Feral Jundi

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Iraq: Baghdad To Cull A Million Stray Dogs

Filed under: Fish and Game,Iraq,Medical — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Matt @ 1:53 PM

     This is actually a good thing.  The wild dog population in Iraq is out of control and a huge problem there.  One thing for everyone to think about when you are out there is don’t be surprised if you see these guys walking around with shotguns, shooting up dogs in the streets and cities.  It would be very easy to mistake these guys as the enemy or think there is some kind of firefight with all of the gun fire caused by this culling operation. It looks like they are operating in teams of four–two shooters, two vets, and possibly some police escorting them around.  And this is just for Baghdad.  I can’t even imagine how big the stray dog population is throughout Iraq. –Matt

—————————————————————–

Iraq dogs

Baghdad to cull a million stray dogs as rogue canine population soars

June 11, 2010

More than a million stray dogs roaming Baghdad are facing destruction.

The initiative has so far led to 42,000 strays being killed in only two months.

Teams of riflemen and vets are trying to thin out a rogue canine population that has reached at least 1,250,000.

Numbers grew hugely after the fall of Saddam because of the lawless state of the Iraqi capital.

But with the streets now much safer, the authorities are trying to clear out the stray dogs.

(more…)

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Fish And Game: Hog Bounty Program In The Upper Peninsula, Michigan

     This is cool.  Although I think their intent is to only offer bounties to locals who shoot pigs. You will have to call the phone number below to ask if they offer the program to folks outside of the state.

     Also, check out the show Pig Bomb on Discovery Channel.  The series is entirely dedicated to the feral hog explosion throughout the US.  I hope to see more bounty hunting programs pop up. Especially if these hogs are causing $800 million in damages every year.  –Matt

—————————————————————-

Hog Bounty Program Up and Running in U.P.

The Delta County Conservation District is administering a privately-funded program aimed at eradicating, or at least reducing, the number of wild hogs in the Central Upper Peninsula. The two-year pilot program got started in mid-April with funding from the U.P. Whitetails organization and the District.

In early January, the Michigan Wildlife Conservancy had publicly called for hog bounties across the state to avoid serious, long-term damage to Michigan’s agricultural and natural resources. Nationwide, wild hogs conservatively cause $800 million worth of damage annually to crops, golf courses, lawns and forests by their feeding and rooting habits. They are also vicious predators of livestock, deer fawns and ground-nesting birds.

(more…)

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Fish And Game: Fox Stop Versus The Fox And Wild Dog Bounty Program In Australia

    “In reintroducing the bounty, we are aiming to replicate the success of the 2003 program when about 198,000 foxes were killed,” Mr Ryan said.

     Mr Walsh said the State Government’s token ‘Fox Stop’ program had proved to be an abject failure.

     “Just 6,200 foxes were killed last year under the Fox Stop program last year, as opposed to 198,000 when the Fox Bounty was trialled in 2003,” Mr Walsh said.

*****

   Wow, the numbers speak for themselves. lol I say bring back the bounty program because the Fox Stop program looks pretty ineffective.  If you read through the rules and such for the Fox Stop program, you can kind of see why it sucks.  The bounty program is simple and plays well to free market forces that work.  You assign a value to the animal, and you open up the hunt to those who have a license.  Simple and easy to understand. –Matt

——————————————————————

Coalition vows to bring back the bounty

10 May, 2010

A VICTORIAN Liberal Nationals Coalition Government will implement a year-round statewide bounty to control fox and wild dog numbers across Victoria.

Shadow Minister for Regional and Rural Development and Leader of The Nationals Peter Ryan, and Shadow Minister for Agriculture and Deputy Leader of The Nationals Peter Walsh today announced $4 million over four years to establish a Fox and Wild Dog Bounty if elected to government.

Mr Ryan said Victorian fox and wild dog numbers had exploded in recent years and were a serious threat to farming communities and the natural environment.

“Foxes and wild dogs are exposing farmers to severe stock losses, resulting in hefty costs to farm businesses and Victoria’s economy,” Mr Ryan said.

“Under the Coalition’s program all licensed shooters, including rural landholders, will be eligible for a $10 bounty for every fox and a $50 bounty for every dog killed.

“Research shows foxes are estimated to cost Australia more than $228 million per year in combined environmental and agricultural impacts and control costs, with the direct impact on sheep production alone estimated at $17.5 million every year – in some areas they have been known to take up to 30 per cent of lambs.

“In reintroducing the bounty, we are aiming to replicate the success of the 2003 program when about 198,000 foxes were killed,” Mr Ryan said.

Mr Walsh said the State Government’s token ‘Fox Stop’ program had proved to be an abject failure.

“Just 6,200 foxes were killed last year under the Fox Stop program last year, as opposed to 198,000 when the Fox Bounty was trialled in 2003,” Mr Walsh said.

Story here.

—————————————————————-

FoxStop 2010 website here.

—————————————————————-

Fox, wild dog bounties under state coalition

David McKenzie

May 10, 2010

BOUNTIES for killing foxes and wild dogs will be re-introduced next year if the Liberal Nationals Coalition wins the November state election.

The $4 million, four year proposal was unveiled today by Shadow Minister for Regional and Rural Development and Nationals leader of  Peter Ryan and Shadow Agriculture Minister and deputy Nationals leader Peter Walsh.Under the proposed Fox and Wild Dog Bounty, all licensed shooters, including rural landholders, would be eligible for a $10 bounty for every fox and a $50 bounty for every dog killed. (more…)

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Fish And Game: Coyotes In The News

   Coyotes in the news these days.  Governor Rick Perry of Texas shot a coyote with a laser sighted .380 revolver, and I thought that was interesting.  No idea who the manufacturer of the pistol was.

