Originally posted by ardcarp
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Northern Forest
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostIt depends on your post of view. The "middle" of the United Kingdom is somewhere in Morecambe Bay. The middle of Great Britain is a little further east in the Forest of Bowland.
Of course, Londoners think it's on Waterloo Bridge.
It's actually the Round Pond in Kensington Gardens. Which is in fact the omphalos of the world.
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Originally posted by Old Grumpy View PostThis forest will be in the Midlands
So I presume you mean it is to keep non-desirables out of the North!
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostI wonder whether the money for this (very worthwhile) project has been obtained by cancelling the Trans-Pennine rail electrification .
But these areas will soak up funding, leaving many of the northern hills just as bleak and treeless in the coming 25 years.
Admittedly the government's cash contribution isn't huge[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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A great deal can be achieved at little or no cost. Seedlings can be raised by schools and community groups and planting done by volunteers. Dealing with difficult terrain, or where earth has to be moved/reshaped, fencing to prevent loss through browsing, drainage, are the kinds of things which cost, but again much can be achieved with good organisation and use of volunteer groups;such projects can lend themselves to team building days and CSR tick boxing for business.
The Woodland Trust appears to be the lead on this grand scheme and they have the advantage of being an established body in terms of experience and fundraising.
I have read that there is £75bn hard infrastructure investment planned for the M62 corridor - I do hope the Northern Forest isn't a cop-out for the landscaping and remediation work that should be part of(and therefore costed into) such schemes.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostA great deal can be achieved at little or no cost. Seedlings can be raised by schools and community groups and planting done by volunteers. Dealing with difficult terrain, or where earth has to be moved/reshaped, fencing to prevent loss through browsing, drainage, are the kinds of things which cost, but again much can be achieved with good organisation and use of volunteer groups;such projects can lend themselves to team building days and CSR tick boxing for business.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI agree with the initial statement, but sometimes there has to be more. There seem to be too many people in government and elsewhere expecting "volunteers" to do things which arguably ought to be paid for - for example in schools and libraries. Some people doing what is effectively voluntary work are exploited quite ruthlessly. The notion that they should be satisfied with what they do for the community is OK for those earning substantially more to suggest.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostAgree, but felt it better to limit my views to the immediate subject! 40 years of assorted involvement in what I believe is now termed the 'Third Sector' has made me only too well aware of the extent, especially in recent years, to which the Establishment expects such bodies to pick up the pieces from deficient public policy, and to do so without support.
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