curly Posted July 11, 2012 Report Posted July 11, 2012 well may be somebody reads the forums beacuse some grass has been cut at the bank top
Keith Scantlebury Posted July 11, 2012 Author Report Posted July 11, 2012 well may be somebody reads the forums beacuse some grass has been cut at the bank topMight have something to to with a certain e-mail. Cutting arround the seats is a start , but not enough
Symptoms Posted July 11, 2012 Report Posted July 11, 2012 I have it on good authority that a chaingang of shackled naughty/evil teenagers had been forced to chomp the grass; good to know that the powers-to-be are listening to The Forum's wise old owl ... Symptoms.
curly Posted July 13, 2012 Report Posted July 13, 2012 keith - i read your letter on the news post leader.hopefully you'll of rattled a few cageswell i thought that maybe someone(ie the council) had read the letter as on my way to blyth this a.m.i actually saw a white van with a trailer pull up beside the long grass at the black bridge..and you guessed it, there were grass cutters on it.but when i came back a couple of hours later the grass had not been cut,me thinks the will need strimmers first the length that it is.
Keith Scantlebury Posted July 13, 2012 Author Report Posted July 13, 2012 (edited) That letter was written a few weeks ago before the baskets were put up and the raised beds and planters were planted in the Station. However, the planters on the grass at St Johns were short lived. The primroses that were in them were nicked and the scroats who nicked them were trying to sell them door to door, they were only there about 2 days. I spoke to the parish councillor responsible for them and he says that they would now probably be moved somewhere else as he believed in an "abuse it, then lose it" policy. Personally, I agree with him, some people just love spoiling things for others.The grass at the Bank Top ?, apparrently this is a "grow wild area" as we learned on Wednesday night. It is a load of tosh because who would actually want to use those seats in such an area. An e-mail that I sent on Monday was passed on to the head of maintenance and the grass arround the seats (only) was cut on Tuesday. Prior to cutting it, you could hardly see the seats before the grass was cut. Also it was pointed out by a county councillor that it was hard to believe that even a grow wild area would be allowed to impede the footpath and the road. Then, predictably, the weather was blamed. One councillor actually defended having long grass because she believed it "would soak up all the rain". Edited July 13, 2012 by keith
Vic Patterson Posted July 13, 2012 Report Posted July 13, 2012 "One councillor actually defended having long grass because she believed it "would soak up all the rain".I like that one!
curly Posted July 14, 2012 Report Posted July 14, 2012 thanks for the explaination,even if it had been left as a 'grow wild area' we all know what wild grass looks likeand is there not areas left to go wild down the woods etcif it had been designated for meadow wild flowers and thats totally differentbut then even meadows need to be tended to get the desired effect - not left .........its just been a money saving exercise ........may be bedlington west should leave 20 acres for a 'grow wild area' we all know what the response would be there.
Adam Hogg Posted July 14, 2012 Report Posted July 14, 2012 One councillor actually defended having long grass because she believed it "would soak up all the rain".Note keith that she was on the Executive.
Keith Scantlebury Posted July 15, 2012 Author Report Posted July 15, 2012 Note keith that she was on the Executive. yep
Symptoms Posted July 17, 2012 Report Posted July 17, 2012 If it's appropriate then the grass should be cut, for example in town centres, play areas, most parks, landscaping around buildings, around bus stops, and so on. I reckon it should generally remain uncut elsewhere, places like road margins and central reservations (but have a mower-wide cut strips alongside the gutters for 'elf 'n' safety), large designated areas within parks, swathes through accessable woodland, and along hedgerows ... this should be done to create wildlife areas.
curly Posted July 23, 2012 Report Posted July 23, 2012 quoteIf it's appropriate then the grass should be cut, for example in town centres, play areas, most parks, landscaping around buildings, around bus stops, and so on. I reckon it should generally remain uncut elsewhere, places like road margins and central reservations (but have a mower-wide cut strips alongside the gutters for 'elf 'n' safety), large designated areas within parks, swathes through accessable woodland, and along hedgerows ... this should be done to create wildlife area Well the area in question has had its mower width strip, the rest looks a mess, it is not encouraging wildlife, or any type of meadow wildflowers.... it is like an abandoned building site.....oh hang on thats what part of it was after the bridge renovators went. Please can we have the nicely mowed area back............. FOR HEALTH AND SAFETY REASONS ie getting out of the open at the furnace bank as YOU CANNOT SEE THE TRAFFIC COMING IN ENOUGH TIME TO GET OUT OF THE OPENING.
Brett Posted July 23, 2012 Report Posted July 23, 2012 Please can we halt all grass cutting until my hayfever dies down please?It's especially bad this year for whatever reason.
curly Posted July 23, 2012 Report Posted July 23, 2012 (edited) thats because the grasses have been allowed to flower and hence the pollenif cut enough less pollen as no flower heads Edited July 23, 2012 by curly
11011100 Posted July 26, 2012 Report Posted July 26, 2012 Its a bit late but I got the answer to getting ALL the verges cut to Scandanavian standards, ALL the roads fixed, ALL the roads swept and new white lines put down, ALL the flower beds up to Kew Gardens standards loads of overtime for the council workers............. EASY get the Olympic Torch to be run all over the shire................ SIMPLES D'oh! why didn't we think of that sooner...
John Fox (foxy) Posted April 20, 2013 Report Posted April 20, 2013 The forthcoming elections have made their mark already, the grass on Beaufront Park Estate has been cut two times in Three weeks.
wonky Posted April 26, 2013 Report Posted April 26, 2013 well !!..now heres an expert on grass speaking...i know it can look untidy and that some one will always be to blame for not looking after it but there is a simple solution...get the councill to hire some farmers to come in with their silage machines..roll it up in to black bales and feed it to all the cows from the station that i used to gan oot with as a lad...sorted....wonky..lol
John Fox (foxy) Posted April 26, 2013 Report Posted April 26, 2013 (edited) well !!..now heres an expert on grass speaking...i know it can look untidy and that some one will always be to blame for not looking after it but there is a simple solution...get the councill to hire some farmers to come in with their silage machines..roll it up in to black bales and feed it to all the cows from the station that i used to gan oot with as a lad...sorted....wonky..lolSometimes you do talk a load of Crap Edited April 26, 2013 by foxy
Keith Scantlebury Posted April 27, 2013 Author Report Posted April 27, 2013 If, as was suggested last year, that it was just as well the grass was left long , "to soak up all the rain" where did the money go to that was saved from NOT cutting the grass.? (less fuel, less frequent services /repairs etc.) The same would apply in drought conditions when the grass would not grow.
wonky Posted April 27, 2013 Report Posted April 27, 2013 Sometimes you do talk a load of Crap..tell me about it...lmao..
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