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Turf Cutting Ban

  • 17-10-2010 4:20pm
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 47


    Hello,
    I'm going to be affected by the Turf Cutting Ban next year. The dept of the envirnoment says that it is the result of the EU habitat directive, of which Ireland has a ten year derogation. So basically it will be illegal to cut turf on my half acre plot of bog after next year. I inherited the plot of bog from my uncle some 30 years ago and I have come into possession of the purchase agreement made between him and the Land Commission (early fitities) for which he paid £20 in old money. I would view the Turbary rights as an asset, as it provides fuel to heat my home each winter and the dept (albeit under the EU direction) is taking this asset away from me, at the stroke of a pen. The compensation scheme is now closed, which I understand was dirisory by all accounts. I understood from John Gormley that his department would be making contact with affected owners (Turbary ownership in my case, I dont own the land underneath it) but to date I have nothing. I must state that I was not aware to the compensation scheme until it closed. Does anybody think that it is unconstitutional to take these rights away from peolpe without being adequately compensated i.e by money or plots in lieu?


    PS: I dont think its help that the whole debate turns into a "Greens" versus the "country peolpe", or becomes personalised.


«1

Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,438 ✭✭✭5live


    You may be right that it isnt fair but then again life isnt fair either. After a while you get a bit immune to the decrees that eminate from upon high because apparently down here in the stix and muddy byways of 'life beyond the pale' we hardly exist other than as statistics on a computer screen. And as for not opening a green v rural debate (as you termed it), it hasnt closed in the last 3 years. Not wishing to enter into a polemic about the green party(ok so i lied), it is gauling for me personally and probably for a lot of posters on this section to have misguided policies enforced from above with little or no recognition for your rights or beliefs. Which leads me back right to your OP.:D. Isnt life just bloody hilarious


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,568 ✭✭✭Chinasea


    Shame we couldn't could work out for ourselves that our over fishing was unsustainable, that our carbon monoxide emissions were out of control, that our land filling of 100% recyclable materials had to be pointed out to us by the EU, that the water and the river and lakes that I drink from is not for my noxious farm waste to be dumped into and that the bog that I inherited will too never be renewed but hey, my house shall be warm and My name is Alright Jack.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 10,271 ✭✭✭✭johngalway


    I must state that I was not aware to the compensation scheme until it closed. Does anybody think that it is unconstitutional to take these rights away from peolpe without being adequately compensated i.e by money or plots in lieu?

    This isn't Gospel by a long shot, but, I think you'd get told there was a compensation scheme in place, and that you missed out is your own fault through lack of awareness.

    If you feel that strongly about it maybe take some legal advice on the matter. I don't agree with the ban either by the by.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,401 ✭✭✭reilig


    Wasn't the compensation scheme only for those who have already been notified that they can no longer cut on their bog? I understood that if you are notified that you can no longer cut on your bog in the future then you will be able to apply to a newer compensation scheme that will be put in place for newer bogs that have turf cutting bans.

    There was a great documentary on tg4 a few weeks back. I put a link to it up here. Google, you might find it. It gave a great view of both sides of the argument - the farmer side definitely won.

    I don't agree with the ban either - maybe we'll have an election before it comes into law and it won't go ahead.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 10,271 ✭✭✭✭johngalway


    reilig wrote: »
    There was a great documentary on tg4 a few weeks back. I put a link to it up here. Google, you might find it. It gave a great view of both sides of the argument - the farmer side definitely won.

    This it?


