Sadistic pheasant shoot must end
AFTER registering its disgust about raised laying cages - a partcularly inhumane method of confining pheasants and partridges used for breeding by the shooting industry - the British Association for Shooting and Conservation is now exhorting its membership to purchase its feathered targets from local traditional game farmers.
But there is nothing humane about these 'traditional' methods.
Hens and cocks used for breeding purposes are caught in the wild (a practice that is illegal for other wild bird species). Unsuitable captured breeding birds and surplus cocks are mass-purchased by game meat processing companies. The selected birds are routinely medicated to prevent disease in a ruthless system that confines them in unnatural crowded conditions, until they are released to be killed as cheap additions to the seasonal shooting stock.
The offspring of these breeding birds fare no better. They are hatched in incubators, reared under heat and light, hand-fed and finally released into a harsh environment with developed naivet about predators.
They are unskilled nest builders and breed unsuccessfully in the wild. Furthermore, they are not suited to the British climate or to the high-flying requirements of commercial shoots.
That is why this year will be no different to any other in the sadistic shooting calendar. Another 40 million pheasants and partridge will be bred and released for a certain cruel end. Rhetoric that local and traditional game bird breeding is best is nonsense. It is the same. It is inhumane.
Kit Davidson
Shooting Consultant
Animal Aid.
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Weather for Epworth
Friday 18 May 2012
Today
Cloudy
Temperature: 8 C to 11 C
Wind Speed: 20 mph
Wind direction: North east
Tomorrow
Cloudy
Temperature: 8 C to 13 C
Wind Speed: 13 mph
Wind direction: North
