Gabriel Hemery

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Gabriel Hemery

Dr Gabriel Hemery (born 13 December 1968) is an English forest scientist (silvologist) and author. He co-founded the Sylva Foundation with Sir Martin Wood, a tree and forestry charity established in 2009.

Quick Facts Dr Gabriel Hemery, Born ...
Dr Gabriel Hemery

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Gabriel Hemery, 2023
Born (1968-12-13) 13 December 1968 (age 56)
OccupationAuthor, Photographer, Forest Scientist
NationalityBritish
EducationUniversity of Oxford
GenreNatural History
Website
www.gabrielhemery.com
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Career

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He began his career at the Northmoor Trust,[1] now named the Earth Trust, in Oxfordshire. He later became Director of Development for the Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland, returning to forestry to establish the Forestry Horizons think-tank in 2006. He is currently Chief Executive of Sylva Foundation, which he co-founded with Sir Martin Wood in 2009.[2]

He has played an active role in the Institute of Chartered Foresters where he is a Fellow.[3]

During 2011, he co-founded the ginger group Our Forests with other prominent environmentalists, including Jonathon Porritt and Tony Juniper, to provide a voice for the people of England in the future of the country's public forests.[4]

In 2022, he was elected Chair of the Forestry and Climate Change Partnership [5] which exists to help Britain's trees, woods, and forests to be resilient and adapt to a changing climate.

With co-author Sarah Simblet he wrote a contemporary version of John Evelyn's SylvaThe New Sylva – published by Bloomsbury in April 2014.[6]

He has written several fiction works including with Unbound Publishing ("author page". Unbound Publishing. Retrieved 7 January 2019. ) Green Gold: The Epic True Story of Victorian Plant Hunter John Jeffrey; a biographical novel describing the true story of an expedition to North America by Victorian botanist John Jeffrey between 1850 and 1854. He has also written two short story collections and a poetry anthology.[7]

He is currently working on a series of guidebooks to British forests published by Bloomsbury, the first of which was "The Forest Guide: Scotland" published April 2023.[8]

In late 2023, his latest book "The Tree Almanac 2024" will be published by (Robinson Books, part of Little, Brown Book Group, with the Foreword written by Tracy Chevalier.[9]

Forestry research

He designed and established a new woodland and centre for hardwood forestry research; Paradise Wood.[10] He was a founding member of the British and Irish Hardwoods Improvement Programme establishing a number of forestry field trials across the UK and Ireland (e.g.[11]). He gained a DPhil degree at the Department of Plant Sciences at the University of Oxford on the genetic improvement of walnut.[12] His research took him to the walnut fruit forests of Kyrgyzstan where he collected thousands of Juglans regia seeds for field trials back in the UK.[13] He then researched and published numerous articles pertaining to the silviculture (e.g.[14][15]) and genetic[16] improvement of walnut. He initiated an agroforestry research project in the mid-1990s, combining free-range broiler chicken with newly established woodland.[17][18]

Books

References

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