PARTRIDGES DESTINED TO BE SHOT LIBERATED
Taken from www.sarconline.co.uk | 01.09.2004 14:32 | Animal Liberation
It's that time of year again! The game shooting season starts in about a months time, and it seems that activists have once again been making a determined effort to stop the annual slaughter...
"These partridges were found crammed into a tiny pen on a known shooting estate in Hampshire."
"The doors of the pen were opened, and the birds were released into the wild, where they have a good chance to live out their natural lives, safe from lunatics with guns."
"The birds immediately took the opportunity to fly off into the sunset."
"The doors of the pen were opened, and the birds were released into the wild, where they have a good chance to live out their natural lives, safe from lunatics with guns."
"The birds immediately took the opportunity to fly off into the sunset."
Taken from www.sarconline.co.uk
Comments
Hide the following 11 comments
roast
01.09.2004 14:51
Partridge is delicious, but possibly not quite as satisfying to cook as guinea fowl.
Pheasant and grouse are equally pleasing to the palate.
These should all be shot wild, rather than reared in semi intensive conditions, as the artificiality of their breeding conditions impaires the flavour.
alan
Pheasants are chinese chickens
01.09.2004 15:53
Pheasants and partridges are reared in captivity and only released a few weeks before they are driven onto the guns. It's much the same all over europe and is pretty disgusting. The Pheasant is only considered native of the UK in the interests of land owners and the arms industry. If someone hadn't picked a couple up and brought them here the only other way they could have got here was bunking onto a cross channel ferry they would certainly not have immigrated here... by choice ..
twin torrifagiani
ah-ha
01.09.2004 16:23
alles klar
right.
well however they are reared/shot: there's nothing like a good bit of game.
alan
grice
01.09.2004 17:42
- -
Excellent action!
01.09.2004 18:33
Arp
Homepage: http://www.animalrightsmedia.com
Know your birds
01.09.2004 21:51
While they were introduced from the Orient as "ornamentals", pheasants are now well established as a feral population in almost all of Europe. The partridges are native (well, that depends upon the species, but Perdix perdix is native to all of Great Britain and Alectoris rufa anywhere east of Wales and South of the Humber).
Look folks, IT'S TOO LATE. Once "exotics" are introduced and establish themsleves they are damned difficult to erradicate. Your pheasants are with you for good. An English bird now.
Mike
e-mail: stepbystpefarm mtdata.com
is this a follow up to the kronstadt story?
01.09.2004 22:47
not a trot
Until every last cage is opened!
01.09.2004 23:47
Fox
don't agree with you Mike
02.09.2004 10:11
each year then Pheasants would very soon become extinct. Sure 22 million of these end up full of lead shot,
only 2 million are eaten and 20 million end up in land fill sites.
As well as releasing millions of chinese chooks into the country side , game keepers also try to wipe out any species that is likely to prey on these defenceless birds.
The euro country side is now teeming with , Magpies, Jays, Green woodpeckers and shrikes all of these prey on
song birds and their nests. Where I live in Italy the "poison meat ball" is the local specialality, possibly aimed at Foxes and badgers, stoats and weasels but also at domestic cats and dogs. apart from all the damage caused by the hunting fraternity trying to adapt the countryside to the needs of the Pheasant there is also a big need for some real environmentalists in their place.
My point is that the Pheasant would not survive in open country without human help and this goes for the whole of europe ..
twin torrifagiani
Partridges
07.09.2004 16:19
Dr RFC
You never see them in the same room together...
08.09.2004 16:10
Just wondering, like.
Professional people go shooting - reason enough to ban it.
Roger
Thrash Silly