Wednesday, September 30
Preparing our apple trees for the onslaught
Sunday, September 27
Do you have a stack of contaminated manure? DOW will remove it!
"Dow AgroSciences are organising the free collection and appropriate disposal of manure that contains trace amounts of aminopyralid and would like to know if you would be interested in this service. If this is a service that you would like undertaken, then please reply back with the following information. Please note that we cannot guarantee that we will be able to arrange disposal services in all cases, although we will do our best to help you. To help in this matter, please answer the questions below and reply back to me by 16th October 2009:
1) Approximately how much manure (either bags or estimated weight) do you have that requires collection?
2) Where is the manure located?
3) Please provide precise details of access arrangements for the site where the manure is located including confirmation of whether there is vehicle access. If you are not the owner of the site, please also confirm whether the owner or another person's permission is required to enter the site:
4) Please provide your contact details: full name, address, postcode and particularly a day time telephone number:
If you do not reply it will be assumed that you do not need any further assistance with the removal of any manure.
Following receipt of this information, I will contact you on behalf of Dow AgroSciences to discuss the follow up arrangements.
Please note that any assistance offered is without admission of liability on the part of Dow AgroSciences or Stewardship Ltd in relation to any losses or damage which may have been caused to your crops.
A website has been created to provide further information. Thank you for your assistance in this matter and assuring you of our best intentions."
Please let me know if you manage to have your contaminated heap removed.
Email contact for DOW with regards to aminopyralid matters is: UKHotline@dow.com
Wednesday, September 23
Caterpillar invasion?
Monday, September 21
Return to winning ways
They have just heard that not only have they won 1st prize in the Ossett/Horbury area senior citizen category but have also won the overall gardener of the year in the Wakefield district allotment garden competition.
Well done to them! To view some photos of their plot click here.
It's not the first time that we have had such greenfingered neighbours as Jan and his dad were Wakefield allotments top gardeners for several years until they stopped competing after his win in 1996. Click here
Sunday, September 20
So what has happend to September's diary?
September is a fairly good month to leave the plot which with help from some good neighbours has managed well without our attentions. Our thanks to our watering friends.
We spent a week near Exminster in Devon staying in a chocolate box thatched cottage with a huge garden. It was also - weatherwise - maybe one of the best week's of summer.
Wednesday, September 9
It's September! How did that happen so quickly?
A couple of young hedgehogs were spotted browsing under the bird feeders. I just hope these will grow to a size that will survive hibernation.
To read the first entry of the September diary and view a film of cute baby hedgehogs click here.
Sunday, September 6
Questions re: Manure Matters website
Firstly the response to the question; Can we accept manure from treated paddocks? was:
Twelve months after treatment, manure generated from animals grazing fields or eating forage that has been cut from them, is considered aminopyralid-free. Manure with suspected aminopyralid residue can still be used to fertilise grassland and fields used to grow cereals and maize. However, it should not, under any circumstance, be supplied to farmers growing sensitive crops such as potatoes or sugar beet nor to gardeners and allotment holders
My query to DOW was:
There was only mention of animals grazing and not that aminopyralid could have been used on bedding material.
DOWs response was;
The most commonly used bedding material for UK livestock is straw derived from cereal crops such as barley or wheat. No products containing aminopyralid have been developed for use on cereal crops grown in the UK. No products containing aminopyralid have ever been approved for use on cereal crops grown in the UK. Therefore, no cereal crops grown in the UK should have residues of aminopyralid derived from direct application to those crops.
If manure generated by livestock fed on forage from pasture treated with aminopyralid is applied to land prior to establishing a cereal crop, the straw from that cereal crop will not contain residues of aminopyralid in sufficient quantities to cause problems to sensitive crops. If the suspension of the approval of products containing aminopyralid is lifted, the new product label will not allow application of manure that may contain residues of aminopyralid to crops other than grassland, thereby removing this concern.
Secondly the response to the question; How can we tell if there is any aminopyralid in the manure? was
Dow AgroSciences has developed a test to check whether manure or compost contains residues of aminopyralid. (See "What can I do" in the panel on the right).
(The test in the panel is the now well known broad bean test).
My query to DOW was:
Isn't it a bit dodgy advising manure suppliers that if they run the test DOW recommend then the manure is safe?
DOWs response was:
This manure test has been put in place as a simple procedure for manure suppliers to check whether residues of aminopyralid might be present in their stocks of manure. A positive result would obviously indicate that the manure should not, under any circumstances, be supplied to gardeners or allotment-holders. A negative result does not guarantee the suitability of the tested batch of manure for use in gardens or allotments, but could be used as additional information when trying to establish the provenance of that manure.
Questions about the source of the manure, and forage within the manure, should always be asked in conjunction with carrying out the test. The test alone should not be relied upon to guarantee the provenance of manure supplies. Gardeners and allotment-holders must always satisfy themselves, as much as possible, as to the suitability of the manure they are planning to use.
Thursday, September 3
Looking for Autumn Bulbs?
Click on the image to access the offer shown above.
For their full range of bulbs click here
Wednesday, September 2
August's diary is now completed
The latest short entry can be read by clicking here
Tuesday, September 1
Epetitions and verification
I guess he didn't verify his account as sometimes the verification email goes into a junk folder.
If it has happened to one person then it is likely to have happened to other people. When you sign up to an epetition an email is sent to the email address that you gave. You have to verify this in order for your name to be added - it just needs you to click the link in the email. The problem is that some email accounts send the message into the junk or spam box. (Obvious don't like anything that comes from the government).
If you have signed the latest petition then please check that your name is on the list and if not check your email including junk box for a message that is from 10 Downing Street.
If you can't find an email then please sign up again.