Archie Miles
Autor de The Trees That Made Britain
Obras de Archie Miles
Etiquetado
Conocimiento común
- Fecha de nacimiento
- 1952
- Género
- male
- Ocupaciones
- Photographer
Miembros
Reseñas
Estadísticas
- Obras
- 9
- Miembros
- 127
- Popularidad
- #158,248
- Valoración
- 4.1
- Reseñas
- 1
- ISBNs
- 14
The selection of woods and trees seems odd to me, an untravelled Californian. Most seem spindly and scrubby. They have usually been cut back over and over again ("coppiced" and "pollarded") for centuries until they are left shrubby, with many slender, gnarly trunks. Many have a krumholz effect, which can be attractive, but less so when it is caused by arboricultural interference as these are. Most others are dwarfed by suboptimal growth conditions (cliffsides) where the sheep couln't get at them. One gets the impression that the southern half of England has very few trees over 20 feet in height, and almost none over 30 feet. It explains why they are hidden.
Scotland and Wales do a little better with some healthy looking woods and a lot of interesting stressed trees, sort of a subalpine effect.
There are only a handful of tree species represented, but the impression I get is that these are the only species in Great Britain. It seems that the only non-introduced conifers in Britain are the Yew and the Scotch Pine.
The photographs are very attractive but not very botanically informative. Although the author writes in many places about lime trees, and photographs many of them, I would not be able to identify one on the basis of this book. From the photographs they appear as just generic trees. This is a frustration throughout the book. I do think I might be able to identify a rowan in leaf on the basis of this book. So that's one to the good. But I might get it confused with a whitebeam.
The author's writing talents do not measure up to his photography. The text is a chatty travelogue just slightly above the level of a flight magazine.… (más)