UK's Ancient Tree Inventory

(woodlandtrust.org.uk)

89 points | by thinkingemote 18 days ago

11 comments

  • pjc50 18 days ago
  • JimDabell 18 days ago
    If you like this, you might also like OpenTrees.org:

    > OpenTrees.org is the world's largest database of municipal street and park trees, produced by harvesting open data from dozens of different sources.

    https://opentrees.org/

    • Lio 18 days ago
      For fans of Giant Redwoods in the UK there is also https://www.redwoodworld.co.uk/locations.htm
      • thinkingemote 17 days ago
        One of my favourite websites ever.

        I love how it's well defined. There are literally no redwoods in the UK before people went to America and even so, the giant species are still in their adolescent stage!

    • keepamovin 18 days ago
      Cool! I like how the official UK site in the OP avoids having a stuffy generic name and just goes with "Ancient". I guess this is like Java-speak for picking BritishBuild over UKExcludingNITreeFactoryConstructorPattern
    • RetroTechie 17 days ago
    • hermitcrab 18 days ago
      opentrees.org seems to have very little data on the UK.
  • dang 17 days ago
    Related:

    Ancient Tree Inventory - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38318132 - Nov 2023 (11 comments)

  • ta1243 18 days ago
    The Sycamore Gap tree was only about 150 years old. Sure it was striking given the position, but the outrage over it seems to be somewhat overexagerated.

    Compare far less outrage when a restaurant chain chopped down a 500 year old tree. Where are the nationwide discussions about whether the CEO or branch manager (heh) or whatever should be going to prison for 5 years or 10 years.

    • Lio 18 days ago
      I think the difference in outcry is because we know exactly who cut the 500 year old Enfield tree down.

      These's no mystery, it was Toby Carvery owners Mitchells & Butlers plc.

      It's also well known that they are now facing legal action because of this, so currently it seems that some kind of justice may be served.

      That wasn't the case for Sycamore Gap. When that first happened it was a mystery who had committed a senseless act of vandlim and if they would get away with it.

      The discussion of whether Phil Urban, Mitchells & Butlers CEO, should go to prison or not will happen when the case goes to trial (...but we all know he won't).

    • krisoft 17 days ago
      > but the outrage over it seems to be somewhat overexagerated

      It is a living thing. It should not be destroyed on a lark. Weather it is 10 year old or 150.

      > Compare far less outrage when a restaurant chain chopped down a 500 year old tree.

      This is directly attributable to succesfull public relationship management. Right away the company in question said that they got the advice from experts that the tree was a danger and needed to be removed. That takes the wind out of the outrage.

      You might say that is not true. You might say tree surgeons will write whatever you want in their report. You might say that they should have informed the council. And you might be all true on those, i don’t know. What i know is that it becomes murky and that disarms the outrage.

      “Unknowns killed a 150 year old living being for no reason whatsoever” is an outrage with no mitigations. “Wisdom of tree surgeons’ advice to pub is in dispute” is a head scratcher not an outrage. “Pub or their contractors fails to file necessary paperwork with Council before safety remediation work commences” is not an outrage but a yawn fest. “Property boundary dispute between Council and Pub” puts me right to sleep.

      • ta1243 16 days ago
        > It is a living thing. It should not be destroyed on a lark. Weather it is 10 year old or 150.

        They are being remanded in custody for their own protection. They've received death threats.

        It's a pile on powered by social media, by people who are willing to be outraged about this while eating their £12 carvery from a company that did it not on a lark, but for profit.

    • mytailorisrich 18 days ago
      Outrage is an emotion. The Sycamore Gap Tree was very famous, symbolic and a landmark, and thus its felling triggered a big emotional response even if arguably the felling of a 500 year old oak by that Toby Carvery restaurant is in a way "worse", indeed.
      • physicsguy 18 days ago
        Famous and symbolic since 1991 when it was in a Hollywood film…
        • GJim 17 days ago
          Ummmmm No.

          The tree was well known in Blighty and famed long before its inclusion in a yank film.

