Greenpop’s Innovative Restoration Methodology and the Uilenkraal Forest Restoration Project

09

OCTOBER, 2025

By Nick Findlay

To step into the forestland of Uilenkraal is to walk through a fragment of history, a place where unique life persists against the odds. Uilenkraal, nestled just outside Gansbaai in the Western Cape, is more than just a forest; it is a piece of South Africa’s natural history and heritage. This dryland, coastal sand forest represents the southernmost tip of Africa’s forest ecosystems—an ancient relic that has miraculously endured for over a thousand years in a challenging, drought-prone environment.

The challenge today is ensuring that this relic survives the mounting pressures of fragmentation, invasive species, and climate change. That is the mission of the Uilenkraal Forest Restoration Project, a sustained restoration commitment that we initiated in 2011 alongside dedicated partners, namely the Tree Liberation Front, Platbos Conservation Trust, Bodhi Khaya Retreat, and the Blomerus and Kleinbos farms. Together, between the properties of Platbos, Blomerus and Kleinbos, we are working to restore 55ha of land and manage a total of 220ha of land. The actual land that is being planted on will vary from year to year, but this is the total area of all three properties that we are working to restore.

This is not a story of simple tree planting. Restoring a dry forest on nutrient-poor, sandy, alkaline soils requires an adaptive, science-backed approach. The central theme of our work here is innovation and adaptation over intervention. This ongoing collaborative effort is a powerful case study in how long-term corporate partnerships can drive significant, tangible environmental action. We’re sharing this story because we believe it’s a blueprint for other businesses that want to make a real, lasting impact. Be a part of this impact by donating, or joining us at our next annual Reforest Fest.

A Challenging Climate for an Ancient Ecosystem

To appreciate the innovation, one must first understand the gravity of the challenge. Over many decades, the indigenous coastal thicket of the Uilenkraal Valley has been left severely fragmented by historical farming practices, the encroachment of aggressive alien invasive vegetation, and intense wildfires. These human and natural pressures have left the forest vulnerable.

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However, the core ecological hurdle is the harsh environment itself. This is a dryland forest surviving on deep, alkaline, and nutrient-poor sands. With low annual rainfall (around 650 mm/year), the margin for error is razor-thin. Standard, large-scale, conventional tree-planting methods consistently fail here. Water conservation, soil enrichment, and the deliberate creation of a protective micro-climate are not optional steps—they are the absolute requirements for survival and success.

Our Tailored Restoration Strategy

Our response to this challenge is a meticulously tailored restoration strategy focused on the survival and growth of every single tree to maximize ecosystem recovery.

Seedling provenance: The process begins at the source, resilience is literally grown into the trees. We do not import foreign seeds. Instead, indigenous and endemic tree seedlings are naturally regenerated, harvested directly from the interior of the existing Uilenkraal forest, and nurtured in the Platbos nursery for two years. This practice of local sourcing ensures the trees are genetically adapted and suited to the harsh, unique conditions of the Uilenkraal sand. They embody the natural resilience of their ancestors.

The dryland planting technique: We employ a specialised dryland planting technique, timing the planting to occur precisely at the start of the rainy season (typically April–July). This strategic window maximises the seedlings’ exposure to natural rainfall, giving them the best possible chance to establish deep roots before the long summer dry period.

Tailored restoration strategy: Working closely with extensively experienced and abundantly knowledgeable arborist, Francois Krige of Krige Trees, we’ve been able to develop an elaborate and contextual restoration strategy for the Uilenkraal project that has sought to revive this forest land efficiently and effectively. His understanding of forest ecology and tree survival has proven instrumental in ensuring the resilience of every plant.

The power of facilitation: The most critical innovation is our shift from individual, isolated planting to communal, clustered planting. We are not planting a uniform field; we are scientifically engineering small, protective forest starter-kits. This “facilitation” method intentionally replicates the natural processes of forest recovery, where young trees thrive in the protective shelter of older stumps or pioneer groups.

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Francois Krige (Platbos Forest Reserve) and Georgina Hamilton (Bodhi Khaya Nature Retreat).

Here is how the process works:

Pit and berm construction: We first excavate a large planting pit, typically 700mm x 700mm. Crucially, we build the displaced soil up around the perimeter to create a berm (a small, protective ridge). This berm is essential – especially when planting on a slope, as is often the case in the Uilenkraal Valley – as it acts as a small dam, capturing and concentrating every drop of rainwater runoff directly into the pit, ensuring the young root system has immediate access.

The soil enrichment layer: Once the tree has been planted we fill the pit with wood chips sourced from the alien invasive vegetation cleared from the site. This organic material serves multiple vital functions:

– It acts as a mulch, drastically increasing the soil’s ability to retain moisture.

– It slowly decomposes, enriching the nutrient-poor, sandy soil.

