For many years now, we have been signed up for sequential cunning plans to get the best out of Irish farmland. REPS (rural environmental protection scheme) I II and III followed by AEOS (Agri-Environment Options Scheme) then GLAS (Green, Low-Carbon, Agri-Environment Scheme) and most recently ACRES (Agri-Climate Rural Environment Scheme). The DeptAg clearly employs at least one PAD [plenipotentiary acronym deviser) to keep pace with the constant changes of policy and direction. The basic deal is that farmers are incentivized to do the right thing as currently dreamed up in Kildare Street. The days of pouring ad lib nitrates onto monocultures of perennial ryegrass Lolium perenne are over: the excess of tiger-pee has been running off into lakes and rivers and destroying their delicate equilibria. Farmers rights end where the nose of the pearl-mussel's (Margaritifera margaritifera whc prev) begins.
One of the features of ACRES is a bunch of Non-productive Investments NPIs. These are things which are good to do but do not put bread on the table. Like hanging a gate instead of blocking a gap with a pallet; or planting a strip of trees to shelter stock. Cash is tight for all the farmers I know, so these NPIs are often put on the long finger. Back in the day, I hung a bunch of gates. Dug a deep hole put in a tall post back-filled with rocks, gravel and cement. At least 3 of these posts have rotted out where the wet fill meets the air and microbes have a field day. Accordingly we applied for a NPI grant for some gates although we had the gates but not the energy to re-dig the hole and use steel rather than wood for the post.
We have something like 2km of battered stone walls acting as field boundaries. Where they were not fit for the purpose of enclosing sheep, we have a) topped them off with sheep-wire b) fronted them with new fencing or c) planted a parallel hedge. One of the NPI options is to clear off brambles Rubus spp. and gorse Ulex europaeus and allow the face of the stone walls to get ins☀️lated. It's not going to butter any parsnips but it will create an alternate micro-climate and provide a niche for species [plants ad animals] that prefer a dry home. Our Ag advisor came on a site visit at the end of 2022 and suggested that I might like to clear one side of That ditch. It was just shy of 90m and faced to catch the afternoon sun. Photos were taken as evidence before the work
We were promised a nice couple of days in mid-Feb 2023 and I set to work. It was very satisfying and satisfactory. And you could hear the wall sighing with relief at getting a haircut for the first time in maybe 40 years. It was three stage process: a) cutting and pulling all the gorse away and into the field then b) reducing each branch to logs and brash, finally c) pushing all the brash back against the foot of the wall as mulch / habitat. We are now burning through those logs.Later the same Spring, I was told
- I shouldn't have started work without prior approval
- . . . and more Official photos
- it was crazy to imagine that I could claim money for cleaning only one side of a wall
- and duh, the top of the wall too.
But this New Year, after a really soggy November and December, the ground and gorse dried out nicely and I set-to to finish the job. Whether it is eligible for payment or not. My Ould Feller policy is to run the chain-saw for no more than a tankful of gas a day. Which is about an hour or a bit more: part cutting and part hauling.
Crap photo (you'll have to squint as always, but I've cleaned a 30m section of the Far Side; pulled the bushes away; then gone back with shears to battle the brambles into submission. My gallop was stopped for half an hour when I touched a gorse-like rock with the saw and had to refile all the teeth on the chain. It happens. Work in progress; more later.







