Speech to the Josephine County Commissioners, 11/24/2010.
Last night, I saw a piece on
RVTV Channel 14 about Abandoned Orchards.
This Board and the Grants Pass City Council should arrange to see it.
I noticed some weeks ago
that the trees in the pear orchard on the River Road Reserve, the old Naumes
property, are not as pretty with fall color as they have been in the past. It appears that about 90% of them are
infected with something that turned nearly all of their leaves brown before
their time. It doesn’t appear to fire
blight, as leaves that grew later in the season at the top of the trees turned
pretty colors; fire blight kills entire limbs.
The video talked mainly
about pear scab and fire blight, both of which also infect apples. This infection appears to be a bit worse than
scab, as it hasn’t just spotted the leaves; it has turned them completely
brown. I submit that the condition of
the trees in this orchard is the real reason that Grants Pass did not allow
pear picking by its residents this year.
Jackson County has a lot of
commercial pear orchards, thus their interest in airing this video on our
shared RVTV Channel 14. I wonder what
Jackson County, and particularly Harry and David, would think of 150 acres of
pear trees, abandoned for nearly10 years and now full of pests and disease,
just upwind of them in Josephine County, owned by the City of Grants Pass. According to this video, those trees should
be ripped out of the ground and burned, this winter, before tender new leaves
come out in the spring to get infected.
Bacterial and fungal spores can fly a long ways, and 150 acres can make
quite a cloud of spores.
Those spores are a much
greater danger to backyard pear and apple trees throughout the Grants Pass
area. This abandoned orchard is a
nuisance to all pear and apple growers; its noxious weeds are a nuisance to
neighboring farmers; its insects spread diseases and infest our trees.
I looked on this county’s
website for any ordinance that applies to abandoned orchards, but I could find
no ordinances on your site at all. The
City of Grants Pass needs to face up to its maintenance liability that it
bought so cheap along with 250 acres of exclusive agricultural use land. This Board needs to help them see it, by
passing an ordinance regarding abandoned orchards if it doesn’t already have
one, and enforcing it if we do. This
speech will be sent to the Jackson County Commissioners and Harry and
David. They will be watching to see what
you do—or don’t.
(“Abandoned for nearly 10 years” is an exaggeration; the land was bought
by Grants Pass in 2006. It may not have
been neglected prior to that; it certainly has been since.)
Published at AssociatedContent.com under Land and Liability.
No comments:
Post a Comment