stalkinginengland
Well-Known Member
Its not the releasing of greys thats the problem or the holding of them. Greys naturally move from there home in the winter and early spring when they pair. The only thing that will stop this is the correct habitat. Then you may get x number of pairs to the acre. The better the habitat the more pairs you will hold. Wild birds know the ground and they stay in the main on the same area from the time they are hatched until they move off in the late winter. If you have enough pairs you can shoot the surplus because they won't stay anyway and will possibly die as they are pushed away. I believe the optimum rate is 4 pairs to the acre. once hatched these birds will stay on the same field and cross it once a day from one side to the other.
The question is how to get these birds on the ground in the first place. The idea of broodies sounds good but there is some reserch by the GC that suggests that the alarm calls and behavier of these is not the same as if reared under english parents. Also English both hatch the brood with the cock bird sitting next to the hen and taking them under him to brood as they hatch.
I am convinced that the only way is to allow the pair of english to hatch and brood their own chicks in a pen in the area where you want to build up the stock and then release the whole family together after they are hardened off.
There is also a problem with worms and this can be treated by spinning corn with added panicure around the fields that they cross daily and like that they will find the medicated feed. With the use of conservation headlands to promote saw fly there is a chance . But releasing reared birds into the wild will never do the trick even if we all put some down.
Just a thought
Mark
The question is how to get these birds on the ground in the first place. The idea of broodies sounds good but there is some reserch by the GC that suggests that the alarm calls and behavier of these is not the same as if reared under english parents. Also English both hatch the brood with the cock bird sitting next to the hen and taking them under him to brood as they hatch.
I am convinced that the only way is to allow the pair of english to hatch and brood their own chicks in a pen in the area where you want to build up the stock and then release the whole family together after they are hardened off.
There is also a problem with worms and this can be treated by spinning corn with added panicure around the fields that they cross daily and like that they will find the medicated feed. With the use of conservation headlands to promote saw fly there is a chance . But releasing reared birds into the wild will never do the trick even if we all put some down.
Just a thought
Mark