Jump to content

This is what hundreds of years of no cultivation or sprays looks like.


JDog
 Share

Recommended Posts

Incredible. It just shows what can be achieved. It's too easy to reach for the chemicals. 

Not on that scale but here I have a meadow not touched since it was ridge and furrow cultivated in the middle ages and then maybe 150 years ago as an orchard (trees are now long gone). It provides endless interest when allowed to grow wild. The barn owls love it. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 Most of the western side of the Outer Hebrides is known as Machair a herb rich grassland, cultivated, grazed and fallow, often with a dressing of seaweed, and its this management without chemicals that maintains the flora and fauna the machair is famous for, my croft is in the main Machair which I try to maintain in the traditional way.

 https://presscentre.nature.scot/news/snh-puts-scottish-machair-on-the-map

machair.jpg.ec5ac64cc869ca93f400898a2a9232c0.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, islandgun said:

 Most of the western side of the Outer Hebrides is known as Machair a herb rich grassland, cultivated, grazed and fallow, often with a dressing of seaweed, and its this management without chemicals that maintains the flora and fauna the machair is famous for, my croft is in the main Machair which I try to maintain in the traditional way.

 https://presscentre.nature.scot/news/snh-puts-scottish-machair-on-the-map

machair.jpg.ec5ac64cc869ca93f400898a2a9232c0.jpg

Your talk of sea weed on the land reminds me of the film. " The Field"  set in Ireland . 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Our meadows are similar to the OP - has not taken hundreds of years - just about 10 really

Its amazing how nature bounces back - some of the improved grassland we have i stopped the tenants spraying about 6/7/ years ago and they are just filling lovely now with flowers - I spread green hay from the established meadows 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Some of the most herb rich grass fields locally to me are the ring of small farms/ horse fields around separating the city from its nearest village, less than a mile. Yes the ‘green belt’, our builders and land speculators are slavering at the idea of building thousands of houses on it now Labour are in.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 17/07/2024 at 10:31, johnphilip said:

Your talk of sea weed on the land reminds me of the film. " The Field"  set in Ireland . 

They used sea weed on the land in Cornwall too but (I'm told) they are not allowed to come down on the beaches and remove it anymore

In Jersey they grow Jersey Royal Potatoes on seaweed but the name is protected 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, Vince Green said:

They used sea weed on the land in Cornwall too but (I'm told) they are not allowed to come down on the beaches and remove it anymore

In Jersey they grow Jersey Royal Potatoes on seaweed but the name is protected 

That's a shame, as it will just rott away at the high tide mark and smell. Also on a big spring tide and strong wind of the sea, it will just end up on the roads . Happen a couple of times up here in southwest Scotland come around October time the kelp dies of and loads get dumped on the shore. 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

15 minutes ago, Vince Green said:

They used sea weed on the land in Cornwall too but (I'm told) they are not allowed to come down on the beaches and remove it anymore

In Jersey they grow Jersey Royal Potatoes on seaweed but the name is protected 

i believe the EU banned the removing of seaweed from the shore as it interfered with the biodiversity......thats why jersey spuds taste boring now..

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Tangle is the local Hebridean name for seaweed and its deposited on the beaches in many tons after autumn gales, it stabilisers the sand in the upper beaches and helps to form dunes, adding nutrients for marram grass etc. crofters traditionally collected a few tons over the winter and spread it on the thin sandy machair soil before ploughing in for potatoes and oats sown in the spring, the small areas of cultivated land allowed rare cornfield annuals to grow and the fallow/grazed land that follows encourages wild flowers until the next cultivation. sadly the tangle is now so badly infested with plastic that it makes it nigh on impossible to separate the weed from the plastic, below is pic of some of my carrots showing the type of soil... [carrots do very well in the free draining sandy soil]

1458421928_carrotearly.jpg.1f4fd995a3e0293230998937eac4d076.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On our farm when I was growing up we had one particular meadow that had a Brook flowing right through the middle of it. It was right on the boundary of our place and bordered the farms small wood and flight pond that my dad put in in the late 70s. As it was tucked out of the way and relatively small at just over two acres it was just left to grow wild and the only attention it got was if one of our neighbours sheep escaped.

It looked very much the same as your picture, absolutely full of wetland wild flowers and a haven for the likes of great crested newts and all kinds of moths and butterflies. We had a tutor from the local ag college come down a couple of times to do wildlife surveys and he told us it was the most diverse place in terms of flora and fauna for miles. 

When dad retired and the farm lease lapsed some of the land was sold for development and Google earth shows the new housing  but it also shows the meadow and wood are still there. I often wonder what sort of state they are in. I shot my first duck on that flight pond and bagged my best ever haul flighting pigeons in the wood, but that was over 25 years ago now. I hope for the sake of the local wildlife it all still thrives to this day.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...