This letter is currently being circulated in response to the Governments proposal to sell off the national forests.
There will be only one reason for a private company to buy a forest and that will be to make money from the sale of the timber. They'll pay lip service to other issues but in most instances the bottom line will be profit and shareholders. Likewise, the Government is only proposing a sell off to save money and have someone else to blame when something isn't right. I appreciate that the Government needs to reduce the national debt but, in my opinion, selling the nations forest estate is not the way to do it; and if you think there will be large enough funds made available to help support charitable ownership, you're away with the fairies. Use the link below to register your support for the Woodland Trusts campaign. Over the next few weeks of the Government's consultation the Woodland Trust will continue to bring you opportunities
to shape the long-term future of England's public estate...so please stick with us.
This petition is just the start of our public campaign.Our website will always have the latest news and ways you can get involved in saving England's ancient forests.
We always appreciate your time and support - what we really need now is your help to gather as many voices as possible
for this call to action. Please pass on the link below to your friends and ask them to make their voice heard too.
http://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/protect
Thanks again,
Sue Holden
Chief Executive
The Woodland Trust
About Me
- Dave Winter
- At the moment I am caring full time for a family member and when the time comes I will be selling up and living on a narrowboat.I enjoy reading,especially about those living on narrowboats and their daily lives.The tug Nb Resolute in the above picture is NOT mine but is owned by Dave Moore and is something I would aspire to own one day although I am going to look at many boats before I make a decision on the style and interior.Tugs are looking good at the moment but have yet to look around one. My interest in narrowboats started some 47 years ago. As a lad I cycled from Luton to bridge 111 on the G.U.by the Globe to fish and watch the Morton and Clayton boats go by,full of coal with a family on board and always wondered how they kept their balance on the planks that ran above the coal and why the the dogs didnt jump in the canal.That fascination has stayed with me so when I am able I will be there on my narrowboat joining in the great community of boat owners. Find me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/brassiclint or listen to my music site.Use earphones or earplugs depending on your musical taste :) http://blip.fm/Dave_Winter
Saturday, 29 January 2011
Thursday, 6 January 2011
STREET ORGAN ON A NARROWBOAT
One of my future plans is to have a street organ on my narrowboat something like the one in the picture below.
This would enable me to raise money in donations for the waterways and be an attraction for another part of my plans which would hopefully enable me to make a small income to pay for diesel etc, more of that later.
A big thank you to Bernard for advising me on the suitability of street organs on a narrowboat.
Monday, 3 January 2011
WHAT'S THE BIG DEAL ABOUT ENERGY
The big deal is that we are drunk with energy lust. It has gone, like a good claret will go, to our heads. It has allowed us to sit and indulge our every whim without a care for the planet and its essential ecosystems we all depend upon. It has encouraged us to to fell forests and drain the swamps which were the very source of our good fortune in the first place. It has handed us chemical - dependant agricultural systems which expend ten calories of energy to grow and transport to the markets a single calorie of food. It has given us cheap intercontinental flights that are destroying the atmosphere. It has given us the technology to fish out whole oceans of fish stocks, pushing some of our very best food species to the verge of extinction. It has trained foresters to view trees only as crops of fibre, forgetting that a mature tree is giving back more to the soils and the environment around it than it takes. Their blinkered view of a forest as a harvestable commodity for quick profit over-looks the energy cycle we are talking about- the trees ability to transfer the combined energy of sun and rain into global maintenance and long-term stability.
The big deal is that for over two hundred years we have consumed our fossil energy bonanza without a thought for the side effects of air pollution,of carbon emissions, of heavy metals, of toxic chemicals or the impact they may be having on the ecosystems of the globe and all the wildlife we profess to love.
The big deal is that unless we wake up and pay attention to what we are doing, your children and your grandchildren are certain to inherit an appalling mess.
This is an extract from a book by Sir John Lister-Kaye..... At The Waters Edge.
Although not a boating subject I thought it pertinent to included in my blog as it reflects the same thoughts on the subject as mine.
The big deal is that for over two hundred years we have consumed our fossil energy bonanza without a thought for the side effects of air pollution,of carbon emissions, of heavy metals, of toxic chemicals or the impact they may be having on the ecosystems of the globe and all the wildlife we profess to love.
The big deal is that unless we wake up and pay attention to what we are doing, your children and your grandchildren are certain to inherit an appalling mess.
This is an extract from a book by Sir John Lister-Kaye..... At The Waters Edge.
Although not a boating subject I thought it pertinent to included in my blog as it reflects the same thoughts on the subject as mine.
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