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Environment

Rewilding pioneer Derek Gow: ‘We’ve left very little room for nature to exist at all’

Derek Gow is a farmer turned nature conservationist in the process of rewilding of his 300 acre farm. This is what an average day looks like for him

Derek Gow is transforming his traditional Devon farm into a 300-acre rewilding haven for beavers, water voles, lynx, wildcats, harvest mice, wild boar and more – species that are either extinct or have become rare in the UK – and showing what farming of the future could look like

I’m up about half past seven. I let the dogs out for a run, make their breakfast then make my own breakfast. Then I go around to check that all the animals on the farm are pointing up the right way.

Every day can produce a changed experience. You see the uplift of nature as it draws breath after centuries of abuse and starts to recover.

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The birds are one of the first things that tell you the times are a-changin’. Skylarks are singing this year; I’d never seen them on the farm before. We have flocks of hundreds of goldfinches now, rising, turning, sometimes being pursued by a sparrowhawk or a goshawk, which is just too big and too clumsy to catch them.

Those predators are coming back and staying and breeding because we’ve got a small mammal population reforming in the grasslands. They’ve got grass that grows and falls over. It’s not cut for hay, so it becomes this citadel for the short-tailed voles or the wood mouse and the bank voles.

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You’ve got many flowers, many insects. This year, for the first time on our land, marbled white butterflies appeared.

My favourite animals are the beavers. Starting from about 15 years ago, they’re right through all the watercourses around us now. They’re the architects of nature. They make the ponds and pools for the frogs over time, as their hold on the land is consolidated.

With some animals, sometimes you only see the scat. If you’re looking at a wild pig, you’ll see a wallow that they’ve dug and used overnight. There are a lot of red deer tracks, but we very seldom see them. Occasionally in the evening, if you’re out just before the light declines, there’ll be a big stag feeding on our next-door neighbour’s silage field, which turns around, looks at you in a lordly fashion and jumps back into the woodland.

Trail cameras are a good way of following what there is. We set a series of cameras on one of the paths about a month ago. There’s what you’d expect, you know, a whole herd of Red Deer, maybe 17 hinds and their fawns working their way through the woodland, then right at the top of the hill, where you’d least expect them, a family of otters chasing each other along the path through the glade. The landscape is still capable of delivering surprises. What we have to do is give it a hand to find its way.

What we’re trying to do is just push on with things. In time of ecological collapse and crisis, there are so many organisations, so many people, that just talk and are still talking about the same thing 10 years on.

Sometimes I’m on site visits as a rewilding consultant, be they building projects or finding out whether the landscape is suitable for the recovery of a certain species. Next week, I’m over in the Fenlands with a bunch of people from the Netherlands who are looking to run a reintroduction project for the Dalmatian Pelican off the coast of Holland. They’re interested in finding potential partners in the east coast of England who could release birds on the other side of the North Sea so that at some stage in the future the different flocks will mix and form greater stability.

The eastern Fens is a landscape that’s full of sadness. You’ll pass the sign saying ‘Welcome to the Fenlands’ and all you’ll ever see is this monotonous, flat land of sugar beet and corn going off into the distance. If there are any weeds left, they’re lining dry ditches with little opportunity for much to live in them.

We’ve left very little room for nature to exist at all. We’ve got landscapes utterly dominated and cursed by millions of sheep. Every survey that’s been undertaken on the state of nature in the last 15 years shows the things that were once common have fallen away like leaves in an autumn gale.

The idea that nature and farming are in opposition is completely ludicrous. I mean, 35% of the land we farm now produces 2% of calories we consume. You can’t call it farmland. It never was. It’s the side of a mountain, its worn-out rush pastures ruined by the numbers of grazing livestock on them.

We waste a third of the food we produce in Britain, 70% of the corn we use to fatten cattle and chickens and pigs in intensive. We use land for growing daffodils, we use it for biofuels. We use it any way we can, slavishly to make money. The idea that it’s a simple field-to-fork type equation, with people wearing their wellies, waving flags, ‘no farmers, no food’, it’s utter bullocks. It’s not like that at all.

Rewilding nature corridors right the way through the landscape would take the worst of the land back that’s never produced anything of great worth from a farming point of view and return it to wetlands full of frogs and dragonflies and hedges full of butterflies.

A landscape that enables nature and us to live alongside each other. If we have any kind of future on this planet, we really do need to seriously set time now and figure out how we’re going to rebuild nature.

Birds, Beasts and Bedlam: Turning My Farm into an Ark for Lost Speciesby rewilding pioneer Derek Gow is out now (Chelsea Green, £20). You can buy it from the Big Issue shop on bookshop.org, which helps to support Big Issue and independent bookshops.

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