        • scott_w 17 days ago
          What's your point?
    • graemep 18 days ago
      Negligence vs clear criminal intent.
      • mytailorisrich 18 days ago
        As far as I understand, that restaurant cut down a tree that wasn't theirs without contacting the owner (the local Council). Any individuals doing the same would have been charged with criminal damage. Their apology and claim of "health and safety grounds" are rubbish in my opinion.
        • hilbert42 18 days ago
          "Any individuals doing the same would have been charged with criminal damage."

          We see too much of employees, CEOs, boards etc. doing unacceptable stuff and riding roughshod over everyone and then hiding behind the protection of their corporations.

          Statutory fine amounts are often set to be effective in normal circumstances, individuals, small and medium businesses, etc. but they're just small change to a large corporation. Clearly, the way around this is to strengthen laws so both corporations and their employees are fined.

          Corporate fines should be set as a percentage of turnover to a level where it actually hurts the offending corporation (its shareholded profits, etc.), also the individual perpetrators within the corporation would be charged separately.

          Much of this shit would stop if those responsible were hit with large fined and or thrown in the slammer. Being individually liable ought to send shivers down their spines, they'd then think twice before acting.

          It seems to me the only reason the Law doesn't make effective use of this 'dual' approach to enforcement must be threats from Big Business to lawmakers to the effect that employees would be less inclined to make decisions thus it would stymie buisnness as a whole (large sectors of the economy would suffer with reduced profits etc.). If not, what else is stopping lawmakers from acting?

          It's time laws were strengthened thus, we desperately need ways to reign in these wilful cowboys.

          • potato3732842 18 days ago
            Government beurocracies acting under the status quo will never reign this sort of abuse in of their own accord because doing so would be suicide for their own power. The exact same laws, precedents, etc that let CEOs not go to jail are leveraged to great extend by government agencies and the agents thereof so the government will never bring the cases needed to reverse the precedents. The solution must be legislative, so there must be public interest and political will that legislators seek to pander to. There isn't the interest or will to reign in the government, people want them to be able to ride roughshod over perceived wrongdoers. And there isn't political will to write legislation that has a double standard of formally exempting government activity. So the local minimum we're stuck in is that bad actors can "do whatever" as long as they do it as part of their day job and don't leave a flagrant paper trail.
            • hilbert42 17 days ago
              "The solution must be legislative, so there must be public interest…. There isn't the interest…"

              Sometimes I despair. I recall when doing Pol. Sc. decades ago Plato's criticisms of democracy and the more I observe its dysfunctional aspects the more I agree with him. Same with Churchill's sentiments.

              As they day, "God helps those who help themselves", if the electorate isn't interested and or cannot understand the problems then dysfunction will continue and bad actors will have a field day.

              I'm out of my depth here, I speculate about why the electorate isn't interested in helping itself but that's more a job for sociologists and psychologists, and I'm neither.

              Ah well….

        • amiga386 18 days ago
          The restaurant conducted a safety review of its premises and the surrounding area, which it is legally required to. Even if it doesn't own the land, it is responisible for making sure it is a safe place for staff and customers.

          This tree overlooked their car park, and if it had fallen or its limbs broke off, could easily crush, maim or kill people.

          They relied on a specialist contractor to tell them whether all the trees in the vicinity were safe. The restaurant is legally required to mitigate hazards.

          The (unnamed) specialist contractor said this particular tree wasn't safe due to dead and splitting wood. While the tree is in this legally-non-binding inventory of ancient trees, it was not subject to any specific tree protection order at the time the contractor gave the advice.

          The restaurant took the contractor's advice and asked them to make it safe, which involved dismembering most of it. Only then did someone who actually cares about trees, and doesn't just see them as a box-ticking exercise or a way to make or save money, learn that this was happening and raise a fuss about it.

          And now the tree has a tree preservation order, after being hacked to bits. It could have had a tree preservation order at any time in the past, but it didn't. If it did have one, the specialist contractor would have known, and would have advised the restaurant differently.

          There aren't any specific villianous individuals anywhere in this story. This is a systematic problem, which is why tree heritage groups are campaigning for a law that protects ancient trees just for being ancient.

