logo
Ireland has a dismal amount of tree cover but ‘wild' is partly between our ears

Ireland has a dismal amount of tree cover but ‘wild' is partly between our ears

Irish Times10-05-2025
Anyone interested in nature in Ireland or Britain is now assailed by versions of the word 'wild'.
Environmental professionals talk endlessly of 'wilding' and '
rewilding
' the country. The introduction of long-absent animals – elks, bison and lynx – are hotly debated or, in the case of beavers, they are legally loosed into our rivers. Horticulturalists want to turn their gardens into mini versions of wilderness. Radical councils are trumpeting 'No-mow May' and liberating the roadside verges as knee-high forests of wild flowers.
The world is going wild for 'wild', but what actually do we mean when we invoke this ancient word? It is a good question but it is also hugely complicated. Look it up in the Oxford English Dictionary and you'll find 17 interlinking uses, some deeply negative. There are entire 'wild' peoples dismissed as 'uncivilised or uncultured'; uninhabited places that are 'desolate' or simply 'desert'; individuals who are 'savage, violent and cruel'. Wildness is loaded with these secondary connotations that make its use not only difficult but controversial.
[
Ireland is waging a war on trees at a time when we need more of them
Opens in new window
]
Yet, simultaneously, wild appears to be something we not only want, but need. The American naturalist Henry Thoreau famously argued that: 'In wildness is the preservation of the world'. Without the nourishment of 'this vast, savage, howling mother of ours. Nature,' he wrote, we would descend to the condition of the English nobility: 'a sort of breeding in and in', he added, that would leave humanity 'destined to die out'.
READ MORE
Actually, there is mounting scientific support for Thoreau's argument. We do need versions of wildness, which is hardly surprising given our genus, Homo, has a heritage of nature immersion that is 2.75 million years old. We now call it 'forest bathing' or any number of nature 'therapies' but the impacts of wild places are proven. Trees release volatile organic compounds that stimulate the amygdala (the part of the brain related to emotions and memory) and boost mental wellbeing. Those same compounds stimulate our immune systems. In Japan they have found that forest bathing
increases capacity to combat illness
.
Forest walks reduce adrenaline and cortisol, chemical symptoms of stress and illness. Organic shapes like those found in forests are restful. Forest places allow our brains to relax, while walking in forests improves our capacity to pay attention. Canadian children brought up in forests are
more developed than those who grow up amid concrete
, with better communications skills, more emotional maturity as well as better general health.
Two further possible reasons why we might need wildness is that
12.5 per cent of children under 19 in all EU countries are judged to be in poor mental health
. In Britain the prevalence of adolescent mental disorders is higher. The figures for mobile phone screen-time are equally compelling. The global average for adults is assumed to be
six hours and 37 minutes
per day. In the US, children aged 11-14 in low-income families are glued to their screens for more than nine hours, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention told us in 2018. And the poorer they are, the more addicted they are, with a concomitant risk of suffering lower mental or physical health.
[
Why is mental health so much worse among Irish youths than adults?
Opens in new window
]
I could go on. But one after another research project is returning with incontestable proof. Yet how and where do we find this condition of wildness?
I recently visited a Polish forest on the Belarusian border called Bialowieza
. It is widely reputed to be a primeval place, a glimpse of what Ireland and Britain might have looked like 10,000 years ago, before our species transformed the world we live in.
It is as close to a wilderness as we can get on our continent. It is missing aurochs, the extinct wild species from which cattle are derived. Yet they were there until the 17th century. Wild horses have been recently reintroduced to Bialowieza and along with its buffer forest, it comprises 280,000 hectares. The core area of 1,500sq km holds all those animals that the rewilding communities wish to see in our islands – wolves, European bison (the largest populations anywhere in the world), lynx, elk, red and roe deer, pine martens, otters and beavers.
2/8/23 News Wild mushrooms grow on branch of old Oak tree in Cahermurphy Oak Wood a hyper-oceanic temperate rain forest remnant in the the Slieve Aughty mountain range of East Clare and South Galway. Photo: Bryan O'Brien / The Irish Times Keywords: ecology seeds acorn tree collate fungi
The native Irish primrose (Primula vulgaris) flowering in an Irish woodlland this spring. Photograph: Richard Johnston
Yet what was more astonishing was the way the forest behaved. With us trees are almost always alive and upright. In Bialowieza, almost half of all the forest biomass is either standing deadwood or fallen trees. There were whole places that looked to have been upended by storm. Deadwood, you realise, is the very soul of this living forest. All sense of conventional order was also abolished and perhaps it is this loss of ourselves in this otherness – this 'howling mother of ours', in Thoreau's words – that bring the recuperative power of such places?
In Ireland as in Britain, with its dismal average of 12 per cent tree cover (compared with a European figure of 38 per cent), we struggle to find such places. Yet perhaps we don't need to. Because some version of wildness is in every place. Go to any spot – even those largely made of concrete or tarmac – and search beneath your feet. You will find a world, a volatile seethe of countless micro-organisms. For, all of life, everything, all the basic circuitry of our planet is determined by bacteria. Life is enthroned on a great and omnipresent dais of microbes.
[
The company of wolves: should large predators be reintroduced to Ireland?
Opens in new window
]
At this bacterial level, there is no human order, no control, not even much knowledge. Studies of soil by a Scandinavian team found a one-gramme pinch contained 4,000–5,000 species. Our world is – or rather perhaps our worlds are – utterly mysterious, entirely beyond us in every sense. We may intervene, we may wage antibacterial wars in our homes, we may live with the delusion of control. But this world is still wild.
So the condition of being wild and our capacity to access it doesn't rely on a single specific destination such as Bialowieza, for example. It exists as a spectrum. It is a variable quality, like temperature. And all places partake of some wildness. Because wild is partly between our ears: it depends upon a quality of loving attention to what is most immediate. And to what is
not
our species. It may be most abundant and easiest to recognise in great primeval forest with bison, but it is also just round the corner. At the roadside. In your garden. These are wild places too. You simply have to attend.
Mark Cocker is an English author and naturalist, who writes for the Guardian's Country Diary. He will give a talk at the Shaking Bog Festival on Saturday, May 17th, in the Glencree Valley, Co Wicklow, followed by a public conversation with
Ella McSweeney
. The event will take place in St Patrick's Church, Curtlestown.
shakingbog.ie/riverscapes
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Natural population' falls in 15 areas, from Belmullet to Dún Laoghaire
‘Natural population' falls in 15 areas, from Belmullet to Dún Laoghaire

