countrryboy
Well-Known Member
A very very goood reply tamar, and i totally agree with u and wot u have said.
But i think shooters and the organistions to do with it need to join together and get out like they never have before and try to educate as many people as possible rural and urban.
I'm not talking about convincing them shooting is great but even to convince them that shooting is a neccessary evil would be a start.
Shoots do an awful lot of postive work that is often unoticed. All the purdey and silver lapwing competitions and awards etc should be far better publicised esp to the general public.
The general public and many in acedemia believe predators have no impact on anything and if u just leave stuff to its own devices it will be ok.
Habitat management alone will not help most of the falling/rare birds species as has been proved by the last 30yrs of mismangent and agri-enviro grants, often doing more harm than good by concentrating birds in an area making it easier for predators
No one is talking about open seaon on BoP's but when it is 'normal' to see 10 or 15 soaring on the same thermal or more following the plough it just becomes a bit much.
I'd say BoP's are a success story of the last 20 years there numbers are soaring beyond belief.
1 farm near me now has 100 plus Red Kites at feeding time, is that natural? they have spread right throu the district, yet i was on that farm 13 years ago balancing on a fuel bowser dangling of the digger boom over an unlit fire and there was NO red kites then. So in 14 years they have 100+ on that 1 farm plus all the rest spread elsewhere, that is phenomal breeding, wish grey partridges or may other bird species bred like that.
Fair enough red kites will eat mainly carrion etc but if there hovering up all the carrion that leaves less for the buzzards, foxes badgers etc, the more mouths the more food it takes for them to survive, at some point there will be more food being ate than wot is produced
Ask any keeper, yes a fox may get in a pen and kill as many as it can (but u hope it is a very rare occurance, and it will only happen the once) but buzzards will visit a pen every day day after day killing birds and eating very little and stressing the rest. Must admit buzzards dinae bother our pens too much now with the ammount of cover and other things we've tried etc (touch wood) but there is only so much u can do.
Goshawks are the worst if ur unfortunate to have any near, we have effectively lost a whole pen for the 3rd yr on the trot due to goshawk and the panic they cause, giving up on the pen next year only 5 yrs old and taking it down
3yrs ago a we lost over 20 in 4 night of almost fully grown birds in mid/late sept all found headless at bottom of roosting trees, most likely a tawny never took a bite ourt of any bird
We're only a small shoot so to lose 20 shortly before shooting season is like losing a whole shoot day bag
Ps tamar was the fox stat on adults or poults or was it nest predatation?
But i think shooters and the organistions to do with it need to join together and get out like they never have before and try to educate as many people as possible rural and urban.
I'm not talking about convincing them shooting is great but even to convince them that shooting is a neccessary evil would be a start.
Shoots do an awful lot of postive work that is often unoticed. All the purdey and silver lapwing competitions and awards etc should be far better publicised esp to the general public.
The general public and many in acedemia believe predators have no impact on anything and if u just leave stuff to its own devices it will be ok.
Habitat management alone will not help most of the falling/rare birds species as has been proved by the last 30yrs of mismangent and agri-enviro grants, often doing more harm than good by concentrating birds in an area making it easier for predators
No one is talking about open seaon on BoP's but when it is 'normal' to see 10 or 15 soaring on the same thermal or more following the plough it just becomes a bit much.
I'd say BoP's are a success story of the last 20 years there numbers are soaring beyond belief.
1 farm near me now has 100 plus Red Kites at feeding time, is that natural? they have spread right throu the district, yet i was on that farm 13 years ago balancing on a fuel bowser dangling of the digger boom over an unlit fire and there was NO red kites then. So in 14 years they have 100+ on that 1 farm plus all the rest spread elsewhere, that is phenomal breeding, wish grey partridges or may other bird species bred like that.
Fair enough red kites will eat mainly carrion etc but if there hovering up all the carrion that leaves less for the buzzards, foxes badgers etc, the more mouths the more food it takes for them to survive, at some point there will be more food being ate than wot is produced
Ask any keeper, yes a fox may get in a pen and kill as many as it can (but u hope it is a very rare occurance, and it will only happen the once) but buzzards will visit a pen every day day after day killing birds and eating very little and stressing the rest. Must admit buzzards dinae bother our pens too much now with the ammount of cover and other things we've tried etc (touch wood) but there is only so much u can do.
Goshawks are the worst if ur unfortunate to have any near, we have effectively lost a whole pen for the 3rd yr on the trot due to goshawk and the panic they cause, giving up on the pen next year only 5 yrs old and taking it down
3yrs ago a we lost over 20 in 4 night of almost fully grown birds in mid/late sept all found headless at bottom of roosting trees, most likely a tawny never took a bite ourt of any bird
We're only a small shoot so to lose 20 shortly before shooting season is like losing a whole shoot day bag
Ps tamar was the fox stat on adults or poults or was it nest predatation?