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Ron Brind Posts: 19041 Joined: 26th Oct 2003 Location: England | quotePosted at 13:41 on 29th October 2009 Another load of old rubbish! Poaching has been part of our culture, whether it be rabbit, hare, pheasant, deer etc but now it seems we have a 'National Poaching Officer' who is presumably paid for the pleasure! Couldn't the money be better spent elsewhere? And what about roadkill? Lets say the car in front of you hits a deer, you pick it up (which is quite legal) you skin and prepare for the table, but along comes the so-called poaching officer demanding a dna test on the carcase, only to decide that it came from Lord whoever's Estate! What another load of old b......s and I think I might consider stuffing an antler up the poaching officers nostrils!!! Apparently butchers are going to be asked "where did you get the deer from" and if they look a little sheepish in responding they are in for a visit. Just to clarify the earlier point about roadkill. If you (the driver) kill a deer with your car you must not take it home because that is illegal. However, the person in the car behind you is entitled to pick it up and take it home. Still a country boy at heart, but I wonder how many will feel more sickened by my picking up the deer, as opposed to a National Poaching Officer employed to stop it? I await the flak... |
Beth Austin Posts: 1090 Joined: 14th Sep 2007 Location: UK | quotePosted at 19:40 on 29th October 2009 Ron, I agree with your thougths on this, as I know that if I had either hit a deer or a deer hit me...I wouldn't be waiting for Car 2 to come along and claim it, legally. I will not and have never run deer with a vehicle, as I have worked a fair number of years on emergency services and have picked up people injured and killed by deer( primarily during 'rut' season). Once the deer has been hit...it needs to be put down(killed). The butcher should always be allowed to legitimately declare where the deer came from, without fear of consequences. Let some Common Sense rule ! |
Ron Brind Posts: 19041 Joined: 26th Oct 2003 Location: England | quotePosted at 19:49 on 29th October 2009 I spent my life in the country Beth and have fished, shot, trapped, prepared and/or eaten most animals, fish and birds legally but find the suggestion of deer dna to see where they came from a touch over the top. The PC brigade again!! |
Beth Austin Posts: 1090 Joined: 14th Sep 2007 Location: UK | quotePosted at 20:17 on 29th October 2009 I totlally agree with you, Ron. |
Ruth Gregory Posts: 8072 Joined: 25th Jul 2007 Location: USA | quotePosted at 03:30 on 30th October 2009 "only to decide that it came from Lord whoever's Estate!" It's what we in America call the European model of wildlife management. Wasn't poaching once a capital offense in England? I think some of Shakespeare's mates got in some pretty big trouble once for poaching.
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Barbara Shoemaker Posts: 1764 Joined: 4th Jan 2008 Location: USA | quotePosted at 13:46 on 30th October 2009 Does "Lord whoever" actually own the deer or just the land upon which they roam? |
Ron Brind Posts: 19041 Joined: 26th Oct 2003 Location: England | quotePosted at 14:31 on 30th October 2009 Good question Barbara but no doubt they have them 'tagged' or will be from a specific blood line, hence the dna! And yes Ruth, the old storyteller wasn't the only one to suffer! |
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