Beavers and Rewilding

Beavers and Rewilding

Join us and hear an inspirational and often riotously funny first-hand account of the movement to rewild the British landscape with beavers

By Blue Heart

Date and time

Wednesday, June 5 · 6 - 7pm GMT+1

Location

Towner Eastbourne

College Road Eastbourne BN21 4JJ United Kingdom

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About this event

  • 1 hour

Since the early 1990s – in the face of opposition from government, landowners, and even some conservation professionals – Derek Gow has imported, quarantined and assisted the reestablishment of beavers in waterways across the UK. Derek is a maverick communicating the urgent need to bring these charismatic creatures back to Britain.

After being hunted to the point of extinction for almost 400 years, beavers are now widely recognised as nature’s architects, and Derek passionately believes they are a key to ecological recovery. Their dams help us to filter water, stop run-off and reduce flooding! They also help build much needed habitat for a range of wetland wildlife.

Join us and hear an inspirational and often riotously funny first-hand account of the movement to rewild the British landscape with beavers – and how it became the most subversive nature conservation act of the modern era.

The bar will be open 5.30-7.45pm for drinks and chats before and after the talk.

Derek Gow

Derek Gow was at the centre of the reintroduction of the Eurasian beaver, the water vole and the white stork in England. He is currently working on a reintroduction project for the wildcat and a book on our lost wolves.

Derek Gow is a farmer, nature conservationist and the author of Bringing Back the Beaver (2020) and Birds, Beasts & Bedlam (2022). Born in Dundee in 1965, he left school when he was 17 and worked in agriculture for five years. Inspired by the writing of Gerald Durrell, he jumped at the chance to manage a European wildlife park in central Scotland in the late 1990s before moving on to develop two nature centres in England. He now lives with his children, Maysie and Kyle, on a 300-acre farm on the Devon/Cornwall border, which he is in the process of re-wilding.


Organized by

The Blue Heart Project is investigating how rain, river and waste water flow through Eastbourne and southern Wealden, interacting with the urban and rural landscape. The aim is to improve flood mitigation and management in the future.

Another strand of the project is supporting local people to become more aware of and resilient to flooding and climate change more broadly. We are doing this through events, partnerships and our Community Fund.

£5