This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteThe sea grass and the oysters are part of the same project S. Oysters were historically the poor man’s protein so when North Edinburgh industrialised and the population exploded you would see hundreds of folk out collecting the oysters, the Forth was one of the richest beds in the world, you could walk half way across on their backs! That wouldn’t last long of course and pollution didn’t help. The project involves sowing the sea grass from seeds collected in Orkney. All very cool.
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22-01-2023 08:42 AM #91
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14-02-2023 02:46 PM #93
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https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-64640215
All major road building projects in Wales have been scrapped over environmental concerns.
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17-02-2023 10:40 AM #94
Why is this not being covered by MM ?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BGN81SEmoPU
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17-02-2023 11:39 AM #95This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
This has had so little coverage on mainstream media in the US some people don't even know it has happened, the Biden administration are still keeping schtum about it too smfh.
Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.
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28-02-2023 10:59 AM #96
For anyone who enjoyed Paul Whitehouse in Gone Fishing, there’s a couple of programmes starting on Sunday on bbc2 where he investigates how bad the pollution in Englands rivers is, and by all accounts it’s a shocking watch.
https://www.bbc.com/mediacentre/prog...roubled-rivers
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28-02-2023 11:08 AM #97This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Good on him.
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01-03-2023 08:36 AM #98
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Anyway today is international sea-grass day - so happy sea-grass day everyone
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01-03-2023 08:48 AM #99
I think I posted this link before but may be of interest to some if they haven't seen it. Seems to be borne from the same thought process as the seagrass project(s) mentioned above:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-63200589PM Awards General Poster of The Year 2015, 2016, 2017. Probably robbed in other years
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01-03-2023 01:12 PM #100This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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01-03-2023 02:09 PM #101
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Regarding the planting its so low tech I thought it was a joke. Basically take a caulking gun and a cleaned out tube of silicon or decorators caulk and cut the top off. Insert the seed with some sandy muddy sediment and press it into the sand. Current success rates are 35-40% of seeds turning into flowers which is meant to be a very very good result. Beauty of it being so simple is the planting can be delegated to community groups. I think there are 3 current experimental sites where they are looking to expand on the existing seagrass meadows. One at Limekilns, one around Burntisland and Kinghorn and another across the water along the Dalmeny Estate shoreline.
Think the bigger issue is protecting existing and new meadows from human activity. 99.99999% of the population won't have a clue about seagrass and when the tide is out will just assume its some seaweed. Bait diggers, dog walkers, families etc won't think anything of walking along it and/or digging it up.
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01-03-2023 02:14 PM #102This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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01-03-2023 02:14 PM #103
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Although hopefully these schemes and advances are used to restore some of the damage we have done - as opposed to just allow governments and corporations to carry on with business as usual.
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01-03-2023 03:36 PM #104This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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01-03-2023 05:38 PM #105
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There's been several case studies from different countries looking at the different impacts it has. Australia has looked at the benefit of fish stocks for them, India and British Virgin Islands have separately looked at the benefits of carbon sequestration, UK has looked at the benefit of it protecting banks from erosion and taking force out of wave energy and the EU has looked at pretty much everything.
The thing to be mindful off is seagrass and oysters aren't some crazy invention or exotic imports. They were native to these parts before human activity destroyed their habitats and these projects are just trying to return these areas to how they were pre-industrialisation.
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01-03-2023 06:05 PM #106This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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02-03-2023 10:40 AM #107
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-64815875
A cheery thought for a Thursday morning.
He's probably not wrong though.PM Awards General Poster of The Year 2015, 2016, 2017. Probably robbed in other years
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02-03-2023 10:51 AM #108This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Great spot HB and thanks for pointing it out, I will definitely be watching this. As an avid angler of all sorts - coarse, sea and game - I'm always interested in things fishing and water quality content. Feargal Sharkey has been ringing the alarm bells on what water companies are doing to English rivers and water sources for quite some time now and hopefully it is beginning to get traction. Sadly I'm not sure the picture is much different here in Scotland.
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02-03-2023 11:59 AM #109This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I’d rather listen to scientists on the reality than to a politician who isn’t even a major figure the Green movement anymore. The ‘throw up your hands and accept it’ crowd really yank my chain. Maybe they have no intention of producing grandchildren who might inherit what is left, or something.
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02-03-2023 02:56 PM #110This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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02-03-2023 04:32 PM #111This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
We might be OK, we might be much worse!
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02-03-2023 04:44 PM #112
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02-03-2023 04:47 PM #113This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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02-03-2023 05:17 PM #114
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Wallace a bit of a random target and I'm not sure it will win the public as much as spray painting Tufton Street but oh well
https://news.stv.tv/east-central/cli...x=1677764427-1
Climate activists shatter glass case holding William Wallace's sword
The pair used rocks to bash in the enclosure at the Wallace Monument before spray painting it.
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02-03-2023 05:22 PM #115This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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04-03-2023 07:21 AM #116This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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04-03-2023 07:33 AM #117
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And collectively we are still doing very little. I think for a lot of people who have been warning about this stuff for decades, and have been laughed at, ridiculed for all that time, they are now finally getting some traction with their argument and are probably just fed up of sugar costing things.
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04-03-2023 05:19 PM #118This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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04-03-2023 06:44 PM #119This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
guilty as charged m’lud.
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05-03-2023 09:22 AM #120
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I'm probably a man of a certain age. Too old to worry about pumping these days. The sea grass and other innovations are fantastic but my fear is they will be used to show we can continue to destroy and invent our way out of it. My view is the world needs to slow down dramatically and innovate to reduce climate change. That will never happen when all politicians seem to want is growth and when very little is discussed beyond a single political cycle. Money and lobbying drives political decision making and that influence has now started to dictate what the electorate vote for too. Climate change will continue to be kicked into the long sea grass and the direction of travel will continue until the point that green technology can generate more wealth for those that pull the levers. At that point it will probably be too late. Unfortunately, all the traits and qualities that most people would consider make good humans don't get you into positions that take decisions. All the traits that we hate are abundant in those that decide our fate and none of them look beyond what effect climate change will have on them and what profit is to be made in the meantime.
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