Police called in to bring halt to felling of trees
POLICE have stepped in to stop oak trees from being chopped down.
Residents watched in horror as contractors started pulling down the 100-year-old trees at historic Padnell Grange, Cowplain.
Dental charity Borrow Foundation, which is selling the land to make way for a 126-home estate, said it was thinning the trees.
But the police were called and put a stop to the work.
Havant Borough Council then issued a Tree Preservation Order on the area to stop any more trees being chopped down.
Jonathan Mercer, 42, who lives in Cherry Tree Avenue, close to Padnell Grange, said: 'This is an abuse of the environment and a tragic loss of these trees.
'Part of the ecosystem of that area has now gone.
'These trees are so old that we will never see their like again in our lifetime.
'Our concern is the wildlife and how it will be affected.
'This is a valuable community amenity and, although the trees were on private land, people were able to enjoy them from the footpath and we have seen lots of bats there.'
Under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 it is a crime to destroy a bat's roost.
Police have confirmed no bats were harmed but have contacted Natural England which will carry out a survey of wildlife in the area.
The Borrow Foundation has not broken any laws as at the time there was no TPO.
Cowplain councillor David Keast said he was sad to see the trees go.
'They were mature oak trees, more than 100 years old and it is a real shame they have been chopped down,' he said.
'But I feel reassured that the council acted so quickly to protect the remaining trees.'
Padnell Grange dates from the 1840s and, although it is an attractive manor house, it is not a listed building.
Nigel Borrow, a director of the Borrow Foundation, is out of the country.
But Rob McKay, from developer Berkeley Street Properties, which is set to buy the site, said one of the problems was that the empty house had been vandalised recently.
Cutting down the trees, he believed, was meant to make the site more open and improve security.
Dr Edgar Borrow was a doctor and farmer who lived at Padnell Grange with his family.
He established the Borrow Dental Milk Foundation in 1971 after research which showed fluoridated milk could help to prevent tooth decay in children if there was no other fluoride source available.
The first community based fluoridation scheme was implemented in 1988 in Bulgaria – two years before Dr Borrow's death.
Dr Borrow was also very generous to local good causes. He donated a quarter of an acre of land at the corner of Padnell Road and London Road in 1976 to Age Concern. There the charity built the Borrow Centre.
Looking for...
Featured advertisers
Jobs
Search for a job
Motors
Search for a car
Property
Search for a house
Weather for Portsmouth
Thursday 24 May 2012
Today
Sunny spells
Temperature: 15 C to 24 C
Wind Speed: 12 mph
Wind direction: West
Tomorrow
Sunny
Temperature: 13 C to 25 C
Wind Speed: 22 mph
Wind direction: East

