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coppice cutter

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Posts posted by coppice cutter

  1. 1 hour ago, sime42 said:

    Presumably that's why Nadine Dories and  Boris Johnson are so keen to get rid of the BBC altogether. 😜 They seem to hate them with a passion. And C4.

    I think that was just typical political grandstanding for their own benefit at the time.

     

    They were both in positions of power and done eff all with it regarding the state broadcaster.

     

    That having been said, I wouldn't have cared one jot if they had.

     

    Time was I'd have defended the BBC tooth and nail, but sadly no longer.

  2. 10 minutes ago, Doug Tait said:

    So Lineker has been reinstated, all back to normal and the BBC will look at how impartiality should impact the different types of presenter or freelancer.

    Issue swiftly kicked into the long grass.

     

    Seems the unofficial Sports Commentator Union has more sway than the government.

    It was pretty obvious all along that the BBC's heart was never really behind what they were doing.

     

    Most likely, because they all agreed with what Lineker said in the first instance and were only taking action because they thought they needed to rather than wanted to.

     

    Just goes to show that trying to act like something you're not, in this case the BBC trying to act impartial when they are nothing of the kind, never works out well.

     

    But never mind, seems their true colours are shining through in the end!

    • Like 5
  3. 1 minute ago, Con said:

    I'm not a big fan of him myself, but ask yourself,  why wasn't Alan Sugar treated the same for his Corbyn/Hitler tweet?

    I've no idea what that may have been so can't be specific.

     

    However, what does strike me immediately is that the good Mr Corbyn was never in government.

  4. 16 minutes ago, Con said:

    This is not really to do with small boats, whatever your view on them is.

    It's about free speech. And a government backed BBC trying to stifle it.

    I think it's more about Gary Lineker being a self-important sanctimonious twat, who, because he regularly tops the BBC earnings lists for some unfathomable reason, thinks he is beyond the rules which apply to everyone else that they pay.

    • Like 7
  5. 2 hours ago, openspaceman said:

    That's like saying if we stopped thieves we could all leave our possessions unlocked

    Which we could!

     

    However, the latter is not practically possible, stopping the illegal crossings should be.

  6. 14 hours ago, Mick Dempsey said:

    People who add 2 and 2 and make 5

    The illegal channel crossings are run by people traffickers, while they continue unabated, the people traffickers prosper.

     

    You disapprove of moves to curb them, ergo you support the trafficking.

     

    I don't think it's a difficult link to see, but sadly beyond some it would seem.

    • Like 3
  7. 14 hours ago, Karris said:

    They have been totally neglected for 30 years.

    What you mean is, they have been free from human interference and nature left to do it's own thing for 30 years.

     

    I have a young woodland of my own which occasionally people ask if they can have a walk around. The first thing I tell anyone so inclined is to remember that it's a natural area which I leave to do it's own thing as much as is possible, it is not a garden. And anyone who ventures out in to it expecting a garden like experience will be disappointed because nature does things very differently to how we humans would generally prefer.

     

    Your wooded area has gone through a well-documented cycle, from stem exclusion where canopy trees dominate to the exclusion of pretty much all else, to understorey initiation where the canopy trees become tall enough to allow light in below and an understory develops.

     

    If you want to clear all or part of the understorey away and leave the canopy trees then that's fine, but be aware that without continuous and ongoing management of the understory in future, either they or something else will just grow back to make use of the light that's now available.

     

    There's no right or wrong in this, either you leave it alone completely, or deal with it in a way that achieves what you wish. Going down the route of "we have to do it this way because it's what's right" could leave you with egg on your face because that's just not how management of such an area works.

    • Like 6
  8. 43 minutes ago, waterbuoy said:

    I like to keep things as simple as possible so....

     

    How about using a couple (or more) of these?  Cheap as chips and simpler than ratchet straps - if bundling on a saw horse then just lie them on it first.

     

    WWW.EBAY.CO.UK

    Find many great new & used options and get the best deals for Tie Down Straps Metal Cam Buckle 25mm Webbing 1m - 5m...

     

    Use them every day for securing bikes on the bike lifts in the workshop, plus I actually sell them.

     

    Much prefer them to the mini ratchet straps and despite what people say I've never had one, or known of one, to let go.

