After taking a few hours to recharge and regroup, I've decided to reply to your questions.
Are the older local farmers who work with these chemicals intimately dying younger than average?
Is there any local evidence among the health of aging farmers that supports your farming chemical paranoia?
Do you think the local farmers are not concerned for their personal health?
Do you think you have more chemical exposure than the local farmers?
The above questions are irrelevant to the issue of chemical trespass and the damage being caused to all the trees, plants, and vegetation on my property, my neighbors property, throughout the county, and likely again this year, throughout the state.
As I'm sure you well know, pesticides are designed to kill specific pests. 24-D LV6 is designed to kill broadleaf plants, trees, etc. The lethal dose of 24-D required to kill a tree is not the same as what would be a lethal dose for other living things. Some would require a higher dose, others a lower dose.
At the moment, I am concerned with the effects on vegetation.
Should some time in the future I be diagnosed with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, my focus will change.
Do you think farmers want to use their expensive chemicals on anything other than their crops/land ? Do you think farmers are intentionally wasteful in this regard ?
No.
You mentioned a couple of dead trees and cited what appear to be "weak" trees.
Quote me where I made any mention of "weak" trees. I don't believe I did. There is a lot of dead in my yard.
Assuming you find traces of some farm chemical in a living tree,
Laboratory tests preformed at the request of the Department of Agriculture inspector have positively determined chemical trespass and contamination due to 24-D LV6, both in 2022 and again in 2023. I strongly suspect when he takes samples again this coming Monday, the results, again, will show 24-D contamination.
how will you make life more difficult for the farmers? Assuming the famers are in compliance with regulations, do you plan a civil suit?
Up until this after noon, I have been saying I do not want to sue the farmers.
But, I've been very carefully mulling over this course of action this evening.
Sadly, due to the way the system is rigged against private property owners in the favor of the big chemical companies, there is no other recourse left than to sue the farmers for the damage caused to property.
If the farmers feel that someone else is to blame, then it will be upon them to prove that in a court of law. I've just this evening come to this sad conclusion after exploring every possible scenario and this appears to be my only recourse.
My property was contaminated with chemical trespass two years ago and I have watched the steady decline and slow death of my trees and all other vegetation every single day since then. Since it's safe to assume the farmers will continue to farm, in the same manner, and using the same chemicals, they use now I will be forced to watch things die on my property until everything is dead, or until the day I die, whichever comes first. I estimate that to be around 20 years. That's a lot of pain and suffering that will be inflicted on me by the farmers via the chemicals they spray. And you have the nerve to ask "how will you make life more difficult for the farmers?"
If you successfully make life more difficult for the farmer(s) and "win", what do you think the ultimate outcome will be?
I hope I will be compensated for damage done to my property, and for my pain and suffering for the next 20 years.
I have no intention to leave my land.
If the farmer decides to sell his property adjacent to your property following sufficient complaints, what type of development do you think will happen adjacent to your home?
The farmer doesn't own the property adjacent to mine.
The landowners around here rent the farmland out to the farmers. The farmers don't own all the land they farm. I don't expect there to be any other complaints because everyone else around here is either a farmer, knows a farmer, or rents out their property to a farmer.
The members of the city council are farmers. The attorneys for the town, city, and county are farmers, or come from farming families.
So, no, the farmers won't be selling their farms - not yet anyway and not until they're ready to retire and get a good offer from a developer, which is already happening and has nothing to do with crop spraying.
Actually, what's been going on is old family farms are being sold at auction and the local farmers, in the past, have been grabbing up all they could get their hands on. But now they have competition from out of state, out of country land grabbers. A development of multi million dollar homes would be a much preferred sight than dying, dead, and contaminated fields.