Thread: Wild Garlic
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Old 27-04-2007, 12:10 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
K K is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jul 2006
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Default Wild Garlic

suspicious minds writes

"Muddymike" wrote in message
news:armdnepmGeMxJKzbnZ2dnUVZ8sylnZ2d@brightview. com...

"K" wrote in message
...
suspicious minds writes

You are not allowed to pick, uproot or destroy any wild plant listed
in
Schedule 8 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 even if it is on
your
own land! You can of course with do what you like with any other wild
plant
on your land with the exception of bluebells which can't be sold.


Wow! That's the heck of a list!
http://www.naturenet.net/law/sched8.html
What's the position with things like pennyroyal which are commercially
available and that you may have planted in the first place?

" "wild plant" means any plant which is or (before it was picked,
uprooted
or destroyed) was growing wild and is of a kind which ordinarily grows in
Great Britain in a wild state." (Section 27 Wildlife and Countryside Act
1981 )

Therefore any that you have planted yourself would not be considered
wild.

Yes of course. I had my brain switched off when i wrote that.

And things on Schedule 8 are sufficiently rare that they would be
unlikely to be growing wild in a garden, so you'd have no difficulty
demonstrating you'd planted them yourself.


You might have a problem explaining where you got them from though.



You only have to prove that they are not wild if you wanted to sell them or
any part of them etc

Schedule 8, which is what we were talking about, relates to destruction,
uprooting etc, whether or not you intend to sell them.


--
Kay