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coppicing

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coppicing

Woodland management practice of severe pruning where trees are cut down to near ground level at regular intervals, typically every 3-20 years, to promote the growth of numerous shoots from the base.

This form of forestry was once commonly practised in Europe, principally on hazel and chestnut, to produce large quantities of thin branches for firewood, fencing, and so on; alder, eucalyptus, maple, poplar, and willow were also coppiced. The resulting thicket was known as a coppice or copse. See also pollarding.



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The charcoal is made from the debris created in the forest-clearing practice known as coppicing, which allows light into the woodland environment, encouraging ancient woodland flowers such as dog's mercury, butterflies and dormice.
Coppicing is an ancient craft where broadleaf greenwood trees, such as hazel, are trimmed to the stump to encourage the growth of stems or "poles.
Funded in part by the European Social Fund, the scheme will train 10 new entrants in the ancient art of coppicing -- whereby broadleaf greenwood trees, like Hazel, are cut back to the stump, to encourage the growth of new stems (poles) which can then be used to make products such as hurdles, furniture and thatching spars.
 
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