Craigsaun
Well-Known Member
Are you commenting to aggravateBecause they're cute
Are you commenting to aggravateBecause they're cute
What why we have five months of hunting period for them.![]()
Shoot badgers to protect rare birds, say conservationists
Animal to blame for almost 42pc of curlew and lapwing nest raidswww.telegraph.co.uk
Basically, research shows that badgers damage success of ground nesting birds so we should be able to cull them.
Outwith the UK unfortunately.What why we have five months of hunting period for them.
Not in the least. The reason badgers are treated like they are is because they're cute and cuddly bears in the public (townie) perception. Plus the previous badger digging etc.Are you commenting to aggravate![]()
Sorry mate , as a farmer I know what TB does to some farms and it’s been proven that badgers are TB carriers but nothing seams to done about this. My question to them is , we have TB , we also have a lot of badgers, so why can’t they trap a badger, test it for TB , IF it’s clear then leave the set alone , if not wipe it out . We are just going round in circles and it’s bloody annoyingNot in the least. The reason badgers are treated like they are is because they're cute and cuddly bears in the public (townie) perception.
You can't honestly saying if they were ugly looking the situation would be the same.
The thread is about why badgers are protected like they are the answer is because they have good PR basically.
As I said before you would want the law to reflect facts and logic which is clearly doesn't.
No worries mate. I wasn't meaning to need flippant but we do live in a very superficial society.Sorry mate , as a farmer I know what TB does to some farms and it’s been proven that badgers are TB carriers but nothing seams to done about this. My question to them is , we have TB , we also have a lot of badgers, so why can’t they trap a badger, test it for TB , IF it’s clear then leave the set alone , if not wipe it out . We are just going round in circles and it’s bloody annoying![]()
I agree,.before the legislation I worked on an estate with a couple of setts. I caught a badger in a wire and it was in an awful state with.sores and about half the weight it should have been. As the sett was in a wood with a dairy farm adjacent and pretty sure it was TB I gassed the sett. I never told anybody and the sett was never used again. A few months later they received.protection.When I joined and worked for the NFU in 1965, it was well known that badgers spread Bovine TB. In those days, the problem was dealt with in a realistic and sensible level. As a result, TB was pretty well under control. When the ban came in, it was only about a year before the levels rose out of control. As the old song goes, "When will they ever learn?"
.And still are where supplementary licenses are in place. Not for much longer, sadly.singletons were also allowed in some cases.
Helicopter hunt…They are the elephant in the room when it comes to ground nesting birds, you can make the habitat perfect and control other predators but then badgers wipe everything out.
It’s not uncommon to see 50 on a night where I am.
I've seen them run across fields as fast as a greyhound I kid ye not.Last week I watched a badger activity hunting. First attempt was a rat in a hedgerow which scarpered up to the hedge. It then turned its attention to the rabbits in the field. It was actively hunting and chased one 20+ yds before it lost it. It was really running quite quickly. Quite a turn of speed.
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So have I , they can certainly shiftI've seen them run across fields as fast as a greyhound I kid ye not.