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drinksloe

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Everything posted by drinksloe

  1. But thats the problem almost every species thriving is a predator and usually an oportunist predator at that, so has no links if a prey species becomes less common. With more stable predator/prey reltionships predators will rise fall 1/2 years after the prey species numbers rise and fall. In this country the predator will munch on the easiest prey and just switch to the next easiest Look at the BTO census syrveys almost every prey species is in decline some and very sevre decline and the vast majority of predators are increasing rapidly. That is not a healthy place to be with only predators thriving, at some point everything will crash as no prey left. Plenty of scientifi studies out there that prove in a lot of areas things are being ate quickier than they can breed. My point about the rabbits is that if something has succesful as rabbits can be kept in check by predators other things have no chance. I can think of quite a few farms where i used to shoot 100 rabbits in a night 10ish years ago and not even dent the population, now hardly a rabbit, and plenty of other places that have never had many rabbits quite unusaul to see 1 now, can't think the last time i seen a rabbit on my shoot and not shot one for 5+ years Sort of got veered of topic but no matter how good the PM is at kiling greys the last thing u want to be doing is enouraging another predator in ecosystems already satrated by predators. I'm sure the idea will work initally for 5,10 or 20 years but at some point as PM numbers rise and grey numbers fall it will be easier for the PM to eat other things and thats when u will have a massive problem as protected (once protected always protected in this country no matter how much damage they cause) so u just have to sit back and watch our wildlife get eaten.
  2. Also in most parts corvids (crows, magpies), sparrowhawks, goshawks, and perrie's are all doing really well +badgers are all increasing population and range. In fact the only BoP not doing well is the once common Kestral as being bullied by buzzards, hardly see a kestral now in my area I can think of a few places where its not unusual to see 10+ buzzards playing in thermals. Rabbits are a fairly staple diet for buzzards, so even if each buzzard eats 1 rabbit a day and u have 10 buzzards in an area they were rare 10-15 years ago, thats 3500+ rabbits a year, in a good year with high populations probably not a problem but when numbers at a low point due to disease its too much to allow them to build and can keep them low or actually lead to local extinctions.
  3. But surely if a species has been here around 2000ish year it has a bit of squaters rights?? If ur going to class everything that came over from roman times on as non native/invasive they're will be a lot of very familar species in that group. My point with the rabbits if something as resilient and able to breed to almost plauge proportions is struggling and almost extinct in a few local areas where it used to be plentiful, many other animals are going to struggle that are not such prolific breeders. Disease is mainly responsible for the rabbits but now when they are at the lowest they are struggling to build up population again because of predation. rabbits have always been boom/bust since mixi arrived, usually just had to wait a few years for them to recover and survivors tended to be more resistant to the next bout of disease To turn it on its head wot species would u say are thriving and really doing well, increasing populations and ranges?
  4. i done some harvest/tractor work a few hours inland from there, but that was about Oct/Nov time. There is fruit picking up there too but not sure wot time of year. Would not fancy doing any tree work in OZ toooo many snakes and spiders about, and esp so when u get further north. Lot of browns in that inland area On that farm i killed over 60 Red backs in an hour or so, was sent up to get a load of old empty gas canisters in an area that looked heaven for snakes, drove the 7.5Tonner round and round in a circle beepin ghe horn round the cannisters to try and scare any snakes away. Bloody s*****ing myself. When i got back to yard the welder/fitter who looked after me gave the boss a real bollacking for sending me up there myself
  5. Like the above says, just cut the strings with a penknife and u can take as many leafs as u need quite easily, just watch if a big square heston baler, have heard of a few farmers being knocked over/falling off things by the force they can spring out at (in a confined hay loft) If big round bales, i roll them next to a pallet, flip it onto its end and just unwind the straw into a trailer or big tote bags etc, bit of a pITA to handle but means u can easily cover the bale to keep it watertight. U can just roll them out but then u have to pick al the straw up thats scattered everywhere.
