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Sinn Féin and the DUP could soon have a very different relationship. Liam McBurney/PA Wire/PA Images

'Surprised, not shocked': What do the North's politicians make of the Sinn Féin surge?

Unionists and nationalists all agree that Sinn Féin is a powerful electoral force.

SINN FÉIN IN power in the North might be far from a novelty, but that doesn’t mean that the prospect of the party leading the Irish government hasn’t attracted attention there. 

For over two decades, Northern Irish politicians have watched the rise of Sinn Féin from pariah party to the main voice of nationalism. 

It was in 2001 that the Sinn Féin vote exceeded the SDLP’s for the first time in a Westminster general election – the first shift in the centre of power of nationalist politics in decades.

Now, Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael know exactly how that feels. The parties have been pushed into second and third place by Sinn Féin’s share of the vote. 

The two parties – so used to dominating constituencies across the country – might well have been taken aback by the swell in support for Mary Lou McDonald’s party. 

But for some Northern Irish politicians, used to campaigning and canvassing alongside Sinn Féin activists, the party’s ability to attract voters has always been apparent.

Few people know the feeling better than the SDLP in the constituency of Newry and Armagh. Once a heartland for the party, the local MP from 1986 to 2005 was long-serving deputy leader (later Deputy First Minister) Seamus Mallon. 

Today, that same seat is held by Sinn Féin, while the party also holds three out of five Assembly seats in the area. 

To local MLA Justin McNulty, witnessing Sinn Féin’s success is hardly new. 

“They captured the mood,” he says. “I think it was a surprise to everyone.”

The leader of his own party, Colum Eastwood, gave his backing to Micheál Martin in the election

But McNulty, like many others, sees the vote for Sinn Féin as a rejection of century-long dominance of Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael. 

McNulty credits Sinn Féin’s electoral machine for helping to deliver that success – a machine that encompasses a vast array of willing campaigners and a well-resourced campaign strategy. 

“They are very well oiled and put huge numbers on the ground and manage the messaging very powerfully.”

It’s the messaging, in particular, that local politicians stress when they talk about Sinn Féin. 

The party, McNulty says, has placed itself in a position where it “owns” the Irish language in the North. Sinn Féin, during the three years of the Stormont collapse, rallied around and backed the campaign for a standalone Irish Language Act

“No one else can touch it,” he says.

“They used the Irish language very effectively recently,” he adds. “And reaped the rewards.”

general-election-2019 Tom Elliott during the UK general election campaign. Brian Lawless / PA Wire/PA Images Brian Lawless / PA Wire/PA Images / PA Wire/PA Images

Another person familiar with electoral battles against Sinn Féin is Tom Elliott, the former MP and Ulster Unionist Party leader.

Most recently, he lost to Michelle Gildernew in the UK general election in Fermanagh & South Tyrone – a constituency notorious for races that often come down to a handful of votes. 

Sinn Féin, he says, “obviously pick subjects they think will resonate with the people, whether they’re deliverable or not”.  

“They have tapped into those social issues on this occasion, around housing and healthcare.”

It’s a strategy, Elliott says, he has often seen from the party.

“They do pick issues, they’ll always do that. It doesn’t matter who they’re campaigning against.”

It’s an analysis shared across the unionist community. On Monday, First Minister Arlene Foster called the election a “huge change”

“I think if you look at that exit poll it’s very clear that people were upset about domestic issues, they were obviously very upset about the housing crisis that there is in the Republic of Ireland, the health issues that were prominent and to the fore,” she said. 

Still, that doesn’t mean Northern Ireland’s politicians foresaw Sinn Féin’s surge. 

“To a certain degree, I was surprised, even picking those social issues,” Elliott says. 

“Their history and their links to the Provisional IRA, maybe some of the younger generation just didn’t see it in that way. Maybe they don’t remember – they didn’t live through those terrible and dreadful times.” 

‘Surprised, not shocked’

One of the earliest unionist responses was from DUP MLA Christopher Stalford.

Writing on Twitter on Sunday night, even before the extent of the Sinn Féin success was clear, he wrote: “Whomever forms the government in the Republic of Ireland, our job will be to work together in areas of mutual interest”.

