Jamie Normington was a much-valued colleague at Cumbria Wildlife Trust © Cumbria Wildlife Trust
Donations for Skiddaw Forest will be doubled between 22-29 April!
Jamie Normington was a much-valued colleague at Cumbria Wildlife Trust © Cumbria Wildlife Trust
This is the 400th tree planted in the RSPB Celebration Wood at Wild Haweswater near Penrith.
The tree was planted by Jamie Normington’s family and close friends, led by his wife Bea Normington, who works for the RSPB, managing the Celebration Wood at Wild Haweswater.
The family and friends of Jamie Normington, a prominent conservationist who lived and worked in Cumbria, have planted a sessile oak, in the RSPB’s Celebration Wood at Wild Haweswater near Penrith in the Lake District, in memory of his remarkable life.
For the past 15 years, Jamie worked tirelessly for Cumbria Wildlife Trust as Training and Education Manager, inspiring and mentoring young people of all ages about the natural world. He was a uniquely talented conservationist, naturalist, educator and campaigner. He would never describe himself as a writer, but he had a way with words.
In 2019 Jamie took on the challenge of the 200-mile Coast-to-Coast walk, from St Bees Head to Robin Hood’s Bay, to raise funds to place copies of the book ‘The Lost Words’ by Robert Macfarlane and Jackie Morris, into 200 primary schools across Cumbria.
Jamie was also the popular compere of the quirky ‘Music on Nature’ (Patron – Robert Macfarlane) event at Kendal Mountain Literature Festival and for the past few years become one of the popular interviewers talking to a number of nature writers. He loved the role as he was a prolific reader and had a talent for connecting with people, bringing a genuine interest, love of literature and a great sense of humour. He was also involved in the Nature Chronicle Prize - Award for Nature writing. Jamie sadly passed away in April 2025, age 53, following a short battle with pancreatic cancer.
Jamie’s tree marks the 400th tree planted in the RSPB’s Celebration Wood. The sessile oak was planted by his family and close friends, led by his beloved wife Bea Normington, who is the RSPB’s Celebration Wood Officer, manging the project at Wild Haweswater.
Bea Normington, RSPB Celebration Wood Officer at Wild Haweswater said: “Jamie was the most interesting husband I could wish for. He made me laugh, took me out for adventures, he was my librarian, my walking encyclopaedia, my chef, my best friend and my rock. He made me mad at times re-stacking the dishwasher and banging pans in the kitchen but I always forgave him because he was the love of my life.
“One of his biggest passions was connecting young people with nature. He was never happier than sharing his wildlife wisdom with people – whether that was a group of primary school children, the young adult apprentices at Cumbria Wildlife Trust, the volunteers he worked alongside, or with me on our many wild walks together. He was also a mischievous, loving and unique son, brother, uncle and friend. He was always there if anyone needed him.”
The RSPB’s Celebration Wood where Jamie’s tree has been planted, is one of several conservation projects at Wild Haweswater, and is a distinctive place to plant a native tree - to mark a special occasion or in memory of the life of a loved one.
Wild Haweswater is the base for ground-breaking landscape recovery work, which is the result of the pioneering partnership between landowner United Utilities and the RSPB, working together since 2011, to enhance this beautiful landscape for the future, benefitting wildlife, water and people.
The RSPB’s Celebration Wood was set up on 1 February 2022 by Bea Normington, next to the mossy temperate rainforest of Naddle Forest, at Wild Haweswater – a 30km2 site surrounding Haweswater reservoir. Since then, it has grown in popularity as a way for both local people and those from further afield with a love of the Lake District, to leave a lasting legacy, benefiting wildlife, as well as helping to restore the native trees that have been lost from the landscape. The Lake District fells should be home to a whole host of native trees such as Aspen, Creeping Willow and Downy Willow, but they have mostly been lost from the English uplands or pushed to the very edges of the craggiest cliffs, due to grazing by sheep and wild deer.
The expert RSPB conservation team at Wild Haweswater manages the largest native tree and plant nursery in the Lake District, where many of these species are grown. The staff and volunteers gather the seeds in autumn, grow them on in the nursery and then plant them back out into the landscape as part of their restoration work. All the trees for Celebration Wood are grown in this nursery and there is a choice of saplings for people to choose from including alder, aspen, bird cherry, blackthorn, crab apple, downy birch, goat willow, hawthorn, hazel, rowan and sessile oak. Celebration Wood supporters also select a pair of personalised ceramic tree markers, beautifully hand-crafted in the Lake District by local ceramic artist Coco Ceramics; one to keep and one to hang on their tree.
Bea Normington added: “Planting the 400th tree is an incredible milestone for Celebration Wood. I am fond of every tree planted but this one is particularly close to my heart in memory of my husband Jamie. When I started this project four years ago, I wasn’t sure how the public would respond but it has been unbelievable. Every tree in Celebration Wood has a story - whether planted to mark a special occasion, anniversary, birthday, wedding, retirement or in memory of a loved ones’ life. Jamie and I planted two trees here for our silver wedding anniversary in 2023, so his memory can be felt throughout Celebration Wood, supporting the wildlife that he was so passionate about.”
Donations for a tree planting cover the cost of growing and caring for the tree as well as the ongoing maintenance of Celebration Wood. Discover more about planting a tree.
Bea has also created a memorial fund for Jamie, supporting Cumbria Wildlife Trust and Pancreatic Cancer UK. Donate here.