You are assuming that in my observing of your approach it’s a criticism. Chill!Your obviously not in an area where herd species are a problem?!
K
You are assuming that in my observing of your approach it’s a criticism. Chill!Your obviously not in an area where herd species are a problem?!
With my small bit, it is ingrained in them, the herd has followed the same route year in year out for the last 40 odd years, the farmer himself has told me that there has been the same tracks in the same place with the same gaps in the hedges since he was a teenager and he is now 55 odd!Sounds like your in a good spot to create a vacuum with sweet ground which sucks them in ready for your attention, a satellite helping control, get a few like minded folks dotted about will make a difference. Problem is the like minded and motivated who are prepared to get stuck in, so to speakback to the old extraction after the deed.
We keep coming back to this which affords me some comfort given my submissions to the DEFRA consultation.All true, the disposal presents a problem for sure once all or as many as possible have embraced the concept.
With my small bit, it is ingrained in them, the herd has followed the same route year in year out for the last 40 odd years, the farmer himself has told me that there has been the same tracks in the same place with the same gaps in the hedges since he was a teenager and he is now 55 odd!
With all due respect i am well chilled!You are assuming that in my observing of your approach it’s a criticism. Chill!
K
Yup, is a big stumbling block given health and safety, infrastructure of ground and the likes.We keep coming back to this which affords me some comfort given my submissions to the DEFRA consultation.
K
But in reality if others around you aren’t doing the same you are making no meaningful difference. It does at least give you something boast about online though I guess!15 odd years ago I took that piece of red ground on manage and keep the numbers under control, now in my work ethic if I take a job on I do that job to the best of my ability!
I don’t fanny about, there are too many people in the surrounding area that are not pulling their weight in managing these red deer that I have around me, so therefore I now and have done for the last two or three years shot every single red deer I have seen on sight subject to the law no messing about if it’s brown it is down end of!
I don’t want to kill the last red deer in this area, but until the numbers are under control or at a controllable level in that area it is wholesale murder end of death and destruction!!
Your obviously no in an area where herd species are a problem?!
It’s nothing to do with shooting heavily pregnant females, they already are by the end of the doe/hind season. It’s about not leaving behind dependant young to starve to death if they happen to be born a little earlier than usual.Until the herd species under control i fully support night shooting and extended hind doe seasons, the time for being sentimental and being squeamish about shooting heavily pregnant females etc has long passed.
Stalkers need to man up and get on with it!
This is the kind of legislation that works because it benefits the landowner for deer numbers to be controlled.German Revier system sets out a damage and fine compensation scheme, Hunting lease holder has to pay for any crop damage.
It wouldn't work here in the UK. Lease areas are too small. One herd of fallow may wander across multiple land holdings in a single night, so unless the deer on all of those land holdings are managed by one lease holder (which is unlikely) how do you determine who is the person responsible for paying compensation?This is the kind of legislation that works because it benefits the landowner for deer numbers to be controlled.
I would say landowners or agricultural occupiers must be left in control. That includes tenant farmers, who shouldn't have to put up with damage to their crops by deer if the landowner isn't doing anything about it. Also, in my opinion, in situations where freehold sporting rights have been separated from landownership, it should still be the landowner or agricultural occupier who calls the shots on deer management, not the owner of the sporting rights..
Landowners MUST be left in control over who they have on their land controlling deer. Tyranny by stealth is not welcomed.
When I filled out the consultation I too suggested the compensation aspect from landowners or leaseholders.Consider “different hunting ( bow , black powder !) “ technique for muntjac to allow hunting in town parks etc.
When I filled out the consultation I too suggested the compensation aspect from landowners or leaseholders. Bow hunting if regulated could open up the longer hours and extend the season for females. My logic for this is that you have to be closer so would potentially be in a better position to see later into darker settings, its much quieter and the ability to observe and select does without young followers should be increased. I appreciate this is not a view shared by many on here and is highly unlikely to ever happen but I think the principle is sound. Give longer seasons for bows such as in the USA plus it would/could encourage more stalkers to get out. It doesn't have to be all about a handful of professionals killing all the deer but maybe more individuals taking what they want or need to eat. Again this works well in many other countries.

Rarely shoot a muntjac doe that isnt pregnant. Even measured the foetus for records at one time.Until the herd species under control i fully support night shooting and extended hind doe seasons, the time for being sentimental and being squeamish about shooting heavily pregnant females etc has long passed.
Stalkers need to man up and get on with it!
Death and destruction of the four-legged fuzzy wuzzies in Rambo mode- love it !!
Don’t be so hard on yourself.I've joined this party a bit late and have read the whole thread this morning, ironically probably shouldn't have waisted the hour and gone out to cull another fallow from my ground