Hafren Forest

Hafren Forest, located near Llanidloes in Mid Wales, is a popular destination for walking and enjoying the scenery, particularly around the source of the River Severn. The forest is named after Afon Hafren, the Welsh name for the River Severn, and offers various trails that lead to the river’s source and waterfalls, including the famous Severn-Break-its-Neck.

The forest itself was planted in the 1930s by the Forestry Commission. It’s lined with thousands of Pine and Spruce Trees. Offering around 15 square miles of breathtaking scenery and abundant wildlife. Home to a variety of rare bird species, including buzzards, goshawks, red kites, and merlins. In addition, nearly all of the UK’s native freshwater fish species can be found in its waters, making it a biodiversity hotspot.

Location:
Situated in the Cambrian Mountains, about 6 miles (9.65km) west of Llanidloes

River Severn:
The forest is known for the River Severn, with its source located just outside the forest boundary on the slopes of Pumlumon.

Walking Trails:
There are several waymarked trails, ranging from shorter walks to the waterfalls within the forest to longer routes leading to the river’s source. Walks through the forest will take you between 30 minutes and 4.5 hours, with terrain ranging from a man-made boardwalk to loose stone and steep slopes depending on what you pick.

Accessible Trail:
A boardwalk trail provides access to a viewing platform over the cascades.

Other Activities:
The forest also offers opportunities for picnicking, wildlife spotting, and enjoying the natural landscape

Historic Interest:
The forest includes some heritage features, such as a standing stone and the remains of a mine.

Commercial Forestry:
While managed for recreation and wildlife, Hafren Forest is also a commercial forest, producing timber for various uses.

Get in touch
Location:
Hafren Forest, near Llanidloes, Powys

Telephone:0300 065 3000

Email:enquiries@naturalresourceswales.gov.uk

Website:https://naturalresources.wales/hafren

The Bottle Tree

The Bottle Tree, scientifically known as Pachypodium lealii, is a unique native plant to Namibia and Angola.

It’s characterised by its swollen bottle neck trunk which stores water for survival in dry environments. The plant also has slender spiny branches and leaves clustered towards the tips.

But it should not be underestimated, as the milky sap is toxic with a lactic juice that was used as an arrow poison by Namibian hunters causing blindness if it gets into the eyes.

Pachypodium lealii is one of the giants of the genus; it is the largest of the continental African species, occasionally obtaining a height of over 8 metres (26 ft) in height. Of the continental species, P. lealii has the most arborescent form. It grows with a single, or sometimes double trunk, though damaged plants may have multiple trunks. The bark is pale and varies in colour from grey to creamy to tan to pinkish. The trunk is generally conical, tapering gradually from base to top. In very old plants the trunk can be more parallel-sided.

However tall P. lealii grows, it’ll be almost entirely branchless until the very top. The leaves grow on slender branches and are jealously defended from herbivores by sharp spines.

Around May to November the leaves will all drop off as the Bottle Tree diverts all its effort into growing surprisingly extravagant flowers. The flowers are pink to white and dark red towards the centre. It has shiny, leathery leaves which can measure up to 20cm in length.

The plant is protected and listed on CITES 2, according to Namibian.org

The Big Belly Oak

The Big Belly Oak is a sessile oak tree (Quercus petraea). It is enormously fat, with a girth of over 11 meters.The oak has a large cavity in its centre, likely an effect of pollarding.

The Big Belly Oak is the oldest oak in the Savernake Forest; Wiltshire, England, estimated around 1,000 years old. It would have been a young tree at around the time that William the Conqueror defeated King Harold in 1066. As part of Queen Elizabeth II’s Golden Jubilee celebrations in 2002, the Big Belly Oak was named as one of 50 Great British Trees, a collection of significant trees in the United Kingdom. 

The Big Belly Oak grows by the side of the A346 road between Marlborough and Burbage, but a walk into the lovely Savernake Forest is the best way of viewing this ancient tree. It is one of many ancient oak trees in the Savernake Forest, including the New Queen Oak, the Queen Oak, the Saddle Oak 1, the Spider Oak; the Cathedral Oak, and the King of Limbs

Reference – Photo by Tom Hill

Ira Apriyani from ‘Trees’ fb page.

