A good rant

paul o'

Well-Known Member
not a fan of the guy but what a good rant

JEREMY CLARKSON
april 28 2019, 12:01am, the sunday times
Jeremy Clarkson: forget Chris Packham’s coup — we farmers speak the only language pigeons understand
jeremy clarkson

Fishing. It’s not one of my specialist subjects. I do not want to stand up to my gentleman’s area in an icy Scottish river and I’d rather spend my spare time in the pub, with friends, than sitting, by myself, on a damp canal bank with a bag full of maggots. Fishing, really, is for people who hate their children.

But, this morning, I feel duty-bound to come to the defence of the nation’s anglists, who are being blamed for an alarming drop in salmon numbers in Scottish rivers. There used to be a time when 25% of all the fish that left their birthplace came back. Today, it’s just 5%.

Those who enjoy animal rights say fishermen and fishermen women are to blame, along with farmers and bankers and possibly Mrs Thatcher, and conveniently fail to mention a couple of important points. Almost all the salmon caught by anglers are allowed to resume their journey after they’ve been landed. And, more importantly, the mouth of every Scottish salmon river is patrolled these days by an armada of hungry seals.

You want to get the salmon numbers up, you must do something about the number of seals. But what? Seals have big doe eyes and puppy-dog faces, and no one wants to see them being beaten to death with bats.

This, then, is the problem with conservation. Protect one species — and seals are very protected — and it’s going to have an impact on another. It’s all a question of balance and being sensible. Which, I’m afraid, is hard when our government is being advised by a Swedish teenager and Chris
Packham is a wildlife presenter on the BBC, and I like him. He’s a good communicator, fun to be with, hugely knowledgable about punk rock and able to tell a corn bunting from a reed bunting at 400 paces. He’s also a fine lobbyist. So fine, in fact, that, having teamed up with a former conservation director of the airborne wing of the Labour Party, the RSPB, he was able to convince the government’s conservation watchdog, Natural England, to announce that it is now illegal to shoot pigeons.

Now I’m not going to be silly about this. Last weekend, as the sun blazed down, I very much enjoyed sitting in the garden listening to the wood pigeons cooing away. It’s a sound that makes me feel warm and fuzzy. And I don’t hold with the argument that town pigeons should be hounded to extinction because they crap on your car. They do, but it’s not a big issue to get a hosepipe and wash it off.

However, I’m a farmer these days, and one of the things I grow is oilseed rape. I grew enough last year to make 100,000 bottles of vegetable oil.

This year, though, things are tricky, because a weed called black grass, which is immune to herbicides, is ravaging the crop.

And what’s left is being half-inched by pigeons. I’m told that I can try scaring them away with loud bangs and kites and statues of Jon Pertwee, but I’m also told by the Viyella army of local countrymen that none of these things actually works. You have to shoot them. And now we can’t.

Score one for Packham and Corbyn’s RAF. But hang on, because if there’s less oilseed rape, that means there’s less vegetable oil, which will drive demand for alternatives such as palm oil. And palm oil production is what’s destroying the jungles of Indonesia, and with them the orang-utan.

So what the do-gooders have done by helping the pigeon, which is as prolific as nitrogen, is kill more of Borneo’s endangered orange monkeys. And that’s obviously idiotic. Happily, there seems to be a solution.

For nearly 40 years farmers have been using a so-called general licence to shoot pigeons, because they’re protected under wild bird legislation, drawn up to save important stuff like the osprey and the golden eagle and so on.

In short, you could get permission to shoot certain kinds of common and unimportant wild birds, such as pigeons and crows and magpies, if it was bleeding obvious they were stealing eggs, pecking out the eyes of lambs or devastating crops. Well, thanks to Chris Packham’s lot, that permission has now gone.

There is one idea for keeping the pigeon under control. Simply remove it, along with the crow and the magpie, from the legislation covering wild birds. Then no special permission to kill it is necessary. It’s not as if this minor shift in the law would cause millions to take to the countryside each weekend in weirdo NRA combat strides, because to shoot a pigeon you need a gun, and you still need a licence for that.

