+1 I have just moved house and its right by a wood. Yesterday morning there were 9 magpies within 300 yards. It seems most gamekeepers these days don't bother with magpies and just put more birds down. When my dad was a keeper we ran larsen traps and tried as hard as possible to keep on top of them ( and squirrels ). We had lots of wildlife there.
Yes you are correct about poults but it all helps to provide a better environment for wildlife. These days shoots mainly depend on released birds.To be honest keeping on top of the magpies will have little actually effect on a released bird shoot, they'd really ony predate eggs/young chicks so no real threat to poults.
They will raid ur feeders/feed rides and wipe out any wild stock and many other nesting birds thou. So still a good idea
I'm no expert on magpies as very few in our area but most advice is best to focus it in the spring when there pairing up, try looking on either basc or GWCT websites for fact sheets tips on trapping them as well as the law.
I have heard it said that trapping all year can educate the bird slightly to ur traps as not as keen to go in them
In scotland u again have to be registered with polis and mark ur trap with ur officail polis number (its free thou and don't need a course)
To be honest keeping on top of the magpies will have little actually effect on a released bird shoot, they'd really ony predate eggs/young chicks so no real threat to poults.
But surely we should strive to assist songbirds and other wildlife, not just quarry species, by reducing predators such as magpies?+1. Better to devoting the time available to trapping or snaring foxes and feeding your coverts on a released bird shoot. in fact I'd even say that on a released bird shoot magpies can be a good, free, "strolling stranger"...or fox...alarm in those coverts.
But surely we should strive to assist songbirds and other wildlife, not just quarry species, by reducing predators such as magpies?
But surely we should strive to assist songbirds and other wildlife, not just quarry species, by reducing predators such as magpies?