Irish Times

time15 hours ago

  • Irish Times

‘Natural population' falls in 15 areas, from Belmullet to Dún Laoghaire

There was a fivefold increase in the number of local electoral areas (LEAs) across Ireland in which more deaths than births were recorded in 2022, new figures released by the Central Statistics Office (CSO) show. The majority of the 15 areas in question are rural towns in the west and south of the country, although the list also includes parts of Dublin typically seen to be more affluent than average, such as Rathfarnham-Templeogue and Dún Laoghaire in south Dublin. The figures are contained in a new release from the CSO. The data covers the country's 166 LEAs and shows the largest natural population decline, a measure that excludes inward or outward migration, occurred in Belmullet, Co Mayo with a rate of -2.9. READ MORE The figure is calculated by combining an area's death rate per thousand of population with its birth rate. In Belmullet's case, the -2.9 figure was calculated from of a birth rate of 8.6 and a death rate of 11.5. Other towns with a notably high natural decrease rate were Glenties, Co Donegal (-2.3) and Kenmare, Co Kerry (-1.2). In these areas, an ageing population means death rates are consistently higher than birth rates with Belmullet and Glenties experiencing a decrease for two consecutive years, the CSO records show. The other local areas that experienced a natural decrease in population were Swinford, Co Mayo; Kilrush, Co Clare; Ballinamore, Co Leitrim; Rosslare, Co Wexford; Tralee, Co Kerry; Boyle, Co Roscommon; Ballymote-Tobercurry, Co Sligo; Artane-Whitehall, Dublin; Bantry-West, Co Cork; and Castleisland, Co Kerry. The highest rates of natural increase in population were all in Dublin: Blanchardstown-Mulhuddart and Ongar, both in the Fingal constituency of Dublin, and both with a rate of 9.7, as well as Tallaght South, South Dublin where the rate was 9.6. Nationwide, the CSO statistics show the rate of natural increase of population in 2022 stood at 3.5, with 54,483 births recorded and 35,804 deaths in total. The CSO noted this rate 'varied significantly across LEAs', but that particularly high numbers of births and deaths were seen in urban areas in north Dublin. The CSO data also showed the national birth rate stood at 10.2, with Tallaght South boasting the highest birth rate in the country at 13.7 live births per 1,000 people. Enniscorthy, Co Wexford and Ongar, Fingal in Dublin were the other LEAs with the highest birth rates, at 13.3 and 13.2 respectively. Seán O'Connor, a statistician with the CSO, said the newly released data 'includes population statistics that are entirely based on administrative records, and as this release uses experimental methodology, [the] estimates are not official population statistics and are not comparable with Census of Population data'. The census conducted in 2022 showed the population of the Republic of Ireland was 5,149,000, a 31 per cent increase from 2002. In May the CSO released findings on the number of births and deaths recorded in Ireland during 2024 which showed the national fertility rate to be 1.5, a decrease of 0.4 from 2014. 'A value of 2.1 is generally considered to be the level at which the population would replace itself in the long run, ignoring migration,' the CSO said. The CSO findings also showed that the rates of deaths related to tumours and cancers were highest in Tralee, Co Kerry, Swinford, Co Mayo and Roscrea-Templemore, Co Tipperary. Deaths caused by respiratory diseases such as influenza, pneumonia and bronchitis were most common in Manorhamilton, Co Leitrim, Ballinasloe, Co Galway and Enniscorthy, Co Wexford.

One Night in Dublin ... out with the city's street cleaners: Smashed bottles, vomit, urine and worse
One Night in Dublin ... out with the city's street cleaners: Smashed bottles, vomit, urine and worse

Irish Times

time15 hours ago

  • Irish Times

One Night in Dublin ... out with the city's street cleaners: Smashed bottles, vomit, urine and worse