  6. While i dinae agree with the widespread pioson drops i just can't see how in some areas u could do it any other way. Assuming the possums and others are causing so much damage, i don't know enough to know if they could be left un culled or if that would rape ur forrests? Last time i was kucky enough to be out we heli'd in to foirdland to do some white baiting i done some 'tramping'. The size and scale of that place blew my mind with just how remote it is. The cabin we were at was meant to be a 4 day walk only 1 way in/out and nothing else for hundreds of miles. I've cut in soime big commercial forrests and driving 10 or even 20 miles in to a job is not unusual, and generally if something happened ur not that far of a track or to the nearest house. Over there there really is absolutely nothing To be fair they were poisoning and trapping that area with hoppers but still seen plenty sign of deer and pigs and next group in had some pig dogs with them. Done the routeburn and greenstone tracks too, lot of trapping going on there for stoats
  7. Do u walk about with ur eyes shut? I'm not that old but in my lifetime the local area has changed massively, once common birds are now almost exticnt locally. Actualy quite rare to see any waders now and definately no succesfully breeding pairs. Look on the BTO site and see the ammount of birds species declines by over 70% in last 30 years. Wild Grey partrdige used to be the staple bird for shooting and if u look at the game returns were shooting hundreds of thousands if not millins every year nationwide, Black grouse used to be present in every english county now only left on grouse moors The nature reserve i'm on committee for refuses to kill any predators, yet we have only fledged 1 mallard duckiling this year and none the previous 4 years. (prob got 50ish resident mallard possibly 4 nest attempts at 10+ eggs each, thats a massive failure rate) Wildlife comes to our reserve to die or be eaten. Probably like most reserves actually doing far more harm than good by attracting higher prey densities in only to make it easy for vermin. The only good thing we have is lots of red squirrels, quite famous for them, sometimes 15+ around the feeders, yet catching greys all around now and a few on the committee are also against killing the greys :banghead: U've also got ur hedgehogs in a massive decline. bumble bees, even in this area hardly ant rabbits nowaays either due to mixi (which in latter years wasnae really affecting them that much) or VHD or predation. If u look at ur trees look at the diseases we've imported SOD in oaks, Ash dieback, PR in larch (my area is going to be a larch free area soon) most due to poor bio security. Not really a glass half empty type person but as far as i can see our wildlife is on way out, and most of the 'conservation charties' are doing more harm than good by caring more for donations than the birds
  8. Has the PTS changed? Been a few years since i've done it but in those days had to be sponsored by a company first so couldnae just go and do it. Nowadays the work is all naionalised and a company from anywhere could be doing the work there. Quite likely teams will be travelling hundreds of miles in to de veg, while u travel miles to where they came from passing on the mway. Think story rail have a lot on slighly further north.
  9. But wot other options are there? Or are the possoms, deer and stoats not really causing that mutch damage to the native flora and fauna? Done some hunting out there, mates out there are mad keen and obviously anti 1080. But i do wish this countries government had the balls to stand up and make difficult hoices that will upset folk to preserve our wildlife which is totally screwed in this country. Not really agreeing with the use of 1080, but if possums etc are causing problems i can't see any other vaible means to control them, athou u could probably say 1080 isnae working either as populations not decreasing Ps about the resistance i was refering to Australia, forget the name of the posion now, think it began with an R, long time since i've been in oZ
  10. Aye been throu some areas a few years after drops and been in a few areas where got a lot of land based feed stations. Got mixed views on it, on 1 hand think its great that NZ gov/DoC are trying to look after there native fuana after we have made such a mess of it. Really is an amzing place that i'd hate to see destroyed, by all the stupid thing we released. But i do feel bad for the animals die like that, but in fairness in NZ (almost) any mammal thats eats it is invasive and non native. Can't see any other real alternative as country is so vast and in accessable. When i was out in OZ they 'claimed' most native animals had some resistance to it as it was derived from the flame retardant in tree bark, so most predators have evolved a restistance to it over the years where cats and foxes don't.
  11. While i agree with u it would be nice i fear the price u'd pay would also be next to no song birds. When u look at the BTO red/amber list at all the once common garden birds that have declined 60,70, or 90% in last 30 or so years, i doubt such a ferocious and able hunter like the PM would be the deathnell for a lot of species There is hardly a natural part of the uk, all is managed land so expecting nature to find a natural balance is fairly naive
  12. Grey squirrels are hardly hard to catch infact 1 of the easist animals to trap. My poiint about the rabbit catchers was that was the days pre mixi and definately pre VHD, and whole regions worked together to keep rabbits at a sustainable level. These boys were taking phenominal nuumbers of rabbits every day. It would be possibly but to many bunny huggers wouldnae allow it, and would get upset by it.
