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Shaping the Wild

Wisdom from a Welsh Hill Farm

This book examines the reality of farming’s impact on nature by studying a Welsh hill farm.

Farming has often been viewed as harmful to the environment, causing friction between those wanting to protect wildlife and the farmers whose livelihoods depend on the land. Conservationists and governments frequently propose well-meaning ideas and policies that all too often do not have the intended results. In this captivating debut, conservationist David Elias explores a farm in Snowdonia National Park and unpacks the gritty reality of trying to reconcile hill farming and environmentalism. Visiting through the seasons, he forms a deep relationship with the land and the people who work it. It is also a farm rich in nature, and he brings his experienced eye to how its wildlife has been shaped by changing farming practices over generations. Through lyrical prose and first-hand conversations with farmers, Elias also shows what current government policies have achieved—or not achieved—and why it is so important for us to understand what it really takes to ensure farming families remain on the land while simultaneously allowing nature to flourish.
 

232 pages | 13 halftones, 1 map | 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 | © 2023

Earth Sciences: Environment

Economics and Business: Economics--Agriculture and Natural Resources

Political Science: Public Policy


View all books from University of Wales Press

Reviews

"Shaping the Wild will quickly become a classic of Welsh nature writing, a loving yet challenging evocation of a unique environment."

Nation.Cymru

“There is an honesty to this writing which demands respect, as the author constantly looks beyond his own thinking, his own experience. This is possible because Mr Elias has built up a lifetime’s empathetic understanding of conservation, farming, the people who live those lives and of the fabric of nature with which they work. This is where mutual understanding between worlds is embodied, and therein lies the potential of the book to support change. In the public domain, how often conversations are cut short by the lack of a shared language, either side unwilling or too willing to express how the fates of farming and nature impact each other.” 

The Snowdonia Society

“A must-read for anyone interested in how governments, businesses and individuals can alter the landscape, Shaping The Wild is a realistic reflection of the difficult problem of ecological protection. At its core, it asks a fundamental question: how do you do the right thing, when you don’t know what the right thing is?” 

Buzz Magazine

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Craig-y-tân
Chapter 2: Lambing
Chapter 3: Wild Woods
Chapter 4: Pastures
Chapter 5: Conifers, Foxes and Crows
Chapter 6: Peat
Chapter 7: Moorland Birds
Chapter 8: The River
Chapter 9: Shaping the Wild Woods
Chapter 10: Shearing
Chapter 11: Heather
Chapter 12: Wilding
Chapter 13: In the End

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