logo
‘Our community deserves beauty': one man's mission to green a UK tree desert

‘Our community deserves beauty': one man's mission to green a UK tree desert

Yahoo20-02-2025
Billy Dasein was born on Rutland Street, Grimsby, in the front room of the house where he still lives. His father was a fitter, and his mother a housewife who also worked in the Tickler's jam factory. He left school at 16 and wound up working at Courtauld's synthetic textiles factory.
Rows of terrace houses, constructed for workers in the booming fish industry, are set out in a grid structure by the docks. Life was similar on all these streets: doors left unlocked, kids out playing. Everyone knew everyone.
Yet, fishing dried up in the 1970s and Dasein says people's lives have been in decline ever since. East Marsh – the Grimsby suburb where Rutland Street lies – is one of the UK's 'tree deserts', with less than 3% tree coverage. Farnham, in 'leafy' Surrey – home to some of the UK's wealthiest neighbourhoods – has 45%.
'When I was about five I wanted trees on Rutland Street,' says Dasein. 'It was always bloody grey and bleak, there was a harshness to it.'
Low tree cover is linked with other forms of deprivation. East Marsh is the 25th most deprived ward out of the 32,844 in England, according to the Index of Multiple Deprivation. More than two-thirds of people on the street live with at least one form of deprivation, related to either employment, education, health or overcrowding.
Neighbourhoods with the most trees have 330% less air pollution and are 4C cooler during a heatwave than neighbourhoods where tree canopy is the lowest
Woodland Trust research
Dasein realised things had transformed on Rutland Street when he came back to look after his dad in 2013 having left Grimsby 15 years earlier, putting himself through university and earning a PhD. The place had 'drastically changed,' he says: people were dealing drugs in the street and everyone he knew had 'buggered off'. In the early 2000s, the council sold off the housing stock. Absentee landlords are now 'tearing the guts out of our community,' he says. There are more than 300 empty homes in East Marsh, half of which have been empty for at least two years, according to council data.
Dasein decided to create a community-benefit society called East Marsh United (Emu). High on its list were the trees. 'They slow traffic, are associated with lower crime rates, increase desirability of an area, and foster community flourishing,' he says. 'Trees are just better for our streets and communities.'
Over the past two years, he has worked with local people and charities to plant 30 trees in the local park, 96 trees in local schools, and thousands of saplings in woodland and hedgerows. 'No one else is going to do it,' he says, 'so we might as well crack on.'
***
In the morning, a cold sea fog comes barrelling in off the North Sea. On Rutland Street some houses are boarded up and cracked paving slabs are strewn around. 'It's very Dickensian in a lot of these houses,' Dasein says.
Terry Evans, who lives on Rutland Street, says many of the houses here are at the mercy of bitter cold in winter and brutal heat in summer. Evans used to live in a house 'with every inch covered in black mould' that made his daughter sick. Once, he says, his wife leant on a wall and her hand went through it. During hot summers, the houses heat up in the sun. 'You can put your hand on our windowsill on the inside and it will burn your hand it's that hot. A bit of shade would be good.'
Evans says having trees on the street would be 'absolutely brilliant', and could slow the cars down, making the street safer. 'It's going to look better to the people coming into the road – you walk down it and it's dull at the moment, there is nothing to give it any colour, which is a massive shame'.
Trees are a crucial part of urban wellbeing. People living in areas with fewer trees have a higher risk of health problems from poor air quality, according to Tree Equity research from the Woodland Trust. On average, richer neighbourhoods have more than double the tree cover per person than poorer ones. Neighbourhoods with the most trees have 330% less air pollution and are 4C cooler during a heatwave than neighbourhoods where tree canopy is the lowest, according to the Woodland Trust research. Modelling by the Barcelona Institute for Global Health found doubling tree cover could cut heat-related deaths in European cities by nearly 40%.
***
The government has listed East Marsh as a priority area for planting more trees owing to low tree cover, but some people have said trees would not last in the neighbourhood. In February 2023, Emu organised a planting day to get 36 trees into Grant Thorold Park at the end of Rutland Street, including maples, sweet chestnut and elm. Hundreds of volunteers turned up. 'Every single tree is still here,' says Dasein.
'Someone cycled past us, and said why are you bothering, they'll be ripped out tomorrow,' remembers Tom Noble from Create Streets, who is working with Emu. 'The community proved they could do it in the park and that has won a lot of trust.'
Since then they have planted trees in seven schools and 4,500 young saplings in hedgerows with the help of schoolchildren.
Related: 'Walking' forest of 1,000 trees transforms Dutch city​
'The difference is incredible when you're around trees,' says Carolyn Doyley, who is a community outreach leader at Emu and works with schools. 'Some kids were naming trees. They know we need more trees and they understand the symbiotic relationship. In hot weather they're vital – you can feel the tension in the air as the heat rises.'
Yet, planting trees is surprisingly expensive. The government's Urban Tree Challenge Fund provides up to £270 a tree, but the rest must be found from other sources. Planting in a park costs about £400 a tree, but planting in the street costs significantly more, as it means digging up concrete: 30 trees on Rutland Street would cost about £120,000 in total, says Noble. They still need to find about £100,000 to make this happen.
In the next year or so, however, Dasein hopes to finally get the 30 trees he wanted on his street. 'For me, if this happens and we see a sweep of trees down here, I will simply think: we've really done something,' he says. 'Our community deserves beauty – arts, culture, the best that civilisation offers – and most of all, nature.'
Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow the biodiversity reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield in the Guardian app for more nature coverage
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

