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Old 28-01-2007, 06:10 PM posted to alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian,talk.politics.animals,uk.rec.gardening,uk.business.agriculture,uk.rec.fishing.coarse
Jim Webster Jim Webster is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Oct 2006
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Default PMWS pork entering food chain


"pearl" wrote in message
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"Jim Webster" wrote in message
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yes, but I admit it

Wow.

.. and the UK is rapidly becoming a water-deficient country too..

not for agriculture. May have to ration domestic use in the SE

Crops aren't being irrigated there yet?


some vegetables and potatoes

not such things as grazing land


I remember the summer of '95 in Essex. Grass all burned up.


yes, and did you see any irrigation of grassland because I travelled pretty
well right round the country that year and never


Any idea why England is experiencing this extended drought?


what extended drought, there is some shortage in some regions but talk about
extended drought in the west and you'd be laughed at


Stick with UK seasonal vegetables

I'd like to see evidence of vegetables causing water depletion.

Simple.
What is the water content of most vegetables?

If it's that simple you should be able to provide evidence
that vegetable production is causing water shortages.


you just did, vegetables and potatoes are the only crops in the UK
needing
irrigation


Those crops have always been grown there, so they're not to blame.


duh, they need irrigation because more of them are being grown in larger
areas, therefore they are part of the problem


And for imported crops it is simple, work out the water content of
vegetables, multiply it by tons exported, that is the amount of water
that
country exports.
If that country is already water deficient, you are merely making things
worse by exporting vegetables


Why are water shortages occuring? Address and eliminate the cause.

'Livestock now use 30 percent of the earth's entire land surface,
mostly permanent pasture


yep, and large areas in the UK, because that is where we produce our
livestock here, is permanent pasture because it is unsuitable for arable
cultivation

Jim Webster