Andrew Burt
Senior Member
Bump
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Good stuff, be good if Andy could maybe pin the thread to the top (is that right?) so it's always there to access.
It was unstickied as there was little input and hence I bumped it up.Any chance Andy? I've now learned it's called a sticky!
This project money will be spent entirely on the National Trust estate. Farmers and landowners elsewhere can apply for woodland creation on riparian zones through the ordinary Countryside Stewardship Woodland Creation Grant.'We hope in time farmers will be incentivised not only to plant trees but to create wetlands, floodplain meadows and other spaces for natural processes and wildlife to regenerate in riparian buffer zones.'
Are farmers going to be given grants for this? And will the EA cease to rip out the natural weed growth in the rivers, bankside vegetation and trees?
Late summer on the Ivel every year, the EA rip out most of the reeds and crowfoot ranunculus from most of the River Ivel. I'd like to think this terrible habitat destruction will stop.
I don't know of any National Trust Estates along the banks of the Great Ouse.This project money will be spent entirely on the National Trust estate. Farmers and landowners elsewhere can apply for woodland creation on riparian zones through the ordinary Countryside Stewardship Woodland Creation Grant.
Who knows what the EA will do?!
Apparently the catchments are:I don't know of any National Trust Estates along the banks of the Great Ouse.
Where's that Edward?View attachment 17711
Some quality work here...
Upper Thames at Newbridge. Over the years I have had more than a dozen 6lb chub fishing to those trees and countless fives. Some lucky so and sos have even caught barbel there. Every angler just marches straight past now. Ten miles up river they have managed to pull the roots out - ten old willows have completely disappeared with no evidence left of their existence. It was a really strange sensation when I went to fish there before Christmas - it took a couple of minutes to realise what had happened.Where's that Edward?
Appalling, PM sent and thanks for postingView attachment 17711
Some quality work here...
Upper Thames at Newbridge. Over the years I have had more than a dozen 6lb chub fishing to those trees and countless fives. Some lucky so and sos have even caught barbel there. Every angler just marches straight past now. Ten miles up river they have managed to pull the roots out - ten old willows have completely disappeared with no evidence left of their existence. It was a really strange sensation when I went to fish there before Christmas - it took a couple of minutes to realise what had happened.
Apparently, they intend making the Upper Thames a dual carriageway for boats. The Thames up here is increasing in width a metre per year. Ironically, over a 100 boats have been hoisted out of the water as they had been abandoned by owners and rental companies and were leaking oil and diesel for years. There is now a sizeable boat graveyard at Grafton Lock.