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,438 ✭✭✭5live


    Chinasea wrote: »
    Shame we couldn't could work out for ourselves that our over fishing was unsustainable, that our carbon monoxide emissions were out of control, that our land filling of 100% recyclable materials had to be pointed out to us by the EU, that the water and the river and lakes that I drink from is not for my noxious farm waste to be dumped into and that the bog that I inherited will too never be renewed but hey, my house shall be warm and My name is Alright Jack.
    I think it is carbon dioxide emissions you are referring to? And agricultural manures are not waste but were always recycled back onto the land they were taken from, admittedly at times not in the most appropriate way and not at all by a very small minority. As for the recycling( or lack thereof), that was just pure stupidity. And the problems with some pollution of waterways by farmers i cannot condone but the countless BILLIONS spent by farmers both with and without grant schemes show the desire of the agricultural community to protect the environment in which we live(not view from afar). And dearest chinasea where does your waste products travel once you flush yuor dual flush receptacle? Solids filtered out and quite a lot of the rest ending up, much diluted, in the very waterways that you are accusing us of polluting, as can be gleaned from EPA reports. Is this do as i say or do as i do?:mad:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,807 ✭✭✭Birdnuts


    Hello,
    I'm going to be affected by the Turf Cutting Ban next year. The dept of the envirnoment says that it is the result of the EU habitat directive, of which Ireland has a ten year derogation. So basically it will be illegal to cut turf on my half acre plot of bog after next year. I inherited the plot of bog from my uncle some 30 years ago and I have come into possession of the purchase agreement made between him and the Land Commission (early fitities) for which he paid £20 in old money. I would view the Turbary rights as an asset, as it provides fuel to heat my home each winter and the dept (albeit under the EU direction) is taking this asset away from me, at the stroke of a pen. The compensation scheme is now closed, which I understand was dirisory by all accounts. I understood from John Gormley that his department would be making contact with affected owners (Turbary ownership in my case, I dont own the land underneath it) but to date I have nothing. I must state that I was not aware to the compensation scheme until it closed. Does anybody think that it is unconstitutional to take these rights away from peolpe without being adequately compensated i.e by money or plots in lieu?


    PS: I dont think its help that the whole debate turns into a "Greens" versus the "country peolpe", or becomes personalised.

    AFAIK the averge compensation was 10K - I'm not sure how it varied with the size of bog though it was claimed that it would be enough to purchase a replacement plot.

    PS: I'm puzzled as to why you have not received or are aware of the compensation - perhaps a chat with the relevant authority would clear this up:)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,568 ✭✭✭Chinasea


    5live wrote: »
    I think it is carbon dioxide emissions you are referring to? And agricultural manures are not waste but were always recycled back onto the land they were taken from, admittedly at times not in the most appropriate way and not at all by a very small minority. As for the recycling( or lack thereof), that was just pure stupidity. And the problems with some pollution of waterways by farmers i cannot condone but the countless BILLIONS spent by farmers both with and without grant schemes show the desire of the agricultural community to protect the environment in which we live(not view from afar). And dearest chinasea where does your waste products travel once you flush yuor dual flush receptacle? Solids filtered out and quite a lot of the rest ending up, much diluted, in the very waterways that you are accusing us of polluting, as can be gleaned from EPA reports. Is this do as i say or do as i do?:mad:

    Shame you missed the point


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,401 ✭✭✭reilig


    Chinasea wrote: »
    Shame you missed the point

    What was the point?? I appear to have missed it too. :confused:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,438 ✭✭✭5live


    Chinasea wrote: »
    Shame you missed the point
    Please clarify the point i missed as i appear to have covered most of your assertions:)


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,568 ✭✭✭Chinasea


    reilig wrote: »
    What was the point?? I appear to have missed it too. :confused:

    We have to be told what is obvious, and penalties have to be enforced by the EU as our unsustainable way of living in this country is a disgrace, and sadly as so many "don't get the point" the only way to get the point is with levies or taxes. Water charges are on the way etc., and again, never mind the charges, it is this wasting of water/natural resources both domestically and commercially with this insular attitude of not seeing the bigger picture is one of the major problems in this country.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 347 ✭✭haybob


