Lumiar School Forest
A bee-friendly forest in Wiltshire.
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Youth Impacted
Lumiar is a small, self funded school currently with around 30 children. The school opens young minds, while encouraging creativity, responsibility and environmental awareness.
The children are full of enthusiasm and eager to learn and care for their environment.
By creating the bee-friendly micro forest, we bring children closer to Nature, build biodiversity, boost bees, and have loads of fun!
Forest Maker
James Godfrey-Faussett
Forest Partner
Forest Report: 2023
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Tallest Tree
This forest is now dense and self-sustaining. The diverse mix of planting has created a good multi-layered canopy and is slowly shading out the weed pressure. This forest has never received any watering (just rain).
Forest Report: 2022
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Tallest Tree
The tallest species is the wild cherry (Prunus avium), with an average girth of 20mm. The forest continues to thrive and reach a good canopy height - weeds are starting to slow due to the increased shade. This is all with zero watering even during the 2022 summer heatwave and drought.
The lower species such as common dogwood (Cornus sanguinea), spindle (Euonymus europaeus) and hawthorn (Crataegus monogyna) are really benefiting from the shade and the interaction offered by the taller faster growing species; they are starting to fill out the lower strata layer.
The forest soil shows a clear sign of healthy mycorrhizal fungi establishment.
“Lumiar is a small, progressive school that engages children with fun hands-on nature-based activities and learning. Our aim is to create a unique bee friendly native forest with the help of the children and local community.”
James Godfrey-Faussett
Planting: April 2021
Why a Bee Friendly Forest?
Bee populations are diminishing rapidly and alarmingly. By creating a tiny forest of specific native trees that flower successionally, we can offer the bees an almost continual food source and well as their favoured trees for winter hibernation.
The children study and monitor the bees and the many other forms of biodiversity that Miyawaki forests make possible.