It's sixteen and a half acres of agricultural land just outside Ennistymon in County Clare. From the peak of a hill in the middle of the land you can see the beach of Lahinch and the mouth of the River Inagh.

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