AmyMay
Situation normal
??
Maybe it's your english but I haven't really got a clue what you're on about? What 'myth'?
Phew, I thought it was just me......
??
Maybe it's your english but I haven't really got a clue what you're on about? What 'myth'?
Phew, I thought it was just me......
Esther's point (and well done to all those who have mocked her English - perhaps you'd like to reply in Dutch next time)
If it was a Dutch website then yes I would pretty much the same as when I lived on the Dutch/German border but seeing as the website has .co.uk after the domain name, I think I'll use my mother tongue thankyou very much
You didn't read anyway, at the frontpage of the UK domain is written
"This website is the English version of our Dutch Ragwort website."
OP, are you an orange and black caterpillar by any chance?
She made the mistake of assuming that this forum was used by people who care about understanding the best ways to look after their animals.
But, that's enough for me. Esther was foolish to open this thread. She made the mistake of assuming that this forum was used by people who care about understanding the best ways to look after their animals.
Why is not wanting our stock to eat ragwort, not looking after them........????
Not every plot of land with grass on it, is a field!
Would you let your horse graze on a plot with old machinery, or with a fence of barbered wire, or with broken glass or old rusty nails in it,
Why dare you call a plot of land with poisoning plants like ragwort , which it certainly is, a suitable horsefield?
As good as.....NoseyPosey
Good attempt at obsfuscation. No-one is saying you should actually reply in Dutch.
perhaps you'd like to reply in Dutch next time)
They weren't attacking as such, merely stating that they found it hard to get the point that was being made - maybe because of the English used.My point, as I'm sure you understand, is that there was no need for people to attack Esther Hegt because English is not her native language.
OP, are you an orange and black caterpillar by any chance?
Now let me see. I can listen to the well-researched views of an expert vet with decades of experience, or I can listen to your single opinion gleaned from seeing what other people pass around on the internet a la Wikipaedia. Three guesses who I believe? Of course sheep are affected by ragwort. They just react more slowly than most horses and as the majority are slaughtered when their ages are still counted in months, the symptoms go unnoticed. Ragwort is an alien species, brought to the UK in the 1800s by a University botanist. It then escaped and spread systematically around the countryside, making particular use of the then, new, railway network.
Yup farmers dont care as they take the cows etc out before there is too little grass to have the beasts NEED to eat it so they dont are that it spreads everywhere. Its horrid stuff and I end up minging after pullin it and my hands stink for days even with repeated scrubbings and gloves
Government just doesnt impse heavy enough fines OR any help for those who just CANNOT get rid of the blurry stuff![]()
Yeah we try but there is always some there but the nags dont eat it as they ahve enough to eat. I actually like winter in these fields as there is NONE!!![]()
Oh, and a friend's new horse has just been diagnosed with severe ragwort poisoningOn looking at the breeder's website it is interesting to see they graze loads of horses on fields with no grass but a lot of ragwort plants
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ps when was ragwort made a controlled species by Maff/Defra/whoever?
Esther can you please explain your motivation? The plant is not at risk. Removing it does no harm. What are you trying to achieve with this thread?