Welcome “two” the herd
Ground-breaking wilding project welcomes the birth of two female bison calves
Head of Education and Lifelong Learning at Kent Wildlife Trust Lee Mason-Baldwin said: “The Wilder Blean Project and wider landscape initiative give us all reasons to be hopeful for the future and is a much-needed good news story in what can feel like a bleak landscape.
“We must inspire young people to champion the environment, after all, we will be handing them the baton of responsibility to protect our natural world as they grow. However, it is also important we give them reason for hope and tackle the eco-anxiety we know many young people face. ‘The Bison and the Butterfly’ does this through its uplifting storytelling of friendship and rewilding.
“A percentage of sales from the book will be donated to the charity, and the launch is supported by a wider education programme and activity pack. We hope it will be the first step that children take to set them on a lifelong journey that ignites their passion for nature.”
History was made in July 2022 when free-roaming bison were first introduced into West Blean and Thornden Woods. On the same day as the climate champions took their first steps into the woodland, temperatures soared past 40 degrees in the UK.
The bison release was made possible through a partnership between the charities Kent Wildlife Trust and Wildwood Trust with the release phase funded through the People’s Postcode Lottery Dream Fund.
The bison act as ecosystem engineers and are used as a Nature-based Solution to woodland management. Through their natural behaviours such as debarking trees and dustbathing they create space for other species to thrive.
Since their arrival in the woodland, the founding member of three now stands at six with a surprise calf born in September 2022, the arrival of the bull in December 2023 and the first calf to be conceived and born in the Blean taking place in December 2023.
Ground-breaking wilding project welcomes the birth of two female bison calves
Kent Wildlife Trust's Chief Executive, Evan Bowen-Jones says he is encouraged by new research which highlights rationale behind the Wilder Blean Initiative.
Thanks to the generous support of the Veolia Environmental Trust, Kent Wildlife Trust has received funding to help them connect rural areas allowing “ecosystem engineers” to change the landscape.