OPINION - If you think A Level results are unfair, I've got some news for you
OPINION - If you think A Level results are unfair, I've got some news for you

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

OPINION - If you think A Level results are unfair, I've got some news for you

If teenagers haven't already absorbed that life is unfair, they'll register it by the time they're 18 and find that everyone around them thinks that their entire future hangs on three little letters, or maybe four, these being the grades they got at A-level or its equivalent today. You may well live for eight decades but for those who got their results at 10am – unless they made it to school earlier – it's the six or so hours they took sitting their exams which determine what follows between now and death. That's how it feels. It was fine, chez McDonagh. There were whoops this morning from my daughter's bedroom, which frightened the cat, once she found she's got the grades to get into the Courtauld. But she's tiptoeing round her friends, some of whom fell short of the results they wanted. It's all the more awkward, since it turns out that there are record numbers of A grades this year: 28 per cent of students got an A or starred A, which looks remarkably like grade inflation. There are in fact marked gender and regional disparities when it comes to A levels. Many more girls – 440,000 - than boys – 380,000 - took A-levels than male students. The boys were concentrated in subjects such as maths, physics and economics in which they did slightly better than girls, but it's striking, that disparity in numbers. As for the regional imbalance, it's even more marked, and London is on the right side of the divide. Some 32 per cent of entries here got a starred A or A; a little under 23 per cent in the north east of England did so. I hate to say this, but London doesn't have a premium on native intelligence over Sunderland I hate to say this, but London doesn't have a premium on native intelligence over Sunderland; there's something else at work, and it's probably the enhanced pupil premium that the capital was so good at demanding and getting in previous years, though the number of private schools may also have something to do with it. Private schools are genius at producing top grades. And there are tricks to getting them: A levels are to a dispiriting extent nowadays a matter of jumping through hoops, in giving examiners the chance to tick boxes (it's not a figure of speech) when they see candidate using the formulas and language that they are looking for. In the humanities, and I've been through this twice now, you aren't marked on your engagement with the subject or your knowledge of it, so much as your ability to make the requisite number of points in the required fashion. And if you don't, you're toast. Notwithstanding the inflated A grades, there are lots of young people out there who are feeling like failures because they didn't measure up to a narrow standard of performance in a narrow range of subjects. You want to bring them together for a collective pep talk to say that, actually, once you're at work, no one cares what you did or where you went. No one has ever asked for proof of my university qualifications, ever and certainly not A levels. What matters is whether you're good at your job, a decent worker, a pleasant colleague. People may ask where you went to university by way of conversation, but there's quite a bit of kudos in not having a degree, the currency now being so widely spread. This year, about 38 per cent of 18 year olds will go to university. It carries zero bragging rights. My father left school in Ireland at 14 and went straight to work in a pottery. It's possible to flourish outside higher education. And yet one of my daughter's friends is trying to find a way to tell her parents that actually, she doesn't want to go to university; she wants to join the armed services. I mean, which is cooler, having a daughter who's an RAF pilot or a girl who, after three years of media studies, still isn't quite sure where she's going, only she's going to be taking an awful lot of student debt with her? The more important aspect of A levels is that it's the culmination of about 15 years of education, in my children's case, courtesy of the state. And it's those 15 years which matter, not the exams that mark their ending. That schooling takes up most of a young life, in the course of which an individual is formed by school, teachers, friends, the state and that intangible thing, the wider culture. In other words, A levels may be the culmination of a lifetime's schooling but they're not the measure of it. They're a narrow assessment of a narrow range of subjects, useful chiefly as an entry to higher education, which isn't for everyone. Other aspects of the years at school matter more. If you've done well, congratulations. But if you didn't, it needn't matter. The adventure of life isn't defined by the letters A to C. Melanie McDonagh is a columnist for The London Standard

‘Historic moment' as reintroduced pine martens produce young on Dartmoor
‘Historic moment' as reintroduced pine martens produce young on Dartmoor