Wikipedia

Vancouver Island

Old growth forest, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.

Vancouver Island is renowned for its extensive old-growth forests, particularly on the west coast. Popular areas for exploring these ancient forests include Carmanah Walbran Provincial Park, Pacific Rim National Park Reserve, and the forests near Port Renfrew.

Carmanah Walbran Provincial Park: This park is celebrated for its massive old-growth trees, particularly in the Carmanah and Walbran valleys.

Here you will see Sitka spruce and Giant Western Red Cedars. Some of the trees, including the Carmanah Giant (a Sitka spruce), are among the tallest in Canada, with some reaching heights of over 95 meters (314 ft). These trees, along with other species like western hemlock and coast Douglas-fir, contribute to the park’s rich and diverse ecosystem.

Pacific Rim National Park Reserve: The western side of the island, including Pacific Rim, is home to lush rainforests and accessible trails that allow visitors to experience the old-growth forests. Meares Island, accessible through tours, is a noteworthy destination.

You will see Giant Western Red Cedar and Sitka spruce, as well as understory plants like moss, lichen, and ferns.

Port Renfrew: Known as the “Tall Trees Capital of Canada,” Port Renfrew boasts a concentration of large trees and old-growth groves, many of which are accessible through the Port Renfrew Big Trees Map.

You will see the Red Creek Fir (the world’s largest Douglas-fir tree), San Juan Spruce, Harris Creek Spruce, Big Lonely Doug (Canada’s second-largest Douglas-fir), and more!

Hiking:
Many of these areas have well-established hiking trails that allow for close-up exploration of the old-growth forests.

Protecting the Forests:
There are ongoing efforts to protect and preserve Vancouver Island’s old-growth forests, with organizations like the Ancient Forest Alliance advocating for their conservation.

Other Notable Areas:
Cathedral Grove in McMillan Provincial Park offers a magical walk among giant trees. Francis/King Regional Park in the Victoria area also features large Douglas-fir trees.

Photos from the Walbran Overview Ancient Alliance

Trees and their Ecological Awareness

STUDY SHOWS TREES SYNCHRONISE ELECTRICAL SIGNALS DURING A SOLAR ECLIPSE

In a remarkable discovery, scientists have found that trees may act as a “living collective”, synchronising their internal electrical signals in anticipation of a solar eclipse.

During the 2022 eclipse over Italy’s Dolomites, researchers recorded spruce trees aligning their bioelectrical activity hours before the event began.

This suggests trees don’t just passively experience environmental changes – they anticipate and respond to them as interconnected organisms. The older the tree, the stronger its anticipatory signals, pointing to a potential transmission of ecological awareness across the forest.

Using custom sensors on living trees and even old stumps, the scientists observed coordinated changes in voltage within cells, known as bioelectrical potentials. These signals, driven by ion flows across membranes, indicate trees might communicate and adapt collectively.

The findings lend strong support to the idea that forests are not merely clusters of individual plants, but interdependent systems where ancient trees play a key role in resilience and ecosystem intelligence. The study also adds weight to growing calls to preserve old-growth forests for their unseen but vital ecological wisdom.

(The study is published in the journal of the Royal Society Open Science.)

The Sacred Stag

The Legend of the Sacred Stag

Long ago, in the heart of the enchanted forest, a majestic stag roamed, its antlers reaching toward the stars, a symbol of the bond between the earth, the skies, and all living things. The stag was no ordinary creature; it carried the wisdom of the ancient world within its spirit, and the forest itself was its home.

The Great Spirit of the Earth called upon the stag one day, for the balance of nature had begun to falter. The harmony between the land and the heavens was at risk, and only the Sacred Stag could restore the flow of life. With a heart full of purpose, the stag set off on a journey to the edge of the world, where the sun touched the mountains and the moon embraced the sea.

As it moved through forests and over rivers, the stag encountered many challenges. The winds of change blew fiercely, and the rivers swelled with the weight of the forgotten spirits. But the stag’s spirit was strong, its heart bound to the rhythm of nature itself. Every step it took, the earth beneath it seemed to sing with life, a reminder that the power to heal the world lay within the most sacred of creatures.

