A museum famous for its green machines is inviting visitors to support a campaign to help restore a Dorset-area woodland. In partnership with Forestry England, the Tank Museum is aiming to raise at least £30,000 to plant 5,000 native trees at Queen’s Copse in Wimborne, United Kingdom.

Leif Mann, Partnerships Manager with Forestry England, said:
“Our aim is to return this woodland to its original character, so we can create a biodiverse habitat that captures carbon, supports wildlife and thrives for future generations to enjoy.”
To raise the funds, the Tank Museum will be offering customers the chance to donate a tree for £6 when they purchase their admission tickets.
Rosanna Dean, the Tank Museum’s Head of Visitor Experience & Commercial, said:
“The Tank Museum doesn’t charge for parking. Our hope is that those who can afford it will make a favourable comparison between the cost of a tree and a day’s parking – and be as enthusiastic about shaping the future as we are about preserving the past.”

Every £6 donated pays for one sapling to be professionally planted with a stake and growth-guard. Forestry England, with over a century of woodland management expertise, will undertake the planting and provide each sapling up to 10 years of care to ensure it flourishes into a new, native woodland just 25 miles from the museum.
The new campaign is the Tank Museum’s second significant environmental initiative of the year. In April, it announced it was running a trial to convert one of its historic vehicles to run on “Green Diesel” – a cleaner and sustainable Diesel alternative.

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If successful, it’s hoped other vehicles could be converted to run on Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil to reduce the environmental impact of its live action tank displays by as much as 90 percent.