
From the ashes
Ash trees are firmly rooted in Britain’s history – and they are making a remarkable comeback.
ByReviewing politics
and culture since 1913
Ash trees are firmly rooted in Britain’s history – and they are making a remarkable comeback.
By Simon ArmitageThe bestselling writer asks: can a forest think? Is a river alive?
By George MonaghanThe head of the Colne Valley on the eastern flanks of the Pennines is visually dramatic – especially when its…
By Simon ArmitageIn this dark and fearful spring, they just carry on.
By Helen MacdonaldThe useless beauty of male birds is evidence of something evolutionists long struggled to accept: female agency.
By Kathleen JamieAs the seasons have been disrupted by climate change, many species have been left mercilessly exposed.
By Helen MacdonaldThe late poet, novelist and New Statesman columnist was equally attuned to the natural world and what lies beyond it.
By Kathleen JamieEvery year the first blackbird feels more poignant, its notes pregnant with nostalgia.
By Helen MacdonaldReintroducing wolves, boar and other lost wildlife to Britain is about enriching human lives as well as preserving nature.
By Helen MacdonaldSoon after the Bay thrush was discovered in 1774, it was lost. But we can no longer blame ignorance for…
By John BurnsideFrost doesn’t merely transform our surroundings – it alters the kind of attention we pay to the world.
By Helen Macdonald