From: Emlyn O'regan (oregan.emlyn@healthsolve.com.au)
Date: Mon Jan 28 2002 - 17:59:50 MST
There are fruit trees lining the streets in some of the older suburbs in
Canberra, Australia. Plums, apricots (I think), other stone fruit? I can't
remember. Plums, mostly.
When I was a student, I often lived in rental houses with an apple tree in
the yard somewhere (quite common) and fruit trees in the street. Thus, even
given my measly income at the time, I am alive now. I will always be
grateful for those fruit trees... they are a brilliant idea.
Emlyn
(btw, I think it is the cost of cleaning/hazard of putrefying fruit which is
the reason they are banned in most places. It's a crazy business.)
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Miriam English [mailto:miriam@werple.net.au]
> Sent: Tuesday, 29 January 2002 10:55
> To: extropians@extropy.org
> Subject: Re: Solving World Problems: Hunger
>
>
> I think there is another problem, in Australia at least...
> Some time ago I looked into the idea of getting councils to
> plant fruit
> trees rather than decorative ones, and found out that it was
> either against
> some law or against some set of rules or guidelines. (I can't
> remember
> exactly... it was about 20 years ago that I looked into this.)
>
> The point is that there must be some reasoning behind
> preventing this...
> never found out what...
> - maybe it is to lessen the cost of cleaning up putrefying fruit
> - maybe it is because previous attempts to do this produced
> local squabbles
> - maybe people snuck around and stripped trees of fruit and
> sold it at
> local markets
> - maybe moneyed interests in the local fruit trade were
> just afraid of
> their profits going down...
>
> It sounds like an interesting question. If I wasn't so busy I
> might be
> tempted to look into it... unfortunately it will have to wait
> until after
> my uploading. :-)
>
***************************************************************************
Confidentiality: The contents of this email are confidential and are
intended only for the named recipient. If the reader of this e-mail is not
the intended recipient you are hereby notified that any use, reproduction,
disclosure or distribution of the information contained in the e-mail is
prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please reply to us
immediately and delete the document.
Viruses: Any loss/damage incurred by using this material is not the sender's
responsibility. Our entire liability will be limited to resupplying the
material. No warranty is made that this material is free from computer virus
or other defect.
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Sat Nov 02 2002 - 09:12:03 MST