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After Storm Goretti, Cornwall plans careful woodland restoration.
Summary
Storm Goretti on 8 January flattened thousands of trees across Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly, and landowners, gardens and conservation groups are clearing damage while planning a mix of natural regeneration and targeted replanting.
Content
Storm Goretti struck south‑west England on 8 January and flattened thousands of trees across Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly. Estates, gardens and conservation charities report widespread loss and damage, including about 119 trees at St Michael's Mount and around 500 trees lost across the St Aubyn estate. Organisations such as the National Trust and private gardens are clearing fallen trees, restoring access and assessing damaged specimens. Decisions on longer‑term restoration are being made with attention to species resilience, natural regeneration and landscape character.
Current situation:
- The storm on 8 January flattened thousands of trees across Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly.
- St Michael's Mount lost or had about 119 trees damaged, and the St Aubyn estate reported around 500 trees lost.
- The National Trust, private estates and gardens are clearing debris, reopening paths and assessing damaged trees while planning recovery work.
- Plans discussed include allowing natural regeneration in some areas and targeted replanting with species chosen for wind and drought tolerance; detailed long-term programmes are still being developed.
Summary:
The immediate impact is widespread tree loss and a substantial restoration task for landowners, garden teams and conservation organisations. Undetermined at this time.