          The way you fight the mundane evil that is bureaucracy is you add more bureaucracy; add in more restrictions on what companies, councils, governments can legally do. Otherwise this happens, and so does this:

          * https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/mar/06/sheffield-ci...

          * https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-devon-64961358

          • mytailorisrich 18 days ago
            None of that gives the right to chop down someone else's tree on some else's land. The reasonable course of action was to contact the tree's owner and to cordon off the area "at risk" in the meantime.

            The only possible redeeming aspect is if the tree is part of the "demised land" of the restaurant, i.e. land that is part of their lease if they are leasing their premises (this is not mentioned in media reports as far as I know so it is unclear), but the reasonable course of action would still have been to contact the owner/landlord first as they usually must give permission.

            Trees are already protected because, again, no-one has the right to chop down a tree that does not belong to them. This is why the people who chop down the Sycamore Gap Tree were charged with criminal damage. A tree preservation order adds another layer of protection in that even it is your tree you are no longer allowed to do any work on it without the Council's permission. In this case it is possible that they simply did not think it was necessary as the tree was in a Council-owned park.

            • amiga386 18 days ago
              The council own the land, and leased it to the restaurant. They claim the Toby Carvery "has broken the terms of the lease which requires Toby Carvery to maintain and protect the existing landscape"

              https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/04/16/toby-carvery-cou...

              There's no need to see malice where indifference and incompetence will do. You need to do a box-ticking exercise, you buy in an expert. The expert says you need to do X, you don't press too hard against that. They say they can do it for you. You assume they know what they're doing and say "OK, do it".

              We'll have to wait for the courts to find out exactly who said what to who, and who made what decision, but this is about as much as we can infer for now. The tree's still gone.

              • hermitcrab 18 days ago
                >The expert says you need to do X

                There is quite a strong incentive for the 'expert' to say you 'need to do X' when they will get paid for doing it.

                • potato3732842 18 days ago
                  >There is quite a strong incentive for the 'expert' to say you 'need to do X' when they will get paid for doing it.

                  Even if they're not being paid for the work they're still gonna be conservative to cover their own ass because they're accountable to their own licensing board or there's some 3rd party government or perhaps private stats tracking their screw ups or whatever.

                  This is what you get when you have a subset of the general public hellbent on requiring that nothing get done without consulting a dozen different licensed professionals oversight by multiple departments, etc, etc.

                  In a "simple" evaluation of incentives there is no incentive to cut the tree if it's not a fairly undeniable hazard but the simplicity has been polluted with a complex spaghetti of requirements.

                  • mytailorisrich 18 days ago
                    Or in this case you contact the owner of the tree before doing anything so that everything is agreed without surprises and arguments.

                    Especially it seems that the Council had apparently done their own assessment recently without finding issues: "According to the council leader, their experts said the tree was healthy and alive in December 2024." [1]

                    [1] https://www.lbc.co.uk/news/uk/toby-carvery-faces-legal-actio...

                    • potato3732842 18 days ago
                      Sure, in fantasy land. In reality the council made the leaseholder responsible for upkeep and maintenance and the last thing the council wants is to be contacted about the specifics of that because it comes off as an attempt to shift liability, which governments hate almost as much as uppity subjects, and any attempt to do so would likely have been met with stonewalling or some nonproductive ass-covering which would have driven up the scope and invasiveness of the tree clearing operation. Say nothing of the cost of all that communication. Maybe if there was a borderline improperly close between the government officials involved and the people working on behalf of the restaurant there could have been an off record conversation in good faith but without someone willing (because they're getting paid or otherwise) to stick their neck out the council isn't gonna say off record let alone go on record saying anything less than "get rid of anything and everything that could be a hazard" (with the judgement thereof to be performed by some party who will take on the liability).

                      The liability and responsibility situation is just to goddamned convoluted for any honest and reasonable exchange to happen.

                      • mytailorisrich 18 days ago
                        No, that's not fantasy land at all, this is common sense, standard practice, and the default position if you are a tenant.

                        There was no urgency: If some expert said the tree was dangerous then it would have been cordoned off while remedy was arranged. It was costing nothing to inform the landlord/owner.

