Is it any use for anything?? Sitting in a high seat just now and noting how much gorse has sprung up on this section of woodlands. Photo attached, what would you do with this?
Is it any use for anything?? Sitting in a high seat just now and noting how much gorse has sprung up on this section of woodlands. Photo attached, what would you do with this?
Hmm, I think my ex may have been part new forest pony.Gorse is OK provided that it's burnt on a 7 year rotation.
Up to that point it provides quite good wildlife habitat, fodder for livestock and an abundance of flowers for wine making.
Once gorse gets older it just kills off everything underneath, creating a fairly barren ecosystem.
Ideally, if you have a large area of gorse on your land, divide it into 7 blocks and burn one block each year
(Incidentally, the New Forest ponies have a special adaption that enables them to eat gorse without prickling their lips. They grow a thick bristly moustache during the winter months).
I was expecting some comments along those lines....Hmm, I think my ex may have been part new forest pony.
Gorse is OK provided that it's burnt on a 7 year rotation.
Up to that point it provides quite good wildlife habitat, fodder for livestock and an abundance of flowers for wine making.
Once gorse gets older it just kills off everything underneath, creating a fairly barren ecosystem.
Ideally, if you have a large area of gorse on your land, divide it into 7 blocks and burn one block each year
(Incidentally, the New Forest ponies have a special adaption that enables them to eat gorse without prickling their lips. They grow a thick bristly moustache during the winter months).
It’s not great for biodiversity - and in the long term can be quite suppressive, especially if it establishes big thickets.Good for wildlife. Formerly used as good quality fodder. Nitrogen fixing, so good for the soil. Effective ground cover and will probably to some extent keep deer off saplings it is surrounding.
I would leave it well alone and resist the urge too many people have to try and make the countryside look like a Sunningdale golf course.
As far as I’m aware the burning of gorse or heather isn’t actually illegal, but you need a licence from NPWS and they are refusing to issue them for controlled burn’s because of smoke and carbon emissions.I love the sight and smell of gorse when it's in bloom, and in small and scattered clumps it's fine. Lots of it in West Cork & Kerry. Beyond that I agree with Dunwater. It's illegal to burn it here (not that that appears to restrain anyone). I lived for a number of years on Bantry Bay, it was not unusual to see gorse fires on the hills around the bay. Apparently the burn back of the gorse stimulates the growth of other plants and provides habitat and fodder for a number of species (not least sheep).![]()