10 years ago I planted invasive Himalayan blackberry &neighbor threatened to sue
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Date: March 31st, 2026 1:30 PM Author: motley address
We have a creek running through the property that has caused insane erosion because for like 150 years cattle and deer and elk have grazed all the riparian plants that grow along stream beds and hold soil in place so I planted blackberry cuttings I took from a nearby state because they are very vigorous and thorny and don't get browsed. Anyway they colonized our banks on both sides and over 10 years provided space for native willows and cottonwood trees to grow and stabilize the soil. Lib neighbor demanded we remove them & threatened to sue if they spread to his property.
This year we had massive flooding and the neighbor lost 4 acres of property that just washed away and is now creek bed but he still has to pay property tax on. A tree also fell on his garage and totaled his truck too. I actually gained land as the silt built up on the creek beds. The blackberry fruits are great for making pies, jam and wine too.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5851991&forum_id=2)#49783336) |
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Date: March 31st, 2026 2:42 PM Author: motley address
"McNulty adds that the future of the bears in the area is in question due to the impacts of climate change, which is reducing the quantity of food sources such as the whitebark pine nuts that the bears have traditionally relied upon to fatten up in the autumn"
This guy is a retard, whitebark pine is in decline because of wildfire suppression, it needs regular fire to propagate and thrive. 90% of these people never go outdoors and have no clue what they are talking about
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5851991&forum_id=2)#49783548) |
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