A campaign to replace some of the thousands of Gloucestershire trees being decimated by ash dieback has reached its halfway point in just two months.

BBC Radio Gloucestershire’s ‘Ourboretum’ project called on volunteers to grow saplings at home which will then be planted outside in the winter of 2021/22.

And green-fingered volunteers leapt to the challenge, planting 650 acorns, 200 beechmast and 270 hazelnuts since late July. They will grow into oaks, beeches and hazels respectively.

BBC Radio Gloucestershire breakfast presenter Mark Cummings said: “What a phenomenal response! Ourboretum is showing just how important the great outdoors is to Gloucestershire folk.

“If our amazing volunteer army carries on like this we won’t just hit the 2,020 target – we’ll smash it.”

According to the Woodland Trust, 95% of British ash trees will vanish over the coming years because of ash dieback, an incurable disease. Gloucestershire is home to hundreds of thousands of ash trees – it is the third most common tree in the county - and experts fear the loss could have a disastrous effect on the landscape and wildlife.

Mark Connelly, land management officer for the Cotswolds National Landscape, said: “We’re delighted with the response so far to Ourboretum!

“It’s really captured people’s imaginations in Gloucestershire, and we’re really pleased so many people are already involved!

“We’re also pleased that the project caught the attention of Ground Control – who are now supplying us with around 2,000 pots, as well as compost and labels to help people continue to join in with this brilliant project.”

How to get involved:

• Collect seeds during autumn using the guidance online: www.bbc.co.uk/ourboretum

• Begin growing the seeds at home

• These home-grown saplings will be planted across Gloucestershire next winter (2021/2022).

BBC Radio Gloucestershire and Cotswolds AONB will identify locations where the fledgling trees can be planted and aim to log each one to create a permanent record of where they are growing