A Field Guide to the Brecks
This week, Timo talks to Richard Evans, co-founder of the Breckland Farmers Wildlife Network (BFWN). They discuss: * the ingredients that formed the BFWN, from Richard’s background and network, to the Breckland Biodiversity Audit in 2010, evidencing nearly 13,000 species, around 2,000 of which are priority species, in the Brecks * how working collaboratively for ecology improvements has brought together otherwise isolated and competitive farms and businesses * the importance of facts and science when talking to farmers and how the standard advice for improving ecology is often a bad fit for the Brecks * the nitty-gritty of what farmers in the BFWN are doing on their land to improve connectivity and restore and protect the natural seedbank and biodiversity * the impacts this work can have such as visibly improving biodiversity and inspiring young people to explore agricultural careers * the Hampshire New Forest as a strange sort of sibling to the Norfolk and Suffolk Brecks * the Landscape Recovery Project the BFWN is proposing for the Brecks, and how it is unusual to have such a project run byfarmers rather than a conservation NGO * what Richard would like to see in the future of the BFWN and the Brecks Landscape Partnership. Find out more about the Landscape Partnership at www.brecks.org [http://www.brecks.org] and the Breckland Farmers Wildlife Network at www.brecklandfarmerswildlifenetwork.org [http://www.brecklandfarmerswildlifenetwork.org].
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