Might be because the male is a boar and the female a sow? Other than that I can find no reference, ancient or modern, to them being referred to as 'pigs'. Could it be a localised thing?
In Welsh they are known as "moch daear" - earth pigs.
Might be because the male is a boar and the female a sow? Other than that I can find no reference, ancient or modern, to them being referred to as 'pigs'. Could it be a localised thing?
ytene, I'm sure there are unscrupulous people out there who take the law into their own hands, but I would expect them to find better ways of disposing of the evidence than that. Personally I fail to understand why the badger, a species which is classified as "Least Concern" on the IUCN Red list, enjoys the protection it does. Other species in that category include fallow deer and red deer, as well as the red fox. The common thread here is that all these species can be shot almost at will. Whilst I admire the badger, they are undeniably powerful and fascinating, if they were a threat to my livelihood I would want to be able to protect myself, as I could against rabbits, deer and foxes. Why does the badger enjoy this lofty status of protection?
As an aside, I hear that badger is actually pretty good eating!
Has no one thought about the "tinned terrier"? One ladle full, a couple of sods of earth, Bobs yer uncle, goodnight Irene!
Has no one thought about the "tinned terrier"? One ladle full, a couple of sods of earth, Bobs yer uncle, goodnight Irene!
Thats the way Defra should do it ! No messin with shootin or trappin or even vacination, or even carcas disposal! Quick, efficient, and cheap! If you can gas moles, why not badgers ?
Any legal cull of Badgers should be accompanied by carcase retrieval & tagging , along with some of those vast sums spent on compo, being directed into post mortem testing for the disease, thereby giving everyone a definitive picture on what is carrying what,...... anyone with an open ticket with minimum Level one, should be considered qualified to shoot Brock where required, with at least a 60 grain round, I probably shoot many, many more rounds after last light, than in any other situation, so Brock is just another species to me, I would qualify my post of 60 grains being an optimum, as they are a really tough animal... I clouted one once with the towbar on my van, @ sixty miles an hour, it shook itself down & carried on it's way.