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Livestock & Forage
Bracken for bedding
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<blockquote data-quote="egbert" data-source="post: 7143990" data-attributes="member: 9965"><p>Commons are owned by a wide variety of owners, not usually the Crown.</p><p></p><p>Often it'd be attached to the parochial manor, with grazing rights upon it registered to adjoining farms - perversely, sometimes the tenants of the 'estate'.</p><p>It's had very little sale value traditionally, as the commoners rights are enshrined in law...but</p><p>...increasingly, when it changes hands, 'rewilder' interests are trying to buy. BEWARE!</p><p></p><p>They cannot extinguish rights to graze, but they can be a pain in the erse.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>The Natural England boffs (delete and apply local gov agency) don't like wall to wall bracken, as it's near to a monoculture flora wise.</p><p>Most are happy to see it knocked back some.</p><p></p><p>don't think there's a problem with the spores when it's cut late enough for bedding</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="egbert, post: 7143990, member: 9965"] Commons are owned by a wide variety of owners, not usually the Crown. Often it'd be attached to the parochial manor, with grazing rights upon it registered to adjoining farms - perversely, sometimes the tenants of the 'estate'. It's had very little sale value traditionally, as the commoners rights are enshrined in law...but ...increasingly, when it changes hands, 'rewilder' interests are trying to buy. BEWARE! They cannot extinguish rights to graze, but they can be a pain in the erse. The Natural England boffs (delete and apply local gov agency) don't like wall to wall bracken, as it's near to a monoculture flora wise. Most are happy to see it knocked back some. don't think there's a problem with the spores when it's cut late enough for bedding [/QUOTE]
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Bracken for bedding
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