School woodland copse inspiration needed

UKworkshop.co.uk

Help Support UKworkshop.co.uk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

stuckinthemud

Established Member
Joined
17 Jun 2019
Messages
790
Reaction score
498
Location
Caerphilly
Well here’s a twist, my school is situated in a smallish woods. Not sure on exact size, maybe 2/3 of an acre. We don’t have enough room for playing fields, just a small triangular copse on a steep slope down to a river. The twist is that in a staff reshuffle, developing outdoor activities (turn that woods into a resource) might fall at my classroom door. The woods is unmanaged, full of ash dieback, downy birch and brambles . Any suggestions on where I can look for inspiration on what to do with it? Oh, this is for a school of 11 to 16 year olds, almost all of whom are boys.
 
This sounds like fun to manage - how good are you at preparing and getting approval for risk assessments.

The Scouts 60 years ago would have been a good source of information starting by making sure everyone had a knife complete with the getting stones out of horses hoofs attachment.
 
Well here’s a twist, my school is situated in a smallish woods. Not sure on exact size, maybe 2/3 of an acre. We don’t have enough room for playing fields, just a small triangular copse on a steep slope down to a river. The twist is that in a staff reshuffle, developing outdoor activities (turn that woods into a resource) might fall at my classroom door. The woods is unmanaged, full of ash dieback, downy birch and brambles . Any suggestions on where I can look for inspiration on what to do with it? Oh, this is for a school of 11 to 16 year olds, almost all of whom are boys.
Maybe ask the Woodland trust for pointers, or local wildlife groups.

Maybe leaving it alone and studying the species in the wood and learning about their interactions? Cheap and nature-friendly.
 
Coed Lleol, Small woods etc.. would be good contacts for you. Tir Coed may be worth a go too.

They can advise on management and engagement.

I run some sessions around wood craft and the like, but I'm West Wales so a bit far possibly. I know some people closer if you'd like to engage that sort of thing.
 
Might be difficult for growing anything in 2/3 acre and a whole school, as sheer footfall could completely dominate it.
Maybe look at using the ash dieback for making stuff?
 
As mentioned already the woodland trust is an amazing source of information and free trees
https://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/pl...QtaTLNMtT5cy8Eizz_NaD9yiEE4jOKRYaArHHEALw_wcB
Not sure about your location but down here in surrey we have to have our trees inspected yearly, I'm very lucky that the guy that does mine is extremely knowledgeable, he trained at Merrist Wood then became a lecturer there after working in Hong Kong for a few years, your local tree surgeons can also be a valuable friend to have.
 
With a river and a slope I'm thinking microhydro project. Ram pump and so on made in DT.
As for the woodland, my first concern would be the ash dieback and getting those trees surveyed before going any further
 
Back
Top