it would be nice if all the roads to 'state' forests weren't locked off to the state!!! Hmmmmm
flyfisher wrote:it would be nice if all the roads to 'state' forests weren't locked off to the state!!! Hmmmmm
That's my opinion too stepbystep. Off the Marlborough hywy. between Great lake and Bronte virtually every road and track is locked up giving the feeling that you are not welcome so don't stop or get out of the car or else. Trespassers prosecuted signs are everywhere, looks fantastic for our tourists. But then we don't want tourism competing with forestry, do we.![]()
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flyfisher wrote: because the wilderness (in the real sense of the word)
Flyfisher
dee_legg wrote:Really interested to know what your and any one elses take is on what wilderness is?
I'm trying to gauge a further understaning of what definition of wilderness is at the moment at uni and i'd appreciate anyones ideas...
tasadam wrote:So there is this...
Tasmania has some beautiful places.
It's such a shame the ugly side is so in your face when getting to them.
What is wrong with these people - do they do this deliberately? It sure seems like it, like, the tourists come and see clearfelling, plantation, burn-off and so on, and it is so in their face that they get desensitised to it and accept it as normal - or so "they" want us to believe perhaps.
I just don't get it, how such an ugly mess is so unavoidable when visiting such a tourist drawcard.
ashlee wrote: Has anyone done the walk from the bottom carpark to the falls? The bush is a disgrace. Never have I seen so many environmental weeds in one place.
flyfisher wrote:it would be nice if all the roads to 'state' forests weren't locked off to the state!!! Hmmmmm
That's my opinion too stepbystep. Off the Marlborough hywy. between Great lake and Bronte virtually every road and track is locked up giving the feeling that you are not welcome so don't stop or get out of the car or else. Trespassers prosecuted signs are everywhere, looks fantastic for our tourists. But then we don't want tourism competing with forestry, do we.![]()
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tasadam wrote:ashlee wrote: Has anyone done the walk from the bottom carpark to the falls? The bush is a disgrace. Never have I seen so many environmental weeds in one place.
Yes, done that walk and it was nice, but like you say there are a lot of plants that don't belong there.
How could that happen?
Have a look at the first post (photos), 700 metres up from the World "Heritage" area is logging and clearfell and Foxgloves.
And I suppose Forestry sell that off to the tourists as "And you can see all the pretty flowers"...
Sounds to me like someone isn't cleaning their machinery properly!
corvus wrote:Interesting comment from Peter Cundall is that Stinging Nettles love to grow in really fertile soil!! so how come they are in abundance (and strong)on the downside of Twin Spires opposite Wadleys Hut ??
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tasadam wrote:Corvus the way I read your comment is that they really love fertile soil. Doesn't mean they won't grow elsewhere. Well, you asked....
walkinTas wrote:Tasmania has two species of stinging nettle, Urtica incisa (native stinging nettle or scrub nettle), and the introduced species Urtica urens (small stinging nettle). Urtica incisa is native to Eastern and Southeastern Australia.
Urtica incisa is widespread and will often appear in an area that has been disturbed. They grow in open moist woodlands or on the sunny edge of rainforests in dapple shade, or in forest clearings especially in soils with good nitrogen content - dislikes heavy shade. They are a perennial herb and so die down to a root stock in winter.
Urtica urens is an annual weed. It is spread by cattle and birds and so appears in stockyards and on bird rookeries. It will grow in just about any soil, (sandy soil, loamy soil and clay soil) at a wide range of pH from acid through neutral to basic. They prefer light shade to open ground with moist and nitrogen rich soil.
flyfisher wrote:Sounds to me like someone isn't cleaning their machinery properly!
You would be horrified by the scotch thistles on the Styx road towards the big trees..2 metres wide strips around 1 metre high.Amazing.![]()
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I've got some pics somewhere, I'll see if I can find them.
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Devon Annie wrote:I've never actually seen foxgloves spreading, they seem to appear in clearings in the bush left over from logging but don't spread into the surrounding bush. I've seen them in previously logged areas in lots of places in Aus.
Slightly off topic, there are stinging nettles in the bush in places which I thought were introduced until I read an account of settlers in the North Motton area encountering huge nettles that could kill a horse they were so bad. I'm glad we don't see them bushwalking very often!
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