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We have an ongoing woodland management programme across the countryside estate in Elmbridge. This programme was approved by the Forestry Commission in March 2012 and includes a Woodland Management Plan providing a framework for best practice woodland management.
Watch the videos to find out more about the management works taking place in autumn winter 2024-2025.
Without management, our woodlands will become dark, over-shaded and dominated by tall, overcrowded trees without any viable structure in the long term. To remain healthy, a woodland must include trees of different ages, species, height and canopy size.
The timber is sold to contractors to finance woodland or habitat management projects in local nature reserves to increase biodiversity and keep them healthy and thriving for the future.
It is transported to mills around the country to be processed to make beams, planks, boards, fencing, decking and timber for peoples’ gardens. It is also used as wood fuel. By-products from the sawmill will be put to use as animal bedding, chippings or mulch for gardens. Nothing is wasted.
The wood that cannot be commercially used is left as fallen dead wood providing a wealth of habitats to a range of wildlife, including birds, fungi, bats and insects. Through decay over time, the dead wood provides the soils of the future.
For further information, email countryside@elmbridge.gov.uk.