Portugal — bioregion profile
Climate and ecosystem. Mediterranean: hot dry summers, mild wet winters, wetter in the north around Trás-os-Montes and drier in the south in the Alentejo. The reference ecosystem is cork-oak and holm-oak montado and dryland forest. Cork oak sits at the centre of it, both ecologically and economically (the value of cork, news). Planting goes in with the winter rains.
Scale and cost. Land is cheap and often abandoned, so a steward-scale start can be larger, around three to five hectares within budget. Rural depopulation means parcels come up, but it also means thinner infrastructure and fewer neighbours.
Hazards. Fire is the defining risk, and it shapes site layout and species choice (fire-resilient forests in Iberia, news). Water is scarce and increasingly managed at community level (Algarve communities and water, news), though regional groundwater has held fairly steady over decades (groundwater in southwestern Europe, study). Restoration and rewilding are active in the country, from river work to reintroducing bison (Portuguese river restoration, news; bison in Portugal, news).
Legal and funding. The non-profit Associação (three to five members, modest cost), with IPSS status as a route to tax benefits. Funding through the national Fundo Ambiental and EU LIFE.
Fit for us. Cheaper, larger, and a better match for living in nature for good. Against that: a language to learn, a move away from our current life, and more fire and drought to design around.