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Bad News Ash Disease discovered in East Anglia


arbwork
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The detection of the disease is as follows:

 

Nursery sites - 15

Recently planted sites - 39

Wider environment - 61

 

If it was all nurseries and new plantings, I'd be very dubious of the wind theory, but as it stands it's mainly present in established sites.

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Ok fair point, so the nurseries supplied the recently planted sites, more probable than the spores travel against the direction of prevailing wind? Needless to say, I'm not 100% convinced. As I said elsewhere, this now is irrelevant, it's here and we probably cannot do much to prevent it's imminent spread across the nation.

Armed with the FC and David's recent pictures, I have perambulated around my parish, studying every ash today armed with binoculars. And I am pleased to report that I have not found or managed to identify correctly, one case of Chalara.

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  • 3 weeks later...

Its very annoying that imports of ash were allowed to continue for so long even after all the problems with the ash in Europe! I know you should never discuss politics or religion if you don't wish to offend but.... I cant help feel like this is the result of the 'Business and profits before all else' attitude of the current government, whom - please correct me if im wrong - weren't exactly elected into power....

Why is it that the persons in power who are given the information they need fail to act until its too late! Is it that they are just too short sighted? It never ceases to amaze me how moronic the UK government can be.

 

Back to the ash trees, latest figures from the FC are

 

Confirmed findings at 21 November 2012:

 

Nursery sites - 17

Recently planted sites - 84

Wider environment, e.g. established woodland - 121

Total: 222

 

something tells me this is going to have the same devastating effect on the landscape as DED

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  • 2 weeks later...
  • 6 years later...

It is ravaging Northern France, Belgium and Netherlands.

I've made several trips across France these last couple of months and seen hedgerows and entire woodlands bristling with bare ash stems as well as piles of cut ash waiting to be chipped for bio-mass.

Not seen it's presence in Brittany but ash is fairly uncommon here.

 Stuart

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