  13. Not a lot of scientific evidence in praise of them on that thread thou. U talk about there acrobatics etc, the reds are even more nimble and acrobatic when u watch them, just most folk have forgot as been so long sonce seen a red. Greys don't have to be here to stay in there was a genuine motivation to cull them region/natioon wide. It would not be as hard as u think if the will was there, they wiped out the coypu years ago 80's?, have the Uists free of mink, which is the most ideal mink habitat u could have, and a nightmare for access for humans. if possible to do that there u can do it anywhere. Plenty of rivers/catchment areas now are mink free trying to bring back the water vole, and mink are pretty common. Even on the islands getting a few clear of hedgehogs now Go down the old fashioned route of a bounty on there tail, used to be bounty's on all sorts of things, even 2-5 quid a tail would definately make it worth while for many to set a few traps on a daily dog walk, or for keepers/farmers feeding birds/stock. and cheaper than some of the madcap/useless schemes that government will dream up. In the old days u had parish rabbit catchers and the ministry (MAFF) had and exercised there right to enter folks land to control rabbits/weeds if they were not doing it well enough. That right will still exist wether it would ever be used to enter some bunny huggers ground to kill squirells is something else thou Compared to many other countries we're pretty rubish at looking out for our native flora and fuana. Wether its boisecurity (diseases) or letting other plants become established (JKW or him balsalm etc) even in scotish mainland hardly a 100% pure bred red der left, as sika so widespread which hybridise with them. Both NZ and OZ routinely air drop poisoned baits to kill non natives, while that would never work here i wish some folk would grow a pair and make some harsh choices to protect wot's left
  14. Meant to add i think on both angelsy and Isle of wight are now considered grey free. Lot of hard work but it can be done. Some areas of cumbria and NE are getting their act together and reds are coming back I know an estate near me where 5 years ago only had a few reds left and catching around 100 greys, used some grant money to employ a trapper and now have lots of reds, reckoned to be well over 100 now and climbing rapidly. They're still catching a lot of greys but it is moves moving in and caught fairly quickly. Also the reds in this area do seem to becoming a bit more resilent to squirrel pox now which the english greys carry not the scottish (yet) But greys are not caught in small numbers all throu the district now, where 10 years ago would be almost none
  15. Most people/conservationists/charities believe the oppisate that greys are more canivorous than reds . Thats the 1st time i've ever heard that. Generally greys tend to live at 6-10 times the density of reds, so even if they are less canivorous they'd have to be 6-10 times less canivourous to make any diference. Most reeasrch/best practice also points to grey squirrel control to help song bird populations. Pretty sure Songbird Survival (a very good bird charity) have proved this and are carrying out more studies on this As for the article, the man's a complete idiot and lives with his head is some fantastical disneyfied world. While it is true PM's will actively target greys and in quite a few places in scotland are noticing reds coming back as PM become far more common, not really that rare in some parts now, infact quite common. Assuming we go do the intro PM route, wot happens in 10,20,30 years time if they are so succesfull and PM have bred to such numbers to wipe out greys and see reds spread back into new areas. Wot will all these PM now eat? Will they just lie back, job done and starve? Or will they turn thier attention to anything else they can catch (any ground nesting birds, song birds or rabbits). PM will happyily raid hen houss etc and are tremendous predators and very clever If u look on the BTO list there is an awful lot of amber and red listed species that used to be pretty common, while everyone like to blame nasty farmers/foresters for habitat destruction in the past 30 yrs when the biggest decline has happened they're has been very little habitat loss as farmers are so tied up with CAP/SFP schemes, and in many cases habitat has improved in that time but birds still declining rapidly. The 1 thing that has increased massively in that 30 years is pedattion wether from corvids, badgers BoP or cats, introing another predator to strained ecosystems is not a good idea long term. Bit like the cane toads in OZ, solved a problem but created a far bigger problem
  16. Could it be some sort of stand? Like a wire birly/fence wire spinner? Althou being square not ideal, just looks like some sort of collar half way up and u put the chisel bit into the ground up to the other bit that sticks out so always the same hieght?? Used to get a slightly similatr old tool like that for pulling thistle roots out but had a forked end and no collar.
  17. Never heard of that before, ur always learning. Wot do u do if u cannae get ur jimny into to the area (to wet or strainer tight in a hadge etc)
  18. If u look at the photo's it looks like it has chain link growing into the bark. Wouldnae be putting my chain throu that. Also will it even be his tree to cut? Lokks almost on the pavement so possibly a council tree.
