1. In the heyday of the Welsh gentry there was at Aber Artro a dower house of the Corsygedol estate. From beech planted in its grounds may have come the compact beech wood, beautiful in all seasons and spectacular in bluebell time, celebrated in Anne Stevenson’s poem, “May Bluebells, Coed Aber Artro”, and in Dave Newbould’s photograph –
No more. The brutal culling of the beech (some felled trees are over 3ft in diameter, no recent arrivals) is captured in Stephen Coll’s photographs (“after-comers cannot guess the beauty been”: Gerard Manley Hopkins, Binsey Poplars felled 1879) –
2. To attempt to unravel the mystery of the damage gratuitously inflicted on Coed Aber Artro (“the Coed”) by Woodland Trust (“WT”) and Countryside Council for Wales (“CCW”) – bodies charged with its protection and wholly or partly funded by the taxpayer – is to embark on a strange and surprising journey to Brussels Continue reading »
Recent Comments