“Let us hope they resolve the deadlock soon and a stable government is in place.”

Still, some unionists have concerns that go beyond the need for a stable government as more Brexit talks loom.

Billy Hutchinson, the leader of the loyalist Progressive Unionist Party, thinks the result “says more about the two large parties than it does about Sinn Féin”. 

“It surprised me, but it didn’t shock me,” he says.

Hutchinson thinks Sinn Féin played the “social’ card”, focusing on issues like health and housing.

The vote, he argues, was not a mandate for a united Ireland but instead a reflection of people’s unhappiness at issues like health and housing. 

belfast-pride-festival Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald and Progressive Unionist Party leader Billy Hutchinson at a talk in Belfast. Liam McBurney / PA Archive/PA Images Liam McBurney / PA Archive/PA Images / PA Archive/PA Images

And while he doesn’t think he’ll see a “united Ireland in my lifetime”, he is concerned about what a Sinn Féin government would mean for Northern Ireland. 

“[Since] way back in the 1990s, the Irish government has played a straight bat,” says Hutchinson. “They wanted to guarantee nationalists in Northern Ireland that they would work to make sure things are done equally.”

“Sinn Féin can’t do that,” he argues.

One common comparison that’s been raised in the last week is the position the DUP found itself in following the 2017 UK election, when Theresa May found herself relying on the party’s MPs to secure a majority. 

Back then, there were concerns that DUP leverage on the UK government would distort policy on Northern Ireland, giving the party significant – some argued improper – sway. 

Now, Sinn Féin finds itself in an even more enviable position in Ireland – with the prospect of Mary Lou McDonald as taoiseach no longer a practical impossibility. 

“In terms of the Good Friday Agreement, they weren’t in government. How can they be in government and represent parties in the North?” says Hutchinson. 

It’s a legitimate question – and one no one has answered so far. Nothing in the Good Friday Agreement rules out Sinn Féin being in government in the South, but it certainly adds an element of uncertainty to cross-border relations that all sides will have to navigate in the months to come. 

“If they took up foreign affairs, they wouldn’t be trusted on Northern Ireland,” Hutchinson says.

“They would be representing republicans, not nationalists.”

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    Mute Reuben Gray
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 3:52 PM

    Great start, though I would say that in 2014, The Philippines broke a World Record by planting more than 3 million trees in an a single hour.
    Our lofty goal of 600k in 3 years is a bit tame.

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    Mute John Brendan Mullen
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 5:33 PM

    @Reuben Gray: as you said, it’s a good start. I see the possibility here for young, unemployed rural youth to gain employment planting and maintaining these new or expanded forest areas. That’s what should happen but I’m sure Leo and co have their cronies already lined up. Paying top buck to party financiers instead of providing the same quality at far less cost, providing employment and experience to those who need it most. Using this model, maybe we could plant far more much quicker and cut rural unemployment at the same time. Win, win, win.

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    Mute Michael Geraghty Bodycoach
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 7:04 PM

    @Reuben Gray: if every person in ireland went out and planted a tree in their gardens or wherever, even if it’s in a pot on a balcony that would be a fine start.

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    Mute Brendan Hughes
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 9:53 PM

    @Reuben Gray: do think tress grow on …….. nevermind.

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    Mute Daire Friel
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    Oct 3rd 2019, 2:13 PM

    @Michael Geraghty Bodycoach: it is actually

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    Mute Danny O' Mahony
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 3:50 PM

    Scots Pine isn’t a native tree
    We have enough of them
    Oak,ash and sycamore we need

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    Mute Reuben Gray
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 3:54 PM

    @Danny O’ Mahony: It is native to Ireland, or at least it was until it became extinct and then reintroduced more recently.

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    Mute Dave Bruen
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:17 PM

    @Danny O’ Mahony: Scots Pine is native, Sycamore isn’t native

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    Mute WoodlandBard
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:36 PM

    @Danny O’ Mahony: Scots Pine been in Ireland since Ireland was called Scotia, but Sycamore arrived with the Normans because when they arrived Ireland’s tree cover was already down to around 10%.

