ChatterBank0 min ago
Culling of vermin
2 Answers
Does this work, and what are the dynamics ?
Cycling to work I am struck by the sheer numbers of squirrels etc, along one stretch of wooded pathway across the common, probably one every 50 yards or so. Similarly magpies in every other tree.
If a pest-exterminator / gamekeeper (I know a few) goes on to a farmer's land and shoots say 30 squirrels, for how long is this effective, and what is the point, beyond satisfying what seems to me in a few cases to be a gratuitous pleasure in killing.
Cycling to work I am struck by the sheer numbers of squirrels etc, along one stretch of wooded pathway across the common, probably one every 50 yards or so. Similarly magpies in every other tree.
If a pest-exterminator / gamekeeper (I know a few) goes on to a farmer's land and shoots say 30 squirrels, for how long is this effective, and what is the point, beyond satisfying what seems to me in a few cases to be a gratuitous pleasure in killing.
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There is no point in shooting squirrels unless you happen to own a commercial forest where large numbers do serious damage to young trees.They have no effect on ordinary farming.
Magpies are not a pest at all. People in towns think they are and complain about the magpies taking eggs and the poor little chicks of garden birds. That's an innocent's view. Fact is, if there are more magpies about then there must be more garden birds about. So it's a good sign, not a bad sign, if magpies are on the increase.Their numbers reflect the health and abundance of their food supply.
Now, shooting rabbits can be quite another matter.They breed like rabbits, obviously, and can clear quite an area of crops.However, in practice, hardly anyone bothers because their depredations are small given the large scale of modern fields and the scale of arable farming.In this village, all arable, a couple of men go out shooting them but the interest is much more in getting them for the pot , local restaurants etc, than the pest control
Magpies are not a pest at all. People in towns think they are and complain about the magpies taking eggs and the poor little chicks of garden birds. That's an innocent's view. Fact is, if there are more magpies about then there must be more garden birds about. So it's a good sign, not a bad sign, if magpies are on the increase.Their numbers reflect the health and abundance of their food supply.
Now, shooting rabbits can be quite another matter.They breed like rabbits, obviously, and can clear quite an area of crops.However, in practice, hardly anyone bothers because their depredations are small given the large scale of modern fields and the scale of arable farming.In this village, all arable, a couple of men go out shooting them but the interest is much more in getting them for the pot , local restaurants etc, than the pest control
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