TED Talks Daily - 3 tips to make your world beautifully wild | Isabella Tree
Episode Date: November 6, 2025When conservationists talk about rewilding, most people picture wolves and bison roaming endless landscapes — but Isabella Tree discovered the real revolution is happening in ordinary backyards. She... shares the incredible story of how she and her husband transformed their failing farmland into a nature paradise, offering a three-step formula for anyone looking to turn their green space wild.Interested in learning more about upcoming TED events? Follow these links:TEDNext: ted.com/futureyou Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day.
I'm your host, Elise Hu.
For environmentalist and conservationist, Isabella Tree, rewilding the process of restoring an area of land to its natural, uncultivated state, isn't just reserved for grand parks.
It can and should happen in our gardens, too.
In her talk, she shares the story of how letting animals roam free on her farmland
brought the land back to life, reviving ecosystems, boosting biodiversity, and even capturing carbon
just in a few years.
She shares some practical tips for rewilding at home and reminds us that sometimes we don't
have to look further than our own backyards to make a difference.
You may have heard a lot about rewilding recently.
It conjures up visions of vast landscapes, reintroductions of wolves, great herds of bison.
It's the most important message we can hear at the moment that nature can restore itself given the chance.
But it doesn't have to be at vast scale, and it doesn't have to be in the middle of nowhere.
Rewilding can happen in your own backyard, in an urban park, anywhere there's a tiny patch of space for it.
And it can happen really fast.
And that's transformative.
not just for nature and the climate, but for ourselves.
How do I know?
Well, for the past couple of decades,
I've been helping to rewild big and small.
When my husband was 21,
he inherited 3,500 acres of farmland
in the busy southeast of England.
Neppest State is on the worst possible land for intensive agriculture.
It was already losing money.
But Charlie had trained as a farmer,
and so for 17 years, he'd tried to turn it around.
By 1999, we were one and a half million pounds in debt.
We knew we had to do something radically different.
We wanted to work with nature,
rather than battling against it all the time.
We began to rewild.
Europe, like Africa and all the other continents of the world,
was once home to vast numbers of free-roaming animals,
animals that we hunted to extinction or close to it.
Their disturbances shaped the land.
They cleared forests.
They opened up wetlands and created grasslands.
They stimulated the soil.
They spread seeds.
We were really excited by large-scale rewilding projects happening in Europe
that were showing that by introducing these animals back into the landscape,
that nature could recover, that biodiversity could rock it.
But could it actually happen at smaller scale?
Could it happen on a farm like ours that had been plowed and drenched with chemicals for decades?
Could we bring our own land back to life?
The first steps were so much fun.
We pulled up all the internal fences, we smashed up the Victorian drains,
we allowed the water to sit where it had always wanted to sit,
and the fields began to scrub up with thorny bushes,
and soon trees began to recolonize.
and then we ring-fence the whole area
and began to introduce our free-roaming animals.
Old English longhorn cattle for their extinct ancestor, the Orocks,
ex-more ponies for the extinct tarpan,
Tamworth pigs for wild boar,
red and fallow deer,
and eventually beavers.
The results were beyond our wildest dreams.
Everywhere these animals went, life surfaced in their wake.
Our land became a kaleidoscope of complex shifting habitats,
the kind of messy margins that wildlife loves.
Soon we were hearing nightingales and turtle doves,
birds on the verge of extinction in Britain.
We had bats and owls and dung beetles and butterflies
homing in on us as if out of nowhere.
And our soil was restoring too,
so suddenly we're pulling down vast amounts of carbon,
whereas before under the plough, we'd just been releasing it.
And all of this happened in five years.
We looked at our land in amazement.
It was like it was breathing a sigh of relief.
And so were we.
Suddenly we could just sit back and watch the miracle of the earth restoring itself.
Of course, we couldn't just let the numbers of animals
grow and grow in our small project.
biodiversity flourishes when there are neither too many grazing animals nor too few.
In vast wilderness areas, nature takes care of this herself,
but we don't have wolves and lynx and bears in the southeast of England,
so we had to become the apex predator.
And that meant suddenly we had an income stream that surprised us.
We had wild range meat.
And together with wildlife tourism,
it's become one of the ways that we can finance rewilding.
It's turned the fortunes of the estate around.
Inspired by NEP, hundreds of thousands of acres are now rewilding in the UK
on land that isn't suitable for intensive modern agriculture.
But of course, not everybody has hundreds of acres to play with,
and soon we were receiving messages from people
who had seen the magic of NEP but wanted to know
if they could rewild their back garden, their schoolyard, their urban park.
Yes, you can.
Our house has a Victorian wall garden of about an acre in size
that for years was dominated by a monoculture lawn.
Lawns have become an obsession the world over
ever since the 1950s when artificial fertilizer
and weed killers and mowing machines
became available to everyone.
