Ruddyreindeer
Well-Known Member
Next week is the BHS ragwort awareness week, again. I failed to do anything about it last year,
o) and felt really guilty ! It's because there is ragwort everywhere I look, in my area. Hampshire is the number one county for ragwort, and yes, I live in Hampshire !
Local estates send teams out to pull the dreaded weeds, but in all honesty the chaps doing it don't really understand that if they leave traces then the weeds will just grow back. It isn't possible to use weed killer as the forest ponies graze most of the lanes, and it even grows on the open heathland.
Local landowners who let grazing to horse owners just aren't bothered about getting people to pull it before it all goes to seed, and I pass field after field of the yellow peril, with grazing livestock ( mostly equine around here).
People just don't get the threat it poses. A lot of them think that
a) Horses and ponies won't eat it because its poisonous, it tastes bitter.
b) So long as they pull it after it has flowered it won't spread.
It really annoys me to see farmers harvesting hay from fields infested with the stuff. Most of it is fed to cattle, but some is sold to unsuspecting and often inexperienced horse owners. Knowing what affect it has on equines, and having read that it is also fatal to sheep and cattle, I wonder how it affects humans who eat the meat etc from animals fed on this hay / silage ?
Quite a rant there, sorry, but I do feel strongly about the whole subject. So, any idea how I fill in the BHS form ? !?

Local estates send teams out to pull the dreaded weeds, but in all honesty the chaps doing it don't really understand that if they leave traces then the weeds will just grow back. It isn't possible to use weed killer as the forest ponies graze most of the lanes, and it even grows on the open heathland.
Local landowners who let grazing to horse owners just aren't bothered about getting people to pull it before it all goes to seed, and I pass field after field of the yellow peril, with grazing livestock ( mostly equine around here).
People just don't get the threat it poses. A lot of them think that
a) Horses and ponies won't eat it because its poisonous, it tastes bitter.
b) So long as they pull it after it has flowered it won't spread.
It really annoys me to see farmers harvesting hay from fields infested with the stuff. Most of it is fed to cattle, but some is sold to unsuspecting and often inexperienced horse owners. Knowing what affect it has on equines, and having read that it is also fatal to sheep and cattle, I wonder how it affects humans who eat the meat etc from animals fed on this hay / silage ?
Quite a rant there, sorry, but I do feel strongly about the whole subject. So, any idea how I fill in the BHS form ? !?