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The Limes: Bast-ardly BIG trees smothered in glamrock moths & decapitated bees

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Manage episode 306128155 series 2533199
Content provided by David Oakes. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by David Oakes or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Our forty-sixth and forty-seventh trees are our two native Limes, (Tilia cordata) and (Tilia platyphyllos). These are trees you can hear before you get the chance to set your eyes upon them - they literally hum with invertebrate life. Limes attract the most psychedelic of caterpillars, doomed bees destined to be decapitated by greedy birds, and (somewhat predictably) humankind seeking the lime’s delicate timber and the versatile bast fibres that lie beneath the bark. This “benevolence to biodiversity” and “cornucopia of creative possibilities” means that coppiced lime stools are some of the oldest living organisms alive in the British Isles today. And if that’s not enough, our two native limes can also cross-pollinate to create a hairy-armpitted native hybrid; our forty-eighth tree, the Common Lime (Tilia x europaea). AND we've yet another musical premiere - Louise Jordan heads off into a Linden Lea. (Special thanks to Brigit Strawbridge Howard, Louise Jordan and Al Petrie for adding their voices to this episode.) More from David Oakes as he uproots the secrets and stories beneath the 56(ish) Native Trees of the British Isles can be found at: https://www.treesacrowd.fm/56Trees/

Why not become a "Subscription Squirrel" on our Patreon, and help support the production of this podcast?


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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133 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 306128155 series 2533199
Content provided by David Oakes. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by David Oakes or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Our forty-sixth and forty-seventh trees are our two native Limes, (Tilia cordata) and (Tilia platyphyllos). These are trees you can hear before you get the chance to set your eyes upon them - they literally hum with invertebrate life. Limes attract the most psychedelic of caterpillars, doomed bees destined to be decapitated by greedy birds, and (somewhat predictably) humankind seeking the lime’s delicate timber and the versatile bast fibres that lie beneath the bark. This “benevolence to biodiversity” and “cornucopia of creative possibilities” means that coppiced lime stools are some of the oldest living organisms alive in the British Isles today. And if that’s not enough, our two native limes can also cross-pollinate to create a hairy-armpitted native hybrid; our forty-eighth tree, the Common Lime (Tilia x europaea). AND we've yet another musical premiere - Louise Jordan heads off into a Linden Lea. (Special thanks to Brigit Strawbridge Howard, Louise Jordan and Al Petrie for adding their voices to this episode.) More from David Oakes as he uproots the secrets and stories beneath the 56(ish) Native Trees of the British Isles can be found at: https://www.treesacrowd.fm/56Trees/

Why not become a "Subscription Squirrel" on our Patreon, and help support the production of this podcast?


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  continue reading

133 episodes

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