   As to the North Carolina coyote population explosion, I am sure they will be able to deal with the problem as soon as they implement a comprehensive plan.  There are plenty of folks in NC that could handle the job of hunting the population down a little.

   My experience with coyotes is that they are very timid out west.  They are hard to stalk, and usually run on any sign of human or smell of human. Some times you might come across some coyote that are not like that, but most seem to be pretty skittish. –Matt

——————————————————————

North Carolina struggles with its wily coyotes

Apr. 29, 2010

By MARK JOHNSON

McClatchy Newspapers

The coyote, enduring symbol of the untamed West and scourge to ranchers and roadrunners alike, has crept on to the silhouetted landscape of urban North Carolina.

On to those dusty streets, heroes have stepped – hardened men, their coffee spoons jingling, aiming to teach these critters that there is law in these parts.

Yes, it’s a legislative study committee.

In recent months, coyotes have been spotted trotting across the runway at Raleigh-Durham International Airport and in Durham backyards. But call county animal control or state wildlife officials, and the best they can usually do is provide the name and number of a trapper for hire.

So the N.C. House of Representatives, led by Speaker Joe Hackney, bespectacled Chapel Hill lawyer and Chatham County cattle farmer, has cowboyed up.

Hackney gathered a posse of a half-dozen House members to the Select Committee on Coyote Nuisance Removal. They rustled up legislation this week that, even if it passes, won’t live up to the word “removal” in the committee’s name.

You see, there are 50,000 coyotes in North Carolina, according to the Wildlife Resources Commission. They’re in every county. State biologists put a GPS tracking collar on one in Tyrrell County, near the coast, and it walked 220 miles in 30 days.

“It’s not a matter of just standing up and saying let’s get rid of ’em,” said state Rep. Arthur Williams, who chaired the committee. “We’re going to have to live with ’em.”

Coyotes are clever. Wily even. When they settle down near people, they get used to being around humans, said state biologist Jon Shaw, whose territory stretches from Moore County to Mecklenburg County.

The committee’s bill would let landowners who raise animals apply to the state for a permit to use a neck, or collar, snare. It’s a flexible cable with a loop and a locking device that tightens around the coyote as it passes through to reach the bait.

The contraption is a role reversal from a whole peck of cartoon devices used by, not on, a coyote. Another device the committee heard about, deserving of having a large “ACME” logo, is the M-44 ejector. When the coyote bites the bait, the device fires sodium cyanide into the animal’s mouth. The varmint falls unconscious and dies within minutes.

What about shooting them?

“Yeah, you can shoot ’em,” Williams said. “They’re not animals. They’re predators.”

Texas Gov. Rick Perry this week recollected shooting a coyote with his laser-sighted .380-caliber pistol near his home in Austin a few weeks back.

“He became mulch,” Perry told The Associated Press.

For the firearms-averse, North Carolina state biologist Colleen Olfenbuttel told the committee that guard animals can scare off coyotes, but she mentioned more than guard dogs, according to the minutes of the meeting: “Llamas and donkeys have been effective.”

As in the days of swinging saloon doors, the orneriest will survive.

Story here.

——————————————————————

Texas gov. shoots, kills ‘wily’ coyote during jog

April 29, 2010

By JIM VERTUNO

AUSTIN, Texas — Pistol-packing Texas Gov. Rick Perry has a message for wily coyotes out there: Don’t mess with my dog.

Perry told The Associated Press on Tuesday he needed just one shot from the laser-sighted pistol he sometimes carries while jogging to take down a coyote that menaced his puppy during a February run near Austin.

(more…)

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Fish And Game: Feral Pig Explosion In Iraq?

Filed under: Fish and Game,Iraq — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 3:28 AM

   I read this thing and got a chuckle out of it. So the Christian hunters used to keep the pig population in check in Iraq back in the day? Interesting.

   My only message to the folks in Kirkuk is that if you want those pigs eradicated, then issue hunting licenses and tags.  Then allow the hunters to sell the pigs to someone who wants them for food. You could create an entire industry out of it, and harvest some pig.

   You could also bring in some folks to eradicate the pigs for you.  I know plenty of hunter/contractors out there that could easily take a dent out of your feral hog population.

   If you turned it into an exotic hunting reserve type deal, you might attract some tourists looking for something interesting.  Rich hunters go all over the world for safaris in places like Africa.  Iraq would be a very unique experience for this class of hunter.

   Another idea is to let your soldiers hunt and kill these things.  They can work on their marksmanship skills and squad movements through the mountains and flat lands.  Turn hunting the pigs into a military exercise of sorts, complete with navigation and tracking. Take lemons, and make lemon aide out of the deal. –Matt

——————————————————————

In this war, pigs are besting Iraqi farmers

By Michael GisickApril 13, 2010

KIRKUK, Iraq — Of all the calamities war has loosed upon Iraq, pigs are not among the most obvious.

Yet, there they are, across a growing swath of northern farmland, a scourge of feral swine risen from the reeds to root among the furrows and wreak havoc on the fields.

“We farmers don’t even want to plant anymore because the pigs just eat it all,” said Abdullah Abdullah, a farmer southwest of Kirkuk whose fields have been trampled by swine. “And this animal, he is not just eating like other animals. He also destroys.”

In better times their numbers were checked, in part, by hunting parties of Christians from Kirkuk who, unlike the Muslim farmers of the countryside, wanted the pigs for food.

(more…)

« Newer Posts

Powered by WordPress