Maybe it would be possible to see where they are nesting and mark off that area as a no mow area?
Linda Scotland
Sent from my iPhone
Sent from my iPhone
Maybe this discussion doesn't belong here…..but, this is a difficult issue and I have to support Sarah's comments. We are organic meat farmers and for years did not have bobolinks in our smaller hay fields. They are there now, perhaps--because the huge field up the road where they used to nest in is now a 10 house lot development.We are far from ignorant about this problem, nor as life long birders are we disconnected from nature's cycles.But, humans have to eat and some one raises thatfood. Even vegetable farmers clear land. So what else can be done to protect the hayfields and the birds that need them? I don't know the answer, but blaming farmers doesn't help.Being paid to postpone haying still means someone else is cutting somewhere and we will then have to pay a high price for hay (which also has to be pesticide/herbicide free).No easy answers for anyone here.On Jun 5, 2016, at 7:52 AM, Sarah Caputo wrote:
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