Welcome “two” the herd
Ground-breaking wilding project welcomes the birth of two female bison calves
The mural was funded by the University of Kent, together with councillors from Kent County Council and Canterbury City Council through members' grants. The project was co-ordinated by the Canterbury Society and the Canterbury Biodiversity Network.
Earlier in the week, in Canterbury's city centre, vinyl artwork representing bison and the red-billed chough have been displayed in the window of the former Debenhams store offering visitors the opportunity to take a selfie with a bison. This forms part of a broader vinyl project by Canterbury Business Improvement District (BID) to add vibrancy to the high street and increase dwell time.
The vinyls were designed and part funded by Kent Wildlife Trust with Canterbury BID, Wildwood Trust, Canterbury Society and KCC Councillor Mel Dawkins.
Keeley Atkinson, Head of Wilder People and Places at Kent Wildlife Trust, said: "The artwork perfectly represents the shared vision of Kent Wildlife Trust and Wildwood Trust to return more thriving complex ecosystems in our woodlands. The people involved in this project have been amazing and I would like to thank all of the team that has turned this vision into reality."
"The UK is losing species at an alarming rate, more than anywhere else in the world. Creating an abundance of biodiversity will help us tackle climate change and address the biodiversity crisis. We want to realise a wilder Kent and this is why we are doing this."
Ground-breaking wilding project welcomes the birth of two female bison calves
Since 2022, the UK has sworn in four new prime ministers, the interest rate has risen from 0.25% to 5.25%, and, as of the 18th July, bison have been in the Blean for two whole years.
A children’s book inspired by the Wilder Blean Project, an initiative that involves free-roaming bison acting as ecosystem engineers in Canterbury, Kent will launch on Thursday 4th July 2024.