Tuesday, June 22, 2021

Mapping British orchards

Map of an orchard

The London-based People's Trust for Endangered Species is mapping its Traditional Orchard Survey, an ongoing project to identify orchards in the United Kingdom.

Another group maps community orchards in England and Scotland.

The People's Trust survey has identified more than 50,000 fruit and nut orchards in England, Scotland, and Wales. 

The total includes abandoned and marginal orchards.

Zooming in on the map eventually resolves to individual orchards. 

Selecting an orchard's pin displays information about the orchard, including what is grows, if that is known. 

There is no way to filter the map by fruit, and but the survey on which the map is based is currently missing from the website available online

(Update: Thanks, see comments!)

HoweverAlso, the website provides two other maps:

Community Orchards

Meanwhile, the Orchard Project, also based in London, has mapped the urban orchards it has supported since 2009, when the group began its work.

There are more than 500 of them in England and Scotland.

This map is searchable, but (as far as I can tell) only by orchard name.

The Project has a page of guides and advice on everything from selecting apple varieties to the nuts and bolts of a community cider pressing.

The Orchard Project also has a lively Twitter account.

Habitat

The People's Trust values traditional orchards as wildlife havens for such endangered species as the noble chafer beetle (Gnorimus nobilis). Per the Trust:

Traditional Orchards are defined, for priority habitat purposes, as groups of fruit and nut trees planted on vigorous rootstocks at low densities in permanent grassland; and managed in a low intensity way.

The Trust's website includes several guides for orchard biodiversity and FruitFinder, a searchable database that identifies traditional apple varieties (and other fruits and nuts) by UK region and use.

Another web pages include links to resources for identifying apple varieties.

Apples are not, per se, the focus of the Trust. But the pomacious fruit is nearly everywhere on the group's website.

It is testament to the way that the cultivation of apples has, over time, influenced and become part of ecosystems and human societies, all evolving together.

Update: This post has been revised to reflect information provided in comments, which may also be of interest.

Maps

4 comments:

  1. Hi Adam,

    Thanks for putting the article about PTES up. To clarify, the survey on which our data is based is here https://ptes.org/orchard-questionnaire/

    I also manage a community orchards page as part of the remit of the Orchard Network. That map is on our website here https://ptes.org/community-orchards/ and lists over 1000 sites.

    Thanks,
    Steve

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Steve, thank you! I am ready and happy to revise the story.

      However, the link you provide for that goes to a page to contribute to the survey.

      The link to the survey from that page is 404 extinct.

      At this point, I am not sure there is a live link to the survey on the website. But it is a big (and interesting!) place, so perhaps I just missed it.

      Delete
  2. The survey results are now available here:
    https://ptes.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/Traditional-orchard-project-in-England-NECR077.pdf

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks! I have revised this post accordingly.

      Delete

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