                        • potato3732842 18 days ago
                          We are not talking about asking your landlord if you can hang some window flower baskets from your studio. We are talking about a contract clause on the order of "keep the f-ing yard mowed and the trees trimmed" between two big evil organizations where Statistically Nobody(TM) really cares.

                          I understand there's no urgency but regardless of timeframe it's just not reasonable to expect discussions to happen between government and a tenant in the way you think they should in the current regulatory environment. Nobody's immediate interest is served by doing it that way and everyone's interest is served by doing it the way they did except in this rare case the public interest and it blew up and became a "court of public opinion" thing hence the lawsuits flying every which way and the finger pointing.

                          If you want to see organizations act how you seem to want toward government then government needs to change. Organizations are unfeeling and sociopathic in pursuit of their goals. They are keeping the .gov at the maximum arms length possible, spreading liability all around, and letting these processes hum along and "fail" in dumb ways that are probably obvious to the people on the ground (but of course nobody will take on the responsibility of raising objection) because those failures are less terrible when they do occasionally happen than the kind of problems you'd get they didn't make it SOP to run the way they run.

                          The common sense you speak of has been implicitly outlawed by the high tax of liability that is levied upon it.

                • scott_w 17 days ago
                  > There is quite a strong incentive for the 'expert' to say you 'need to do X' when they will get paid for doing it.

                  Be that as the case may be, as a non-expert, you better come up with a strongly sourced reason that the expert is wrong and you are right before you start to act.

              • mytailorisrich 18 days ago
                Ah thanks. Then it won't be criminal damage, indeed. Still not sure where the scale between malice and incompetence stands on that one, though.
    • DrBazza 18 days ago
      You mean the tree cut down in or next to the Tottenham Hotspur training ground, or proposed development (I forget).

      Also, the tree cut down by the restaurant chain, that's part owned by... one of the owners of Tottenham Hotspur FC.

      Also the same club that couldn't redevelop their stadium until the scrap yard opposite vacated, which they refused to do. Then it 'mysteriously' burnt down.

      Also, also, I don't subscribe to conspiracy, and I think these are just unfortunate random occurences. Million to one events happen 9 times out of 10.

      • octo888 17 days ago
        London football clubs get up to some right shady stuff. West Ham are just as bad.
    • Nursie 17 days ago
      > Sure it was striking given the position

      That's the clue to the outrage. It was well known and enjoyed by the general public, and a pair of morons decided they were going to ruin it for everyone, for no clear reason.

      > Compare far less outrage when a restaurant chain chopped down a 500 year old tree.

      It's a crime, hopefully it gets prosecuted, but it wasn't as iconic.

      I don't think there's a mystery here.

    • scott_w 17 days ago
      That's a press problem but, without knowing the details, I think that it's reasonable to look into whether we should press criminal charges.
    • physicsguy 18 days ago
      It’s also a non-native species to the U.K.!
    • FiniteField 18 days ago
      [flagged]
      • rainingmonkey 18 days ago
        Exactly, Britain for the Britons! Anglo-Saxons out, and take your ugly Germanic language with you!
      • hermitcrab 18 days ago
        >is mostly an outlet of expression for a latent feeling of nationalism

        I don't think so. It was the fact that it was such a pointless act of vandalism that caused so much outrage.

      • amiga386 18 days ago
        > with their 2000 years of history on the island

        Dude, stop fucking people about. The country was usurped about 1000 years ago by Frenchmen of Danish heritage and they rubbed the native Anglo-Saxon faces into the dirt. And those Anglo-Saxons had similarly usurped native Celtic peoples around 600 years before that. And let's not get into these Celtic people fighting Pictish people for control of proto-Scotland.

        Trying to bundle all the UK's myriad historic ethnicities into a single "white british" category so you can other everyone else is nationalist bullshit.

        • hermitcrab 18 days ago
          And ultimately, we all came from Africa's rift valley. We are all immigrants in the UK. It is just a matter when.
        • Xss3 17 days ago
          I guess nationalism is pointless then? Why is it this sort of 'being proud of your people' thing is only bad when it applies to certain groups but not others despite equally violent histories?
          • donkeybeer 17 days ago
            >nationalism is pointless then

            Correct. For any ethnicity or country. Have yet to see any good in it that outweighs the bad. What useful thing have we ever got by focusing on race and nationalism?

