I have three pens with 800 birds in each, normally I can count on there
being at least three buzzards at each pen actively killing birds, along with
christ knows how many sparrowhawks doing the same. Usually they account for
up to 50 birds per pen This year I thought I'd give the electric fence trick
a try. I lost four poults in transit and used them as bait. Pluck them a
wee bit to make them noticeable, attach a live feed from your pen's
electric fence to the bird (I tie the line about the leg and prod a bit into
the body cavity) and place the bird on an upside down plastic dinner plate
(I have the plate upside down so that it does not collect water and short
out the fence). When the buzzard comes along to lift this easy meat it will
take it off the plate and because the bird its tied to the electric fence it
will not be able to go far with it before it has to land, when it does it
gets a shock and will not take a pheasant poult in a hurry again.
This cured my buzzard problem and I did the same thing for the sparrowhawks
but used a bird that one had killed and had not finished eating before I
disturbed it, I laid the trap in the same manner, except I did not shift the
carcass and the sparrowhawk came back to it within half an hour, only to
screech and fly off never to have a go again.
This year I've lost only one poult to a sparrowhawk and none to the numerous buzzards we have.
As to whether this is legal or not, I have done a lot of checking and can
not find anything to say it is illegal. There is nothing illegal about using
an electric fence to protect a pheasant pen from predators, this includes
badgers and pine martens and they are afforded the same protection that
buzzards are. A sheriff I took advise from said that it could be deemed as
harmful to a buzzard and this could be used as an argument against using it.
This could only be proven if a buzzard was killed by using this method, as
no buzzard is killed it is then sensible to argue that a pheasant poult is
about the same weight as a buzzard and you regularly see them walk around a
pen and get a shock from the same fence without doing them any harm . On talking to our local SNH office manager, he was enthusiastic about a non lethal method of control and said that he could see no grounds for it being illegal.
As to hoping for a law change or a licence to kill them, dream on! In Scotland our MSPs are actively promoting Scotland as a land of enlightened conservation, do you honestly think there's any of them with balls enough to have Scotland the first country within the EC to allow licensed killing of a native bird of prey species in order to protect a non native species released to be killed for pleasure?