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No guest this week. Just Tom and Chloe with a drink, a lot to catch up on, and roughly an hour to get through it all.
It's been 18 months since the last proper project update and quite a lot has happened. 4,000 trees planted. A tiny forest that nearly died twice and is now over six feet tall. A market garden. A distillery in the barn. A charity. Four schools through the gate in one week. And an otter, which felt significant.
This is the third update episode - episode 9 was the start, episode 29 was one year in. This one's the most honest of the three.
Restoring More Nature
Producing More Food
Contributing to the Local Economy
Connecting More People to Wilder Nature
00:00 - Tom's opening confession
01:31 - What we said on episode 29, and how much has changed
05:44 - The four pillars explained
07:04 - 28,000 listeners, 125 countries, and someone in Cape Town saving for their own rewilding site
07:53 - PILLAR 1: Restoring More Nature
08:12 - 4,000+ trees, dragon's nests, and the saplings finally breaking through
10:43 - Tiny Forest: 98% survival, over six feet tall, future outdoor classroom
13:59 - Hedgerows: planted, lost to drought, replanted
15:36 - Wood Meadow: what it is, why it's rare, and a lot of hand-scything
18:44 - Deer: why culling became unavoidable, and the experiment with over-planting
22:24 - The pond that collapsed - and then gave us house martins, a kestrel and an otter
26:39 - Voles everywhere, and what doubling bird species in one year actually means
27:13 - Pigs: what went wrong, what's coming next, and the ecological case for them
31:21 - The cow debate
33:54 - Welsh Rewilding Alliance: founding members
34:02 - Naturfa Pathway: recognised by the Welsh Government
35:05 - PILLAR 2: Producing More Food
35:37 - How a market garden ended up being run by the people who said they wouldn't run it
37:47 - Ducks, chickens, and the orchard
41:54 - 50-100+ varieties: why growing diversity is also food security
43:29 - From least to most efficient food production on the same land
44:33 - PILLAR 3: Contributing to the Local Economy
44:33 - Wilder Spirits: the distillery, the story, the paper bottle, 2 April
47:13 - Mark, Sandy, and why six people working on site matters
48:18 - Platform Nature: what it is, who's using it, and where it's going
52:31 - The Grange Hub: opened by the Future Generations Commissioner
53:13 - Wilder Away Days: NHS to corporate
55:23 - Why talking about money is part of the project
56:38 - Cabins: off Airbnb, direct only, and why that was the right call
57:34 - Revenue transparency: the real numbers from the first six months
58:39 - PILLAR 4: Connecting More People to Wilder Nature
58:58 - Wilder Connections: what the charity is, and why Chloe built it
01:01:11 - Four schools in one week
01:02:01 - Teenagers, sticks, and what co-design actually looks like
01:04:10 - The oak tree moment
01:05:38 - Open days: what they are, and why April sold out a month early
01:06:35 - Hopes for the rest of 2026
The Grange Project
grangeproject.co.uk
Wilder Spirits - pre-orders open 2 April 2026
wilderspirits.co.uk
Wilder Connections - Chloe's charity for nature connection in young people
wilderconnections.charity
Wilder Away Days - nature-centred corporate experiences
wilderawaydays.co.uk
Platform Nature - tools for nature restoration projects
platformnature.com
Leave Curious - Rob's rewilding YouTube channel (120,000 subscribers)
https://www.youtube.com/@CuriousLeave
Dayhike Magazine - the magazine Tom said had him turning every page
dayhike.co.uk
Book an open day or open morning at the Grange Project
grangeproject.co.uk
If you listened all the way through, send us an email with just one word: Flamingo
It tells us you're here, and it means more than you'd think.
If this episode made you want to see what's happening on the land, get updates on the distillery, or just come for a walk - all the links are above.
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No transcript available for this episode.