There will be a short, unscheduled break in the digest at some point in January or February.| Inkcap Journal
In 2018, Katie Stacey and Luke Massey bought seven hectares of degraded land and named it Wild Finca. With little money or experience, they began to bring back nature.| Inkcap Journal
For 41 weeks straight, Matt Staniek has sat outside a United Utilities office and demanded action. What more will it take to save the Lake District's most famous lake?| Inkcap Journal
In 1971, a boatful of feral sheep was transported from St Kilda to the Scottish mainland. Their descendants then vanished. This is the story of the Lost Flock – and the Orkney residents who saved their primitive genes.| Inkcap Journal
Plus reviews of all the other books we read in June.| Inkcap Journal
Plus reviews of all the other books we read in May.| Inkcap Journal
Every inch of Britain has felt the impacts of humanity, but there are still places where nature has free rein, argues Ian Carter.| Inkcap Journal
Adam Weymouth visits the Outer Hebrides to learn about bere barley, a Bronze Age crop that is helping farmers adapt to climate change and resist depopulation.| Inkcap Journal
My secret is out. Nature's Ghosts will be published in May.| Inkcap Journal
The return of wild boar carries a certain level of risk. It is worth it, argues Chantal Lyons.| Inkcap Journal
Matthew Hay takes a trip into the future to watch wolves in the snowless Cairngorms, a decade after their reintroduction to the Highlands.| Inkcap Journal
Our round-up of recent nature books, including a memoir centred on the ancient landscape of Yorkshire.| Inkcap Journal
In 2022, Victoria Bennett left her apothecary garden in Cumbria to start anew on Orkney. In the accounts of old botanists, she began to learn a new language of flowers.| Inkcap Journal