    I think turf cutting is part of our culture and no one seems to be poiting that out
    Hello,
    I'm going to be affected by the Turf Cutting Ban next year. The dept of the envirnoment says that it is the result of the EU habitat directive, of which Ireland has a ten year derogation. So basically it will be illegal to cut turf on my half acre plot of bog after next year. I inherited the plot of bog from my uncle some 30 years ago and I have come into possession of the purchase agreement made between him and the Land Commission (early fitities) for which he paid £20 in old money. I would view the Turbary rights as an asset, as it provides fuel to heat my home each winter and the dept (albeit under the EU direction) is taking this asset away from me, at the stroke of a pen. The compensation scheme is now closed, which I understand was dirisory by all accounts. I understood from John Gormley that his department would be making contact with affected owners (Turbary ownership in my case, I dont own the land underneath it) but to date I have nothing. I must state that I was not aware to the compensation scheme until it closed. Does anybody think that it is unconstitutional to take these rights away from peolpe without being adequately compensated i.e by money or plots in lieu?


    PS: I dont think its help that the whole debate turns into a "Greens" versus the "country peolpe", or becomes personalised.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 347 ✭✭haybob


    See our beloved financial system for unsustainable and just as a point of order farmers have been paying water charges for years and the amount of pollution for poorly built septic tanks and sewerage treatment plants is just as big a factor in polluting the water

    Chinasea wrote: »
    We have to be told what is obvious, and penalties have to be enforced by the EU as our unsustainable way of living in this country is a disgrace, and sadly as so many "don't get the point" the only way to get the point is with levies or taxes. Water charges are on the way etc., and again, never mind the charges, it is this wasting of water/natural resources both domestically and commercially with this insular attitude of not seeing the bigger picture is one of the major problems in this country.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,401 ✭✭✭reilig


    So why ban domestic turf cutters who have cut turf for hundreds of years, who cut only 30m3 of turf per year and in turn preserve heather bogs and create ponds for wildlife - birds, frogs etc to continue to grow not to mention the drainage that it does.

    Why stop the ordinary domestic turf cutter who gives more to the environment by cutting turf than he takes from the environment by taking his 30m3 of peat??? Why do this and impose no restrictions on Bord Na Mona who have wiped out hundreds of thousands of acres of bog in the last 50 years??? A government funded project that has totally destroyed a natural habitat that does nothing to sustain our environment.

    I'll tell you why they chose to stop the domestic turf cutter - it looks good in Europe. They stop a few thousand domestic turf cutters. A lot of fuss is created, lots of letters written to Europe and it looks like the restrictions imposed impact on the whole country, but there's nothing they can do about it. So at the end of the day, the Irish government have taken the easy way out to make it look like they are doing something, instead of doing something with a problem that so evidently needs to be sorted (ie. Bord Na Mona)

    There's nothing unsustainable about domestic turf cutting. The unsustainable thing is all of the electricity produced by burning peat and all of the peat used to make those smokeless briquettes for all the city folk in Ireland who think that they are doing something environmentally sustainable by burning them.

    The turf cutting ban is a con. Every rural dweller knows it. A rule made up by city dwellers who know nothing about turf or bogs but a rule that has serious lifestyle and financial consequences for rural dwellers. But sure if it looks good for Europe .......

    Chinasea wrote: »
    We have to be told what is obvious, and penalties have to be enforced by the EU as our unsustainable way of living in this country is a disgrace, and sadly as so many "don't get the point" the only way to get the point is with levies or taxes. Water charges are on the way etc., and again, never mind the charges, it is this wasting of water/natural resources both domestically and commercially with this insular attitude of not seeing the bigger picture is one of the major problems in this country.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 10,271 ✭✭✭✭johngalway


    haybob wrote: »
    I think turf cutting is part of our culture and no one seems to be poiting that out

    100% true. Irish people are doing more to damage our culture than any EU directive. There's a group within this country that not only embrace regulation and red tape with open arms but openly crave more.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,807 ✭✭✭Birdnuts


    haybob wrote: »
    I think turf cutting is part of our culture and no one seems to be poiting that out

    I'm all for the use of the the slain but the sausage machine is hardly an ancient part of our culture:( - i think we need to seperate the major contractors from people cutting a bit of turf for their own use.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,807 ✭✭✭Birdnuts


    reilig wrote: »
    So why ban domestic turf cutters who have cut turf for hundreds of years, who cut only 30m3 of turf per year and in turn preserve heather bogs and create ponds for wildlife - birds, frogs etc to continue to grow not to mention the drainage that it does.