  19. But how do u tension/pull ur clamp? Tractor?? Most fencers will use a clamp with 2 sets of pullers
  20. How do u do normal tensioning? Wire pullers are great bits of kit, pulled a few quads out with them. and some light trees over before i had winches A few local new/young fencers and farmers pull wire with the tractor but i'd use a set of pullers every time, esp if got 2 clamps and pulling net to the middle, can pull some long streches in a oner. One old school boy i worked with had welded extra long handles on his heads and usually had a pipe to give u that wee bit extra, was mental the pressure he put on his fences, to tight really. Hayes or drivall are the best, be easy enough to weld a rough copy but as was mentioned if puting so much pressure on old rusty wire a very high change of it breaking. Lost count of the times i've snapped line wires when patching old 5/6 strand fences and thats with all wire above ground U could somehow attach a butterfly/raddassuier to ur hook and place wire throu, couple of turns with a spanner and 4" nail and u've secured ur wire, be cheaper
  21. Cheers John, but i don't think 30/40 shots is an awful lot per bottle (assuming ur rifle has a buddy bottle) A few years ago when more rabbits about was not unusual to be shooting 50+ in a nite and not unkown to shoot 100+ Just seems a lot of faffing about about 40 shots when an extra box o bullets is far easier carried.
  22. Have u tried lighter/different pellets? or getting a mil dot scope? (to help for holdover) for ur existing a decent pcp airgun should still be fairly capable at 40m. Possibly pracice a bit more at longer ranges so u learn the drop or if usually shooting at longer ranges alter ur scope zero for 35m and get a set of sticks if shooting standing/freehand I looked into the FAC air route last time i renewed but ended up thinking to much hassle/money for wot they are, are do i really need one. Still got the slot From wot i've been told ur realy looking for a 20 or 22 most generally run around the 25-30 ft lbs, the problem u have is the ammount of air u use per shot, so shot count can drop drastically. Possibly it might be cheaper for u to sell ur sub 12 ft air gun and buy 1 already FAC rated, i was told once fac rated u can not un register them to sub 12 ft, so tend to get them cheaper as smaller market Plus the boy in the gunshop said u can still get richocets even with an airgun, generally the slower heavier more solid bullets are more likely to bounce than a fast frangible bullet. U get CCI segmental 22lr which are designed to break up so lower any bounce With a 22lr u can pick a work horse up for 50 quid all scoped and mod'd, and with a massive range of bullets, got ur basic HV and subs foxes rabbits and u also get various other bullets that have different uses, from sparrow shot meant to be able to shoot rats with it inside sheds to low power rounds that are meant to be around the 40ftlb mark Always meant ot get some of these different runds and see wot there like but never got round to it
  23. Cheers folks. Never thought about coppicing Oak or Beech, generally not a fan of beech as is shades out so much vege but be different when coppicing them. Do u have to let the stem get to a decent size (6-10?) before the first coppice cut for beech/oak? Imagine that will take a whie The other thing i was thinking was either cyprus/leyandi or SS/NS but top them low down to produce multiple stems, so really either coppiced or pollarded and keep them at a lowish hieght to create plenty of year round nesting/roosting cover. Good idea?
  24. Alright folks. Just wondering wot u all consider to be the best mix of trees, bushes or shrubs for conservation? Mainly for general conservation but have quite a few Red squirrels but also bird, butterflies or insects. Ideally have some food value too, costing me a fortune feeding the squirels and birds the now. It's in Sw scot on a steepish banking probably about 100mx40+m wide. At moment got a few pretty large Sycamore trees growing which i will be gradually felling or reducing/pollarding over the next few years as worried about the size of them on such a steep banking, just asking to be blown over Was thinking of a mix of black/haw thorn, rowan, bird cherry, hazel, holly (sure i've forgot some since i sat down to write this) and mibee some Buddicea along top edge, where i may plant a wild flower mix or something similar or seed bearing, wild bird seed/insect rich mix etc Not really wanting anything that will grow to big or heavy for the banking. Open to any ideas folks and also any decent nurseries in southern scot or north eng? ideally not wanting any imported trees breed in europe Cheers
  25. It's the sort of question u could ask 10 different folk and get 10 compleltely different answers and different reasons. Really all depends on wot ur shooting and where and likely ranges, 22lr is very cheap and adaptable but not as good at other at range or if hard ground conditons. If u do a lot of tree shooting for squirrels/crows u'd need to stick to an air for safety Also can cut 22lr barrels right down short so great for sticking out of van windows or handling/carrying in thick cover etc. Can be a pain getting longer barrelled guns in/out van windows sometimes

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