Style of Wight issue 70 BIOSPHERE SPECIAL

Page 29

Feature | STYLE

L U C C O M B E A N D D U N S B U RY: A R E W I L D I N G S T O RY with Nationa l Trust Isle of Wight Nestled beneath Ventnor Downs, and looking out over the sea, is Luccombe Farm. In the past it was farmed intensively, but a new management regime introduced by the National Trust will make it a haven for wildflowers and butterflies, bees and birds.

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n 2018 a team of rangers and volunteers painstakingly collected native seed from nearby National Trust land and spread it to the winds at Luccombe to help reseed the landscape. As these fields gradually become more flower-rich, the annual hay cut that takes place each July will be phased out. Instead, the fields will be managed by grazing with Short Horn cattle and Hebridean sheep, maintained at the right levels to improve biodiversity in the long term. The results have already been seen. In 2019, several thousand bee orchids and hundreds of pyramidal orchids covered one of the chalky fields in a mass of flowers. 165-hectare Dunsbury Farm in West Wight is undergoing a similar transformation. Intensively farmed until it was purchased by the Trust in 2015, its ploughed fields have been

taken out of crop production and allowed to go fallow, to reduce artificial nutrients and stabilise the soil. Already nature is starting to reclaim the landscape. The first plants to appear were deep-rooted bristly oxtongue, hawkweeds and sow thistles, which broke up the compacted soil, encouraging worms to aerate and enrich the soil. Grazing is next, using herbivores to create a landscape of open grassland, with patches of scrub and woodland. They’ll spread seed in their coats and in their dung, which provides homes for insects and in turn food for birds and bats.

visited by hen harriers and short eared owls, hunting over the fields that are now abundant with small mammals that have set up home in this everwilder landscape.

There’s a good network of paths, so you can see some of the changes if you take a wander. You’ll hear more skylarks and yellow hammers singing, and there is hope that visiting swallows will breed soon. Just like at Luccombe they’re already seeing results: last winter Dunsbury was May and June 2021

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Style speaks: to TV science

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pages 114-116

Summer in soft-focus: subtle

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pages 92-95

Growth in nature – with

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page 113

Natural beauty, inner calm

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pages 81-83

A business plan is not a straitjacket – with Dale Howarth

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pages 109-110

Out and about on Biosphere Island – with Hannah Lisseter

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pages 111-112

Play the long game: with

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page 80

People with style: Fiona Taylor

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pages 84-86

From brownfield barn to beautiful bespoke home – with

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pages 87-91

Beauty in the biosphere: green

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pages 77-79

Slowing down: from fast fashion

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pages 75-76

Style with substance: fashion

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pages 72-74

We’re open! 14-page feature

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Recipe inspiration: 10 things to

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pages 53-55

Interview: Cush Jumbo on filming

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pages 48-52

Fresh summer salad: recipe by

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page 56

Behind the cover – with designer

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Seasonal vegetable: sugar snap

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pages 57-58

Photography competition

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page 46

Biosphere book reviews – with

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page 43

Biosphere from above: Alfie in

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pages 44-45

Researching rockpools – with

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Kids art activity: become an eco

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pages 38-39

Foible & Folly: unearthing

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Style spectrum: Theo Vickers

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pages 34-37

Beyond the biosphere: team

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pages 32-33

Before the biosphere: the Island’s

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Lead interview: Rewilding the

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Supporting spectacular seagrass

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30dayswild – with the

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Luccombe and Dunsbury: a rewilding story – with National

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page 29

News from Mountbatten

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page 17

Style picks: our favourite stylishly

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Charity and community

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page 16

Tribe and Tide: navigating Island

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pages 23-25
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