Discarded fast-food, pizza boxes, smashed bottles, burst black bags, vomit, blood, urine and human faeces – these are the staples strewn across the workplace of the capital's street cleaners as they start a weekend morning shift. It's 6am on Sunday. Drury Street, metres from Dublin's premier shopping thoroughfare Grafton Street, is ground zero for Dublin City Council 's army of sweepers, power-washers, sanitisers and vacuum-cleaners. 'This is the hotspot,' says Sean-Michael Larkin, the council's waste services manager. READ MORE This morning he is overseeing 38 cleaning operatives and drivers, bolstered by a number of contractors. 'Temple Bar was the hot spot. It is still very busy there, but since Covid this area is party central,' he says of the partially pedestrianised Drury Street and surrounding streets. Making his way towards Lower Stephen Street it is clear the aftermath of a weekend night in the capital is not only unsightly but potentially hazardous. There is a huge amount of broken glass – wine, beer and spirits bottles as well as smashed drinking glasses – along with discarded nitrous oxide canisters, congealing food and human waste. Sean-Michael Larkin manages a team of cleaners for Dublin City Council. Photograph: Dan Dennison 'That's more than likely kitchen waste,' says Larkin, gesturing to a mound of potato peelings and prawn shells. 'It's more than likely one of the private contractors [bin collectors] lifted an overflowing bin and it's spillage that DCC [Dublin City Council] will have to clean up.' Two council workers wearing bright yellow gilets sweep debris from the paths on to the road. Repeatedly Larkin stoops down to move bottles and cartons from ledges on to the road, for the oncoming 'Multihog'. Members of the street cleaning team at work in Dublin 1. Photograph: Dan Dennison The road will soon be swept by this 'machine sweeper', says Larkin. The 'Multihog' is a slow-moving vehicle that travels at about 8km-10km per hour with large rotating brushes that sweep then suck up all before it – glass, cans, chip-boxes or mashed-up pizza. Overhead and at ground level are seagulls with their relentless cacophony. 'They are a protected species. I have no idea why. But they are nightmare for us. They open everything,' says Larkin. At the turn to South William Street, by a well-known pizza spot, two gulls are pulling slices from a torn bag on the ground, throwing their heads back and swallowing their cold breakfast whole. Seagulls pose a huge problem for waste management in the city centre. Photograph: Dan Dennison 'They know their spots,' says Larkin. 'They have sampled every food on offer in the city. They know where they like to go.' It's 6.15am. The Multihog having already cleared this stretch, South William Street is now being power-washed. Neil Wrigley, night supervisor with PMAC stone and masonry cleaning contractors, describes what they have cleaned. Neil Wrigley is a contractor hired by Dublin City Council to pressure wash the streets overnight and into early morning. Photograph: Dan Dennison 'We are removing all the stains left from last night. There's been puke, pee, two pools of blood over there,' he says, pointing towards Castle Market. 'There was a human poo there,' he grimaces, looking towards the Powerscourt Townhouse Centre. 'We put a bit of pine in the hot water. It just makes the place smell better. The smell of urine is not nice. [ One Night in Dublin ... with the bouncers at Copper Face Jacks: Once you're gone, you're gone Opens in new window ] [ One Night in Dublin ... at the museum: A nocturnal walkabout at the Irish Museum of Modern Art Opens in new window ] 'We clean 44 streets over Saturday and Sunday – all over the northside and southside, with six vans.' Wrigley, who has been removing overnight filth from the streets for a decade, likes the work. 