    Why stop the ordinary domestic turf cutter who gives more to the environment by cutting turf than he takes from the environment by taking his 30m3 of peat??? Why do this and impose no restrictions on Bord Na Mona who have wiped out hundreds of thousands of acres of bog in the last 50 years??? A government funded project that has totally destroyed a natural habitat that does nothing to sustain our environment.

    I'll tell you why they chose to stop the domestic turf cutter - it looks good in Europe. They stop a few thousand domestic turf cutters. A lot of fuss is created, lots of letters written to Europe and it looks like the restrictions imposed impact on the whole country, but there's nothing they can do about it. So at the end of the day, the Irish government have taken the easy way out to make it look like they are doing something, instead of doing something with a problem that so evidently needs to be sorted (ie. Bord Na Mona)

    There's nothing unsustainable about domestic turf cutting. The unsustainable thing is all of the electricity produced by burning peat and all of the peat used to make those smokeless briquettes for all the city folk in Ireland who think that they are doing something environmentally sustainable by burning them.

    The turf cutting ban is a con. Every rural dweller knows it. A rule made up by city dwellers who know nothing about turf or bogs but a rule that has serious lifestyle and financial consequences for rural dwellers. But sure if it looks good for Europe .......

    If you think Bord Na Mona are a problem now - wait until their privitized to pay for the banks and the vulture capitalists have control of over 80,000 acres of our boglands:(


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,717 ✭✭✭LostCovey


    reilig wrote: »
    So why ban domestic turf cutters who have cut turf for hundreds of years, who cut only 30m3 of turf per year and in turn preserve heather bogs and create ponds for wildlife - birds, frogs etc to continue to grow not to mention the drainage that it does.

    Reilig,

    The drainage is the problem.

    A drained bog is a damaged bog - wrecked from an ecological point of view. The reason that domestic cutting is banned on some bogs is that these are small fragmentary relics of the bog systems that covered large parts of the country. Bord na Móna di a massive amount of state-sponsored vandalism. Totally agree. Unfortunately the small bogs that are left are all we have, and they were always too small for B Na M.

    The idea of the ban is to preserve the best of what is left. Very unfortunate for the people cutting them, but the alternative is keep going till its all cut away or wrecked by drainage and cutting.

    LostCovey


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,807 ✭✭✭Birdnuts


    LostCovey wrote: »
    Reilig,

    The drainage is the problem.

    A drained bog is a damaged bog - wrecked from an ecological point of view. The reason that domestic cutting is banned on some bogs is that these are small fragmentary relics of the bog systems that covered large parts of the country. Bord na Móna di a massive amount of state-sponsored vandalism. Totally agree. Unfortunately the small bogs that are left are all we have, and they were always too small for B Na M.

    The idea of the ban is to preserve the best of what is left. Very unfortunate for the people cutting them, but the alternative is keep going till its all cut away or wrecked by drainage and cutting.

    LostCovey

    I think if the compo matches the price of a replacement plot nearby it would satisfy all sides:)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,380 ✭✭✭O.A.P


    Yep


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,380 ✭✭✭O.A.P


    Birdnuts wrote: »
    I think if the compo matches the price of a replacement plot nearby it would satisfy all sides:)
    Right let them eat cake.:D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,717 ✭✭✭LostCovey


    O.A.P wrote: »
    Right let them eat cake.:D

    Precisely.

    Soda cake smashed to crumbs in an enamel bucket and cold tea from a cidona bottle.

    It's a long way from the Hymac, the hopper machine on the John Deere and a Polish driver on the mobile phone all day.

    Romantic Ireland's dead and gone, it's with O'Leary in the grave.

    LostCovey


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,438 ✭✭✭5live


    LostCovey wrote: »
    Precisely.