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    Mute Sea Graham
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 5:27 PM

    @Danny O’ Mahony: on the case already. Planted acorns last year and have had a 50% success rate. Planting about 100 this year and chestnut

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    Mute Monty Donotno
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 8:16 PM

    @Sea Graham: horse chestnut not native but lovely flowering tree. Spanish chestnut fab tree as well. Not native mean they host f all life for insects and so on. Willow easy to grow provides so much within a short time.

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    Mute Daire Friel
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    Oct 3rd 2019, 2:14 PM

    @Danny O’ Mahony: Scots pine is Native to Ireland

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    Mute Fiona Fitzgerald
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    Oct 3rd 2019, 3:45 PM

    I’m with you on that. If you can’t climb it or make hurleys out of it, skip it. Plant solid trees, not more monocultured pines. Nothing grows in pine forests but pine.

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    Mute David Grey
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:01 PM

    I’ve planted over 200 trees on my land, but apparently I’m a dirty polluting rural dweller compared to the latte sipping urban dwellers that buy organic fruit and veg from the far reaches of the globe while I grow some of mine.
    Carbon tax is ridiculous unless it’s based on actual science and doesn’t impoverish rural people.
    What about giving us carbon credits for our efforts instead of rewarding the wrong people….

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    Mute Clifford Brennan
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:05 PM

    @David Grey: Nice one. What species did you plant?

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    Mute Monty Donotno
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 11:23 PM

    @Clifford Brennan: yea was it laurel or leylandii?

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    Mute Hatchjaw
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    Oct 3rd 2019, 2:32 AM

    @David Grey: I plant 30 to 40 trees every year. Planted all Scott’s Pine last winter, Beach and Oak the year before that. This year I plan on spending a couple of hundred euros on trees.

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    Mute Anthony Clark
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 3:53 PM

    So “Ireland to plant 22 million trees *every year* for next 20 years”… but will take them 3 years to plant the first 0.6 Million… Suppose there has to be a ramp up but that’s a very slow start.

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    Mute Karl Charlie
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:02 PM

    @Anthony Clark: i dont think the 600k trees planned is part of the 22million a year id say this is on top of the 22mil planted to replace trees cut down

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    Mute Brian Ó Dálaigh
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:12 PM

    @Anthony Clark: that’s 600,000/22,000,000 native trees. Guess what the remaining trees are. Monoculture sitka spruce to create ecological dead zones.

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    Mute Peter D W Clancy
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 5:22 PM

    @Anthony Clark: I was thinking it should read 22 million trees over the next 20 years.

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    Mute Anne Monahan McGrady
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 10:53 PM

    @Anthony Clark: Another journal error !

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    Mute Clifford Brennan
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:04 PM

    We can all add to this. You’ll find lots of saplings in Spring growing where they won’t last too long. Dig it up carefully, pot it if necessary, watch it thrive and replant it when ready. Its basically free to help out in a small way.

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    Mute Martin McFly
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:53 PM

    @Clifford Brennan: thanks for the tip. Great idea. I’ll be on the lookout now in Spring.

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    Mute Burn_the_Witch
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 5:19 PM

    @Martin McFly: Do it before spring. You want to do it before any buds show up on the tree, so end of November or December.

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    Mute yell cub
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 7:38 PM

    @Burn_the_Witch: I do this every year. Pot up 20-30 baby trees, water them over the summer, after about 2-3 years they’ll be a bit bigger than knitting needles. Plant them out when there’s no leaves on the stem (if you disturb the root when the tree is in leaf it dies in a few days, replant only when leafless/dormant). Plant them wherever you can and where they’ll have a good chance of surviving, spare ground, wild ares, gaps in hedgerows on the side of the road. It’s free and a bit of fun.

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    Mute Diarmuid Hunt
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 10:13 PM

    @Clifford Brennan: Took an offshoot near the base of an older sycamore during the snow two years ago, getting too big for my apartment now though, will have to give it away this winter I think, it’s just over a metre now.

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    Mute Cooking School
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:09 PM

    Irish oak please

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    Mute Brendan Brennan
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 5:14 PM

    Just ordered 300 native trees for our own site today, hoping to start planting this October Bank Holiday weekend. Trying to do our little part.
    Bought them from hedging.ie, found them to be the best prices for non commercial customers like myself.