'There is great pride in getting the city back up and running. We see it every morning, the place, how bad it is and then how good we leave it,' he says. The council have their own wash teams too, says Larkin. There is 525 operational and 32 administrative staff in street-cleaning services, with crews out almost 24 hours a day, seven days a week. 'We run a night team, working from 10pm to 5.30am six nights a week – washing and street-cleaning. That is going up to seven nights a week. Another crew starts at 6am to 2pm and then another from 2pm to 10pm,' says Larkin. [ A night with the Dublin Fire Brigade: 'I didn't recognise my former colleague until he was pronounced dead' Opens in new window ] The team also includes drivers in larger sweeping and cleaning trucks, the Johnston 600s, and staff operating large sweeping/vacuuming machines known as 'madvacs' pushed and manoeuvred on footpaths. And then there are the crews emptying and re-bagging more than 3,200 bins across the city, of which just under 1,000 are within the 4km of the city-centre. Onwards towards Dame Street, there are multitudes of tourists already on the move. Dozens are gathered at the Molly Malone statue on Andrew Street, likely waiting for a tour bus, at about 6.30am. At Temple Bar Square Peter Flanagan is one of two operatives sweeping a sea of takeaway bags, cartons and other debris on to Fownes Street for removal by a Multihog. 'This is not too bad really,' says Flanagan. 'Some mornings it can be a hell of a lot worse. Sure you could have 100 bins there and they'd still throw it everywhere.' Up Crow Street, towards Dame Street and more bags filled with restaurant waste, including packaging, are split open. If the weather is good, there is often more rubbish to clean up. Photograph: Dan Dennison Larkin believes these may have been upended by people looking for empty cans and plastic bottles to exchange in the Re-Turn deposit scheme. 'I call them the Re-Turn entrepreneurs. It's a new issue we face,' he says. He is hopeful the removal of the derogation that allows city centre business use plastic bags to dispose of waste, from September, will reduce this spilt rubbish dramatically. 'They are a real issue for us. They are cheap and cheerful but they mean rubbish is everywhere,' he says. On Grafton Street, destitute people are sleeping in doorways as council staff sweep. 'We work around the homeless,' says Larkin. 'Once they are gone, we come back and remove the cardboard [on which many bed down] and any other waste. It is a sensitive issue but generally we have good relationship with them. There is a large human element to this work.' Shortly after 7am, back at Drury Street, Philip Clarke is sweeping up the last remnants of debris. Early morning on Drury Street. Photograph: Dan Dennison 'The wife says I am the best hooverer, the best floor washer,' he says, laughing. 'I had good naval training washing the decks. I was in the naval reserve for five years – got them decks shipshape and Bristol fashion.' On the same shift two weeks ago the street was 'a sea of glass ... there were cars doing U-turns ... they couldn't come up here,' he says. Asked why the scene was so bad he mentions high temperatures over the weekend of July 12th and 13th. 'The weather plays a big part. People come into town, drink, enjoy themselves. If the weather is good the mess the next day will be really bad,' he says. 'The worst thing that could happen would be if they extended the licensing hours. We'd never get in to clean up after them. 'Now, the clubs close around 3am and people are gone home by 4am so you have that window of opportunity. If nightclubs weren't closing until six in the morning, sure they'd still be in town when we're coming on. We'd never clean it.' In his job since 2001, he takes great pride in the work. 'When we come on it looks like a bomb is after hitting the place,' he says. After the team has cleaned Drury Street, Dublin. Photograph: Dan Dennison 'But in the space of two hours, the place is licked clean, ready to hand it back to the people.'

