That's the key thing my mate - time. Soon as lamb is born it has a time scale it has to feed within, for a number of reasons. One being that they have limited reserves of brown fat which keeps them warm. But if they didn't get decent colostrum feed early it'll have ongoing problems. That colostrum from ewe in first couple of hours is the absolute life for a lamb.if found in time
Yeah, I had one I seen in thermal, bumbling towards me. I let it get closer & closer, until it almost in kicking distance - I hissed "feck off badger" wow!! Like a rocket down the field, didn't break stride at fence at bottom, under in a flash and gone. They body shape is deceptive as they can really move when want to.Ive seen them run as fast as any greyhound too.
Now the million dollar question is Tim , did the fox kill it or find it dead ?
It was not there when we went in but that one was eating it and 2 others hanging around after a doing a tour of the farm..Now the million dollar question is Tim , did the fox kill it or find it dead
It was not there when we went in but that one was eating it and 2 others hanging around after a doing a tour of the farm..
shoot first ask questions later.
what happened here?
It was not there when we went in but that one was eating it and 2 others hanging around after a doing a tour of the farm..
shoot first ask questions later.
what happened here?
We shot 150 foxes in 3 years on a local sheep farm as they lambed 3x a year, the shepherd had foxes coming in the other end of the stalls while he was tending a ewe at the other end.I reckon a lamb ate it!
Found it dead, I think, from what little I can tell from that photo. But in the absence of any additional info it's difficult to say from a pictureNow the million dollar question is Tim , did the fox kill it or find it dead ?
Because they don't have fangs maybe?Found it dead, I think, from what little I can tell from that photo. But in the absence of any additional info it's difficult to say from a picture
However, the million dollar question is not whether the fox killed it or found it dead, but why was the lamb vulnerable to predation in the first place?
We shot 150 foxes in 3 years on a local sheep farm as they lambed 3x a year, the shepherd had foxes coming in the other end of the stalls while he was tending a ewe at the other end.
One jumped the stall and grabbed a new born.
The badgers cleared up most of the foxes very quickly
Is it a road bike ( number plate and lights) or dirt bike. Ether way they will visit the local petrol station to refuel.Of course, if you keep chickens or pheasants, you need to eliminate foxes.
However, on arable farmland where I manage the wildlife, we had got to the point where there is a beautiful harmony with rabbits and mice kept down to numbers that do minimal crop damage because there is a rich array of predators: stoats, foxes, both barn and tawny owls, as well as buzzards and other birds of prey. Deer numbers have been brought down low enough that the trees surrounding the fields and the plants in the margins are their food, rather than the crop, whilst still giving new deer each year for the freezer. The bucks are all great, as the rifle does the genetic selection. It has become a wild life reserve, where the crop is untouched and all the mammals we have in the UK are in a harmonic balance: nature at its best.
Then someone comes along, unauthorised, on a motorbike with number plate obscured, with rifle exposed on his back, dressed in black, complete with balaclava, and shoots the vixens. So her cubs will starve, and rabbits will increase. The tool keeps on doing it, usually Saturday nights.
What is it about foxes that drive people to takes risks like this? Any ideas on how to prevent it?
NB: Police have been out a few times, farmland is easy to escape from. Residents now call me if they see things going on, but they are not out in the middle of night. They find the remains of the foxes the next day or so. I do a patrol at night, which helps in my mind, but I then go back to bed.
You have SunI think you misunderstood me.
Sheep getting ill and or dying is the shepherds concern and good shepherds they are. The whole family is involved and for many decades.
The problem with Charlie is when this area gets overwhelmed, and it does. Then there is to much competing. If an sheep fall ill in the night they will, if I dont keep a balance, be predated on before death.
Do my thing and they have a chance.
The upshot for me is total unlimited access to private land to shoot what i want whenever I want.
I scratch their backs and they scratch mine.
I have months of fire wood drying in the sun by way of appreciation.