    Soda cake smashed to crumbs in an enamel bucket and cold tea from a cidona bottle.

    It's a long way from the Hymac, the hopper machine on the John Deere and a Polish driver on the mobile phone all day.

    Romantic Ireland's dead and gone, it's with O'Leary in the grave.

    LostCovey
    Or is it a case of 'tread softly as you tread on my dreams'?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,401 ✭✭✭reilig


    Lads, its Dublin 4 environmentalists who are making the rules for rural dwellers. Chinasea talks about waste and highlights the waste of water resources. So why don't the D4 environmentalists put a restriction on water uses. Turn off the taps so that people can only use it at certain times of the day - it would be as sensible as the turf cutting ban (or as nonsensible, but you see my point). Or maybe they could try to fix the leaks that are causing the waste.

    It comes down to easy targets. Domestic turf cutters are easy targets in this society. The people making the environmental laws won't pass laws that will impact on themselves. D4 politics again, no consultation, no thought for anyone.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,807 ✭✭✭Birdnuts


    O.A.P wrote: »
    Right let them eat cake.:D

    Even cake will be in short supply after the next few budgets:(


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,907 ✭✭✭✭CJhaughey


    Chinasea wrote: »
    Shame we couldn't could work out for ourselves that our over fishing was unsustainable,
    What overfishing? We have the 2nd biggest fishing waters in the EU and about 4% of the fleet. Do you really think we overfish? We take a fraction of what the other EU countries take in terms of fish catch in our waters and you think we overfish?
    You must be living in a different Ireland to me.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 10,271 ✭✭✭✭johngalway


    CJhaughey wrote: »
    What overfishing? We have the 2nd biggest fishing waters in the EU and about 4% of the fleet. Do you really think we overfish? We take a fraction of what the other EU countries take in terms of fish catch in our waters and you think we overfish?
    You must be living in a different Ireland to me.

    The mouth of what used to be a good salmon river empties into a bay across from where I live. This bay is divided in two by an island. Most of the salmon run up the farm side of that island. When they are running, you could almost walk from that island across the bay on the heads of seals.

    Talking to one of the ghillies on the river this year, they told me this was the worst year ever for salmon on that river (they installed a counter years ago).


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,907 ✭✭✭✭CJhaughey


    johngalway wrote: »
    The mouth of what used to be a good salmon river empties into a bay across from where I live. This bay is divided in two by an island. Most of the salmon run up the farm side of that island. When they are running, you could almost walk from that island across the bay on the heads of seals.

    Talking to one of the ghillies on the river this year, they told me this was the worst year ever for salmon on that river (they installed a counter years ago).
    I am not surprised one bit. Traditional netsmen were allowed to shoot seals that were predating on their nets amd this kept seal numbers manageable.
    Now with driftnetting gone there is no need for the fishermen to cull seals.
    Result is a gradual and noticeable increase in the seal population with no natural predators.
    I predicted at the time of the driftnet ban that in a few years the anglers would be asking for a seal control cull to be in place.
    Its like anything else you need to control number of naturally occuring predators or you will have an imbalance, but funnily enough for all the talk of ecosystem based management in fisheries there is zero discussion of managing the other parts of the ecosystem such as seals and other marine mammals.
    I hope the chap that owns Delphi lodge just up the road a bit from you will now realise that driftnetting wasn't the worst enemy of salmon.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,568 ✭✭✭Chinasea


    reilig wrote: »
    Lads, its Dublin 4 environmentalists who are making the rules for rural dwellers.
    It comes down to easy targets. Domestic turf cutters are easy targets in this society. The people making the environmental laws won't pass laws that will impact on themselves. D4 politics again, no consultation, no thought for anyone.
    This auld line trotted out as usual when anyone mentions anything any shade of green or dare I say the allergy word 'environment'.



    I respect our environment no matter where I live.