Parents of fourth-class pupils face back-to-school costs of more than €700
Parents of fourth-class pupils face back-to-school costs of more than €700

Irish Times

time15 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Parents of fourth-class pupils face back-to-school costs of more than €700

Parents of children going into fourth class will spend more than €700 on back-to-school costs in the coming weeks, while those with children starting secondary school will spend over €1,100, according to new research from children's charity Barnardos . Its annual costs survey put those for primary children at €725 when uniforms, school trips, classroom materials, voluntary contributions and extracurricular activities are totted up, while those for older children were an estimated €1,113. When the children's charity carried out similar research a decade ago, the same items for a child in fourth class were €400, while parents of children entering secondary school spent an average of €785. The research, published on Wednesday, suggests 50 per cent of parents of primary schoolchildren and 60 per cent of parents with children in secondary school are worried about meeting costs. Just 34 per cent said they will be manageable. READ MORE The research also found that 27 per cent of parents of older children and 14 per cent of primary school parents have to use savings to meet back-to-school costs, with 15 per cent of secondary and one in 10 of primary school parents taking out loans to cover the expense. Barnardos welcomed developments in recent years, including free schoolbooks, hot meals and increased capitation grants, but said many parents remain concerned about costs. This was particularly so in relation to uniforms, voluntary contributions and, for secondary school parents, the increasing cost of digital devices. [ Tips to cut back-to-school expense Opens in new window ] On average this year, primary school parents spent €125 on uniforms and secondary school parents spent €199. The biggest issue identified by parents were schools' insistence on expensive crested items instead of generic clothing. Children growing through uniforms, particularly shoes, during the course of the school year and the fact many schools have tracksuits as well as day-to-day uniforms, were also identified as problematic. Almost three-quarters of primary school parents and 92 per cent of secondary school parents said their children had to wear crested/branded uniforms. Only 34 per cent of primary school parents said their school offered an affordable uniform option, with only 14 per cent of secondary school parents saying the same. Barnardos welcomed the rollout of free schoolbooks to all primary and secondary schools, saying it had made 'a real difference to families across the country'. However, the charity said many schools still require parents to pay for classroom resources averaging €74 for secondary schools and €51 for primary schools. [ Parents face going in to debt to fund school costs Opens in new window ] The vast majority of schools request a voluntary contribution, with the average amount asked by primary schools put at €87 and €133 by secondary schools. A total of 73 per cent of primary and 78 per cent of secondary school parents said the payment did not feel voluntary. A significant number of parents raised the issue of having to pay for school tours and additional extracurricular activities, and highlighted how such costs could come up suddenly. On average, the cost was €144 for secondary and €64 for primary school.

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