Devon & Sussex, UK

Our projects are based on our driving principle: Restore, Nurture and Inspire.

RESTORE : We help regenerate and protect ecosystems.

 
 

NURTURE UK

We support environmental education and nature experiences for youth through our partnership with The Children’s Forest, an organization focused on children’s wellbeing through tree planting. Over six days, we helped 60 children from Hailsham Primary Academy immerse themselves in nature, planting native trees like hawthorn and oak.

We also supported the creation of a medicine forest at Wowo campsite in Sussex in collaboration with The Children’s Forest. FWF founder Nicoleta Carpineanu expressed her joy in working with the organization, as her son had attended Forest School with its founder. Additionally, we provided paid opportunities for two environment graduates from Sussex University to assist in planting and tending 2,000 trees at Wilderlands.

 

INSPIRE : We create music and art

RESTORE UK

At ForeWe are dedicated to tree planting and nature regeneration. In 2023/2024, we planted 2,000 trees at Wilderlands in Sussex, with 1,200 more planned for Spring 2025. Previously, we planted 2,700 trees at Springham Farm in 2022 and 6,000 trees in Devon in 2021/2022.

In 2025, we’re partnering with Wilderlands Farm, a nature regeneration project focused on creating a nature recovery corridor across Sussex. We’ve planted native species like silver birch, oak, and hazel, while supporting the farm’s community initiatives.

Our other projects include Springham Farm, where we promote biodiversity and regenerative farming, and Farm Under the Radar in Devon, transforming grazing land into a wildlife haven using sustainable farming techniques.

 

NURTURE : We celebrate culture and community.


 

INSPIRE UK

We’re developing Enchanting Forest, a multimedia project that captures the sounds, songs, and folklore of Sussex. Founded by Nicoleta Carpineanu during the 2020 lockdown and inspired by the wet woodland near Ebernoe Nature Reserve, the project is supported by Arts Council England. It features a collaboration of local artists, musicians, and conservationists to create an album and short film that merges folklore, electronic music, and natural soundscapes.

The project, which includes works by the late David Alexander Yeoman, will be recorded in natural locations such as Kingley Vale and the Sussex Kelp Forests. Proceeds from the album will fund reforestation, rewilding, and environmental education projects in East Sussex.


Every donation you make to Forests Without Frontiers supports the restoration of whole ecosystems, through planting and protecting trees, increasing biodiversity, supporting local communities, helping preserve indigenous knowledge, supporting nature-inspired music and art and educating younger generations.