Bloody americans, c...
 

  You don't need to be an 'investor' to invest in Singletrack: 6 days left: 95% of target - Find out more

[Closed] Bloody americans, coming over here and shooting our goats

164 Posts
63 Users
0 Reactions
339 Views
Posts: 23107
Free Member
Topic starter
 

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-politics-45967845

Why not go to the zoo and bag a couple of penguins while you are at it?


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 5:55 pm
Posts: 8527
Free Member
 

Just read that.

Arseholes.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 6:00 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

thats sickening


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 6:02 pm
Posts: 23107
Free Member
Topic starter
 

One would assume that somebody gave them permission and supplied the weapons too.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 6:07 pm
Posts: 43345
Full Member
 

"Hunting" sheep. You have to take avoiding action to stop running into the bloody things!


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 6:10 pm
Posts: 23107
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Next they are hunting bins with sticks.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 6:13 pm
Posts: 7763
Full Member
 

” Country sports is worth 150 million every year” That’s quite a claim since Edinburgh Uni counted 1300 full time employers in the industry in 2015. Or are the gun ****ers just adding other outdoor sports in? Seeing the goats from time to time on the hills is ace, and how is a spieces that has been here since the Stone Age invasive?


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 6:15 pm
Posts: 28475
Free Member
 

Nothing is more thrilling than the experience of taking down an apex predator in its natural habitat. Or failing that, a field somewhere.

https://twitter.com/LSwitlyk/status/1052216609757175808/photo/1

You can walk right up to them, FFS.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 6:22 pm
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

Corrr Blimey 🤦‍♀️🧟‍♂️

I’m sitting here bloody fuming.

She should be shot.

****ing arrogant tart.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 6:25 pm
Posts: 8527
Free Member
 

She is defo deserving of a proper hoof in the slats.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 6:26 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Don't see the fuss to be honest. The meat will be well used, the animals died in better conditions than the vast majority of others that will get slaughtered and ate. They weren't just out randomly shooting goats and sheep in a field. They are bringing in good money to the local economy and the photographs are not in your face disrespectful like some you see. I have plenty similar pictures holding up fish I've caught, dispatched and later ate.

Anyone who eats meat really can't have a serious problem with this. It's a far better way to get meat than from an abattoir. Just another bandwagon to jump on for the ill informed.

Big difference doing this than chasing animals and ripping apart with dogs, shooting big cats for turning into rugs, or plain old blasting away songbirds here and there just for the hell of it.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 6:39 pm
 Drac
Posts: 50352
 


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 6:49 pm
Posts: 45504
Free Member
 

Outrageous.

A grown adult wearing a baseball cap backwards.

(I'm on the 'meh' side, as all these animals are either non-native, or no natural predator left or just there for food anyway)


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 6:49 pm
 Drac
Posts: 50352
 

It’s a far better way to get meat than from an abattoir

How exactly?


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 7:07 pm
 csb
Posts: 3288
Free Member
 

The comments on twitter are hilarious. There is outrage from some thick idiots over deer culling. I assume the sheep are similarly managed.

Do people not get that they are managed? If mugs like this are willing to spend money to kill something that needs controlling then more fool them.

Surely taking pleasure in killing things is a sign of a psychopath though?


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 7:12 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

How exactly?

Abattoirs are generally cruel places, the animals can and do suffer a fair bit getting to the abattoir, being handled whilst there and the dispatching itself.

Surely taking pleasure in killing things is a sign of a psychopath though?

There will be some psychopaths taking pleasure from the actual killing bit but thats not the pleasure bit for most hunters. I doubt they actually get joy from pulling the trigger and seeing a life extinguished. Just like I take no pleasure from hitting a fish on the head with a weighted stick to kill it, but I like getting out on my boat, spending a day walking along a river fishing the pools, walking in the hills stopping at hill lochs to cast a fly, and of course the preparation, cooking and eating of the fish.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 7:12 pm
 Drac
Posts: 50352
 

Abattoirs are generally cruel places, the animals can and do suffer a fair bit getting to the abattoir, being handled whilst there and the dispatching itself.

And shooting is completely harmless.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 7:14 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

And shooting is completely harmless.

Yes, that's what I said didn't I? Oh no wait, I didn't.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 7:19 pm
Posts: 10474
Free Member
 

I’d shag her.

Meanwhile let’s not forget the goats and their effect on deforestation,


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 7:27 pm
 Drac
Posts: 50352
 

Yes, that’s what I said didn’t I? Oh no wait, I didn’t.

So how is shooting any better? You didn't say.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 7:31 pm
Posts: 31206
Full Member
 

Certainly not my cup of tea and I don’t really see the “sport” in hunting an animal with bugger all camouflage, that poses no threat, and has no fear of humans.

But...

I do think the outcry is typical social media froth.