We looked again at our high-carbon, high-maintenance green desert
and wondered why on earth we had it.
Three years ago, we decided to rewild it.
It's become a wildlife haven.
In just three years, biodiversity has increased 35%.
Rewilding a garden isn't about simply closing the garden gate and letting it go.
It takes intentional interventions to create the right balance of plants
and to create the kind of habitats that wildlife loves.
So this is what we've learned.
These are our three top tips for making your green space and garden wilder.
First, the earth is not flat.
In nature, there are mounds of ant hills and mole hills
and pits made by pigs and wallows made by rolling bison.
Creating lumps and bumps produces patches of sun and shade and damp and dry,
which create conditions for a much wider spectrum of plants,
and that creates many more opportunities for wildlife.
We happen to have some old farm buildings that we were demolishing nearby,
so we asked the diggers if they would come and dump
hundreds of tons of crushed brick and concrete onto our perfected lawn.
You may have a patio or a piece of concrete or tarmac that you can pull up.
Crush it up and mix it with sand,
and you have the perfect free-draining medium for a dry garden.
In a dry garden, you can have plants like wildflowers
that really love poor soil conditions.
And because you're not having to water and fertilise,
you're saving yourself a lot of time and money,
but you're also helping the planet.
We've planted 1,100 different plants,
mostly from arid parts of the world.
But you don't have to have that many.
You can make an enormous impact
just by choosing plants that insects love,
and by extending the pollen
and nectar season and supporting forgotten creatures
like night-flying moths, some of our greatest pollinators.
And all of these plants are rubbing shoulders
with our native self-seeding wildflowers.
We vowed never to use the word weed again.
You can learn to love your dandelions and clover.
Second, think like a herb of all.
When the job of a gardener is never to allow one single plant to dominate.
If you do, you lose all those plants that are creating species richness in your garden.
So when you're pulling out the thugs, think of yourself as a wild boar,
rootling out those docks and thistles.
And when you're pruning your roses or your climbers,
you're the nibbling teeth of a deer.
Thinking of yourself as an animal in an ecosystem is incredibly freeing.
It allows you to become more holistic and organic.
It allows you to get messier.
There's still room for a lawn in the wilder garden,
but think of it as part of the mosaic.
Consider a wildflower or a chamomile lawn.
And when you mow, be the cow.
Graze very tightly in some areas,
but allow others to stay long,
providing protection for small mammals and birds.
Mix it up. Grow a mohican.
Finally, find life in death.
In nature, death is a primary source of life,
but in a garden we get rid of anything that dies.
Leaving dead wood and piles of leaves is fantastic habitat,
but it also creates natural fertilizer for next year's growth.
And leaving seed heads instead of obsessively deadheading
provides really important food for birds over winter.
In the UK, we have 23.
million private gardens, covering an area four and a half times the amount of land that is
designated to national nature reserves. And most of those gardens are dominated by a green
desert lawn. Imagine if all those gardeners thought differently, if they put away the artificial
fertilizer and the herbicides and began to think of themselves as a keystone species, as a mole or
an ant or an earthworm.
Like this amazing city gardener who's become obsessed with bees,
everything from bumble bees to sharp-tailed bees to leaf-cutter bees to masonry bees.
We tend to think of bees as aggressive and scary,
but if you watch them, they're just gentle, sensitive creatures going about their business.
You can fall in love with them.
We can rewild balconies in cities, even in high-rise blocks.
even a window box can become a nature reserve
and cemeteries and churchyards
and bus shelters and whole streets
we can rewild our public monuments
this is the Tower of London
now a wildflower meadow heaving with bees
and this is the field museum in Chicago
once a green desert
and now a vital food stop for birds on migration
we can have whole tower blocks
erupting in plants, bringing life to our windowsills, capturing carbon, producing oxygen,
cleaning the air, insulating us in winter, cooling us down in summer.
So much of rewilding is about changing the aesthetic.
It's about questioning what we've always been taught to think of as beautiful and normal and stable.
It's about shedding our obsessions, particularly our desire to be always in absolute control.
Rewilding is about embracing the messy and the unpredictable.
It's about letting go.
It's about rewilding ourselves.
Thank you.
That was Isabella Tree at the TED Countdown Summit in Nairobi, Kenya in 2025.
If you're curious about Ted's curation, find out more at TED.
dot com slash curation guidelines. And that's it for today. Ted Talks Daily is part of the Ted
Audio Collective. This talk was fact-checked by the TED Research Team and produced and edited
by our team, Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian Green, Lucy Little, and Tonsica
Sungmar Nivong. This episode was mixed by Christopher Faisi Bogan. Additional support from
Emma Tobner and Daniela Balareso. I'm Elise Hugh. I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed.
Thanks for listening.
Thank you.
Thank you.
