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Desert Island Discs

Isabella Tree, writer and conservationist

Desert Island Discs

BBC

Society & Culture, Music Commentary, Music, Personal Journals

4.413.7K Ratings

🗓️ 24 November 2019

⏱️ 41 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Isabella Tree is a conservationist and writer of the award-winning book Wilding: the Return of Nature to a British Farm, which tells the story of rewilding a 3,500 acre farm estate in Sussex, which she oversaw with her husband Charlie. The adopted daughter of Michael Tree and Lady Anne Cavendish, Isabella grew up in Mereworth Castle in Kent, and then in Shute House, a vicarage in Dorset. Following her expulsion from two secondary schools, she attended Millfield School as a sixth former, where mutual friends introduced her to her future husband. After reading classics at the University of London, she went on to work as a journalist and travel writer for the Evening Standard and The Sunday Times. Her first book, The Bird Man, about the Victorian ornithologist John Gould, was published in 1991. She married Charles Burrell in 1993 and settled at Knepp, a dairy and arable farm in Sussex. She continued to travel, writing books about Papua New Guinea, Nepal and Mexico. In 2000 Isabella and Charlie closed the farm business at Knepp, and turned the estate into a conservation project, letting the land develop on its own, and eventually introducing free-roaming animals – cattle, pigs, deer and ponies. Two decades later, the project has seen extraordinary increases in wildlife, fungi, and vegetation with extremely rare species like turtle doves, nightingales, peregrine falcons and purple emperor butterflies breeding there. The soil is richer in micro-organisms which help to recapture carbon from the air and promote a functioning ecosystem where nature is given as much freedom as possible. She lives at Knepp with her husband Charlie and has two children, Ned and Nancy. DISC ONE: ‘The Whole of the Moon’ by The Waterboys DISC TWO: ‘These Foolish Things’ by Billie Holiday DISC THREE: ‘Life’s a Gas’ by T. Rex DISC FOUR: ‘Where’s the Telephone Bill? by Bootsy’s Rubber Band DISC FIVE: ‘Three Little Birds’ by Bob Marley DISC SIX: Mozart’s Clarinet Quintet, played by the Brindisi String Quartet DISC SEVEN: BBC Sound recording of Nightingales And Bombers The Night Of The Mannheim Raid DISC EIGHT: ‘Dancing in the Moonlight’ by Toploader BOOK CHOICE: War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy LUXURY ITEM: Mask, snorkel and a neoprene vest CASTAWAY'S FAVOURITE: These Foolish Things by Billie Holiday Presenter: Lauren Laverne Producer: Cathy Drysdale

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

BBC Sounds Music Radio Podcasts

0:04.7

Hello, I'm Lauren LeVern and this is the Desert Island Disks Podcast.

0:08.4

Every week I ask my guests to choose the eight tracks, book and luxury they'd want to take

0:13.1

with them if they were cast away to a desert island.

0:16.0

For right reasons, the music is shorter than the original broadcast.

0:20.3

I hope you enjoy listening.

0:30.6

Music Radio Music

0:41.8

My cast away this week is the writer and conservationist Isabella Trey.

0:46.4

She started out as a travel journalist, but it was an adventure she undertook at home

0:50.8

that would make headlines around the world.

0:53.0

In 2002, she and her husband Charlie made a controversial decision

0:58.0

to take their hands off the wheel, surrender their 3,500 acre estate to nature and see what happened.

1:05.0

Despite bitter opposition, Nepp Castle estate in Sussex just 45 minutes from London was transformed

1:11.5

from conventional farmland into natural wilderness and now boasts a kaleidoscope of purple emperor

1:17.2

butterflies, nightingales, turtle doves, nesting perigrand falcons, 13 species of bat and a prize-winning

1:24.8

Isabella's best-selling book about the project, Wilding, has been healed as a landmark in nature

1:30.1

writing. She says we just love the feeling of life rebounding, the noise of the birds and insects,

1:35.9

barking foxes, roaring stags, there is a sense that the very ground beneath your feet is coming to

1:42.0

life again, with wormcasts, antils, dong beetles, fruiting bodies of fungi, moles, you just feel like

1:49.0

the land is heaving with life. Isabella tree, welcome to desert island discs.

1:53.9

Thank you very much. So you're 20 years into your rewilding project now, for listeners who have

1:58.6

yet to view your online webcam, pay the picture for us, what would we see smell and feel on arrival?

...

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