As a food journalist I get sent a lot of food related news items. I thought perhaps from time to time I would share the more note worthy with you.
This is a story about Yeo Valley's Campaign to get people to plant trees.kev
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Start the day with a yogurt this spring, or pour milk into your morning coffee and you could be playing a part in helping to boost the UK’s sparse tree cover – which currently makes us one of the least wooded countries in Europe.
Today just 12% of the country is covered by woodland, compared to the European average of 44%. Britain’s No 1 organic dairy company, Yeo Valley is joining forces with the UK's leading woodland conservation charity, the Woodland Trust to try and reverse the picture. In a bid to stimulate a revival of the great British garden it’s going to make available thousands of free trees which it hopes will become the centrepiece of gardens throughout the country. At the same time it’s aiming to support the Woodland Trust in its own conservation and tree planting work.
The dairy company’s ‘plant a tree’ drive will run for two months from mid April and will give people a free tree, complete with support cane and guard in return for five labels collected from its organic milk and organic natural yogurts. For eight labels it will provide two trees.
As an alternative, people can turn their tokens into a donation to the Woodland Trust, with £2.50 being given by Yeo Valley for five labels and £5 for eight labels.
The Yeo Valley offer will include a choice from five native British trees; Hawthorn, Wild Cherry, Rowan, Silver Birch and Hazel. Each has been chosen for its versatility, robustness and appropriateness for the average sized UK garden.
The dairy company recently won a Queen’s Award partly because of environmental work it has carried out on its own Somerset farmland, including the planting of more than 20,000 trees to restore old woods create new ones.