But will the government allow a pigeon free-for-all? It should. It makes sense. We live in weird times, though, when governments in general and ours in particular are entirely detached from the real world. They seem to live in a universe full of unicorns and magic fairy dust. So there’s no way Michael Gove, who’s running the countryside this week, is going to say, “Lock and load, Farmer Giles. Let’s waste the motherf******!”

So what about this for a plan? We pat Chris Packham on the back and say, with a magnanimous smile, that he has won. A bit like remainers are being urged to do by Brexiteers. But then we carry on as before. A bit like Brexiteers are being urged to do by remainers.

Seriously, can you see the police being that bothered? Really? About the death of a pigeon? And how would they ever know? A shotgun is noisy, but it’s not so noisy that it can be heard in the nearest police station, which these days is usually 20 miles away. And only open from nine to five. On a Tuesday.

Plod isn’t interested when I have a gate or a quad bike nicked, so I can hardly see a Swat team coming through the door with an enforcer ram because they suspect the pie I’m taking out of the Aga has four and twenty pigeons in it.
 
That is funny and real

a key point Clarkson made
"Simply remove it, along with the crow and the magpie, from the legislation covering wild birds. Then no special permission to kill it is necessary "
 
I've no idea who or what Jeremy Clarkson is or does (that's one of the perks of never having had a telly), but he seems to have it all summed up quite nicely there. I hope the right people are reading it and feeling slightly foolish.
 
I've no idea who or what Jeremy Clarkson is or does (that's one of the perks of never having had a telly), but he seems to have it all summed up quite nicely there. I hope the right people are reading it and feeling slightly foolish.
You really have never heard the name Jeremy clarkson before?!!
 
I've no idea who or what Jeremy Clarkson is or does (that's one of the perks of never having had a telly), but he seems to have it all summed up quite nicely there. I hope the right people are reading it and feeling slightly foolish.
How do you know he is on the tv?
 
What’s happens if I’m not protecting crops. I just want to eat them??? What catchment of law am I in there???
 
Thanks for posting that, brings the whole silly business down to earth. I ran a number of Larsen traps on mine and neighbours land this year and accounted for a good number of Magpies, we now have all noticed an increase in the Bluetit and Blackbird population, which unless common sense prevails again wont be happening next year.

JC mentioned sheep with eyes pecked out, for anyone in doubt this happens a lot, a fat ewe gets cast in the night (trapped on her back) and within an hour of dawn either a Carrion Crow or a Magpie has pecked her eyes out. She has to be destroyed and any of her Lambs (that the Corvids Have left alone) bottle fed most times. The same thing happens when a Ewe is having a difficult birth and can’t move Magpies gather like Vultures and literally jump all over her to peck her eyes out.

Don’t start telling me it’s nature taking its course, if these murdering #&*@“* aren’t controlled we won’t have half the songbirds within 10 years.

Willowbank.
 
Loathe or Love him Clarckson,s common sense shines through ,just a pity he cant give Packham a blood transfusion and infect the odious creature with a dose of said common sense .Packham has no idea of cause and effect ,stop bird pest control and wonder why food costs a lot more and disease which is free is back on the rise .
Maybe thats the answer cover his roof in bread or corn and see how he goes when all is covered in Pigeon poop
 
It's a fairly reasonable assumption that when a name crops up that I'm "supposed" to know about but don't, it's someone that's become well know as a result of being seen on the telly.

Apologies, unneccessary. Was in an argumentative mood last night after a discussion about corvids etc.
 
......
Don’t start telling me it’s nature taking its course, if these murdering #&*@“* aren’t controlled we won’t have half the songbirds within 10 years.

I often have to point out (usually in a debate) that we are not separate from nature.
Just because we choose what to do, rather than act out of instinct, doesn't mean we have to run by different rules.
It's survival of the fittest, concious decision or instinct.
 
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