Mark, I wouldn't if I were you tongueout , the guy who set that up was later charged by the DNR with animal cruelty.bigfathairybiker wrote:I could just use one of these..... :lol:
Mark
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Blu
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Mark, I wouldn't if I were you tongueout , the guy who set that up was later charged by the DNR with animal cruelty.bigfathairybiker wrote:I could just use one of these..... :lol:
Mark
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That may be the case, but I follow an Australian adage - If it's feral, it's in peril. It's just that I prefer to utilise the 'ferals' if possible.Dougan wrote:Why us!? - I can think of other rodents that breed faster, are more sustainable, and have far more meat on them...
If you're concerned about 'alien' species, then I'd be more worried about the current rate that they are now arriving...many are aquatic or fauna; so are not as obvious as a mammal, but some could do some real damage to what is left of our countryside...grey squirrels have been here for nearly 150 years...I don't want to upset you but the fight against the grey was lost long ago.oaken wrote:Ah, the truth as Dougan sees it!Dougan wrote:
Ah, more rhetoric from the anti-squirrel brigade...
...the first link is from the Ornithological Society - They are (as you can imagine) totally biased towards birds, and see most mammals as evil - What they won't tell you, is that while squirrels are partial to a few birds eggs, they are by no means the worst offenders...many birds will destroy other nests (even within their own species) just for territorial reasons. And robins (yes the cute ikkle robin) are one of the worst, particularly when it comes to destroying blackbird eggs...
...this is the real truth; backed by scientists who understand whole ecosystems, and are not just biased/obsessed with a single species.
And the second link, to me anyway, is the peak of hypocrisy...while squirrels do damage trees, so do a lot of other animal...and none of them are even a drop in the ocean compared to what humans are doing...
...I just love the way we like to blame any other species than ourselves :roll:
And you accuse me of rhetoric clapclap
Grey squirrels are a recently introduced ALIEN species. Yes other native species do do more damage to the songbird population and our woodlands but they are an indigenous part of our, admittedly, fecked up ecosystem.
I would rather see thrushes hopping around and healthy woodlands than be deceived by the cute fluffiness of this destructive alien species. As you point out, our own environment has enough trouble without tree rats!
Don't get me started on magpies!!!
:lol:Chapuis wrote:Dougan said - "...but then as people on here keep telling me, I am a 'Bambi shagging tree-hugger'..."
Dougan that's illegal also.
bigfathairybiker wrote:That is something I will be discussing with my Dad.Dougan wrote: ...it sounds like you have a lovely spot for squirrels; so I guarantee that if you remove them, others will move in to replace them, so it won't solve the walnut tree problem.
The only reason that there are squirrels there is because it is such a great place for squirrels.
What I think I will probably do is catch them before they eat the walnuts and release them over Barton range as they could do with some. :roll:
Then hopefully we will be able to harvest the nuts before another pair move in.
btw: Do squirrels find their way back or is it another pair that has moved in?
Anyway they will be left in peace this weekend as tomorrow is competition fun day at the ITSC!
Mark
Not posted with Nippletalk.
I once got quite a telling off for feeding feral cats at a campsite in WA ( ) ...but I totally agree with their stance on invasive species...Sandgroper wrote:That may be the case, but I follow an Australian adage - If it's feral, it's in peril. It's just that I prefer to utilise the 'ferals' if possible.Dougan wrote:Why us!? - I can think of other rodents that breed faster, are more sustainable, and have far more meat on them...
Or looking at it another way, if humans are the cause of the the problem then we should fix it - even if it means the alien species is removed permanently from it's non-native habitat. There is or should be a balance between prey and predator in nature - if the prey species has no natural predator then we as those responsible for the imbalance must fulfil that role.
I wouldn't do that unless they are 6br proof !bigfathairybiker wrote:That is something I will be discussing with my Dad.Dougan wrote: ...it sounds like you have a lovely spot for squirrels; so I guarantee that if you remove them, others will move in to replace them, so it won't solve the walnut tree problem.
The only reason that there are squirrels there is because it is such a great place for squirrels.
What I think I will probably do is catch them before they eat the walnuts and release them over Barton range as they could do with some. :roll:
Then hopefully we will be able to harvest the nuts before another pair move in.
btw: Do squirrels find their way back or is it another pair that has moved in?
Anyway they will be left in peace this weekend as tomorrow is competition fun day at the ITSC!
Mark
Not posted with Nippletalk.
So are Badgers - they invade discussions without adding anything of substance to them...meles meles wrote:oomans is an invasive species too...
That's irrelevant. Grey Squirrels have been in the UK for about the same time as rabbits, foxes and other ferals have been in Australia - the difference is we don't see them as cute and cuddly. We see them as invasive species that the damage the environment and destroy our native species; so we try like hell to get rid of them and rectify our mistakes in releasing them.Dougan wrote:
I once got quite a telling off for feeding feral cats at a campsite in WA ( ) ...but I totally agree with their stance on invasive species...
...don't forget though that much of Australia and it's wildlife is the same as it was thousands of years ago...whereas in the same timescale, the UK has completely changed.
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