RE: [RC] Interesting article on Spread of Weeds by Horses - Kristen A Fisher
Dawn - Could you let me know exactly where you have
seen these small patches in TX as - ahem - yeah, I would like to avoid any
potential conflict LOL.
Kristen
From: rdcarrie@xxxxxxx
[mailto:rdcarrie@xxxxxxx] Sent: Wednesday, February 22, 2006 11:21
AM To: kskf@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; KimFue@xxxxxxx;
ridecamp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: [RC] Interesting article on
Spread of Weeds by Horses
Yes, pot is quite the cash crop in the Pacific NW. When I was
living in Oregon, there was speculation that it was the number
one revenue-producing "crop" in the state, outstripping even the timber
industry. <G> When deer hunting in the Oregon Coast
Range, we'd occasionally come across patches of "product" growing in the
National Forest. We'd casually turn and go the other direction, not
wanting to risk the booby traps and possible armed guards.
I've come across an occasional small patch in the Nat. Forest here in
Texas, but nothing on the scale of what we'd find in Oregon.
Dawn in East Texas
-----Original Message----- From:
Kristen A Fisher <kskf@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: KimFue@xxxxxxx;
ridecamp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Wed, 22 Feb 2006 09:28:47 -0600 Subject:
RE: [RC] Interesting article on Spread of Weeds by Horses
I know this reply is
about 2 weeks old but I have been confined to reading revenue-related emails
and not RC so I am just catching up on this. Can someone remind me what grants AERC has funded to
to similar studies and where? I thought the Grant Committee had approved
something like this a while back and can't remember the details - it would be
interesting to compare procedures and results.
Also, it seems weird to
me that all the "alien invaders" they reference are from other *continents*. I
would suspect that horses are not the ones bringing these weeds from
abroad???