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Welcome to our website. . . .
Troserch woods are now back in public ownership. This
neck of ancient woodland, up the Morlais River from Llangennech, was first
acquired for the nation by the Forestry Commission in the 1950s, then
stripped of its native trees and replanted with softwood conifers. In
the early 1990s it was sold off to private investors, partially felled,
and then reopened to the public in return for grants. Early in 2006, with
the 10-year access agreement coming to an end, the woods were up for sale
again. On September 29th, after a six-month campaign and thanks to a grant
from Cyd Coed (the Forestry Commission in Wales) the woods were bought
back for the community. Troserch Woodlands Society, set up in April 2006
now has well over 200 members and in October nearly 100 people joined
a walkabout organised with Llanelli Ramblers and Llangennech Community
Council to celebrate the ‘reopening’ of the woods.
Now we’ve got the woods, we’ve got to decide what to do with
them: how to make the best of this beautiful, unspoiled
river valley for human beings and other animals. What sort of public access
and amenity do we want? How best to foster wildlife and manage the regeneration
of a more natural broadleaved mix? How much of the conifer plantations
to fell, how much to thin? Or would we be better to leave it to time and
nature, as old trees die or get blown down? Do we want a wildish wood,
or a smoothish park? To consider these questions, we hope to arrange a
wider consultation in the New Year, so more people can consider the issues
before the AGM in May. |
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the news . . . |
Our next committee meeting
will be held on Wednesday 6 December at Tigof Hall in Llangennech
starting at 7.00pm. All members and would-be members are welcome.
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Dr. Dan Foreman at Swansea University
will be conducting a polecat survey in the woods in the first week
of January next year.
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We have applied for a grant off the "Pipe-laying
company" to cover wildlife surveys and signs and another grant
off BIFFA to cover the mine entrances with grills, to preserve
habitats for bats, including Greater horseshoe bats. _____________
History Group meeting. On Wednesday 6 December at
11.00 at Troserch Farm |
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