    And just because something is part of our culture I fail to see how that makes it right or indeed our divine right to continue doing what we know to be detrimental. There are many hideous practices carried out in the world under this “cultural excuse” alibi.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 10,271 ✭✭✭✭johngalway


    CJhaughey wrote: »
    I hope the chap that owns Delphi lodge just up the road a bit from you will now realise that driftnetting wasn't the worst enemy of salmon.

    That the same lad who advertises his business as being in Connemara, when it's actually in Co. Mayo?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,401 ✭✭✭reilig


    This ould line is trotted out because its true. These city dwellers have had more impact on rural dwellers in Ireland than the Department of Agriculture. Not one of them know what its like to live outside of the city. They promote all of this sustainable living like travelling to work on a bicycle and public transport. For god's sake, its 8 miles to the nearest shop from my house and I have to drive 40 miles to get to work. I could take the train, but it costs Eur22.50 return - that almost keeps my car in diesel for a week to drive 80 miles per day - and the train station is 9 miles from my house. You are forgetting about the forum that you are posting to, this is a farming forum, most people that post here are farmers, we are the carers of the environment. If one of our cows sh!ts in the field we are likely to have an environmental officer out to inspect where the runoff goes. We maintain hedgerows, keep water ways clean and are the one stop shop for everything that is green about this country.

    The fact is that the turf cutting ban is wrong. It doesn't matter if you live in a town, city or in the country, the turf cutting ban is wrong on all levels. It has little to do with tradition. People have a right to use their own land. People have a right to heat their house in the same way that they always have. Most houses that bear the impact of the turf cutting ban will now be having oil installed - how sustainable is that??? Its certainly a lot less sustainable than cutting turf.

    I've said it already on this thread, the implementers of the turf cutting ban saw domestic turf cutters as easy targets. They were told by europe that they have to do something and instead of sorting out the problem that exists (Bord Na Mona), they choose something that looks great to the EU Bureaucrats, but has minimal environmental impact. That's why its wrong. The implementers of the ban did not consult, they did not inform. They just imposed. Cromwell did that. Lets hope they don't stay in power as long as the English stayed in ireland.

    Chinasea wrote: »
    This auld line trotted out as usual when anyone mentions anything any shade of green or dare I say the allergy word 'environment'.



    I respect our environment no matter where I live.



    And just because something is part of our culture I fail to see how that makes it right or indeed our divine right to continue doing what we know to be detrimental. There are many hideous practices carried out in the world under this “cultural excuse” alibi.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,717 ✭✭✭LostCovey


    reilig wrote: »
    The people making the environmental laws won't pass laws that will impact on themselves. D4 politics again, no consultation, no thought for anyone.

    Reilig,

    Predictable stuff.


    Your local (Govt & Opposition) rural TDs support these policies, as do mine. That D4-baiting hand-wringing God-they'll-never-understand-our-ancient-ways-with-the-hopper-machine guff cuts no ice with anyone OUTSIDE the cities who actually uses their head to think.

    I don't mind if the taps in Dublin 4 are turned off forever, it won't make a whit of difference to the destruction of raised bogs. Stiopping [eat extraction will. It really is not complicated.

    Two or three posts ago you were suggesting that draining them was a good thing.

    You may well be a proud environmentalist-farmer, and a conscientious custodian of a pristine rural landscape, but someone was putting industrial amounts of nitrates in the ground water till the EU Commission made them aize-up-on-it-a-biteen-like.

    Might be that D4 crowd again, the devious hoors.

    LostCovey


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,807 ✭✭✭Birdnuts


    johngalway wrote: »
    . When they are running, you could almost walk from that island across the bay on the heads of seals.

    .

    Its a good thing then that sightings of Killer Whales are on the increase in Irish waters:D;)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,907 ✭✭✭✭CJhaughey


    Birdnuts wrote: »
    Its a good thing then that sightings of Killer Whales are on the increase in Irish waters:D;)
    They don't predate on the inshore stocks of seals.
    Orca tend to stay offshore at least outside the 6 mile zone.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,807 ✭✭✭Birdnuts


    CJhaughey wrote: »
    They don't predate on the inshore stocks of seals.
    Orca tend to stay offshore at least outside the 6 mile zone.

