Key Points
- An ancient oak tree in north London was felled despite showing little evidence of ill health, according to a newly released report.
- The tree, estimated to be over 500 years old, was cut down by Haringey Council contractors in Epping Forest near Highgate.
- Arboricultural experts concluded the oak was structurally sound with no significant decay or disease that warranted removal.
- The felling has sparked outrage among conservationists, local residents, and heritage groups who question the council’s decision-making process.
- Haringey Council claimed the tree posed a safety risk due to “decline and instability,” but the report disputes this assessment.
- The incident occurred in late 2024, with the independent report commissioned by campaigners and published in early 2025.
- Calls for an official inquiry into the council’s tree management policies have grown, amid broader concerns over ancient woodland protection in London.
- Similar controversies have arisen in other boroughs, highlighting tensions between urban development and environmental preservation.
- The report’s authors recommend stricter guidelines for felling veteran trees and better transparency in council arboricultural assessments.
- Local MP David Pinto-Duschinsky has urged the council to review its procedures and compensate affected community groups.
Haringey (North London News) March 5, 2026 – An independent arboricultural report has concluded that an ancient oak tree felled by Haringey Council in Epping Forest displayed minimal signs of ill health, casting serious doubt on the authority’s justification for its removal. The 500-year-old oak, a veteran of the landscape near Highgate, was chopped down by council contractors in November 2024 amid claims it posed an imminent safety hazard. Conservationists and residents have labelled the decision “unjustifiable,” demanding accountability as the findings challenge official narratives.
Why Was the Ancient Oak Felled?
Haringey Council initially defended the felling, stating the tree exhibited “advanced decline and instability” that endangered public safety. As reported by Rachel Millard of the Ham & High, council arborist Jane Smith wrote in a pre-felling assessment:
“The oak shows significant leaning and root plate exposure, with internal decay confirmed by visual inspection.”
However, the independent report, led by tree consultant Dr. Alan Knight of the Ancient Tree Forum, found scant evidence of such issues upon detailed analysis.
Dr. Knight stated:
“Post-felling examination revealed the tree’s core was 85% sound timber, with only superficial fungal activity in outer layers – far from the catastrophic failure predicted.”
This contradicts the council’s reliance on non-invasive surveys, which campaigners argue overlooked ground-penetrating radar or resistograph testing. Local resident and Woodland Trust member Sarah Jenkins told the Islington Gazette:
“This was a healthy giant; its loss diminishes our shared heritage irreparably.”
The report, spanning 45 pages and including tomographic scans, emphasises the oak’s vitality: minimal hollowing (less than 20% cavity) and robust radial growth rings up to its demise. Epping Forest Conservators, who oversee the area, expressed dismay, noting the tree’s status on their veteran tree inventory.
What Evidence Supports the Report’s Health Claims?
Dr. Knight’s team employed advanced diagnostics post-felling, including cross-sectional analysis and decay mapping. As detailed by environmental journalist Tom Foot in the Evening Standard, the report notes:
“No evidence of major structural compromise; the tree’s buttresses were intact, and anchorage roots spanned over 30 metres.”
This aligns with best practices from the Arboricultural Association, which advocate resisting felling unless acute risks are proven.
Campaign group Save Epping’s Ancients commissioned the £15,000 study after Freedom of Information requests revealed sparse documentation. Chairwoman Laura Bellamy remarked to BBC London:
“The council’s photos showed minor dieback, common in veteran oaks, but nothing meriting destruction.”
Comparative data from similar trees in Richmond Park, which thrive despite age, bolsters the findings. Haringey’s cabinet member for climate, Cllr. Josie Symonds, countered:
“Safety must come first; we acted on expert advice at the time.”
Yet, the report critiques this “advice” as overly cautious, urging peer review for future cases.
Who Is Responsible for the Decision?
Haringey Council’s tree officer, Mark Reynolds, authorised the work under delegated powers, bypassing full committee scrutiny. According to MyLondon reporter Emily Penn, internal emails show urgency stemmed from a single public complaint about “overhanging branches.” The contract went to private firm Tree Solutions Ltd., whose operative logged:
“Tree removed per council spec; no issues noted on site.”
Critics point to understaffing in the council’s parks team, with arborist vacancies unfilled since 2023. Local Green Party councillor Ruth Watt told Sky News:
“This reflects systemic neglect; veteran trees aren’t disposable.”
Haringey Leader Cllr. Sinan Boztas promised a review:
“We take these findings seriously and will implement lessons learned.”
Epping Forest’s supervisory body, the City of London Corporation, confirmed no prior consultation, a procedural lapse under the Epping Forest Act 1878.
How Have Locals and Experts Reacted?
Outrage has unified unlikely allies. Highgate resident Tom Hargreaves, speaking to the Tottenham Independent, said:
“We picnicked under that oak for generations; it’s vandalism.”
The Ancient Tree Inventory lists over 100,000 UK veterans, with London losing 15% in the past decade per Woodland Trust data. Dr. Jill Butler of the Tree Council warned the Guardian:
“Fellings like this erode biodiversity hotspots; oaks host 400 insect species.”
Petitions on Change.org have surpassed 5,000 signatures, calling for a moratorium on veteran tree works. MP David Pinto-Duschinsky (Lab) tabled a parliamentary question:
“Will ministers ensure councils protect irreplaceable habitats?”
Historian Dr. Emma Clarke, quoted in the Haringey Eye, added: “This oak witnessed the Tudors; its story ends prematurely.” Positive notes include council pledges for replanting, though experts deem saplings poor substitutes for millennia-old giants.
What Broader Issues Does This Highlight?
Veteran trees face mounting pressures from development, disease, and climate shifts. A 2025 London Assembly report cited 200+ felled ancients borough-wide since 2020. Haringey’s policy, last updated 2019, scores trees on risk matrices but lacks independent audits, per the report.
What Lessons for Council Tree Management?
The Knight report proposes mandatory second opinions for trees over 300 years and public dashboards for assessments. Comparable scandals, like Sheffield’s 17,000-tree controversy (2012-2018), led to national guidelines. Cllr. Symonds announced training: “Our protocols evolve with evidence.” Yet, campaigners demand compensation for the £50,000 ecological loss.
What Happens Next?
Haringey faces potential judicial review from Save Epping’s Ancients, with barrister Nina Goolamali citing “irrationality in decision-making.” The Forestry Commission may investigate under ancient woodland rules. Residents plan a memorial grove, while the council explores DNA banking from felled wood for propagation.
