TAS
Senior Member
Please don't blame me if this changes but I have not noticed one mosquito this summer - so far.
Me either. I even went on a 5-hour long drive down south and didn't have to clean my windshield afterwards because I wasn't really hitting any bugs.Please don't blame me if this changes but I have not noticed one mosquito this summer - so far.
I swear every piece of news referencing glyphosate is either the negative environmental impacts or how it gives people cancer. Probably good to ban it.I wish this herbicide would be banned in western Canada too. I would be curious if any research has occured if forest fires are bigger and hotter due to the removal of more water heavy trees (broad leaf) https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/sudbury/forestry-herbicide-ban-ontario-1.7610057
I just want to provide another perspective on this. Almost certainly, if you replace softwood conifers with aspen/poplar (our main broadleaves), you'll get lower susceptibility to fires. There's a reason we usually don't deliberately do that, and indeed try to prevent it from happening naturally: the softwoods have properties that make them much more versatile and in demand. Wood scientists could maybe find new uses for aspen besides pulp and particleboard, but the material is just at a natural disadvantage.I wish this herbicide would be banned in western Canada too. I would be curious if any research has occured if forest fires are bigger and hotter due to the removal of more water heavy trees (broad leaf) https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/sudbury/forestry-herbicide-ban-ontario-1.7610057
Single tree selection isn't often used in Alberta because our major species are shade-intolerant and wouldn't recruit below a dense canopy.I wish there more small operators who used select-cut instead of clear-cut tree removal with a mandate to replace like for like in terms of species.




