Guy Shrubsole

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Guy Shrubsole


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Influences


Guy Shrubsole works as a campaigner for Friends of the Earth and has written for numerous publications including the Guardian and New Statesman. Who Owns England? (2019) was his first book.

Average rating: 4.27 · 3,920 ratings · 530 reviews · 9 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Lost Rainforests of Bri...

4.29 avg rating — 2,026 ratings — published 2022 — 4 editions
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Who Owns England?: How We L...

4.21 avg rating — 1,381 ratings — published 2019 — 7 editions
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The Lie of the Land: Who Re...

4.43 avg rating — 344 ratings — published 2024 — 5 editions
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Wild Service: Why Nature Ne...

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4.27 avg rating — 179 ratings — published 2024 — 4 editions
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Land for the Many

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The Lost Rainforests of Bri...

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Regeneration

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really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2012
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Guy Shrubsole 3 Books Colle...

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The Flow Rivers Water and W...

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More books by Guy Shrubsole…
Quotes by Guy Shrubsole  (?)
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“This was the very heart of Wales' rainforest zone, where the oceanic climate conspires to make conditions perfect for the rich profusion of plant life that we'd spent the past week exploring. Yet here, humanity had found a rainforest and turned it into a desert. It had started long ago, no doubt: Wales' Green Desert is the product of agricultural malpractice dating back to the twelfth-century monks of Strata Florida. But what began as a profitable enterprise in medieval times today supports a mere twenty-eight farms over an area covering 46,000 acres. The farming unions claim that rewilding will lead to rural depopulation, but centuries of overgrazing have already drained the land of both people and wildlife.

And in doing so, Wales is losing part of its heritage, its culture. Because the Wales of this great country's myths and legends was a rainforest nation, whose peoples lived and coexisted with the Atlantic oakwoods that once carpeted their land, celebrating them in song. They knew these rainforests and knew them deeply, weaving them into their stories, vesting their greatest heroes with a magic derived from that profound knowledge of place and ecology.

There is a way back from this, but it is unlikely to come through a culture war between sheep farmers and rewilders. The truth is that there is more than enough space in Wales, as there is in the rest of Britain, both for farming to continue and for more rainforest to flourish.”
Guy Shrubsole, The Lost Rainforests of Britain

“One... misconception is the idea that England is now mostly concreted over. Coupled to this is the idea that the onward march of bricks and mortar is the main cause of declining species and habitats. Neither assertion is true. Just 8.8 per cent of England is built on; 73 per cent is farmland, and 10 per cent is forestry. The biggest drivers of biodiversity loss in this country are modern agriculture, forestry and shooting. ...the greatest threat to the countryside comes from within it.”
Guy Shrubsole, The Lie of the Land: Who Really Cares for the Countryside?

“Grouse moors exist or one purpose only: to maximise the numbers of a particular bird, the red grouse, for weathy men and women to shoot. Theirs is an entirely artificial, intensively managed environment. Moorland heather is extensively burned to encourage the fresh shoots eaten by young grouse. Many grouse moors were drained historically, because it was thought this would improve the otherwise damp conditions for both sheep and game birds. Gamekeepers lace the moors with traps to kill animals that predate on grouse: stoats, weasels, foxes and birds of prey. It's illegal to kill birds of prey, but that doesn't stop it happening: the unlawful persecution of raptors is endemic on Britain's grouse moors. And if you want to own a grouse moor, you have to be rich: even the Spectator says that owning one is 'screamingly' elitist and 'the ultimate trophy asset'.”
Guy Shrubsole, The Lie of the Land: Who Really Cares for the Countryside?

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