    Theres increasing evidence that this was not always the case and in fact recent studies in Scotland suggest that pressure from Orcas is actually pushing some populations of Grey seals out of Western Scotland to parts of NI. The recent beaching of a pregnant Orca(sadly died though:() in North Mayo is also an interesting development in this regard:)


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,438 ✭✭✭5live


    Chinasea wrote: »
    This auld line trotted out as usual when anyone mentions anything any shade of green or dare I say the allergy word 'environment'.



    I respect our environment no matter where I live.



    And just because something is part of our culture I fail to see how that makes it right or indeed our divine right to continue doing what we know to be detrimental. There are many hideous practices carried out in the world under this “cultural excuse” alibi.
    And again, Chinasea, i ask you what happens to your waste when you flush? It is very easy to b***h about other people while doing nothing yourself. I joined REPS when it wasnt fashionable but because i believed in the basic premice that the environment we live in matters. There were restrictions but, funnily enough, i could use MORE nitrogen fertiliser than i was and am still using because i despise waste and throwing out fertiliser because it was always done that way is just p**s poor management. So again i will ask you WHERE DO YOU THINK YOUR WASTE GOES WHEN IT IS MAGICALLY PIPED FROM YOUR HOUSE?????? From working in dublin i can tell you right now that a massive ammount of it ends up barely treated in dublin bay. And is this agricultural waste?????????????


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,139 ✭✭✭Feargal as Luimneach


    CJhaughey wrote: »
    They don't predate on the inshore stocks of seals.
    Orca tend to stay offshore at least outside the 6 mile zone.
    5cywbt.jpg


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,907 ✭✭✭✭CJhaughey


    Feargal

    I hope you know the difference between the Southern Fur seal in South Georgia and the seals here.
    That photo is from a small cohort of well publicised Orca that feed in this manner in South Georgia.
    Trying to allude that the Orca present here do the same is rubbish.
    They don't feed in close in Ireland and more to the point I am yet to be shown any evidence that they actually use seals as prey in these waters.
    They are far more likely to be feeding on Herring.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,139 ✭✭✭Feargal as Luimneach


    CJhaughey wrote: »
    Feargal

    I hope you know the difference between the Southern Fur seal in South Georgia and the seals here.
    That photo is from a small cohort of well publicised Orca that feed in this manner in South Georgia.
    Trying to allude that the Orca present here do the same is rubbish.
    They don't feed in close in Ireland and more to the point I am yet to be shown any evidence that they actually use seals as prey in these waters.
    They are far more likely to be feeding on Herring.
    I know that;)
    Killer whales are quite rare around Irish waters. But it wouldn't surprise me if they were to become more common, people would start wanting them culled as well. They are quite fond of snacking on salmon.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,907 ✭✭✭✭CJhaughey


    I know that;)
    Killer whales are quite rare around Irish waters. But it wouldn't surprise me if they were to become more common, people would start wanting them culled as well. They are quite fond of snacking on salmon.
    So are Bluefin tuna and there have been no calls for them to be culled.
    I don't think there will ever be quite as many Orca here as there are seals though.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 215 ✭✭babybrian


    ah silly people, since when did a discussion on 'turf cutting ban' become about Orcas and seals.... Go away and make your own discussion on them in the animals section or something similar. :mad:

    As for turf cutting ban, it is a rdidculous law and from talking to others around with areas of bog they havent a hope of policing this issue and I hope it back fires on that idiot politian that singed it in (the poet fella from Galway)Michael D Higgins.
    There is growing anger towards Depatment officials and the NPWS for heavy handed and unjustified penalties on farmers who are trying to get by and make a living and in doing so maybe help to get Ireland out of this hole we are in because of the likes of these Departments who have squandered Billions.

