enfieldspares
Well-Known Member
With regret I renewed with SACS in December 2019 so am outside the fourteen day "second thoughts" allowed time limit. But I sure as heck won't be renewing come December 2020.
Why ? It’s not like they posed a threat to lacs etc anyway ?I bet LACS, Wild Justice etc. are rubbing their hands with glee when they read how many people will be resigning from pro-shooting organisations.
I bet LACS, Wild Justice etc. are rubbing their hands with glee when they read how many people will be resigning from pro-shooting organisations.
Countryside Alliance?I’ll have a look at that before SACS renewal around May time. I’ll stay with the CA for the time being as they’re quite proactive on other rural issues that directly affect me.
I bet LACS, Wild Justice etc. are rubbing their hands with glee when they read how many people will be resigning from pro-shooting organisations.
With regret I renewed with SACS in December 2019 so am outside the fourteen day "second thoughts" allowed time limit. But I sure as heck won't be renewing come December 2020.
Ah..but SACS don't refund. I've paid the lot up front. If it were via direct debit then, yes, I certainly would.
In all honesty, I think the game shooting fraternity should be looking at a voluntary ban on the release and subsequent shooting of all game birds within the next five years. Despite the evidence that game meat is sustainable and the allied activities benefit many other species, the general public is largely against the wholesale release of thousands of reared, non-native birds into the environment every year simply to be shot for sport. We don't need them for food and chickens are much more cost-effective to raise anyway.
Whereas pigeon, rabbit and crow shooting can still hold the moral high ground, providing a valuable and free service to the farming community and the country as a whole (think of the cost of publicly funded pest species control), the game shooting industries can make no such claims. The tide of public opinion is marching inexorably onwards toward this outcome and, despite best efforts, it is clear that game shooting has been painted into a corner of sustainability and credibility.
It is with this in mind that I propose that all organisations get behind my suggested capitulation, despite any evidence to the contrary, and adopt this wholesale, voluntary, moratorium on game shooting as soon as possible. It is clear that this is the logical next step. We can kiss goodbye to the controversial muirburn policies, the tarring by association by unscrupulous gamekeepers and the accusations of raptor persecution. This would leave the rest of us in a much better place, those that simply shoot species such as deer, fox, rabbit, pigeon and crow for pest or species control without the fear of having the mud thrown at us for our legal, necessary activities, or the clay and target shooting communities whose activities take place in controlled and defined areas that do not affect SSSI's or any other sensitive area.
Whose with me? BASC? CA? NGO? Anybody?
I wouldn't think the NGO as you would be making most of their members redundant and causing family hardships. It would also p me off a tad.☻
you are quite right Harrymac. The Food Safety Act already has a section permitting the appropriate mionioster to prohibit any foodstuff where there is reason to believe it is hazardous - remember the beef on the bone and spinal tissue ban!Without trying to be flippant, yes, I think that is silly. The amount of lead ingested by people who eat a lot of shot game was shown to be inconsequential. A study in Scandinavia showed lead levels in such people to be slightly raised above those normally found in the population, but even that level fell well below what is considered harmful.
As for damaging the environment. How? Bearing in mind the amount of lead getting chucked around our countryside every day, why aren't we hearing from the water companies about elevated levels of lead in water. Why aren't farmers experiencing crop failure, and why aren't the Food Standards Agency complaining of lead contaminated peas and rape seed?
I'm firmly of the opinion that this is not an environmental issue. It is an anti shooting measure in an environmental disguise.