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maxthecollie 30-11-2013 20:36

Re: disgrace
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by redbrickbathinyard (Post 1085995)
Well your lucky, we have just discovered today that there is going to be a enormous 35metre wind turbine errected just off Willows lane, smack bang on the little bit of green belt we have left in this area.

So next time you are up the coppice you should be able to see the turbine, hopefully you won't get one up there.

If Peter Britcliffe had his way we would have had a panopticon on the top of the coppice

susie123 30-11-2013 20:53

Re: disgrace
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by yerself (Post 1085918)
Didn't know you could see 'em from Morecambe.:D

No but I can probably see Great Gable on a clear day.:p

susie123 30-11-2013 21:03

Re: disgrace
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by DtheP47 (Post 1085959)
Thanks Margaret an interesting read, nonetheless all the area was forested at one time stretching all the way to the forest of Bowland....coppicing in terms of managing that woodland makes more sense ....and we have acorns on our coat of arms.

You don't coppice oaks - it's usually hazel. A few years ago I lived in an area where this was carried out as a cottage industry producing spars for thatching and poles for fence panels. We had a hazel coppice next to our house and our village pub had a unique name, the Hook and Glove, being the implements used - a billhook and a leather glove.

Michael1954 30-11-2013 23:36

Re: disgrace
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by susie123 (Post 1086003)
You don't coppice oaks.

Well I'm no expert but a quick Google of Coppice Oak suggests you can, but correct me if I am wrong.

susie123 01-12-2013 00:08

Re: disgrace
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Michael1954 (Post 1086021)
Well I'm no expert but a quick Google of Coppice Oak suggests you can, but correct me if I am wrong.

OK I didn't say you can't, I said you didn't. Oak is usually left as the standards among which the coppice crop is grown and cut down on a relatively short cycle and the oak can be cut on a longer cycle... sorry it's geting a bit late for lucid explanations...:(

Neil 01-12-2013 07:52

Re: disgrace
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by maxthecollie (Post 1085999)
If Peter Britcliffe had his way we would have had a panopticon on the top of the coppice

From memory he was very much against it

Neil 01-12-2013 07:53

Re: disgrace
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by redbrickbathinyard (Post 1085995)
Well your lucky, we have just discovered today that there is going to be a enormous 35metre wind turbine errected just off Willows lane, smack bang on the little bit of green belt we have left in this area.

So next time you are up the coppice you should be able to see the turbine, hopefully you won't get one up there.

35m is only a baby turbine, the ones on Ossy moor are 80m to the nacelle and 120m from the ground to the tip of the blade at its highest point

DtheP47 01-12-2013 09:20

Re: disgrace
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Michael1954 (Post 1086021)
Well I'm no expert but a quick Google of Coppice Oak suggests you can, but correct me if I am wrong.


Quote:

Originally Posted by susie123 (Post 1086028)
OK I didn't say you can't, I said you didn't. Oak is usually left as the standards among which the coppice crop is grown and cut down on a relatively short cycle and the oak can be cut on a longer cycle... sorry it's geting a bit late for lucid explanations...:(

Well I reckon the dendrological link/explanation for the Coppice is stronger than that of a Dutch description of a hill. Maybe folk on here will correct me but I can't think of any other places near here on the map with links to the land of dykes. And Hollands Pies doesn't count. :)


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