            • Xss3 16 days ago
              I guess Ireland should just join the UK then since their national identity is meaningless. You can tell them. I'll watch.
              • donkeybeer 15 days ago
                Why did the fight / oppression begin in the first place? Race, ethnicity and nationalism.
                • Xss3 14 days ago
                  No. It was about colonisation. Resources. Control. Power.
            • Xss3 16 days ago
              Culture is part of national and ethnic identity.
      • trextrex 18 days ago
        Which are the indigenous ethnic groups experiencing dissolution?
        • FiniteField 18 days ago
          White British is an ethnic umbrella recognised by the British government. In the last recorded statistics, the White British population in Britain had been reduced to 54% by births, and dropping significantly each year. A generation ago Britain was 90-95% White British. It's a staggering, utterly unprecedented rate of demographic change that historians will look back on with the same or greater significance as the Anglo-Saxon or Norman invasions.
          • DonaldFisk 18 days ago
            > In the last recorded statistics, the White British population in Britain had been reduced to 54% by births

            According to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_British , "In the 2021 Census, the White British group numbered 44,355,044 or 74.4% of the population of England and Wales." In Scotland the percentage is 87.1%.

            You might be referring to the percentage of recent births to non White British parents, which is a different thing. (And, if someone's parents are, say, Polish, but they're born in the UK, surely that makes them White British.)

            > It's a staggering, utterly unprecedented rate of demographic change that historians will look back on with the same or greater significance as the Anglo-Saxon or Norman invasions.

            Well, we mostly speak English with a lot of vocabulary from Norman French, rather than Welsh or a close relative of it as we would have done had those invasions never happened. And I don't see that changing as a result of recent immigration.

            • FiniteField 17 days ago
              Demographics by births are much more meaningful than the total population because it's only births (and more immigration of course) that informs all future generations. Even if all immigration was halted today, the Britain of the future will be ~50% native (not taking into account the statistically lower native birth rates).

              >if someone's parents are, say, Polish, but they're born in the UK, surely that makes them White British

              Not exactly. "White British" as a compound noun means "ethnically British", not "white AND a British citizen".

              >Well, we mostly speak English with a lot of vocabulary from Norman French, rather than Welsh or a close relative of it as we would have done had those invasions never happened. And I don't see that changing as a result of recent immigration.

              Large areas of England do not speak English as their first language, and there are rapidly evolving youth dialects with strong black and other minority ethnic influences. As a reminder, the mutation of Old English due to Norman French influences took centuries. It's not at all out of the question that even the current already-done migration may cause the largest transformation of the language since the Normans.

              • Angostura 17 days ago
                You point appears to be that people should be more outraged by the people who are having insufficient babies, rather than someone cutting down an iconic tree.

                Which is an odd point.

                "Large areas of England do not speak English as their first language". That's no way to speak about Norfolk

          • pxeger1 18 days ago
            I agree it is happening and is and will be interesting to study, but I don’t think there is any reason other than racism to be outraged by it.
            • FiniteField 17 days ago
              I don't mean to say this as a challenge to what you said, but as a genuine question: Do you hold any value in the continued existence of the red squirrel in Great Britain? Would you see its extinction as any kind of loss? I know many people that are hugely invested in securing the red squirrel, but would never be seen dead expressing any kind of hesitancy towards the idea of their own ethnic group disappearing. I've always found it a little odd, given that squirrels don't have culture, traditions, or a written history attached, and it's purely aesthetic.
              • donkeybeer 17 days ago
                Brits aren't a different species
                • FiniteField 13 days ago
                  Why does the technicality that red and grey squirrels are different species hold any weight to you? The effect is still the same: They are two discernibly different populations, of which one is on the decline in its native land alongside the increase of another. As humans, we are orders of magnitude more sensitive to population differences amongst humans than amongst squirrels. Squirrel populations do not have associated music, dress, religion, traditions, and so on. So the question remains: Why does the decline of a discernable population of squirrels carry immense sentimental weight to many people, but not the decline of an ethnic group? Especially when most people would give a very different answer if that ethnic group were, for example, Native American or Palestinian? The only answer to me is that people feel that they aren't allowed to hold these sentimental thoughts, and work to block them from their own mind.
                  • donkeybeer 13 days ago
                    I am glad you mentioned religion. That's another thing that has done humanity far far more bad than good.
                  • donkeybeer 13 days ago
                    I do not play favorites with nationalism. I have the same opinion of Arabic or Chinese or any other culture.

