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Working at a nature reserve today:
[ Section: 1/1 File: z_MoorCopse_0054.JPG UUencoded by: Turnpike Integrated Version 5.02 S ] sum -r/size 11644/534333 section (from "begin" to "end") sum -r/size 4964/387793 entire input file -- Sue ] ![]() ![]() |
#2
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Looks like very difficult work.
Now here in Calif. we would have to leave the course as it goes..... Letting nature decide. We have some trails that you cannot use chain saws and or power tools in order for the bird or wildlife population nesting time, and mating...... I can understand some of the concerns..... john "Mad Cow" wrote in message ... Working at a nature reserve today: [ Section: 1/1 File: z_MoorCopse_0054.JPG UUencoded by: Turnpike Integrated Version 5.02 S ] sum -r/size 11644/534333 section (from "begin" to "end") sum -r/size 4964/387793 entire input file -- Sue ] ![]() ![]() |
#3
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In article , jloomis
writes Looks like very difficult work. The bushes have to be harvested every few years for poles and firing - it's a traditional practice that's given rise to its own ecosystem. Doing it in a foot of water was interesting but not especially difficult. Now here in Calif. we would have to leave the course as it goes..... Letting nature decide. The River Pang's normally a quarter of a mile from our work site. This year thanks to some wet weather it was everywhere! The Pang's perched above the valley of the much larger River Thames so official policy is to prevent it changing its course, but for that we only need to keep the banks planted with willows so that they can't wash away. We have some trails that you cannot use chain saws and or power tools in order for the bird or wildlife population nesting time, and mating...... Most birds nest in thicker cover than old coppice provides, and anyway we have to finish before the bushes leaf out. Nothing nests in the newly-cut area, they'll go to one that was cut 3-5 years ago, where the cover's thickest. -- Sue ] ![]() ![]() |
#4
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On Fri, 7 Feb 2014 23:46:23 +0000, Mad Cow
wrote: In article , jloomis writes Looks like very difficult work. The bushes have to be harvested every few years for poles and firing - it's a traditional practice that's given rise to its own ecosystem. Doing it in a foot of water was interesting but not especially difficult. Now here in Calif. we would have to leave the course as it goes..... Letting nature decide. The River Pang's normally a quarter of a mile from our work site. This year thanks to some wet weather it was everywhere! The Pang's perched above the valley of the much larger River Thames so official policy is to prevent it changing its course, but for that we only need to keep the banks planted with willows so that they can't wash away. We have some trails that you cannot use chain saws and or power tools in order for the bird or wildlife population nesting time, and mating...... Most birds nest in thicker cover than old coppice provides, and anyway we have to finish before the bushes leaf out. Nothing nests in the newly-cut area, they'll go to one that was cut 3-5 years ago, where the cover's thickest. Very good explanation. You might add that traditional practices in woodlands are, in many places, hundreds of years old going back to the time when self-sufficiency was essential for survival. You could also add that your own self-suffiency depended on proper management of these resources by previous generations - exactly what you are still doing. Guy Gorton |
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