Description

Date: 12th May 2026, 7pm

Venue: David’s Bookshop. This is an in person event (not available to attend online)

Event to start at 7pm, doors & bar opening 6:30pm.

Please note there are no physical tickets, your name will be added to a guestlist after purchasing and this will get you entry at the event. 

A sparkling green field. A dull and scrubby patch of grass. One is the sanitised evidence of monoculture, the other a world teeming with more life than you could ever imagine.

Join John Wright, one of our best-known naturalists, as he uncovers the beauty and rich diversity of Britain's grasslands. Bursting with mushrooms, lichen and wildflowers, home to butterflies, bees and beetles, and vital to foxes and birds alike, these grasslands are part of our natural heritage. From meadows to mires to heathlands, John Wright introduces them in all their variety: the history of how grasslands came to be, what can be found there, what we risk with their loss and what can be done to save what is left.

Most of all, he shows why we should care. Because grasslands are never just patches of grass.

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  • David's Bookshop

Event Ticket: John Wright, 12th May 2026

    Date: 12th May 2026, 7pm Venue: David’s Bookshop. This is an in person event (not available to attend online) Event... Read more

    £8.00

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        Description

        Date: 12th May 2026, 7pm

        Venue: David’s Bookshop. This is an in person event (not available to attend online)

        Event to start at 7pm, doors & bar opening 6:30pm.

        Please note there are no physical tickets, your name will be added to a guestlist after purchasing and this will get you entry at the event. 

        A sparkling green field. A dull and scrubby patch of grass. One is the sanitised evidence of monoculture, the other a world teeming with more life than you could ever imagine.

        Join John Wright, one of our best-known naturalists, as he uncovers the beauty and rich diversity of Britain's grasslands. Bursting with mushrooms, lichen and wildflowers, home to butterflies, bees and beetles, and vital to foxes and birds alike, these grasslands are part of our natural heritage. From meadows to mires to heathlands, John Wright introduces them in all their variety: the history of how grasslands came to be, what can be found there, what we risk with their loss and what can be done to save what is left.

        Most of all, he shows why we should care. Because grasslands are never just patches of grass.

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