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    Mute johnbunton
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    Oct 3rd 2019, 7:26 AM

    @Brendan Brennan: Is there grants available for such purchases I wonder? And if not there should be.

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    Mute Brendan Brennan
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    Oct 3rd 2019, 7:36 AM

    @johnbunton: Hi John, I looked in to that but there’s no grants for small land owners. Just farmers and large land owners. I paid for the trees myself. I bought 2.5 acres last year and that’s where the trees are going to be planted by myself and by the help of my extended family.

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    Mute johnbunton
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    Oct 3rd 2019, 8:20 AM

    @Brendan Brennan: Great stuff I’m looking into a small plot of agricultural land myself and was thinking of doing something similar. Hopefully government bodies catch up in the future and it’s possible to get some funding.

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    Mute Brendan Brennan
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    Oct 3rd 2019, 8:55 AM

    @johnbunton: Absolutely! But while we wait for the governmnet to catch up, we should all try do our part where we can

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    Mute In my opinion
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 5:11 PM

    Why can’t we utilise TY students and have them assist in the planting of trees on common land around Ireland every single secondary school take part. Then have the primary school kids take part in bee bombing grass verges and public areas around Ireland.

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    Mute Daniel Dunne
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 11:51 PM

    @In my opinion: I.n.s.u.r.a.n.c.e. the silent killer to every great idea.

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    Mute Shayne O'Donoghue
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:19 PM
    43
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    Mute Séan Ó Nuanáin
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 3:48 PM

    Cuireann sé gliondar orm seo a chloisteáil

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    Mute MiseBean
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 10:39 PM

    @Séan Ó Nuanáin: Da mbeadh na corabhéil ós na crainn id ithe gach tráthnóna samhraidh, is beag gliondar a beach ort.

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    Mute Declan Edward
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:09 PM

    Oak and sycamore trees hard to spot in most areas now

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    Mute brendan H
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 7:57 PM

    @Declan Edward: Loads of sycamores around the west of the country

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    Mute Airwave81
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:01 PM

    Great idea as the could have a double usage as tree houses for our accommodation crisis .

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    Mute WoodlandBard
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:33 PM

    Looks good until you look closely at the figures posted in this article. 22 million trees per year being planted each year, but 600,000 native trees over 3 years is 200,000 native trees a year. Put the native trees planted against the 22 million trees planted per year, and that still keeps Ireland at around 1% native forestry?

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    Mute Micheál
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 6:12 PM

    Plant Oak!!

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    Mute Noel Cowzer
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:32 PM

    Why not let people collect and plant there own trees the children would have more respect and the local community would benefit tremendously ps it would only cost the tree price imagine the savings no council / local authorities workers needed only a stores person

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    Mute WoodlandBard
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:39 PM

    @Noel Cowzer: Yay! Indeed that is the most active and far better way than relying on government policy. We need to do this ourselves and forestry education is vital. This is all working incredibly well in Scotland. Now it’s Ireland’s time.

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    Mute Jodi
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:32 PM

    So the business to get into is tree nurseries…or will we be importing the saplings?

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    Mute Martin O'Reilly
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 5:37 PM

    Oh boy, with all the negativity in the the news lately this is fantastic to hear!

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    Mute Darren Bates
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:06 PM

    Brilliant!

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    Mute Matt Connolly
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 6:32 PM

    Oak, chestnut and walnut are the best native trees for consuming carbon. I’ve collected and potted some acorns with a view to moving one to my garden if any of them sprout. I’m running the risk of being accused of being an unhinged puppet, but it’s within the capacity of everyone with a garden to plant a tree. Collectively we could more than double that 600,000.

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    Mute Monty Donotno
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 11:13 PM

    @Matt Connolly: chestnut and walnut (has allelopathic roots that deters other trees) are not native and host almost no insect life in Ireland compared w likes of willow. Willow is an ecological bomb in terms of benefits it provides in short time to struggling ecosystems. Oak takes ages. Spends about 20 years putting down a tap root with an unbelievable hold on the earth below it. After 5 years you decide to move a planted oak, good luck, you might dig a metre of tap root and still lose the tree in transplanting it. Almost every other tree can be lifted with a higher success rate than oak. You need a fair bit of land too. Hazel a magic tree. Roots shrink when you cut that back and willow can be found in every colour though the one that plants itself locally such as grey is aboriginal and doing much more than a scrawny oak. Oaks are young at 200 years of age. It’s only then they start hosting an ecosystem unto themselves, but over first 10 years doing v little compared w willow.