Finally, at the summit of the highest mountain, the stag stood before the Celestial Circle, a mystical altar where the realms of the earth and the sky met. With a deep breath, the stag raised its antlers toward the heavens, calling upon the stars, the moon, and the sun to restore balance. A brilliant light flooded the land as the stag’s cry echoed across the universe, and the forces of nature aligned once again.

The stag returned to the forest, its spirit forever linked with the pulse of the earth, the wind, and the waters. It became a symbol of wisdom, renewal, and the interconnectedness of all living things.

Moral: Just as the Sacred Stag carries the spirit of the earth within its being, so too must we carry the wisdom and strength to restore balance when the world feels out of harmony. The power to heal and renew is within all of us, connected by the spirit of nature.

Native American Identity fb Page

Guilty Verdit of Felling the Sycamore Gap Tree

‘Revenge’ for a planning dispute or the desire to get a souvenir for a newborn girl were the possible reasons two groundworkers cut down Britain’s most famous tree, it can be revealed today as they were both found guilty.

Daniel Graham, 39, and Adam Carruthers, 32, face up to ten years in prison for felling the Sycamore Gap tree during a ‘moronic mission’ which lasted less than three minutes, and causing damage to Hadrian’s Wall in the process.

Jurors found the pair guilty after their friendship degenerated and they tried to pin the blame on each other in court. The verdicts were delivered after five hours of deliberations

The trial previously heard that Carruthers had chopped down the tree so he could present it to his newborn baby girl as a ‘trophy’ – without realising the revulsion this would cause. 

Another theory is that the plot to chop down the tree was hatched as Graham was facing removal from his ramshackle home in the shadow of Hadrian’s Wall – branded a ‘shanty town’ by long-suffering neighbours. 

Some locals in the remote rural area are convinced that the groundworker’s motive in targeting the iconic tree stems from his grievance with authority over his failure to secure planning approval for the eyesore he created in the unspoilt landscape.

Graham bought a small plot of farmland in Grinsdale Bridge near the Cumbrian village of Kirkandrews-on-Eden in 2015, the Telegraph reported.

There he quickly established a number of buildings on the property and gained planning permission for a stable block, horse shelter and storage units.

But locals complained when Graham moved into a caravan on the site shortly afterwards, using it as the base for his business, DM Graham Groundworks – which lists tree clearance among its services.

Officers instantly recognised his voice as he told them that ‘one of the lads that [did] it, Adam Carruthers,’ had taken his chainsaws back home.

The ‘anonymous caller’ said if police searched Carruthers’ home and workshop they would find the saws and part of the felled tree, along with a shotgun and a pistol. No firearms, chainsaws or the tree wedge were found, however.

On December 1, 2024, days before the trial was originally scheduled to begin, Graham took to Facebook to accuse Carruthers of felling the tree, posting a series of images of his former friend.

‘I truly would not do it,’ he wrote.

‘It’s my picture everywhere. Well, here’s a picture of the man with [the] hidden face.’

In a tense exchange with Mr Wright during his cross examination, Graham tried to justify turning on his friend.

He developed the land – which he named Millbeck Stables – into a sprawling ‘shanty town’.

When neighbours complained about additional prefab buildings erected without planning permission, the noise of his dogs and the constant to-ing and fro-ing of the lorries he used in his groundwork business they were met with aggression.

A neighbour told the Telegraph that Graham had ‘completely destroyed the look and peace of this area’ and that ‘harsh words’ had been exchanged.

‘It was unbelievable that he managed to establish a home there on what had previously been a green field,’ they said.

Graham applied to Cumberland Council for permission to live there lawfully in October 2022 despite never having sought planning permission, the Sun reported.

But after neighbours objected and the local parish council said people felt threatened by his ‘dominant and oppressive behaviour’ it was rejected in April 2023 – leaving him facing eviction.

Just five months later, he and Carruthers chopped down the famous tree.

Now some locals believe the ‘moronic’ Sycamore Gap outrage was his bid for revenge on all those he felt had wronged him.

