
Campaigners reach 'breakthrough' with council Poynton Pool tree plan
Campaigners fighting to save trees at a Cheshire beauty spot have said they have been told their alternative plan for the site is viable.Cheshire East Council wants to cut down up to 70 trees by Poynton Pool to reduce flood risk around the ornamental water feature, which dates back to about 1750.The Friends of Poynton Pool have put forward an alternative plan which would see just one tree removed and has said there has now been a "potential breakthrough" with the council.A council spokesperson said it was in an open dialogue with the group, but the viability of any proposals "remains the responsibility of the council".
Poynton Pool is an ornamental pond formed in the 18th century and is classed as a high-risk reservoir because of the amount of water it contains.The council said some trees had to removed as part of its legal requirements to maintain the site.The plans was deferred by councillors at a meeting last year, and a study by the Environment Agency a few months later found the pool was significantly smaller than the council had previously estimated.
One stump
The Friends of Poynton Pool (FoPP) said the potential breakthrough came in a meeting between the group, Poynton Town Council and Cheshire East Council earlier this month.FoPP Chairman Mike Ellison said the group's proposal would require "minimal inspection and maintenance" and see just one beech tree stump and some vegetations cleared.He said: "It also means the council will no longer be required to provide a costly carbon offset mitigation planting scheme at Walnut Tree Farm in Woodford."A spokesperson for Cheshire East Council, said the authority is continuing to speak to the group about the ongoing management and safety of the reservoir.They said: "The development and determination, including viability, of any final proposals to address the requirements of the Reservoirs Act, remains the responsibility of the council and their appointed qualified, professional team."
See more Cheshire stories from the BBC and follow BBC North West on X. For more local politics coverage, BBC Politics North West is on BBC One on Sunday at 10:00am and on BBC iPlayer.
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It was put in fresh and clean in 2017, on top of a square of carpet, then moths and carpet beetles (a similar scourge to clothes moths) were added. They have eaten fully through one jumper, the rest is covered in detritus. It is a fashion horror scene. Taped on the lab's wall is a list of recipes. House flies are fed a mixture of wheat bran and yeast powder; moths get fishmeal and yeast powder. Rentokil is currently assisting Olivia Augusta, a Central Saint Martins final year jewellery design student, who asked for their help with her graduation project. She has duct-taped a sweater leaving sections exposed which was placed into a box with moths – when ready she will use jewellery to cover the holes left by the moths. 'You can spend an awful lot of money removing moths,' says Paul Blackhurst, head of Rentokil's technical academy. Indeed, earlier this year a £32.5 million mansion in west London had an infestation of moths so bad that its exasperated owners sued the vendor and were allowed to hand it back with an almost full refund. 'About 10 years ago there was a big rush for more natural home insulation using untreated wool,' Blackhurst says, shaking his head. 'Before it used to be washed in borax [sodium tetraborate, which works as an insecticide]. The problem is [moths] could be in anything, cavity walls, old furniture. You've got to find that pocket and isolate it.' Moths adore our centrally heated cosy homes. They go for the good stuff, natural fibres – merino wool, cashmere, silk. ' National Trust properties with tapestries, butterfly collections, taxidermy, dead cluster flies around the base of windows –they'll thrive on that,' adds Blackhurst. Abandoned bird's nests hidden in chimneys are often an origin source. 'There's so many associated secondary infestations with bird's nests, it's phenomenal,' he says, smiling. 'Bed mites, bird mites, as soon as that material [the feathers] is exhausted they'll move on to the next thing [your clothes],' he adds. A dead rodent under a floorboard will have a similar effect. Once the moths have fed off the mouse, they will head to your cupboards. This activity is incessant, which is why everyone I've mentioned this article to is so excited by the tiny-wasp army treatment, potentially offering a silver bullet to infestations. The real culprits are the moth larvae. Once impregnated into your fibres, they feed off the protein left there from your sweat or spilled dinner, and as they hatch and grow they decimate the fibres. When you've got adult moths flapping around it's too late. Which is where the wasps come into play. Rentokil's Entosite treatment utilises microscopic Trichogramma evanescens wasps, which are released in small sachets at the site of infestation. They work as egg parasites: the wasps seek out moth eggs, then lay their own eggs inside the larvae – so instead of another moth, a new Trichogramma develops and hatches. The treatment was first trialled in 2021 by conservators at Blickling Hall, a Jacobean National Trust stately home in Norfolk, in the face of a post-Covid moth explosion. These microscopic parasitoid wasps were used during a trial alongside pheromone traps (which attract male moths, reducing the chances of them finding a female). A year later, they saw an incredible 83 per cent reduction in moth numbers. 