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For fox sake.
You removed your group yet again Alan. Here are the responses to your post.
"Alan Holmes" wrote in message ... You obviously do not have foxes around you, they break into chicken runs and kill large numbers which they then leave, they do not store them to eat later, cats catch birds and play with them, they rarely eat them, although I have known my cats ocassionaly to eat one, but as they are well fed they usually leave them, a nieghbour of mine tried to keep ducks and the foxes used to steal the eggs and leave them all over my garden together with the uneaten dead ducks. We have foxes regularly in our garden. And we keep free range chickens. It's not difficult to look after chickens properly, and put them away in the evening, in a fox-proof run. If I make a mistake, and the foxes kill the chickens then I would consider it my fault; not the foxes. I don't see why trying to get food to eat should be a capital offence. Just because you see wildlife nearby does not necessarily mean it's a problem. Pete On Tue, 30 Jan 2007 13:09:27 -0000, "Peter Darby" wrote: "Alan Holmes" wrote in message ... You obviously do not have foxes around you, they break into chicken runs and kill large numbers which they then leave, they do not store them to eat later, cats catch birds and play with them, they rarely eat them, although I have known my cats ocassionaly to eat one, but as they are well fed they usually leave them, a nieghbour of mine tried to keep ducks and the foxes used to steal the eggs and leave them all over my garden together with the uneaten dead ducks. We have foxes regularly in our garden. And we keep free range chickens. It's not difficult to look after chickens properly, and put them away in the evening, in a fox-proof run. If I make a mistake, and the foxes kill the chickens then I would consider it my fault; not the foxes. I don't see why trying to get food to eat should be a capital offence. Quite. Just because you see wildlife nearby does not necessarily mean it's a problem. Sounds familiar ;) -- Old Codger e-mail use reply to field What matters in politics is not what happens, but what you can make people believe has happened. [Janet Daley 27/8/2003] |
For fox sake.
"Old Codger" wrote in message ... You removed your group yet again Alan. Here are the responses to your post. "Alan Holmes" wrote in message ... You obviously do not have foxes around you, they break into chicken runs and kill large numbers which they then leave, they do not store them to eat later, cats catch birds and play with them, they rarely eat them, although I have known my cats ocassionaly to eat one, but as they are well fed they usually leave them, a nieghbour of mine tried to keep ducks and the foxes used to steal the eggs and leave them all over my garden together with the uneaten dead ducks. We have foxes regularly in our garden. And we keep free range chickens. It's not difficult to look after chickens properly, and put them away in the evening, in a fox-proof run. If I make a mistake, and the foxes kill the chickens then I would consider it my fault; not the foxes. I don't see why trying to get food to eat should be a capital offence. Just because you see wildlife nearby does not necessarily mean it's a problem. Pete On Tue, 30 Jan 2007 13:09:27 -0000, "Peter Darby" wrote: "Alan Holmes" wrote in message ... You obviously do not have foxes around you, they break into chicken runs and kill large numbers which they then leave, they do not store them to eat later, cats catch birds and play with them, they rarely eat them, although I have known my cats ocassionaly to eat one, but as they are well fed they usually leave them, a nieghbour of mine tried to keep ducks and the foxes used to steal the eggs and leave them all over my garden together with the uneaten dead ducks. We have foxes regularly in our garden. And we keep free range chickens. It's not difficult to look after chickens properly, and put them away in the evening, in a fox-proof run. If I make a mistake, and the foxes kill the chickens then I would consider it my fault; not the foxes. I don't see why trying to get food to eat should be a capital offence. Quite. Just because you see wildlife nearby does not necessarily mean it's a problem. Sounds familiar ;) -- Old Codger e-mail use reply to field What matters in politics is not what happens, but what you can make people believe has happened. [Janet Daley 27/8/2003] Please just FOAD |
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