‘It’s what everyone around here was saying and it makes perfect sense,’ one told the Sun.

‘He considered that caravan his permanent home and had asked the council to legally recognise that.

‘When they refused the only way it could ever have ended for him was being evicted.

‘He’s a tree surgeon, he cuts trees down all the time – what better way, in his eyes, for him to take revenge?’

Meanwhile Graham appealed to the planning inspectorate in a bid to avoid eviction, but that was turned down on April 28, the day before his trial began.

He has six months to find somewhere else to live – however his immediate future is now behind bars.

Richard Wright KC said: ‘Though the tree had grown for over a hundred years, the act of irreparably damaging it was the work of a matter of minutes.’

Graham and Carruthers were ‘best of pals’ at the time and regularly worked together felling trees.

Graham’s Land Rover was picked up on automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) cameras between Carlisle and Sycamore Gap at night on September 27 2023, and returning early the next morning. His phone was traced to cell sites making the same journey.

When police arrested the pair and searched Graham’s phone, they found a two minute and 41 second video which showed the sycamore being cut down at 12.30am on September 28, and had been sent to Carruthers.

They also found photos and videos of a wedge of tree trunk and a chainsaw in the boot of Graham’s Range Rover, although these have never been found.

Messages and voice notes between Graham and Carruthers the next day showed them talking about the story going ‘wild’ and ‘viral’, referring to ‘an operation like we did last night’ and joking that damage looked like it had been done by a professional.

A man named Kevin Hartness posted about the tree on Facebook, writing: ‘Some weak people that walk this earth; disgusting behaviour.’

Carruthers sent this post to Graham, and later sent a voice note in which he said: ‘I’d like to see Kevin Hartness launch an operation like we did last night… I don’t think he’s got the minerals.’

In August last year, Graham made an anonymous phone call to the police in an attempt to implicate his friend and save himself.

He said Carruthers and an associate had tried to intimidate him into taking the blame for cutting down the tree, insisting that the criminal justice system would be lenient towards him due to his mental health issues.

He added: ‘If someone is costing me money and affecting my business then I will f***ing grass.

‘No doubt about it he [Carruthers] is the one holding the chainsaw. Adam felled the tree, I don’t know 100 per cent who the other person was.

‘I was annoyed about my business suffering through his actions.’

To explain away number plate and phone site evidence against him, Graham insisted that Carruthers and an accomplice had taken his car, with his phone inside, and driven to the Sycamore Gap without his knowledge while he had been sleeping in his caravan.

Carruthers, for his part, did not directly accuse Graham of being involved in felling the tree.

But he insisted that on the evening the tree was felled he had tried to take his partner and young children for a meal at the Metrocentre in Gateshead but turned back because their 11-day-old baby was unsettled.

Jurors rejected these flimsy alibis and found the pair unanimously guilty of causing criminal damage worth £622,191 to the tree and £1,144 worth of damage to Hadrian’s Wall, a Unesco world heritage site owned by the National Trust.

They now face up to ten years in prison.

Sycamore Gap timeline: How damage to the landmark tree unfolded 

– September 28, 2023

  • 12.32am A video is made on Daniel Graham’s phone showing the sound of a chainsaw, followed by the sound of a tree falling
  • 9.46am Police receive a report that the Sycamore Gap tree has been damaged. The investigation begins

– October 31, 2023

  • Graham and Adam Carruthers are arrested and interviewed. Police find two chainsaws, and a chainsaw blade and cover at Graham’s house

– November 3, 2023

  • Graham and Carruthers are arrested and interviewed again. Carruthers’ property is searched and a chainsaw is found

– April 30, 2024

  • Graham and Carruthers are charged with criminal damage. They both later plead not guilty.

– April 28, 2025

  • The trial of Graham and Carruthers begins at Newcastle Crown Court

– May 9, 2025

  • Graham and Carruthers are found guilty of cutting down the tree in an act of ‘deliberate and mindless criminal damage’

July 15, 2025

  • Graham and Carruthers will be sentenced

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14695485/Sycamore-Gap-revenge-motive-planning-dispute.html