hedgerow


A linear barrier of densely planted shrubs and trees, maintained by regular cutting and laying, that serves simultaneously as a fence, a windbreak, a wildlife corridor, a boundary marker, and a living archive of the land's history. Some English hedgerows are over a thousand years old. The species composition of a hedgerow can be used to estimate its age — roughly one new species per century.
Etymology
Old English hecg (hedge) + rāw (row). A row of hedge.
Notes
Hooper's Rule: count the number of woody species in a 30-meter stretch and multiply by 100 to estimate the hedgerow's age in years. Rough but surprisingly reliable.
agriculture/grazing animal sign forest/woodland human settlement Old English
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