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Road and traffic blame, not sheep
It
was refreshing to read the letter from Larry Still in last week's
edition of The Forester. Mr Still obviously understands the
Forest of Dean and its traditions and brings a welcome dose of
common sense to the issue of free roaming sheep.
For many years now the Foresters have had to live
with massive increases in traffic thundering through the interior
Statutory Forest and on roads that w designed to take it. As Mr
Still says it is the roads and associated traffic speed and not
sheep that are the problem.
I doubt if the writer of a letter 'Name and address
supplied' from someone who does not have the courage his or her
name, will be asking a sheep badger why he is going about his legal
pursuit. If he does, the badger mil him that no restraining order
has been placed on the Commoners' Association or those commoning.
What
is
taking place is an unnecessary dispute between the
Forest of Dean District Council and Forest Enterprise with the
Commoners' Association as interested observers - and for which the
council tax payers or income taxpayers will have a lot of money
whoever wins or loses.
I am reminded of a letter that I read in the local
press last year in which a lady complaining about the trees. She
said that they were a nuisance because the leaves
were blocking her guttering. It seems that the lady
had missed the point.
We are privileged to live in the forest and the
leaves come as part of the package.
Get rid of the trees. Get rid of the animals. Let's
have a nice concrete and tarmac Dean with massive overhead steel
walkways, plenty of ropes to swing on, mountain and motorbikes and
4X4s racing around everywhere and the traffic careering through
oblivious to the safety of all and everything around.
This is not for Dean Forest Voice, nor do we expect
for the majority of Foresters. We would rather see trees with the
animals grazing safely and people enjoying and respecting the beauty
all around them.
Keith Morgan, Broadwell - Dean Forest Voice

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