sallywhoa
Member
Well it does`nt happen here,we,as a nation are not quite so quick to shoot anything that moves,owning rifles capable of downing a leopard EFFICIENTLY are def not licensed except in exceptional circumstances. Providing it is only the occasional sheep we mostly welcome these fabulous animals,and trigger happy twits would be sorted by our police long before any big cats.
They have been very local `round here for some forty years,and even a friend rolling home from the pub in the early hours on meeting Felix ,just stopped..so did the cat..and then both of them turned heel and kept walking.
I take the same attitude as with my resident country foxes,leave my hens alone..and I`ll leave you alone too.However ,any hens that snuff it are left out in the field for Charlie`s supper.As for Felix,it is exactly the same ,but then very few are even likely to have the privilege of seeing him,let alone taking a pot shot ..thank God!
As for the other poster calling me,of all people ,a bunny hugging townee is a huge huge joke..I am in fact a rampent field sport addict and have been on EVERY one of the Marches against the Hunting Act.And ,by the way,never have lived even with close neighbours....middle of nowhere is just fine.It does not mean you want to kill everything though,in fact hunting /shooting are forms of conservation.
I am not a "trigger-happy twit". When it comes to defending oneself or property/livestock, the police are worthless. If they DO come out, by the time they get there, the damage will be done. I guess its hard for me, living in a different country, to just embrace the concept of being helpless victims as acceptable. I am no gun-toting vigilante, but I have had to shoot stray dogs that were killing my sheep. Whats the alternative? Dead sheep. The police do nothing, the owners do nothing...
I guess people have different notions of "beauty". If I lived in the UK, and my horse came in from the pasture looking like the OP's horse, I wouldn't think the creature that did it was "beautiful" or noble any more than if it was a person that slashed the animal.
I agree with you that if the predator is leaving your animals alone, it should be left alone. But that doesn't seem to be the case in this instance. Whats the answer? If its to do nothing, then it would be much more humane to put the horse down NOW than to allow its throat torn out or die from a slow infection from its wounds.
As far as rifles capable of killing a big cat, it doesn't take much. They aren't very tough animals compared to predators like a bear or a wolf. ( African lions are different, as are leopards, I am referring to the puma/lynx/bobcat/panther size) Their lungs and heart are small and even the slightest injury to either can be fatal.
I'm really not trying to pick a fight, just trying to figure out why people think its acceptable for livestock to be sacrificed so cruelly to a feral, non-native predator? They are native here and cause alot of problems, not something to passed off as no big deal. It was a big deal to that horse.