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We’ve entered a new phase of the rewilding revolution. Now nature lovers can spend the night in stylish stays amid areas where wildlife is positively thriving, ....
‘That’s not a treehouse!” my ten-year-old daughter protests when I show her a picture of where we are going. I try to see the L-shaped cabin through the eyes ....
Noisily dance music festival to attract 6,500 after moving to new woodland home in shadow of Belvoir Castle leicestermercury.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from leicestermercury.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A party-loving aristocrat has revealed he is set to rewild his 750-year-old family seat and allow nature to flourish - despite local farmers urging him to use it for crops instead. Anselm Guise, the son of the baronet of Highnam, was labelled the hedonistic heir after dismissing his father s plan of following him in a banking career. Instead, the 49-year-old father-of-two became a DJ and founded the electronic dance music event Glade Festival - before taking ownership of his family s seat, Elmore Court in Gloucestershire, in 2007. Speaking to The Times, Mr Guise, the son of Sir James Guise, the 8th and present baronet of Highnam, admitted he would be breaking with tradition again by letting nature take over his grounds. ....
Shutterstock Anselm Guise, the son of the baronet of Highnam, was dubbed the hedonistic heir after rejecting his father’s plan that he follow him into banking. Instead, he became a DJ running psychedelic trance parties and founded the ‘Glade Festival’ (thought by many to be one of the world’s leading electronic music festivals) and studied ‘the art of staying awake’ at the University of Bristol (according to his LinkedIn profile). This was all before going on to take up the reins on his family’s 750-year-old seat, Elmore Court in Gloucestershire, in 2007. Now, his latest plan is to follow a handful of fellow aristocrats – as well as some multimillionaire tycoons in Scotland – and embrace the rewilding movement. 49-year-old Anselm plans to rewild his 250 acres of land and allow nature to take over. Such a decision has pitted him against a number of local farmers who are against the idea of returning prime arable land to nature rather than growing crops. ....