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More than eight million trees lost this winter in the UK

It is the untold story of the winter storms. More than eight million trees have been brought down and many are now threatened by another two named storms bearing down on Britain.

Forest managers warn that already “catastrophic” damage will be made worse by Storms Dudley and Eunice.

There are warnings that the heating climate is making our weather more severe and unpredictable, and that management and planting strategies must adapt more quickly.Short presentational grey line

Forest ranger Richard Tanner says that he’s never seen a real battlefield, but the west shore of Windermere now reminds him of photographs he has seen.

“It looks like someone’s set off a bomb.”

All around are the giant root plates of fallen trees, some the size of caravans, studded with rocks torn from the earth.

“There’s three tonnes of tree and then five or six tonnes of earth maybe. And that’s all got to be dealt with. We’ve lost thousands and thousands of trees just on this one property.”

Mr Tanner has looked after the South Lakes property of the National Trust for a decade, which includes the crested beech at Wray Castle. It was a champion, with the biggest girth in Britain and Ireland. “But Arwen’s 90mph winds were too much.”

We head south to the other end of Windermere, and Great Knott Wood. In November 2021 Storm Arwen knocked down over a third of it in one night, including dozens of ancient oaks and yew trees. It’s still too dangerous to allow the public back in – thousands of trees are weakened and precariously balanced.

“Put it this way, we wouldn’t be here if it was windy,” says Heather Swift. She has cared for this site on behalf of the Woodland Trust for two decades.

“We did have this nice, dappled light and shade, but now all the spring plants that are trying to come up, they’re stuck under this wet, dark blanket of fallen trees.”

Kelvin Archer manages all the Trust’s forests from the Scottish border, down to the Midlands, and across to both coasts.

He says almost a quarter of the charity’s standing woods – hundreds of thousands of trees – have fallen.

“Climate change means that storms normally only seen in north-east Scotland are now hitting Northumberland and right across to Cumbria.”

He says that woods that were “firm and safe” are now getting blown over.

“We are now seeing damage to woods that have been here for generations that can’t handle the new storm issues we are having.”

Many species anchor roots, and woodlands shape themselves in a way to help them withstand our prevailing south-westerly winds. They weren’t prepared for Storm Arwen, which barrelled in from the north.

“I’m a forester because I love woodlands,” says Mr Archer. ” I come out here because it’s a safe space for me. And we’re losing them.” – bbc.com