Yahoo

time10-07-2025

  • Yahoo

‘Historic moment' as reintroduced pine martens produce young on Dartmoor

Pine martens reintroduced to Dartmoor have produced their first young, with camera-trap footage capturing shots of kits scampering through woodland. Conservationists behind the project to return pine martens to the south west of England after a 100-year absence have said they were 'ecstatic' to see the reintroduced animals had successfully bred. The discovery comes after 15 pine martens – eight females and seven males – were released at undisclosed Dartmoor locations in autumn 2024, as part of efforts to restore the species to the area. Pine martens were once common in the South West, but were hit by the loss of their woodland habitat and by human persecution, conservationists said. The Two Moors Pine Marten Project partnership, a collaboration of groups which is behind the reintroduction, and its local volunteers, have spent hundreds of hours tracking the movements of the cat-sized animals, installing den boxes for them and checking camera traps to see what they are up to. Two films show young pine martens, known as kits, exploring their new Devon home, with one clip revealing three kits chasing each other through leaves and up a bank in a Dartmoor woodland, and other of the same family of a mother and two kits running along a fallen tree close to a stream. Experts said female pine martens usually give birth to two or three kits in spring, with youngsters spending their first seven to eight weeks hidden in dens before emerging in early summer, and sticking with their mothers until the following spring. The conservationists behind the project said the population in the South West should now grow gradually over coming years, and the team is preparing for a further release of pine martens at secret locations in Exmoor this autumn. Devon Wildlife Trust's Tracey Hamston, who leads the Two Moors Pine Marten Project, said: 'When our volunteers discovered the footage of pine marten kits on one of our trail cameras we were ecstatic. 'This is a historic moment for the return of a native animal and for the future of the South West's woodlands. 'To have breeding pine martens back after a century's absence signals a positive step in nature's recovery. 'It's also testament to the many hours work undertaken by the project partnership and dozens of local volunteers.' Jack Hunt, Woodland Trust assistant site manager for Devon, said staff and volunteers have been checking camera traps for several months, and over the past few weeks had been 'eagerly anticipating' spotting kits on the films. 'This sighting is wonderful news. 'The work over many years to restore and improve the condition of our woodlands, to support other landowners to do the same and work in partnership on this project has culminated in the return of the pine marten born in its natural environment in Dartmoor, the first of many and the beginning of the return of this missing species.' The partnership involves Dartmoor National Park Authority, Devon Wildlife Trust, Exmoor National Park Authority, Forestry England, National Trust, Somerset Wildlife Trust and Woodland Trust, backed by the National Lottery Heritage Fund and supported by the Vincent Wildlife Trust.

Project coaxes purple butterfly into new county
Project coaxes purple butterfly into new county

Yahoo

time26-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Project coaxes purple butterfly into new county

A "conservation success story" has seen a British butterfly species coaxed in to a new county. The purple emperor is a relatively common sight in the south of England but until last summer was previously unrecorded in Derbyshire. The planting of sallow trees in shaded spots close to the oak woodlands the species inhabits in the county since 2023 encouraged two sightings, in Bretby and Aston-on-Trent, in 2024. And a further record of the purple emperor basking on a driveway in Ticknall on Wednesday means the butterfly is "100% going to establish" locally, according to Derbyshire recorder for charity Butterfly Conservation Ken Orpe. Mr Orpe, who was awarded a Green Apple environmental award for his work encouraging landowners to create caterpillar habitats including at Kedleston and Hardwick estates, said the species had been noted expanding north from Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire and most recently Leicestershire due to climate change. He said: "We thought if we can get some sallows, which is the food plant of the caterpillar, planted, it might just entice it into our beloved county." Purple emperor males can be the size of a small bird, says the Woodland Trust, and have an iridescent purple sheen to their wings, while the females are smaller and brown in colour. Butterfly enthusiasts call the species "His Majesty" said the trust, and Mr Orpe added in Victorian times spotters would "go crazy" for them. But sighting them can prove tough, as when mature in late June to August, the males prefer to congregate on the tops of oak trees waiting for females to pass by. Mr Orpe said: "They're absolutely brilliant, quite large, as big as the palm of your hand, and when the sun shines on the male it's a beautiful purple sheen on the wings. "It's really good news that they've reached Derbyshire. I used to have to go to Wiltshire or Hampshire to see them, that was 20 years ago, but now they've come to see us." Follow BBC Derby on Facebook, on X, or on Instagram. Send your story ideas to eastmidsnews@ or via WhatsApp on 0808 100 2210. Droppings of Springwatch bird being analysed Pine martens could return to county countryside Project aims to return 'keystone' elk to UK 'Iconic' butterfly seen in county for first time Tree planting aims to attract 'iconic' butterfly Butterfly Conservation

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store