Pike has become a sporting fish here, it used to be something folks were glad to get rid of. Those wee triangular bones are a pain to remove properly, and unlike the salmon you can't eat them.
No idea on the commercial production of seedlings, I know that they sprout along every forest road though (and every garden where they're shed, I have three sprouted this Winter in one of my planters, and I'll need to find homes for them ) so it can't be that hard to get them going.
Forests here were either deciduous, and were cropped for pannage, shipbuilding (oak preferred), etc., or pine for fuel for the iron furnaces or pit props. They weren't really seen as places for much food. Hedgerows and forest edges though, and lots and lots of orchards around. Apples, pears, plums, and the like are still grown in huge variety.
M
No idea on the commercial production of seedlings, I know that they sprout along every forest road though (and every garden where they're shed, I have three sprouted this Winter in one of my planters, and I'll need to find homes for them ) so it can't be that hard to get them going.
Forests here were either deciduous, and were cropped for pannage, shipbuilding (oak preferred), etc., or pine for fuel for the iron furnaces or pit props. They weren't really seen as places for much food. Hedgerows and forest edges though, and lots and lots of orchards around. Apples, pears, plums, and the like are still grown in huge variety.
M