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Rewilding, a group of residents in Derbyshire fight back.

(70 Posts)
Babs03 Tue 10-Sept-24 14:31:42

A group of residents in Derbyshire have taken their mowers and cut the grass growing in front of their houses after the council had said they were leaving public grassed areas to rewild. Residents said it was waist height, children couldn’t play in it, dogs couldn’t walk through it, and it risked being full of litter, rodents, and ticks.
I am all for rewilding and is nice to see some public parks setting aside areas for this, farmers also are required by law to set aside areas to be rewilded. But grassed areas near roads or near houses should not be included. With roads the grass can cover road signs causing confusion for drivers, and as has been said, grassed areas near houses can become unsightly and full of litter which in turn attracts rodents, and ticks can be dangerous to both dogs and their owners.

Allira Wed 11-Sept-24 20:10:36

MissInterpreted

Rewilding is all well and good, but there have to be some limits. When it is left to the extent that road signs and lines of visibility for road users are obscured, or drains choked with weeds, then it becomes a matter of safety. And don't get me started on ragwort - I have a friend who lost a horse to ragwort poisoning!

There's rewilding and then there's neglected and overgrown.

The two are not the same thing at all.

tictacnana Wed 11-Sept-24 20:25:59

Just before the election we saw street cleaners and council mowers at work for the first time in years … possibly since the last election. Ffs , give me a break !

MissInterpreted Wed 11-Sept-24 20:26:11

Exactly, Allira!

MayBee70 Thu 12-Sept-24 16:38:48

MissInterpreted

Rewilding is all well and good, but there have to be some limits. When it is left to the extent that road signs and lines of visibility for road users are obscured, or drains choked with weeds, then it becomes a matter of safety. And don't get me started on ragwort - I have a friend who lost a horse to ragwort poisoning!

I keep seeing comments on Facebook defending ragwort that are always full of comments from people whose horses have died horribly from ragwort poisoning sad

MissInterpreted Thu 12-Sept-24 19:59:53

MayBee70

MissInterpreted

Rewilding is all well and good, but there have to be some limits. When it is left to the extent that road signs and lines of visibility for road users are obscured, or drains choked with weeds, then it becomes a matter of safety. And don't get me started on ragwort - I have a friend who lost a horse to ragwort poisoning!

I keep seeing comments on Facebook defending ragwort that are always full of comments from people whose horses have died horribly from ragwort poisoning sad

There's one man in particular who seems to have made it his mission to comment on any post about ragwort, especially to do with horses. He completely refutes any suggestion that any horse has ever died from ragwort poisoning, when many horse owners can sadly attest to the opposite being true.

MissAdventure Thu 12-Sept-24 20:03:44

Well, the washing line area is no longer re-wilding, here. smile
It's been done.

mae13 Thu 12-Sept-24 20:21:23

Where I used to live some residents would plant bedding plants at the base of the several trees along the street until.........the council sent every household a letter informing us that what we were doing was considered to be vandalism as the trees were council property, being part of a public place, and unless we stopped immediately we could all be sued.

Local government Jobsworths!

Allira Thu 12-Sept-24 20:33:03

Some of the residents here are very proactive and a group (including some who are/were local councillors ) have planted wild flowers, fruit trees etc.

pascal30 Thu 12-Sept-24 20:37:53

MissAdventure

Well, the washing line area is no longer re-wilding, here. smile
It's been done.

glad to hear that.. let's hope for some sunshine now...

Babs03 Thu 12-Sept-24 20:42:39

I could be wrong but the rewilding or neglecting grassy areas in order to save money, doesn't result in meadow like growth in public grassy areas near us, no pretty meadow flowers inviting insects, just ugly coarse grass and flowerless weeds that look ragged and shabby.

Syracute Thu 12-Sept-24 22:46:28

Babs03

I could be wrong but the rewilding or neglecting grassy areas in order to save money, doesn't result in meadow like growth in public grassy areas near us, no pretty meadow flowers inviting insects, just ugly coarse grass and flowerless weeds that look ragged and shabby.

Not all beneficial weeds are pretty looking, sorry, but sometimes we have to choose reality.
There is nothing beneficial in a grass lawn. There are many attractive alternatives like clover or creeping thyme.
We must start now as more and more land is built on our eco system is being destroyed. In the USA the bird population is down 50 percent .

Syracute Thu 12-Sept-24 22:50:09

Spencer2009

My sister lives in Arizona, if you don’t keep your front garden clean and tidy you receive a warning, then a fine if you ignore.

HOA s are a menace to the environment. No one I know wants to live there as they dictate all kinds of nonsense besides gardening. Usually in golf communities where the golf courses are heavily maintained with pesticides which is harmful to all.

Allira Thu 12-Sept-24 22:55:10

There is nothing beneficial in a grass lawn.

Grass absorbs carbon as well as rain.

Better a grass lawn than a hard surface.

Mollygo Thu 12-Sept-24 22:58:59

There is a field near us now totally overgrown with brambles, rosebay willow herb, convolvulus and nettles except for two paths kept clear by walkers. That’s not a problem.
The plants and grasses including nettles which obscure the road signs, and the view at road junctions, narrow the width of the pavements and break up the pavement surface are a problem.
As Allira posted
There's rewilding and then there's neglected and overgrown.

I have to praise the work of the council who have recently cut down and removed all the grasses and weeds alongside and in the brook, which meant that the recent heavy rainfall didn’t flood the road again.

Allira Thu 12-Sept-24 23:01:52

As Allira posted
There's rewilding and then there's neglected and overgrown.

Unfortunately my garden is looking like the latter since all that rain.
Some of the weeds are quite pretty so why wouldn't they grow in a small area I did want to rewild?

Janetashbolt Sat 14-Sept-24 19:52:36

I cut the grass outside mine and my neighbour's houses that belongs to the council, in 12 years they've never cut it. I also litter and dog poo pick and kill the weeds, I can't bear all the overgrown untidy furniture strewn gardens on my street (huge council estate)

ElaineI Sat 14-Sept-24 20:42:47

I don't mind rewilding if it's done properly but just leaving grass to grow on verges is a mess. People also don't clear weeds from the perimeter of houses now and it is just a mess all the way along the pavement breaking up the paving in places. DH likes a neat garden where everything is cut back when it starts to grow. I'm the opposite and would love a wilder country garden but it's his pride and Joy so just leave it to him.

MayBee70 Thu 19-Sept-24 13:36:17

We now have an invasive weed growing in our canal. The fear is that it is also growing in the drainage ditches that protect the village from flooding. The Canal Trust are a charity with limited resources and no one is sure if they are responsible or the Environment agency. I’m worried that it will result in buck passing. Either way flooding must surely be damaging to the flora and fauna of this country and everything that can be done to prevent it should be. Can’t help but feel that this weed is a result of no mow May, June, July…I did see a grass verge in Kelso full of the sort of wild flowers that should be a result of rewinding, not the invasive weeds that are growing everywhere unchecked.

yogitree Thu 19-Sept-24 13:40:09

smile