In uk.rec.gardening Oz wrote:
: Tim Tyler writes
:By contrast, the artificial toxins have been designed to be tasteless and
:invisible to consumers.
: One thing I am certain about, and that is that smell and taste features
: absolutely nowhere in anyone's selection procedure for pesticides. The
: infinitesimal residues (if any) left by the time you eat it are only
: detectable (if at all) by hugely sophisticated analytical equipment.
: Just to give you some idea I have visited a site where they could test
: at these levels. They had three areas, with separate doors to the
: outside and staff from each area were not allowed to touch each other
: until their shift had finished. This was because if one of the 'low
: level detection' area walked through the 'high level' area (where the
: test applications were made) then they would totally trash the analysis
: just from particles they picked up walking through.
: As any farmer would tell you, many sprays smell 'rather strongly'.
: So you are quite incorrect.
Reading comprehension problems? Or are you just a troll?
:Strawberries are one of the most pesticide-infected types of produce.
:They don't have natural toxins in.
: I very much doubt that. When I grew them nothing much but the odd slug
: ate them, which is always a giveaway.
I presume you were growing them on your own private planet - where
there are no birds.
:They are "designed" to be eaten by mammals like us.
: The fruits maybe. That doesn't mean they aren't toxic. I expect there is
: a fair bit of oxalic acid in them just the same.
The most toxic bit is probably the seeds - but very few of them are
digested.
:The fungicides sprayed on strawberries are toxic to
:animals like us.
: Fungicides are toxic to fungi.
: That's why they are called fungicides.
Because something is toxic to one kingdom that doesn't mean it
isn't toxic to other ones.
--
__________
|im |yler
http://timtyler.org/