reloader54
Well-Known Member
It's a sort of in joke. "SHE" written by H Rider Haggard was called Ayesha. Played by Ursula Undress in the film.
I remember it well, mostly the bikini.
It's a sort of in joke. "SHE" written by H Rider Haggard was called Ayesha. Played by Ursula Undress in the film.
Couldn't agree more. They need control.somebody pointed this out to me the other week,
looking at the comments it would seem the heron is hated 'cos it eat goldfish, and little baby ducks, but these muppets don't seem to know what damage otters do to those same goldfish,koi, fish stocks, and waterfowl, and anything else they can get hold of.
Frankly, I admire foxes as a species. Over millennia, they are the only dog-like animal that has not only survived over a widespread area of the Earth but are able to constantly adapt and thrive in differing conditions. In most areas, they are doing much better than thriving. I have no problems with their numbers being controlled though for good reason, be that farming interests or for game. Indeed I've done a bit of that. But, as any gamekeeper will tell you, you don't permanently get rid of them from an area. Even if you do kill all the foxes on, say a pheasant shoot, it'll only be temporary and sure enough, that area will be fox free for not too long.
Being one of the biggest shoots they probably put down lots more birds than required as it is a big commercial shoot.Being very hard on foxes is not essential on todays typical game shoots where only a tiny fraction of the bag is wild. One of the biggest game shoots in the north is very close to where I live and has lots of foxes, for his own reasons the head keeper dictates they are left alone by his team of underkeepers, no doubt some are killed when causing bother but certainly by February there are lots on the ground. I know of other good shoots where foxes could be seen come out of nearly every drive and bags were always achieved. There does seem to be a kill everything mentality among particularly the young keepers, often it just seems to be for bragging rights between old college mates.
Being one of the biggest shoots they probably put down lots more birds than required as it is a big commercial shoot.
On shoots like this they hardly have time to control vermin.
They are too busy doing all the other work.
A small private shoot requires vermin to be controlled because they can't afford to loose 100 birds if they only put down 1000 birds.
Regards Dan
there is an estate near me that puts down a very large number of pheasant and partridge [keepers are told never to repeat the exact numbers, even after leaving] but as the old saying goes,,, "three can keep a secret only if two are dead", rumour has it excess of 10,000 partridge alone, wouldn't like to put a number on pheasants, 1000 bird days are common, 500 before 11.30 sometimes.
the losses down to road casualties alone are more than some shoots total of reared birds. they do have fox control although the "method" would only be a guess.
A secret is only secret if kept to yourself. That is not a big shoot, one near here killed nearly 3000 partridge in one day. IMHO it's far too many but then how many is too many. Road kills mean very little in terms of large numbers and do not reflect well on shooting as a whole, and neither does fox predation have much effect. It's nothing to see 40 or so squashed birds over a mile of road. Foxes hardly need to kill anything, just nip down to the B.... road for a McDonalds.
Do you honestly believe this? I have never had time to ask a fox it's social standing.I was taught less foxes meant less grouse /gamebirds and other ground nesting birds would be eaten.very surprised to read such a statement.