Rewild the Ghost Woods

We live with ghosts.
All across England, lost beneath neat, uniform timber plantations, lie the remains of some of our oldest living ecosystems. These are the “Ghost Woods” – once thriving ancient woodlands felled in the 20th century and now smothered by monoculture plantations. These forests should be alive with birdsong, fungi and wildflowers, but instead they’ve been turned into dark and gloomy tree farms.
Wild Card wants to change this.
We’re calling on Forestry England to honour their own promises and restore these lost habitats, turning back time on centuries-old woodlands now buried under plantations. The land is already there, the seedbank is ready to regrow, but it won’t survive another 60 year timber cycle. The time to act is now.

WHERE HAVE OUR GHOST WOODS GONE?

The situation today is dire.
Just 1.6% of England is true ancient woodland.
Another 370,000 acres of former ancient woodland known as PAWS (Plantations on Ancient Woodland Sites) have been replaced by timber plantations.
Forestry England controls a massive 105,000 acres of these lost woodlands but they’re not doing enough to bring them back. That’s bigger than the Isle of Wight!
Monoculture plantations may grow wood, but they annihilate the rich biodiversity of ancient woodland: they damage soil, suppress wildlife, and silence the landscape. These aren’t forests, they’re crops.
BRING BACK THE GHOST WOODS!
We want to revive the Ghost Woods to bring back thriving native woodlands where nature, people, and local communities all can benefit. If Forestry England stopped dithering and delaying they could:
– Restore nature and revive biodiversity across thousands of acres of public land
– Create sustainable, green jobs in communities that need them most
– Support better quality, locally produced timber through mixed woodlands and thoughtful management
– Inspire a generation by becoming leaders in the rewilding revolution!
Many of these gloomy plantations are nearing felling age now. This is a once-in-a-generation chance to do things differently. But if Forestry England re-plants timber crops as before, we’ll lose what little is left.
Instead, we’re demanding a bold step: restore these landscapes and let nature lead.
This is public land. Let’s use it for the public good.
GET INVOLVED IN THE GHOST HUNT

Want to take action in your local area? We’re coordinating gatherings in each of Forestry England’s six districts; ordinary people gathering in their local plantation to hunt for the signs of the ghost of ancient woodlands.
If there is no action planned in your area yet and you’d like to organise one as part of your local climate or nature campaign group please get in touch with us at ghostwoods@wildcard.land
Let’s gather together in our hundreds to demonstrate just how loud the call for restoring ancient woodland is!
From our blog
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Ancient Woodland Restoration Film
Last week saw the premier of a new film (embedded above) from our friends at Woods for the Trees. The film, entitled ‘Ancient Woodland Restoration: The Story of Light and Life’, is incredibly relevant to our latest campaign to restore the Ghost Woods – ancient woodland which haunts Forestry England’s plantation forests. The film premiered…
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Hope for the Ghost Woods
Our hope for the ghost woods lies in their restoration. In these dark plantation forests, the spirit of the ancient woods still remains, desperate to make a comeback and reawaken the flowers, trees and fungi which can best sustain our native wildlife. You can read more about how they came into being in our blog…
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Which Woodland: A Clear Choice for Biodiversity
There’s no denying that England needs timber, and therefore timber plantations. But how do these plantations stack up for biodiversity when compared to ancient woodlands?