We live near one of the National Parks to be open for hunting and we hate the hunters who come up here already. They cut through our road to the Park mostly hunting for pigs with their pig dogs, they throw rubbish out the windows all along our roads out here, they have often been intoxicated when driving out here - throwing their KFC and Maccas rubbish and bundy and colas cans out the window. As we live on quite a few acres - if they travel through/past our property and see a pig before they even get to the national park they will often let their dogs out and trespass on our property. We have had to intervene on many many occasions to get them to bugger off. They have been known to lose their dogs which end up making their way to our house or our neighbours houses where we feel threatened by these almost wild half staved dogs. We have hunters coming up here with knives, guns and even bow and arrows thinking that because our property borders the national park and looks just as wild as the national park that they have some right to just walk on and start chasing or shooting things. We like to walk all through our property - but with an increase in hunters there will be even more of a risk for us and our dog getting attacked or shot on our own property.
Nuts wrote:I don't see what that link contributes to the topic, is the suggestion that registered hunters by default will be slobs (or that bushwalkers are snobs..)?
corvus wrote:IMHO that pic of the dead Elephant is so unneeded or wanted and I think the mods should have it removed .
Disgusting, disturbing, revolting not wanted and not to be kept on this Forum.
Tony wrote:Nuts wrote:I don't see what that link contributes to the topic, is the suggestion that registered hunters by default will be slobs (or that bushwalkers are snobs..)?
I am not sure what your point is nuts, as I stated that most hunters will be doing the right thing, but I am pointing out that some hunters already think they have the right to hunt in or on properties near NP's, are trying to you saying this is OK.
Tony
PS I think my post is very relevant to this topic
corvus wrote:IMHO that pic of the dead Elephant is so unneeded or wanted and I think the mods should have it removed .
Disgusting, disturbing, revolting not wanted and not to be kept on this Forum.
corvus
True Green wrote:I thought National Parks were created for the benefit of native animals and the protection of their habitat.
Killing of introduced pests seems to fit in with this purpose.
True Green wrote: The Elephant picture is very relevant. Do you know that the counties with controlled and regulated elephant hunting all have increasing elephant populations, while most those with no legal Elephant hunting have declining populations, due to poaching. The reason for this is a large part of the hunting fee goes to habitat protection and anti poaching patrols. The local population also gets an income and employment from this as well as all the meat from Elephants shot. If they did not have this they often become poachers to survive. Allowing the locals to earn an income from elephants causes them to see them as a resource to be conserved. If they don't have this elephants are just a pest which destroy their crops and a source of ivory.
True Green wrote: By shooting this elephant Robert Borsak has contributed more to conservation than everybody combined who has criticized him. Without controlled hunting and the money it brings to remote areas of Africa all elephant populations would be in terminal decline. You decide if you want elephants to survive in the wild or have legal hunting banned and Elephants wiped out by poachers.
True Green wrote:I thought National Parks were created for the benefit of native animals and the protection of their habitat.
Killing of introduced pests seems to fit in with this purpose.
Nuts wrote:
Of course I wouldn't say its ok, I'm saying it's about as relevant as having to pick up a bushwalkers turd from a hut doorstep after snow melt. Emotive, judgemental and included to get a reaction by vague inference. C'mon, I mean are 'hunters' taking babies and condoms on their hunts or a few local dicks without so much as a licence! It just escalates ignorance (as we immediately see..). It seems 'most hunters will do the right thing' is mere lip-service. Keep it 'real'.
Perhaps registered hunters having access would have influence over the number of yobs?
then as a moderator you should remove it and if you do then you should also remove every anti hunting post on the Buswalk.com forum.about as relevant as having to pick up a bushwalkers turd from a hut doorstep after snow melt. Emotive, judgemental and included to get a reaction by vague inference.
maddog wrote:As pointed out by north-north-west above, there would seem to be very little evidence to suggest that recreational hunting will have any meaningful impact on feral animal populations, and conservation outcomes in general. I would be interested if you have anything new to contribute in this area.
Cheers
maddog wrote:Given that allowing recreational shooting in National Parks appears to be without precedent, and undoubtedly a significant shift from the 'conservationist' status quo, it is a controversial and potentially explosive topic.
Cheers
maddog wrote:I have made no reference to the pest control efforts of NPWS.
For the likely contribution of recreational hunting to controlling populations, refer to posts by wildwalks (pg 10 of this thread). In the lack of evidence to the contrary, this argument is convincing.
Cheers
Great question. with most animals there are what are called "doomed young", babies that will never grow up because there is just not enough food, water etc due to competition with others animals. When animals are killed in an ad hoc manor through recreational hunting the dead animals are quickly replaced by the otherwise doomed young. It varies greatly on each species but generally you need to remove around 50% of the population from and ecosystem each breading cycle to impact on the overall population. The type of animals targeted is also very important - a yound female removed has a lot more impact on reducing the population then an male.
The Game council push theory that since they have killed 15000 animals this year that there are 15000 less animals in the bush. If this where true then clearly you would get to zero in just a few years. But it is propaganda, they are just wanting a sport to sound like it has environmental benefits. This is a sport, a recreational past time - that is OK - just not in a National Park where it will do damage.
True Green wrote:In Victoria hunters kill 40,000 Sambar Deer a year, many of those in the Alpine National park. You can not say that does not have an impact.
True Green wrote:...but do you agree that they do not have the funding and will never get the funding to have a pest control program...
True Green wrote: Wildwalks provided no evidence to the country, just an opinion.
north-north-west wrote:True Green wrote:In Victoria hunters kill 40,000 Sambar Deer a year, many of those in the Alpine National park. You can not say that does not have an impact.
Where did you get that number? It seems wildly optimistic, given the insistence here by a number of hunters that they often spend entire trips without firing a shot . . .
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