Record features
Track whitebeam, oak standards, veteran birch, hazel areas, holly thickets, rides and wet woodland patches.
Dendromeda helps woodland owners, ecologists and foresters turn maps, photographs, observations and management actions into a living record of how a woodland changes over time.
Dendromeda connects the things that actually matter: compartments, notable trees, habitat features, photos, tasks, objectives and outcomes.
Track whitebeam, oak standards, veteran birch, hazel areas, holly thickets, rides and wet woodland patches.
Upload photos and notes from each visit. Attach them to the woodland, a compartment or an individual feature.
See change over time: crown release, regeneration, browsing pressure, canopy gaps and management outcomes.
Traditional woodland management plans are snapshots. Dendromeda continuously records objectives, interventions and outcomes so a UKFS-aligned plan becomes an output of the system, not the starting point.
For woods with public paths, Dendromeda can publish a simple public page: why trees are being thinned, which habitat features are being retained, and what the woodland is becoming.
A QR code on a bridleway can show a calm, readable story of the woodland and its management.
Explain the lone whitebeam, the veteran oak, the retrenched birch and the retained willow patch.
When people see felling, tubes or thinning, they can understand the ecological intention behind the work.
Dendromeda is starting with small private and community woodlands: the places where good management happens over decades, but the evidence often lives in one person’s head.
Request early access