Traditional Hedge Laying at our Country Park

Visitors to Ruddington’s top tourist attraction may have noticed a time-honoured hedge laying technique to help manage its hedgerows sustainably, which aims to provide a valuable habitat and food source for wildlife.

Further winter work is being undertaken at Rushcliffe Country Park by its Park Rangers and Friends of Rushcliffe Country Park (FoRCP) volunteers using a traditional, manual technique which involves cutting the hedge tree thinly at the base and lying them on their side, as can be seen above. It’s an annual practice they have used for decades in certain places of the park to enhance nature conservation.

All being well, new shoots will arrive in spring, creating a dense hedge, originally developed as a livestock barrier but that will now enhance local biodiversity and create a more manageable hedge compared with mechanical techniques. Hedge laying has been used for hundreds of years but has been slowly dying out since WW2 due to the introduction of mechanical hedge cutting from tractors and readily available wire fencing.

Rushcliffe Borough Council’s Cabinet Portfolio Holder for Leisure and Wellbeing, ICT and Member Development Cllr Jonathan Wheeler says: “We’re proud to keep this traditional country hedge laying technique at our park which helps to keep our hedges in a much better condition than mechanical flailing. It’s a manual activity which is carried out over the colder months whilst the hedges are not growing or supporting wildlife such as nesting birds.”

He adds: “Hedgerows provide vital resources for mammals, birds, and insect species and contribute to carbon reduction and we have a strategic aim to increase the Borough’s hedgerow network by 40% across the Borough by 2050. A big thank you to our park rangers and the FoRCP for working hard to keep this wonderful hedge laying tradition alive. We look forward to seeing the fantastic results in the spring.”

Rushcliffe Country Park Manager Alastair Glenn says: “As well as being an important habitat in their own right, hedgerows act as wildlife corridors allowing dispersal between isolated habitats. Our rangers and the FoRCP build the hedgerows every year and it’s a great way to stay physically active, socialise and improve the park.”

FoRCP volunteer Rosemary Dove comments: “Hedge laying is extremely beneficial to wildlife, providing habitat, wildlife corridors and food. We have been sharing this skill between volunteers for many years and it has become a real team effort alongside the park rangers, from harvesting our own stakes from the park, to clearing the old growth and laying the hedge itself. It’s a great social thing to do.”

From left to right: Park Ranger Steve Brown, Rushcliffe Borough Council’s Cabinet Portfolio Holder for Leisure and Wellbeing, ICT and Member Development Cllr Jonathan Wheeler, Rushcliffe Country Park Manager Alastair Glenn and Member of Friends of Rushcliffe Country Park (FoRCP) Rosemary Dove at Rushcliffe Country Park.

The FoRCP group meets every Wednesday from 8.30am to 2pm to help create and maintain habitats and conservation work, learn and share knowledge about wildlife and nature, and help improve the park and its facilities and welcomes new members.

You can contact Friends of Rushcliffe Country Park via Facebook >>HERE<< or call the Country Park Rangers on 0115 921 5865.  Joining leaflets are also available in the park’s Visitor Centre – where prospective new members can fill out a form and sign up in person.

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