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Rewilding
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<blockquote data-quote="Kevtherev" data-source="post: 8356022" data-attributes="member: 4240"><p>A subject that has been discussed regularly on here with the wildlife trusts and Gov buying up farms and parcels of land.</p><p>My take on it is this.</p><p></p><p>If they want to rewild a farm or some land then the only way to do it would be to remove every trace of mankind’s activity over hundreds of years.</p><p></p><p>Remove every man made object be it a Fence </p><p>Stone wall</p><p>House </p><p>Bridge </p><p>Road </p><p>Foot path</p><p>The list is endless and I bet they wouldn’t like that version which in my mind is the only genuine rewilding you could get.</p><p></p><p>Im all for nature and habitat but we need a steady balance of local food production fair prices for produce, Protect local communities and smaller family farms.</p><p>Very short sighted of our Gov to neglect the very basics of life and that’s home grown British Food by British farmers.</p><p></p><p>what greater landscape than that of the British countryside mostly shaped by the hand of man and those men were FARMERS.</p><p></p><p>(And remember you can’t eat trees)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Kevtherev, post: 8356022, member: 4240"] A subject that has been discussed regularly on here with the wildlife trusts and Gov buying up farms and parcels of land. My take on it is this. If they want to rewild a farm or some land then the only way to do it would be to remove every trace of mankind’s activity over hundreds of years. Remove every man made object be it a Fence Stone wall House Bridge Road Foot path The list is endless and I bet they wouldn’t like that version which in my mind is the only genuine rewilding you could get. Im all for nature and habitat but we need a steady balance of local food production fair prices for produce, Protect local communities and smaller family farms. Very short sighted of our Gov to neglect the very basics of life and that’s home grown British Food by British farmers. what greater landscape than that of the British countryside mostly shaped by the hand of man and those men were FARMERS. (And remember you can’t eat trees) [/QUOTE]
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