    There will be war!!!!!!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,568 ✭✭✭Chinasea


    5live wrote: »
    And again, Chinasea, i ask you what happens to your waste when you flush? It is very easy to b***h about other people while doing nothing yourself. So again i will ask you WHERE DO YOU THINK YOUR WASTE GOES WHEN IT IS MAGICALLY PIPED FROM YOUR HOUSE?????? From working in dublin i can tell you right now that a massive ammount of it ends up barely treated in dublin bay. And is this agricultural waste?????????????

    Wrongs don't make rights.
    Would you not think that if we were all to become a bit more - actually in the case of Ireland, a heck of a lot more environmentally aware then perhaps our waste could be disposed off in a much more environmentally friendly way? With the highest population growth in the EU and one of the worst economic disasters in Europe, tings just ain't looking great.

    A total mindset change is radically needed in Ireland and unless we are to get rid of the ‘I'm alright Jack modus operandi’ and attitude that prevails in Ireland we shall only have our inward-looking selves to blame, which is a shame for those of us who actually care about the Bigger Picture.
    It starts right in your back yard, be it D4, a halting site in Blanchardstown or an inherited bog....


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 215 ✭✭babybrian


    but isnt it from the top down that the change is supposed to come from?leaders? how can anyone have respect for leaders and their advisors when there is such a difference of opinion between the leaders and the hard working people of Ireland who are trying to get things back working but are being stiffled by bureaucracy and red tape... If it is to come from the top, close down bord na mona and build renewable infastructure and dont me started on selling our gas for next to nothing!!!

    So I say to hell with there ideas until they start to make sense and stop hitting the most vulnerable


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,438 ✭✭✭5live


    Well Chinasea i find myself agreeing with you. If we all look after our own backyard all will be ok. We recycled household waste when it wasnt common or popular. We supplied our own drinking water and burned our own wood(and turf when available); all natural occuring naturally regenerated sources. But you again avoided my query on waste? Why? And are you in favour of incineration in dublin of dublins waste? I have to agree with previous posters on industrial turf cutting as being the worst against the miniscule quantities cut for home consumption versus a higher carbon footprint in imported heating oils. And thats even before we get into politics of fuel security and funding of terrorism but thats not an issue for this particular forum. Do we regress to blocking drainage of all our bogs or just those not needed for industrial output?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,488 ✭✭✭Bazzy


    Lads the government cannot tax turf you cut off your own land

    The small compensation payment you recieve will quickly be put back into the government coffers when you buy oil etc


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,568 ✭✭✭Chinasea


    5live wrote: »
    Well Chinasea i find myself agreeing with you. But you again avoided my query on waste?

    Using the excuse of frustrating bureaucracies and red tape for simply throwing the towel in and continuing on regardless of the consequences is exactly what I was talking about.


    Waste – I think my point is wasted tbh


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,438 ✭✭✭5live


    Chinasea wrote: »
    Using the excuse of frustrating bureaucracies and red tape for simply throwing the towel in and continuing on regardless of the consequences is exactly what I was talking about.


    Waste – I think my point is wasted tbh
    Again...Your point?:o


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,907 ✭✭✭✭CJhaughey


    babybrian wrote: »
    ah silly people, since when did a discussion on 'turf cutting ban' become about Orcas and seals.... Go away and make your own discussion on them in the animals section or something similar. :mad:
    Way to go, who made you a Mod?
    This was in response to a poster likening turf cutting to overfishing.
    if you read the thread you would understand what was being discussed, as it is you are coming across as a little ignorant.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,807 ✭✭✭Birdnuts


    Bazzy wrote: »
    Lads the government cannot tax turf you cut off your own land

    The small compensation payment you recieve will quickly be put back into the government coffers when you buy oil etc

    It has been claimed that the compo provided will allow the purchase of a replacement plot nearby. Whether it does or not is open to debate since individual circumstances will differ.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,807 ✭✭✭Birdnuts


    5cywbt.jpg

    Could you imagine the boost it would give to tourism on the West coast if our Orcas started that crack??:D;)


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