                    In any case, you are implying the ridiculous point that somehow culture is some telepathic magic that is inherent to the people who lived there from some completely arbitrary cut off point where you somehow think it drops out of thin air in the blood or something instead of something one is raised into. Do you think for example a british baby taken to afghanistan and raised by the Taliban would turn up to have English culture magically?

                    Extreme nationalism is a third world culture to me, I would consider a capitalist, liberal immigrant from say Egypt to be more European than a white nationalist. The far right causes problems for and has problems with far right from other places. White nationalists and Islamic extremists hating each other, and so on. I have never heard democratic capitalist people having issues with other democratic capitalist people. If you want to solve ethnic etc conflict I would say the surest shot approach to it is to suppress, deport, eliminate, deal with far right wingers of every stripe whether white or islamic or jewish or any other.

                    And lastly what exactly has nationalism given us? The bad far outweighs the good. For pithy stuff about language and food, you have genocides, warfare, bloodshed on the other end of the scale.

                  • donkeybeer 13 days ago
                    And Palestinians are being genocided...again driven by nationalism and religion. Genocide and property crimes are obviously bad.

                    Whites aren't being genocided in England. If someone thinks that, then being a delusional snowflake somehow equating not having enough babies to other races genociding you is their mental problem, not mine.

          • GlacierFox 18 days ago
            Why have you highlighted this expression as something latent in the middle and ruling classes? I 100% agree with what you're saying and most of my 'lower class' (like myself) council housed friends I discuss this sort of thing with do also.
            • physicsguy 18 days ago
              Because it’s not au fait to express such opinions in middle class circles is what I think he means. He is correct to some extent.
    • jimnotgym 18 days ago
      And Sycamore is an invasive non-native species that gets actively removed from ancient forest as a weed.
      • pbhjpbhj 17 days ago
        They've been in the UK for 500+ years -- whilst those trying to grow "native" woodland might avoid them they still support generalist associate species and so could be more useful, eg in urban settings.
  • metalman 18 days ago
    there was an(old old) tree, and surounding medow destroyed for a roundabout(recent), not just any tree, but one with a literary conection, the authors name escapes me, the house of the author is part of the councils holdings, as was the tree and medow, but, famously, as per another author, "but roundabouts must be built", england somewhere , last 3-4 years
  • _rpxpx 17 days ago
    Thanks for posting. It's so good to see this sort of stuff on Hacker News - so good to see other programmers who care about trees and the natural world. I just found out about a giant redwood in a Victorian park very close to where I grew up that I never knew about.
  • whywhywhywhy 18 days ago
    love the idea and the data but the map just being kinda broken ruins this, the markers disappear when you zoom in, doesn't show the image of the tree when you click on it.

    if you were trying to find interesting trees to visit with this in a browsing way it would be tedious.

    • hermitcrab 18 days ago
      It is perhaps just a bit overloaded from the HN attention.
  • Namari 18 days ago
    Good idea, though it's failing to load when you point to another city than the one that was loaded automatically
  • Alex_001 17 days ago
    [dead]
  • conorjh 18 days ago
    [flagged]
  • hermitcrab 18 days ago
    Brilliant resource. I'm not sure about the word 'inventory' though. Wikipedia says:

    "a quantity of the goods and materials that a business holds for the ultimate goal of resale, production or utilisation"

    I hope that ancient trees are more than that.

    • RetroTechie 17 days ago
      Wiktionary:

      2. A detailed list of all of the items on hand.

      3. The process of producing or updating such a list.

      From Latin "inveniō" ("to find out")