Büschauer wood

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Büsch Auer wood (also Büsch Forst , Danish Byskov ) is about 300 hectares in the municipalities Langstedt and Silberstedt on the Schleswig Geest in northern Schleswig-Holstein ( Southern Schleswig ) located forest area. In the Danish period, the wood was within the Uggelharde ( Ugle Herred , for example: Eulenharde). The core of the wood goes back to a small wooded area with a cave located directly on the Treene . The greater part was still heather at the beginning of the 19th century , which was later reforested with conifers . The proportion of coniferous forest in Büschauer Holz is correspondingly large today. There are mainly non- native conifers such as sitka spruce , Japanese larch and pine . In addition, there are oaks and sand birches with a characteristically pronounced herbaceous layer from natural regeneration and site-appropriate reforestation. In the north-west of the wood there are also oak-beech and oak-birch forests in small areas. The wood is traversed in its central area by the Büschau , which rises in the Jalmer Moor ( Hjalm Mose ) and in the valley of which fallen wet grassland is formed. The historical core exhibits a continuity of at least 220 years. In the Büschau area there are some largely intact transitional bogs . South of the wood, the Bollingstedter Au drains into the Treene.

Around 220 hectares are designated as part of the FFH area Treene Winderatter See to Friedrichstadt and Bollingstedter Au as a Natura 2000 protected area.

The name of the forest is derived from the Danish by for a settlement and skov for forest and denotes a forest in the village, i.e. at the border between Eggebek and Langstedt, the corresponding field name was first recorded in 1737

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Videnskabernes Selskab Kaart over Slesvig, Sydöstre Blad (6). Copenhagen Royal Library.Retrieved July 27, 2020 .
  2. Management plan for the fauna-flora-habitat area DE-1322-391. Ministry for Energy Transition, Agriculture, Environment and Rural Areas Schleswig-Holstein, accessed on July 27, 2020 .
  3. Treene Winderatter See to Friedrichstadt and Bollingstedter Au (FFH DE 1322-391). Ministry for Energy Transition, Agriculture, Environment and Rural Areas Schleswig-Holstein, accessed on July 27, 2020 .
  4. Management plan for the fauna-flora-habitat area DE-1322-391. Ministry for Energy Transition, Agriculture, Environment and Rural Areas Schleswig-Holstein, accessed on July 27, 2020 .
  5. ^ Wolfgang Laur: Historical place-name dictionary of Schleswig-Holstein . 2nd Edition. Karl Wachholtz, Neumünster 1992, ISBN 3-529-02726-X , p. 190 .
  6. Anders Bjerrum: Sydslesvigs stednavne . tape 4 . Akademisk forlag, Copenhagen 1984, p. 387 .

Coordinates: 54 ° 35 '23.9 "  N , 9 ° 21' 22.3"  E