A small interesting clip on the grey partridge

Interesting video.
Great to hear that there’s now a shootable surplus in some areas and that GWCT are continuing looking after the situation.
Not sure exactly what we are being asked to do in order to help going forward. It was a little bit vague about that.
 
Sorry to keep referring to it but even if you trap and snare those that you can legally do so, you still have the same problems. The proliferation of avian predators is the biggest.problem with badgers coming next. The amount of sparrowhawk's, buzzards, kites, ravens, carrion crows and magpies is now way beyond reason.
Our grey partridges are declining rapidly on the estate even after all legal predation control has been carried out and habitat well managed. When I was young I could count Covey after Covey on a mixed farm, they are now extinct along with many song birds in that area. In those days all crows and magpies nests were destroyed and the birds shot by either farmers or keepers,.buzzards and ravens were only seen in Wales and Scotland and sparrowhawk's were not plentiful. The reasons for the demise of partridge is plain to see but their countrywide disappearance will never be altered due mainly to the inability to control their main predators.
 
This clip came up as a recommendation when I was on YouTube, nice to watch, certainly highlights the problems Ratel mentions above. We have a few pairs.

I also watched 10 minutes of Springwatch out of the corner of my eye as I chatted to the missus last night, a Goshawk took out a Song Thrush nest, and a fox just ploughed through a hedge in the dark and took out a Chiffchaff nest (I think it was a Chiffchaff, could be wrong)... I wonder how many cameras they have set up on various nests that get plundered... loads I would guess.
 
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