– It cools the ground, protecting the shallow roots from excessive heat.

High-density clustering: We plant the trees in these high-density clusters. The strategic goal is to establish a closed canopy as rapidly as possible. This newly formed canopy is the ultimate facilitator—it shades the ground, further cooling the soil, retaining moisture, and most importantly, physically suppressing the germination of aggressive alien invasive seeds. The trees protect each other, collectively forging a self-sustaining micro-climate.

Pioneer Species Selection: We strategically select indigenous, site-specific pioneer tree species known for their hardiness and ability to thrive in alkaline, sandy soils. These trees, such as the Pterocelastrus tricuspidatus (Cherrywood) and Sideroxylon inerme (Milkwood), are planted first to act as nurse trees, kick-starting the ecosystem by creating the shade and soil conditions that allow slower-growing, later-successional species to establish themselves beneath the new canopy.

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Holistic Management for Landscape-Scale Resilience

Restoration methodology extends far beyond the planting pit. To secure the long-term, landscape-scale future of the forest, Greenpop employs a holistic management approach across the entire valley:

Restoring connectivity: The project strategically works across multiple private properties (including Platbos, Bodhi Khaya, Blomerus, and Kleinbos) to re-establish vital ecological corridors. These corridors serve as safe highways for local fauna, allowing animals like bushbuck and the elusive Cape leopard to move safely and naturally between previously fragmented forest patches. Our work is conducted within a broader landscape that is a part of the Walker Bay Fynbos Conservancy and feature areas formally registered as Cape Nature Stewardship sites, which work with landowners on regional conservation efforts. A hint towards the collaborative, high-standard conservation framework that guides the entire valley.

Proactive fire management: Wildfire poses a major, existential threat in this region. We actively manage this risk by developing and maintaining firebreaks that safely delineate the highly fire-prone fynbos from the sensitive, low-fire-frequency forest habitat, as well as through alien vegetation clearing, which increase the risk of fire due to the highly flammable oils they contain. 

Active kick-start, passive follow-up: Our active planting, driven by the Facilitation Technique, serves as a crucial “kick-start” to the ecological recovery. Once established, these clusters enable and accelerate further natural regeneration across the landscape, minimizing the need for constant human intervention over time. Active follow-ups are needed to manage long leaf wattle and various other pioneer invasives that spring up after a disturbance. Once the ground is sufficiently cooled the invasive species struggle to germinate. These follow ups are performed by the local team over several years both ad hoc and through planned intervention.

Community first: Crucially, our ecological success is inextricably linked to Social Economic Development (SED), positioning this restoration as a powerful engine for a local green economy. This commitment starts with people: the project directly creates vital local Green Jobs, offering sustained employment and robust, hands-on training for community members. These roles encompass the full cycle of restoration—from seedling harvesting and nursery management to tree planting, alien removal, and year-round maintenance like fire-break management, trail management, and strategic peak-season watering. By training people in these advanced land management techniques, we are not just employing them; we are investing in local skills that boost the overall resilience of the bioregion. This community involvement, in turn, strengthens the emerging ecotourism sector, making Uilenkraal a compelling destination and proving that environmental investment delivers a powerful social return.

Prioritising adaptation: The Uilenkraal Forest Restoration Project is a case study which indicates how a project’s success depends on adaptation. We are not simply counting trees; we are actively engineering the precise conditions necessary for an ancient, dryland ecosystem to heal and build long-term resilience against a changing climate. This approach is proving to be a scalable model for dryland forest restoration efforts globally. We’ve demonstrated how strategic, science-backed methods can reverse decades of degradation, providing a more powerful and memorable message than simply stating a fact. This project has been a journey of 15 years of trial and error, learning as we go throughout the entire process and working out how best to nurture this complex landscape and its contextual conditions. We’re still learning and don’t plan on stopping anytime soon!

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By focusing on innovation over intervention, the Uilenkraal project has moved beyond simple planting. The flagship Bodhi Forest (Blomerus) technique, demonstrated so powerfully at the Blomerus farm site, proves that by deliberately creating protective, communal micro-climates—using rainwater funnels and wood chip mulch—we can achieve exceptional survival rates in harsh, dry conditions. This commitment to science and strategy is what transforms degraded land into resilient forest.

The success of the Uilenkraal project is a collaborative effort. You can directly contribute to the survival of Africa’s southernmost forest by both donating, and being a part of the movement by joining us at our next Reforest Fest, RFF2026, where you can experience these innovative methods first-hand. By empowering nature with the right tools, we ensure the survival of Africa’s southernmost forest, preserving a living relic and a model of resilience for a drier world.

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Photography courtesy of Juliette Bisset. Banner image courtesy of Nur Hazwani Hamid.

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Greenpop Foundation NPC is a registered non-profit organisation. Registration Number (NPO): 151-411 NPO.