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    Mute Peter Cuthbert
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 8:06 PM

    Adding Salix caprea and other salix species would enhance Biodiversity. .The All Ireland Pollinator Plan developed by the National Biodiversity Data Centre lists Willow as a very important component of food resources for Bumblebee Queens as they begin breeding in early spring

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    Mute Chizy Andrew Mullally
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:43 PM

    Great start……and in a couple of months chop down a hundred thousand Christmas trees…something has to give

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    Mute Steven Moens
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 5:11 PM

    @Chizy Andrew Mullally: Christmas trees are a crop, they’re not even counted as forestry. You don’t for example qualify for forestry schemes when planting a Christmas tree plantation.

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    Mute joe
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 5:16 PM

    @Chizy Andrew Mullally: what’s your point? They absorb co2 get cut down replacement trees are planted. The Christmas trees get recycled a rot down slowly releasing the co2 which had been absorbed and creating compost. What’s the issue? Better than plastic crap!

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    Mute Peter Cuthbert
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 7:49 PM

    Good start.Once nurse species such as alder and birch have established, hope oak will be considered on suitable sites .Direct seeding might also be an option.Hope trees will be of native irish Province and not imported ?.

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    Mute Sean O' Donovan
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:40 PM

    Carbon credits? Nah. Too busy robbing the Irish folk of hard earned cash.

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    Mute Aine Power
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 7:10 PM

    Where’s the oak, sycamore and beech. Cheap trees, and no one needs more conifers.

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    Mute Tim Pot
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    Oct 3rd 2019, 6:24 AM

    @Aine Power: They are native species chosen for their appropriateness to that location.

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    Mute Sean Thornton
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 8:14 PM

    Wilding is better. Leave the land fallow and mother nature takes care of itself.

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    Mute Fiona Fitzgerald
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    Oct 3rd 2019, 3:54 PM

    @Sean Thornton: Not noticeably. Aren’t we down to 1% forest as it is? It’s great to hear that some government effort is being made. Besides, a lot of wild seeds are dropped by birds, and they need somewhere to perch, hence more trees (besides my balcony, damn pigeons).

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    Mute Eugene Conroy
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 5:37 PM

    Great that’s about 60 trees for every homeless person in ireland. We should bring back ANCO and teach them how to build cheap wood framed shanty town style accommodation.
    There yeah go no. Problem solved

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    Mute Patrick Ó Beagáin
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    Oct 4th 2019, 8:17 AM

    All the trees that are planted can be registered on: https://www.trilliontreecampaign.org/

    @David Grey
    @Brendan Brennan
    @yell cub

    Also check out the “easytreesie” project.

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    Mute John Meaney
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 8:04 PM

    Will the EU owned them as the already own our forest ?

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    Mute Reuben Gray
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 9:30 PM

    @John Meaney: what the actual?…..

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    Mute John Meaney
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    Oct 3rd 2019, 12:09 AM

    @Reuben Gray: ya the journal should do a report on the EU own the rights to our fish, rivers,drinking water, bogs, and Forestry

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    Mute Chizy Andrew Mullally
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:45 PM

    Great start…and in a couple of months chop down a hundred thousand Christmas trees…something has to give

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    Mute Karin Muller
    Favourite Karin Muller
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 6:31 PM

    Do the maths here pls – somethings wrong

    2
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Garry Coll
    Favourite Garry Coll
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 10:59 PM

    Just don’t put them close to the location of a 5G mast or you will run the risk of getting arrested.

    2
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Chizy Andrew Mullally
    Favourite Chizy Andrew Mullally
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 4:48 PM

    about the same amount of Christmas trees?

    1
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute joe
    Favourite joe
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    Oct 2nd 2019, 5:17 PM

    @Chizy Andrew Mullally: they get replaced!

    10
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