I read there was a magnitude 3.3 on the Richter Scale event only 25 miles off Fleetwood in the last few days. Barely made the media.
Probably due to fracking in Surrey, or climate change - everything else seems to be.

Sounds like par for the course.PanBiker wrote:Boiler not working this morning so unexpected cold shower for me this morning! Powered down, reset and cycled, fires up but trips out after 30 seconds with fault lights flashing like Blackpool prom. Time for an engineer visit:
Tried logging on to my account on the BG website but it can't process my request suggests I try later, no problem, do it the old fashioned way and ring them up. A dozen button presses later I am told that British Gas are experiencing a higher than normal level of calls and are unable to connect me to a service representative at this time, they suggest that I might like to try booking my service online!
You cannot defend the indefensible.Tizer wrote:Ask farmers and agronomists how they sleep, they are the ones who use chlorpyrifos to prevent disease in their orchards in order to meet the demands of supermarkets for apples free of all signs of disease. Ask supermarket customers how they sleep, they are the ones who drive the demand for unmarked apples. According to the agriculturalists: "Chlorpyrifos is the last of a generation of broad spectrum insecticides. It’s used for controlling a wide range of pest species, including damaging caterpillar species as well as the rarer but highly destructive mussel scale and apple blossom weevil, as well as capsid bugs. If chlorpyrifos was not available it would need to be replaced with up to three additional sprays of more selective insecticides, for every one chlorpyrifos treatment. That would see input costs escalate and in time we may find that ’old’ pest species that have long been consigned to bygone books of orchard problems, make a return." Quoted from this Farming UK web page:
http://www.farminguk.com/news/Changes-t ... 23122.html
I think he's got it.Stanley wrote:So, it was a scientist who poisoned the river?
hartley353 wrote:You cannot defend the indefensible.Tizer wrote:Ask farmers and agronomists how they sleep, they are the ones who use chlorpyrifos to prevent disease in their orchards in order to meet the demands of supermarkets for apples free of all signs of disease. Ask supermarket customers how they sleep, they are the ones who drive the demand for unmarked apples. According to the agriculturalists: "Chlorpyrifos is the last of a generation of broad spectrum insecticides. It’s used for controlling a wide range of pest species, including damaging caterpillar species as well as the rarer but highly destructive mussel scale and apple blossom weevil, as well as capsid bugs. If chlorpyrifos was not available it would need to be replaced with up to three additional sprays of more selective insecticides, for every one chlorpyrifos treatment. That would see input costs escalate and in time we may find that ’old’ pest species that have long been consigned to bygone books of orchard problems, make a return." Quoted from this Farming UK web page:
http://www.farminguk.com/news/Changes-t ... 23122.html
Hi Hartley 353. With your background you will be aware that agrochemicals are strictly controlled. The more potent ones can only be bought and used by licenced operators, for example for amenity use, and are not on sale to the general public. I was employed in the Chemical Industry and involved in the manufacture of some extremely toxic and potentially damaging products. The industry that produces these products takes its responsibilities extremely seriously, as do the professional people who use them and many products have been withdrawn voluntarily by the agricultural industry.hartley353 wrote:Thankyou for reading the post Chinatyke. There are many ways of polluting a watercourse to kill the largest or the smallest of its inhabitants, and in my time as a custodian of the countryside I have seen the effects of many of them. Some of the pollution was accidental some deliberate, The chemicals I have spoken of are extremely toxic, and should not be available to just any one. The men and women who invent them have to take responsibility for their use, and make sure that they are used with proper constraints by licenced operatives, if their guidance is not followed then stop manufacture. Not following a proper path makes them culpable.