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Report - - Wye Bugs, Kent. December 2020 | Other Sites | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - Wye Bugs, Kent. December 2020

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RXQueen

T-Rex Urbex
28DL Full Member
visited with @Chloe Explores and another lady.

a cold days exploring but at least the rain kept off. a quiet mooch around even though there’s a school next door and we were seen as there’s not a great deal of cover on that side.

bit of fun trying to find a way into the grounds involving numerous trees and attempts whilst trying to not look suspicious on a public footpath. once in the grounds we were greeted with rows of large greenhouses full of very dead plants. unfortunately on this visit all access to buildings were sealed tight and a lot of the greenhouses were closed too. we did manage to see one of the labs through a break in a window.

it was just getting dark when we left and after looking around here we tried the neighbouring college building but the only way in would have involved a mass of brambles so we called it a day and left disappointed and cold.

history -


WyeBugs is an independent partnership of professional scientists, based in Kent.

They specialise in providing insect diagnostic and support services to the horticultural and agricultural industry, as well as solving problems associated with insects in the domestic environment.

Their services should be of particular interest to the producers of chemical pesticides and biocontrol agents; their distributors; growers using or planning to use IPM; those interested in trapping and repelling insects, including blood sucking arthropods; and those in the field of compost and manure management.

They have extensive DEFRA and PSD approved experimental facilities available including laboratories; glasshouses; field plots; and controlled environments ranging from incubators to medium scale insectories.

Throughout the 1970s and 80s the Entomology Group at Wye College, University of London distributed biological control agents produced as part of their research projects to professional growers and amateur horticulturalists. These biocontrols were mainly predators and parasites of mealy bugs and soft scale insects, in particular the Australian ladybird Cryptolaemus montrouzieri and the parasitoid wasps Leptomastix dactylopii and Metaphycus helvolus.

In the late 1980s the group had the vision of biocontrol being used as a first choice for pest control by amateur gardeners - but that required a source of reasonably priced biocontrols packaged in quantities small enough for even a single 10' x 8' greenhouse. In 1991 we launched WyeBugs at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show, offering a full range of biocontrols by mail order for as little as £3 per pack. We produced the renowned WyeBugs Biological Control Handbook, which demystified the science behind the technique and gave home horticulturalists access to some of the knowledge previously only enjoyed by professionals. Our service to commercial customers was also enhanced, offering despatch direct to their customers under their own brand names.

Once the retail biocontrol market had been proved viable, due in no small part to WyeBugs, other companies joined the scene and offered glossy catalogues and credit card facilities. As we still had our main task of scientific research, we handed over the retail side of WyeBugs to those better able to cope with the burgeoning demand. WyeBugs continued, as it still is today, to be a major producer and distributor of biocontrols for mealy bug, scale insect and other pests, supplying both professional and retail outlets.

It wasn't only biocontrol that occupied the entomology team at Wye during this period, however. They also built excellent links with non-agricultural industries, doing experimental work on insect repellents and attractants. This work encompassed the fields of domestic pests and life-threatening disease carriers such as mosquitoes. The group gained a reputation for producing commercial information rapidly and cost-effectively, but with scientific thoroughness and accuracy uncompromised.

In 2000 Wye College was merged with Imperial College London and became the Wye Campus of that institution. In summer 2002 the entomologists responsible for WyeBugs decided to leave higher education and launch a fully fledged commercial enterprise. WyeBugs is based on the Imperial College campus at Wye, with access to the College's glasshouse and experimental facilities as well as their own.

The development of WyeBugs as a comprehensive entomological research and development service was further enhanced in the summer of 2005 when we were granted certification by the Pesticides Safety Directorate (PSD) as an 'Officially Recognised Testing Facility / Organisation' (ORETO 190). With the expansion of our team we are now able to offer our clients a pesticide efficacy evaluation trials service able to evaluate a wide range of plant protection products.

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westernsultan

Banned
Banned
Nice report and history - have you seen the masterplan available as a pdf download but it won't let me copy the link. The document is entitled Former Wye College, Wye (Wye 3) dated March 2018
 
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Calamity Jane

i see beauty in the unloved, places & things
Regular User
Nice long exposures there. A place ive wandered but never shot. Great report, very comprehensive:thumb
 

Old Git

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
i too got seen by school guy near end of explore luckily. shot off a bit swift only to find someone had repaired barbed wire to cut off my escape. first time this has happened to me so ive been lucky. just left via other end across fields so no prob.
 

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