     

    The saw horse I use though is about two foot deep and tapered so you're working with more stuff at a time than you'd be bundling to make the pimp. I compress it in the middle with a heavy duty ratchet strap which essentially wraps around it and pulls it down in to the vee of the saw horse.

     

    Produces the sticks very quickly and effectively and usually I just put it in a pile for kindling, but I think having it in bundles would allow me to get even more use out of it. 

  9. The relevant factor is that it has to be a split mechanism to allow you to tie in the middle.

     

    If were just a case of squeezing the bundle then something like a V top and bottom would suffice but the centre has to be open to allow it to be tied.

  10. Anyone made them or have tips for doing so?

     

    The actual cutting of the sticks I have sussed, I just load up the sawhorse with the lengths and run the chainsaw down through each section leaving me with piles of roughly foot lengths between pencil and marker pen thickness which I use for kindling.

     

    But I think I could get even more use out of it if I had it bundled and tied up as pimps. I've watched the "Pimps, faggots, and benders" video in the past (now removed from youtube not surprisingly!) but it concentrates more on the overall process than the actual bundling of the sticks.

     

    I've plenty of used sisal twine as well so that's sorted too, just need to devise a handy way of squeezing the wee bundles until I tie them up.

  11. 24 minutes ago, Mick Dempsey said:

    .........her activism has skewed public opinion to a more green agenda.

    And how are people embracing this 'green agenda' tell me?

     

    Are they giving up their cruises, are they reducing their air-miles, are they buying less disposable shit, are they spending their money on quality longer lasting items even though they may be more expensive in the first place, are they looking for more locally produced food, are they shunning out of season fruit and veg to reduce food miles, are they cutting down on internet usage or messaging apps to help reduce the ridiculous carbon footprint of largely pointless data centres, etc, etc.

     

    When the answers to all the above are a resounding "yes", then I'll start to consider that the "green agenda" may be something more than yet another media/corporate buzz word for the gullible.

    • Like 4
  12. 20 inches of topsoil, you sure you've got that correct?

     

    If that's the case you probably need to give it a year to settle or at least layer and compact it during the summer when dry or you'll end up with a very uneven area in a couple of years time when it settles properly.

  13. 19 hours ago, doobin said:

    Lots of people asking £6k for similar, doesn’t mean they are getting it- in fact I can tell you they are not.

    Well I do always say that there's a big difference between asking and getting so I can easily accept that as being the case.

     

    It does make buying harder though as you need to find a seller that's either desperate or realistic.

     

    Furthermore, and absolutely no slight on Iseki, Kubota will always be easier shifted than anything else in the sector, and therefore generally a bit harder to buy too.

  14. The weans bought me a DAB radio years ago when it was forecast to be a great thing.

     

    There's fewer digital stations on it now than there was when I got it, although to be fair, internet radio has really caught on in a way that wasn't really envisaged back then.

     

    Luckily the radio has FM on it as well and that's mostly what it stays on.

     

    Classic FM at present for the sheep during housing.

    • Like 2
  15. 3 hours ago, Stihl123 said:

    my kubota B2100

    it came with a deck and a few spare parts, so i sold all those on

     

    so i'm now left with a very clean b2100 with only 1030 hours that owes me just £3070

    20221204_105001.jpg

    Lovely wee tractor, looks in exceptional condition too, people seem to be rougher on them generally than bigger stuff.

     

    I've an ST30 and simply couldn't do without it, indeed would have no trouble making use of something like yours as well.

     

    But they're getting up in to crazy money, you've done exceptionally well with that outfit. 👍

    • Like 1
  16. On 16/02/2023 at 13:24, Hillbillee said:

     My friend planted a new wood then left it alone, it became swamped with thistles, so I go round early winter with the brush cutter, just being careful.

    The problem with cutting thistles during the winter is that you're only removing dead growth and it will have no impact on the plant itself so will just come back next year.

     

    You should consider cutting them during summer and it will do much more to knock them back or in some cases kill them.

     

    There's an old farming expression for cutting thistles,

     

    Cut in May, back next day

    Cut in June, back soon

    Cut in July, sure to die

     

    Not sure if it would kill them but it would definitely give the trees a bit of growing time without having to compete, and they'd get a bit more benefit for your efforts.

  17. 9 minutes ago, AHPP said:

    Do you have lots of time, money and peace in your life? Do you want less of all of them?

    Just to clarify, I laughed at this but it's also searingly accurate!

    • Like 2

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