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peeking over the fence...
"brooklyn1" wrote in message ... And I know very well what 4 1/2 acres is, my back yard is 5 acres of lawn, takes a good part of two days to mow, I'd hate to think how much work it would be to tend to it in crops, would take like six families of illegals. Yesterday for the first time this season it dried out enough that I was able to mow my 4 acre back field for the first time, used to be a hay field and it was already in seed, that takes a full day's labor every week just to mow and keep the forest from growing back. Why do you keep such a large area in grass and not allow trees to grow back? A forest will support a lot more life than grass. |
#17
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peeking over the fence...
"Hedda Lettis" wrote:
"brooklyn1" wrote: And I know very well what 4 1/2 acres is, my back yard is 5 acres of lawn, takes a good part of two days to mow, I'd hate to think how much work it would be to tend to it in crops, would take like six families of illegals. Yesterday for the first time this season it dried out enough that I was able to mow my 4 acre back field for the first time, used to be a hay field and it was already in seed, that takes a full day's labor every week just to mow and keep the forest from growing back. Why do you keep such a large area in grass and not allow trees to grow back? A forest will support a lot more life than grass. Nothing is further from the truth. Forests alone don't support much life, many critters can make homes and find protection in forests but they'd starve to death. Most life lives on the edges of forests, of which my property contains many miles... I maintain many paths, trails, and hedgerows. Grazing critters (deer/geese, etc.) need the grasses to feed... even the raptors need large expanses of open space to feed, as do the land preditors, as do water fowl who can't land or become airborne in a forest nor would they find food on a forest floor.. there really isn't much food at all on the forest floor, perhaps a rain forest floor but not here... most food in any forest is in the canopy, requiring specialized animals which can take advantage; woodpeckers and squirrels but deer can't climb trees, there isn't much light on a forst floor so nothing much edible grows. Many song birds feed on insects as they swoop in immense flocks close to the ground, without vast open space they'd starve or move on... perhaps you've never greeted spring while watching 10,000 robins on the march hunting worms. Without large open spaces there'd be very few pollenators, life on land would cease to exist, not just as we know it, life on land would just cease. Ultimately there needs to be a balance of various biomes; forest, meadow, pasture, and wetlands... I maintain exactly that balance as perfectly as I can, which is why there are so many critters of all types that make their home here. People who make there home in a small cleared space in a forest because they're too lazy to mow see very few critters. Methinks you need to educate yourself on how life forms exist... you've probably believed all those Disney movies featuring animals living deep in the darkest forests that can talk. |
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