Smallholders Insurance from Greenlands

Author Topic: Ticks, tick-borne diseases and environmental schemes  (Read 1959 times)

SallyintNorth

  • Joined Feb 2011
  • Cornwall
  • Rarely short of an opinion but I mean well
    • Trelay Cohousing Community
Ticks, tick-borne diseases and environmental schemes
« on: October 24, 2011, 02:18:54 am »
Here's the thing.

There are a lot of woodland margins and so on getting fenced off from livestock under environmental schemes.  The theory being that the livestock eat the understory and by excluding them the habitat becomes more diverse and supports a greater variety of flora and fauna.

Sounds great, but a lot of such ground near me is becoming choked with bracken.  Environmental schemes do not think bracken is a good idea, and neither does anyone else.  However, on steep, craggy and/or wooded slopes it is nigh-on impossible to control the bracken once it gets a hold.

There are two problems with the bracken.  Firstly, it chokes everything, resulting in the habitat becoming less diverse and supporting a lesser variety of flora and fauna.  Secondly, bracken is a really great environment for ticks to multiply and spread.  Deer ticks can carry Lyme Disease, which affects humans, and sheep and deer ticks can spread a variety of diseases to dogs and livestock.

Our vet and others are reporting an increase in tick-borne diseases in sheep.

Don't listen to the money men - they know the price of everything and the value of nothing

Live in a cohousing community with small farm for our own use.  Dairy cows (rearing their own calves for beef), pigs, sheep for meat and fleece, ducks and hens for eggs, veg and fruit growing

SteveHants

  • Joined Aug 2011
Re: Ticks, tick-borne diseases and environmental schemes
« Reply #1 on: October 24, 2011, 11:01:28 pm »
Apparently one of the answers is to use animals as 'tick-mops' - sheep being one of them. Good news if you are looking for grazing, bad news if you don't like getting sheep in to treat them. It does seem to defeat the object though, but then, isn't that environmental schemes all over?

colliewoman

  • Joined Jul 2011
  • Pilton
  • Caution! May spontaneously talk rabbits!
Re: Ticks, tick-borne diseases and environmental schemes
« Reply #2 on: October 26, 2011, 07:03:45 am »
get some gleanies :thumbsup: :thumbsup:
they eat ticks and sound ridiculous enough to make you laugh every time you hear them.
ooh and they taste great, a very underrated birdy is the guinea fowl ;)
We'll turn the dust to soil,
Turn the rust of hate back into passion.
It's not water into wine
But it's here, and it's happening.
Massive,
but passive.


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