• Contact us
  • Advertise with us
  • Cumbria Crack app
  • About us
Monday, July 21, 2025
cumbriacrack.com
  • News
  • Sport
    • All sport
    • Carlisle United
  • Business
  • What’s on
  • Jobs
  • Food & drink
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Sport
    • All sport
    • Carlisle United
  • Business
  • What’s on
  • Jobs
  • Food & drink
No Result
View All Result
cumbriacrack.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Business

Axed trees make triumphant return to Ambleside holiday park

by Cumbria Crack
18/07/2021
in Business
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Henry Wild at Skelwith Fold. Larches now clad the exterior of the park's new eco-friendly offices
Henry Wild at Skelwith Fold. Larches now clad the exterior of the park’s new eco-friendly offices.

Around 200 mature larch trees which an Ambleside holiday park was forced to fell are now making a triumphant return to where they grew up.

Skelwith Fold caravan park had to give the trees the chop this winter after the Forestry Commission discovered them to be suffering from a deadly plant disease.

The cull was necessary to prevent the blight spreading, and the park’s family owners said they were heartbroken at having to lose so many specimens.

But the story now has a happier ending as the larches are being upcycled this summer across a range of building and other projects on the park.

“We have gone from despair to delight at seeing our trees not go to waste, and instead playing a big part in our sustainability work,” said Skelwith Fold’s Henry Wild.

“For example, the sawn timber has created a stunning natural finish to our new energy-efficient office building which includes an air source heat pump and solar panels.

“The larches are also being turned into everything from fencing, planters and outdoor seating to red squirrel feeders and hand-crafted furniture for our holiday homes.

“We hope to find a good use for virtually every last splinter, even using smaller branches to create wildlife habitats, and turning off-cuts into chippings for our playground.”

Gaps that have appeared in the park’s 130 acres of woodland and grounds where the trees once stood have become part of a rewilding project, said Henry.

“It’s given us a great opportunity to let nature loose and regenerate in its own way, and we’re already seeing saplings, wild flowers and other plants pushing up through the soil.

“We’re thrilled that so many unexpected positives have come out from what we originally saw as a complete disaster, and that has a very special resonance in these times,” he added.

The deadly disease affecting the park’s larches was identified as Phytophthoras, from the Greek for “plant destroyer”, which has become rampant across wide areas of the country.

Henry said he was now hopeful that Skelwith Fold’s quick response to the outbreak will help put the brakes on the spread of the blight in the Lake District.

The Wild family, which has owned the park for nearly 25 years, has won a number of environmental awards for its care of the natural world and many wildlife-friendly projects.

Previous Post

How you can volunteer in Cumbria this summer

Next Post

Student of the year accolade for AW Jenkinson worker

Have you read?

Story Homes raises £8,000 for Cancer Research UK at golf day
News

Story Homes raises £8,000 for Cancer Research UK at golf day

11/09/2023
World expert in social media to headline business event
Business

World expert in social media to headline business event

05/09/2023
Cumbria’s Lloyd Motor Group expands in Newcastle
Business

Cumbria’s Lloyd Motor Group expands in Newcastle

05/09/2023
Cumbrian firms given £10 million-worth of investment
Business

Cumbrian firms given £10 million-worth of investment

04/09/2023
New director for H&H Land & Estates
Business

New director for H&H Land & Estates

04/09/2023
Cumbrian apprentices kick-start telecoms careers
News

Cumbrian apprentices kick-start telecoms careers

04/09/2023

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our mailing list to receive daily updates direct to your inbox!

*We hate spam as much as you do. Privacy Statement

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

33 Middlegate
Penrith
Cumbria
CA11 7SY

Phone: 01768 862313
Email: admin@cumbriacrack.com

Registered in England as Barrnon Media Limited. No: 12475190
VAT registration number: 343486488

Explore

  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Carlisle United
  • Business
  • What’s on
  • Jobs

Useful links

  • Contact us
  • Send a sport report
  • Get our app
  • Advertise with us
  • About us

Follow us on

Newsletter

Subscribe to our mailing list to receive daily updates direct to your inbox!

*We hate spam as much as you do. Privacy Statement

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

© Barrnon Media Limited 2023

Terms & Conditions / Privacy Policy / Cookie Policy
This website and its associated newspaper are members of the Independent Press Standards Organisation
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Sport
    • All sport
    • Carlisle United
  • Business
  • What’s on
  • Jobs
  • Food & drink

© 2025 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.