Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeYour LettersThe march of the Triffids

The march of the Triffids

Australia’s open spaces and grasslands are being invaded by aggressive woody weeds of the eucalypt family and the feral plants they shelter, such as lantana and rubber vine. This invasion is assisted by a fifth column of misguided tree lovers and climate alarmists who demand that these environmental weeds be protected and their expansion subsidised by the taxpayer!
Like Triffids, the invaders are stealthing out from every patch of bush, surrounding homes and towns, consuming grasslands and displacing grassland birds and animals, both native and domesticated.
This invasion started in neglected parks and conservation areas and was given a massive boost by the Kyoto inspired bans on controlling regrowth, even on freehold land. The final stupidity is the use of carbon credit finance to encourage the deliberate planting of woody weeds on land currently used to produce food and fibres.
For as long as humans have lived in Australia, woody weeds have been kept in check by their natural predator – bushfire. But more reckless policies, promoted by misguided urban tree lovers, have prevented the regular use of fire in many areas.
As wildfires in several areas have shown, the heavy fire load in this creeping bush becomes a lurking menace, as dangerous to neighbours as an unexploded bomb. It must be kept in check by periodic small fires, well managed grazing animals or mechanical means. ‘Shutting it up’ is an unacceptable and unnatural practice.
The explorers Leichhardt and Mitchell both reported the native use of fire to restore the grasslands and both remarked on the grassland and open forest they encountered. However, since their time, there has been an explosion of woody weeds into the Mitchell grass country, and into many other grasslands. It is like a cancer on the land.
These scrubby weeds and carbon credit plantations also harbour all the pests and predators that threaten native wildlife and domestic livestock – feral foxes, pigs, dogs and cats.
The global warming alarmists and others have led us into deadly delusion. Trees do not control the climate, and eucalypt plantations and infestations are not worthy of elevation to saintly status in the plant kingdom. Just like grasses, herbs and algae, they are part of the grand carbon cycle on which all life depends. If humans need to worship and protect any land plant species, it should be not useless invasive woody weeds, but the valuable grasses and legumes, including cereals such as wheat, oats, barley and rye, pastures such as Mitchell grass and buffell grass, legumes such as lucerne, clover, soya beans and siratro and giant grasses such as sugar cane, sorghum and maize.
It is strange that governments keen to protect farmland from coal mining are promoting policies that result in the destruction of grazing land by state protected weeds.

Viv Forbes,
Rosewood

Previous article
Next article
Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Hart and Smith star in small field

WARWICK BRIDGE CLUB Dealer: N Vul: Nil NORTH ♠ A1095 ♥ K6 ♦ K106 ♣ AKJ6 WEST EAST ♠ 74 ...
More News

Handcraft entries open for 150th Stanthorpe Show

The handcraft section includes sewing, mosaics, decoupage, quilling, jewellery, macrame, card making, and resin art, to name a few. We always review our schedule annually...

Ingenious Sheep competition returns to Stanthorpe Show

A firm favourite among visitors to the Sheep Pavilion is the Ingenious Sheep Section, a creative showcase highlighting the district’s resilience in the face...

Family team win Australia Day event

A big field of 60 enthusiastic golfers teed off in the annual Australia Day two-ball Ambrose at Stanthorpe on Monday, 26 January, sponsored by...

Barnes starts the year on winning note

Jill Barnes has taken out the Warwick Women’s Golf Single Stableford on Wednesday 21 January from Anne Lyons who survived a count-back to finish...

Three-day Yard Dog Trial joins 150th Stanthorpe Show lineup

The 2026 Stanthorpe Show will include in its lineup of events a Yard Dog Trial over the three days. A yard trial involves a handler...

New lease to set wheels in motion for junior Cowboys

Wheels are now firmly in motion for Warwick junior rugby league after the Southern Downs council agreed to offer the new junior Cowboys club...

New lease to set wheels in motion for new junior Cowboys

Wheels are now firmly in motion for Warwick junior rugby league after the Southern Downs council agreed to offer the new junior Cowboys club...

Thriving hub connects Warwick homeschoolers

What started as a solution to homeschooled teenagers feeling isolated has now turned into a thriving community of 15 families and 30 homeschooled kids...

Regional students bypass ATAR stress with new TAFE pathways

TAFE Queensland is giving High School students a route to University without an ATAR through flexible pathways. The vocational education provider hopes these pathways...

Charity race day brings strength and generosity

Jockey Kyle Wilson Taylor has dominated the Warwick Turf Club’s Charity Race Day winning three of the seven races at Allman Park on Thursday...