'The concept of biological controls has been around for years,' explains Blackhurst. 'As controls on insecticides tighten, and they get taken off the market, we're looking more into it.' Traditional moth-busting involves heating a propert to 56C (not possible in historic houses where the heat can damage delicate textiles) or fogging with chemicals over a four-hour period (or a combination of both). A thorough investigation to locate the primary source means looking in the loft, up chimneys and under floorboards to find that errant rotting rodent or bird's nest. It is incredibly invasive. 'We buy the wasps and get them fresh,' Blackhurst says. They are sent out in timed batches, which will hatch over three weeks. The sachets have a tiny hole through which they will emerge, unseen. 'Their sole responsibility is to mate and find eggs, deposit their egg in the moth egg, which will then hatch and consume the moth egg. That's their protein source.' Because moth life cycles will be at different stages, Rentokil will return and place more releases over a three- to six-month period, sometimes in conjunction with an insecticide treatment (especially for extensive infestations) that can be utilised after the wasps have finished, to zap anything remaining. 'It's a more natural, tailored approach for a longer-term strategy' he adds. Blackhurst is a man of cautious optimism. 'We've had good results,' he says, adding that 'we trial everything; we will not release something if we're not comfortable with it.' The treatment starts from £450, with an initial £100 survey cost taken off from the overall treatment cost. 'Human messiness is basically the cause of all pests,' Matt Green, Rentokil's principal entomologist tells me, popping a white lab coat over his Carhartt sweatshirt. The boardroom we are standing in is decorated with totems of Rentokil's century of extermination – the company marked its centenary earlier this year with a 'Pestival' ice cream van that handed out free treats in South London, albeit topped with chocolate covered mealworms. Rat taxidermy features heavily in the office decor, alongside framed Manchurian scorpions from China, emerald beetles from Japan, giant water bugs from Mexico. A trophy cabinet houses a royal ratcatcher sash from George IV's reign, vintage poison bottles, a branded Matchbox toy van among other archive ephemera. There are reassuring amounts of hand sanitiser and wipes scattered around. Pests are, of course, relative. 'It's a hugely cultural thing,' Green continues, 'In Iran no one lifts the phone for pest control unless something is going to kill you. [Then there's] nuisance pests of the bourgeoisie – in America we have technicians that deal with millipedes. They're not going to hurt anyone, somebody just doesn't want them in their house because they're an icky bug. Pest control in the Middle East and Africa will treat snake infestations.' He compares it to Maslow's hierarchy of needs 'for pests'. Green is based in the lab, where extermination and control products are tested and new treatments developed. In an ante room, decorated with enlarged close-up photographs of bugs, sits a line of prototype plastic fly-traps. The final product is in a rich puce hue. 'Thanks to PhD students from the University of Thessaloniki in Greece, who painted fly-traps in different colours as a test,' explains Green. Pink was the most effective shade for attracting them. Along the corridor, sweltering behind thick plastic strips, lie several small rooms full of creepy experiments. There are boxes of mosquitoes and bed bugs, fed by donated but unusable NHS blood, deliveries of which come weekly. There are rolling cultures of flies, 100 of which get put into different ultraviolet fly-traps for testing every morning. 'We get through about 600 flies a week,' says Green. Boxes of giant stick insects and Madagascan cockroaches (the largest will fill your palm) are kept as teaching tools to show what these beasts look like up close. 'You can get a biology degree in the UK without looking at an insect,' Green shakes his head, adding, 'when the population gets too big, sometimes the technicians take them home to keep as pets.' I watch as Fabio Leonel, his entomologist colleague, gently strokes a cockroach until it makes a hissing rattle noise. They share jovial tales from the field. Blackhurst grins: 'There was an interesting rat problem which was linked to drains, but then a secondary infestation of fleas from the rats…' My skin begins to itch. On the way home I turn up the air conditioning in the car to full freeze. I get home shivering. In my daughter's room I spot two moths flying above the carpet. I vacuum ferociously and spend the next three days washing every single item of knitwear in the house, saying out loud to any pupae within earshot, 'Beware. I will unleash the wasps.'