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51 minutes ago, EdwardC said:

I remember when the Tenfoot was a field with a pond in it.

 

I can also remember when we didn't bring pests and diseases into the country on imported wood/plant/soil products, or at least not as often as at present. Hopefully post-Brexit, and one of the few good things about Brexit is, we will be able to ban such imports of plants, the soil they're grown in and wood materials.

 

So what's the problem: Ash dieback imported on nursery trees had arrived long before 2012, the recent importation of oak prosesionary moth  on imported oaks spreading the pest throughout the UK, Phytophthora austrocedrae in juniper imported on nursery stock, the virulent strain of Dutch elm disease imported on logs from Canada, the importation of  asian longhorn beetles, the introduction of red band needle blight, Ips typographus, elm zig-zag sawfly, Splanchnonema platani, oriental chestnut gall wasp. I could go on. Or I could start a new list of pests and diseases knocking on the door; emerald ash borer, pine prossesionary moth, Xylella fastidiosa, beech leaf disease and so it goes on ad-nauseam.

 

When will we learn.

I’m taking that as a tacit acknowledgement of the stupidity of a free movement of goods and people policy. 

 

If thats as close as we ever get to an acknowledgement of the potential advantages of Brexit, well, that’ll do for me ???

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On 19/09/2019 at 21:51, EdwardC said:

I remember when the Tenfoot was a field with a pond in it.

 

I can also remember when we didn't bring pests and diseases into the country on imported wood/plant/soil products, or at least not as often as at present. Hopefully post-Brexit, and one of the few good things about Brexit is, we will be able to ban such imports of plants, the soil they're grown in and wood materials.

 

So what's the problem: Ash dieback imported on nursery trees had arrived long before 2012, the recent importation of oak prosesionary moth  on imported oaks spreading the pest throughout the UK, Phytophthora austrocedrae in juniper imported on nursery stock, the virulent strain of Dutch elm disease imported on logs from Canada, the importation of  asian longhorn beetles, the introduction of red band needle blight, Ips typographus, elm zig-zag sawfly, Splanchnonema platani, oriental chestnut gall wasp. I could go on. Or I could start a new list of pests and diseases knocking on the door; emerald ash borer, pine prossesionary moth, Xylella fastidiosa, beech leaf disease and so it goes on ad-nauseam.

 

When will we learn.

....and not one of these is attributable to the importing of firewood !!! 

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