Trees: a wood wide web
Andrew Marr explores the life of trees with Peter Wohlleben, Kathleen Jamie, Ruth Pavey and Gary Fuller.
Trees may have vibrant inner lives and certainly appear to have individual personalities, claims the forester-cum-writer Peter Wollheben. In his bestselling book, The Hidden Life of Trees, he uncovers an underground social network of communication between trees.
In the late 1990s the journalist Ruth Pavey purchased four acres of scrub woodland in Somerset, and set about transforming this derelict land into a sanctuary for woodland plants, creatures and her own thoughts.
The natural world comes alive in the poetry of Kathleen Jamie. Although her landscape is often her Scottish homeland, politics, history and human folly are never far
away, as she asks how we can live more equably with nature.
And breathing clean air is the goal of Gary Fuller’s book, The Invisible Killer. He studies the rising threat of air pollution from London’s congested streets to wood-burning damage in New Zealand.
Producer: Katy Hickman
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Peter Wohlleben
ĚýThe Hidden Life of TreesĚý - The Illustrated Edition is published by Greystone Books
Ruth Pavey
ĚýHer book about the project, A Wood of One’s Own, is published by Duckworth
Kathleen Jamie
ĚýKathleen Jamie’s Selected Poems is published by Pan Macmillan
Gary Fuller
ĚýThe Invisible Killer: The Rising Threat of Air Pollution – and How We Can Fight Back is published by Melville House
Broadcasts
- Mon 10 Dec 2018 09:00±«Óătv Radio 4
- Mon 10 Dec 2018 21:30±«Óătv Radio 4
Podcast
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