Boggy blueberries battling climate change
Our pioneering Rindle wetter farming trial has a new crop – and it’s just ready for your breakfast!
Tony West
Our pioneering Rindle wetter farming trial has a new crop – and it’s just ready for your breakfast!
When a peatland is drained and converted to agriculture, the carbon that was stored in the peat oxidises and gets released into the atmosphere contributing to the climate emergency. As part of a…
Climate change is on our doorstep and it will be up to the next generation to lead the way in fighting to protect our planet.
If you were to do just one thing to fight climate change, what would it be? Buy an electric car, install solar panels, give up air travel – or go peat-free?
The Wildlife Trusts unveil new educational guides for children to learn about how nature can help tackle the climate crisis.
Feeling overwhelmed by the scale of the climate and nature crises? Don’t worry! There are lots of things you can do to help from home.
A boggy, unloved field has been transformed into a ground breaking carbon farm, planting sphagnum mosses to absorb and store carbon from the atmosphere.
I have become a detective; an investigator seeking clues; peering into burrows and carefully searching through grass and mud for one of the UK’s most elusive creatures, the water vole.
Gardeners are being told to go peat-free as the climate and wildlife crisis lands in our flower beds and hanging baskets.
There are plenty of ways you can take action against climate change in your own backyard or local greenspace.
The Wildlife Trust for Lancashire, Manchester & North Merseyside has received a share of £3.5million from Co-op and their charity, the Co-op Foundation, to continue a pioneering wetter farming…
New Environmental Land Management Schemes described as vital by UK Government, but still - after six years of waiting - no detail is provided.