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‘Hold your nerve and trust nature’: birds, bats and butterflies rebound at Somerset rewilding farm
A short-eared owl in flight at Heal Somerset. The number of bird species at the former farm has risen from 67 to 94 in three years. Photograph: Jenny Vickers View image in fullscreen A short-eared owl in flight at Heal Somerset. The number of bird species at the former farm has risen from 67 to 94 in three years. Photograph: Jenny Vickers ‘Hold your nerve and trust nature’: birds, bats and butterflies rebound at Somerset rewilding farm Letting nature take over at a former dairy farm has resulted in a surge of species in just three years Three years of rewilding on a former dairy farm in east Somerset have seen recorded bird species soar from 67 to 94, butterfly species rise from 11 to 24 and small mammals grow in number. Heal Somerset, the first site acquired by the charity Heal Rewilding , has produced a state of nature report mirroring a national survey by environmental charities that has tracked the decline in nature. Surveys at the 190-hectare (460 acres) farm are revealing the rate at which wildlife returns after conventional agriculture stops. A humane trapping survey found the site was home to five small mammal species compared with three at a nearby organic dairy farm. View image in fullscreen Two tamworth pigs roam free on the former dairy farm. They are to be joined by a small number of cattle and ponies. Photograph: Heal Rewilding Heal Somerset near Frome is now home to at least 15 bat species and 60 species of breeding bird, including the endangered bullfinch and numerous tree pipits , another bird under threat. “I had no idea when we arrived in January 2023 what to expect,” said Jan Stannard, chief executive and co-founder of Heal Rewilding , which acquired the site through donations and philanthropic lending. “To some extent you hold your nerve and trust nature. If you give wildlife an undisturbed safe place, a sanctuary, you have this sense that something good is going to come out of it. It’s an absolute joy to see wildlife resurging.” The rewilding process is unlike traditional conservation because it uses natural processes to manage land and does not seek specific outcomes in terms of boosting a particular rare species. Instead, nature sets the agenda. View image in fullscreen Natural processes are used to manage the site, which covers 190 hectares (460 acres). Photograph: Heal Rewilding At Heal Somerset, streams have been returned to a more natural flow – assisted by the arrival of free-roaming beavers, which are spreading across east Somerset’s rivers. Dead wood has been left in place and natural growth encouraged through scrub and tree regeneration. Two tamworth pigs have been introduced and further large herbivores such as cattle and ponies will be reintroduced in small numbers. They will live free among a mix of glades, meadows, scrub and trees rather than dense woodland. The project is supported by more than 250 volunteers who participate in surveying, removing barbed wire fencing and other rewilding work. The charity has p