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Old 14-04-2010, 10:11 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Mike Lyle Mike Lyle is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jan 2007
Posts: 324
Default Tree stump killer

Rusty Hinge wrote:
Tim Watts wrote:
Jeff Layman
wibbled on Wednesday 07 April 2010 17:21


But if you use the ammonium sulphamate from that pack as a stump
killer, you
will be doing something illegal, as daft as it may sound. In fact,
AFAIAA, you are only allowed to use approved products for designated
"pesticide"


Sod that, already ordered

uses. If you use anything else (eg coffee grounds to deal with
slugs), then
you risk prosecution.


What you have to realise is that there are now so many statues on
the book that criminalise perfectly innocuous activities that the
only way to remain sane is forget the law and use common sense -
this has become and will remain my approach to life in this country
until such a time that sanity is restored (if ever).

Do you feel happy that it is a non indictable criminal offence for
you to replace one of your windows or an external door without
informing local building control, to quote one example?


Oh dear! Oh dear oh dear! And I've replaced my back door *AND* my
front door,,,

And I've a box full of old mains cable waiting for something-or-other,
and a gas cooker to put in the kitchen.

Who's got the duty handcuffs this week?


People don't 'alf panic about this kind of thing...or perhaps there's a
hidden political agenda. I need chapter and verse before believing most
of these Daily-Mail-type tales: you may not (perhaps for good reasons of
public safety or consumer protection) be allowed to _sell_ certain
things for certain purposes, but that doesn't necessarily mean you
aren't free to _use_ said things for said purposes.

The claim that prosecution could follow tipping coffee grounds on the
garden is almost too silly to reply to.

--
Mike.