Monday, 22 July 2013

Plant a tree to keep cool...

Plant a tree to keep cool...

 

While Britain swelters under soaring temperatures, one of the best places to be is beside a tree, nature's very own air conditioning system.

 

 

The trees of Wildwood offer visitors welcome relief from the sun and offer an amazing air conditioning effect thanks to water evaporating from their leaves, up to 14°C on the hottest days.

 

 

Ancient man was no fool and often built their homes next to trees, some archaeological evidence suggests that man used different types of trees to keep him cool in the summer and warm in the winter.

 

Scientists are now rediscovering this lost knowledge in their quest to make us more energy efficient.

 

So the advice for keeping cool this summer is to plant some trees or take a visit to Wildwood Trust and spend the afternoon beneath our cooling canopy of trees, looking at the animals that would have surrounded our wise ancestors as they kept cool.

 

Peter Smith, Wildwood's Chief Executive stated:

 

"Remember to plant some trees in front of your house or office this autumn and especially in front of any air conditioning units.

 

I am amazed at how many air conditioning units are left in direct sunlight, just by planting a tree you could drastically reduce the electricity it uses and help cut down on global warming."

 

The Wildwood 'Woodland Discovery Park' is an ideal day out for all the family where you can come 'nose to nose' with British Wildlife. Wildwood offers its members and visitors a truly inspirational way to learn about the natural history of Britain by actually seeing the wildlife that once lived here.

 

Wildwood is situated close to Canterbury, just off the A291 between Herne Bay and Canterbury. www.wildwoodtrust.org  01227 712111

 

 

 

Why trees are good at keeping us cool:

 

  1. Trees help keep the air and soil near gardens moist by releasing water through their stomata in a process called transpiration. Every Tree 'transpires' as much water as a tap on full. It is this process that cools down the air. Research by the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory suggests that trees lower the air temperature by 3°F to 6°F (2°C to 4°C) in the vicinity just by the transpirational effect.

 

  1. Effectively shading a house with tall trees can reduce indoor temperatures by as much as 10 degrees when temperatures soar.

 

  1. Trees planted to shade an air conditioning unit require less energy to cool a building. Keeping a building cooler and saving you money.

 

  1. Deciduous trees planted on the south side of buildings stop sunlight in the summer but when their leaves drop off allow sunlight to warm the house in the winter. This cooling effect has been shown to decrease energy use in a home by 17% and 30% in two case studies in America.

 

  1. Evergreen trees planted on the north side of buildings to protect buildings from prevailing winds during the winter can decrease wind speed by half, therefore, decreasing winter energy consumption.

 

 

***********************ENDS**********************

 

 

Peter Smith

Chief Executive

Wildwood Trust

 

Registered Charity No 1093702

 

Wildwood Trust

Herne Common

Herne Bay

Kent

CT6 7LQ

 

e-mail:      peter@wildwoodtrust.org

Tel:          01227 713881

Mobile:     07986 828229

Fax:         01227 711900

www.wildwoodtrust.org

 

Wildwood Trust is Kent's unique 'Woodland Discovery Park', a visitor attraction with a difference.

 

Wildwood is not only the best place to bring the family for a day out, but it is also a bold and innovative new charity, backed by the UK's leading wildlife conservationists. As a new charity Wildwood needs everyone's support in its mission to save our native and once native wildlife from extinction.

 

Wildwood Trust's vision is to bring back our true 'wildwood', a unique new way of restoring Britain's land to its natural state. This involves releasing large wild herbivores and developing conservation grazing systems to restore natural ecological processes to help Britain team with wildlife again.

  

The Wildwood 'Woodland Discovery Park' is an ideal day out for all the family where you can come 'nose to nose' with British Wildlife. Wildwood offers its members and visitors a truly inspirational way to learn about the natural history of Britain by actually seeing the wildlife that once lived here.

 

Set in a sublime 38 acres of Ancient Woodland, Wildwood offers visitors a truly unique experience. Come Nose to Nose with our secretive badgers, experience what is like to be hunted by a real live pack of wolves, watch a charging wild boar or track down a beaver in his lodge.

 

Wildwood Trust runs a highly successful programme of Conservation Projects – we are the UK's leading experts in rescuing and re-establishing colonies of Britain's most threatened mammal, the water vole. Wildwood Trust has pioneered the use of ancient wild horses to restore nature reserve. Wildwood Trust has been at the forefront of efforts to re-establish the European Beaver back in Britain where they belong. European Beaver have been proven to help manage water ways to bring back a huge range of Plants, insects and animals