I wonder how many outraged tweeters then went home and enjoyed a nice bit of lamb - because eating baby animals just a few weeks old is fine, its killing full grown adult animals that is wrong apparently.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 7:35 pm
Posts: 41642
Free Member
 

And shooting is completely harmless.

Given the choice I'd take a surprise bullet from an anonymous sniper on a grassy knoll over being taken to an abattoir.

How exactly do you think farmers deal with sheep that need killing on the farm?


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 7:40 pm
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

Certainly not my cup of tea and I don’t really see the “sport” in hunting an animal with bugger all camouflage, that poses no threat, and has no fear of humans.

But…

I do think the outcry is typical social media froth.

Or or maybe some of us think there should be more social consciousness when gratuitous photos like this appear in the media.

I defend my right to get annoyed.

Someone has too.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 7:43 pm
Posts: 10474
Free Member
 

Buy a gun so you can really defend your rights.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 7:46 pm
Posts: 17834
 

What's the problem?  Is it cos the shooter's a wimminz?  Would much rather see culling that's properly controlled as opposed to a slow painful death.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 7:46 pm
 poly
Posts: 8699
Free Member
 

I don’t really get the outrage.  There are feral goats.  They need managed.  She is paying for privilege of managing them.  It’s seems win win like deer stalking - or do people not realise the environment these goats are in and think it’s on a farmyard?

what I don’t get is the photographs with your kill afterward - and I dare say posting those across social media is see as just boasting about killing for the sake of it; but I eat meat and would rather eat meat that roamed wild than had a factory farmed life, and think we don’t eat enough goat - all the veggies wolfing down goats cheese tarts seem to ignore the fact that male kid goats are usually killed Very soon after birth as they are a burden in this country (veal has similar issues with marketing image).

I wonder how many outraged tweeters then went home and enjoyed a nice bit of lamb – because eating baby animals just a few weeks old is fine, its killing full grown adult animals that is wrong apparently.

Nobody eats “baby” lambs - there’s no real meat on them.  Most of the “lamb” you eat looks to normal people like a sheep and is probably much nearer a year old.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 7:54 pm
Posts: 15261
Free Member
 

Social meeja froth really innit.

The animals, which have no natural predator, are classed as an invasive, non-native species in the UK, and hunting them on private land is not illegal.

She's not broken any actual laws though has she? It's just a little lacking in 'good taste' stalking goats in cammo is comical, posing with it like its "Big Game" or something is just odd insta-****ery for a certain subset, but meh if they're entertained fair enough..

It's Just a Culture clash really though, 'Merican hunting nuts are a special case; travelling the world and paying to shoot local furry things just because they can... TBH I'd happily take her cash and point her in the direction of a, not at all endangered, goat.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 8:00 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I'm very much on the what's the fuss side, i can't say i can see any fun in stalking a sheep but i can imagine the goats were more interesting. Can't see the enjoyment in it but i can't see the enjoyment in fancy cars either. In the grand scheme of things the majority of that goat will go in the pot and to use, ditto the deer and the mutton.

I'm entirely ambivalent about the trapping of rats or the occasional hitting of one with the car and they really do just go to waste so much worse but i guess they haven't the PR of a goat.

It's an over populous invasive species with no natural predators not a rhino.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 8:05 pm
 Drac
Posts: 50352
 

How exactly do you think farmers deal with sheep that need killing on the farm?

Go on then tell me?


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 8:14 pm
Posts: 43345
Full Member
 

I can't get worked up about it but shooting sheep though? Hardly something to be proud about or to display as a trophy.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 8:14 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

what I don’t get is the photographs with your kill afterward – and I dare say posting those across social media is see as just boasting about killing for the sake of it;

The celebration of killing is strange and the way Americans do it is even odder. They are an odd group though. i can picture her sitting next to a friesian talking about the stalk and prestige.

i can imagine (but I might be wrong) that people want to think that killing animals is a necessity for food or to control population so that they can feel ok about some of the less nice aspects of the meat supply chain the created. To post pictures and appear to revel in killing (even if you eat the animal) makes some feel uncomfortable.

believe it or not there are many people who do not associate the meat in the supermarkets with real animals.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 8:26 pm
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

What’s the problem?  Is it cos the shooter’s a wimminz?  Would much rather see culling that’s properly controlled as opposed to a slow painful death.

Absolutely.

Why not round them up and cull them properly?

Is it cos it’s easier to get wimimz to shoot them then post crass images of “the kill” all over the internet so retards can pour gushes over them in some kind of awe of worship...

We have 70 cattle and 250 on our farm, instead of taking them to human slaughter we ought to get this tart over to shoot them all then post images of it in the same way it’s been done here..

Sure, why not.

Afterall some of you think it’s ok, and humane so hey.. lets see the “prize”

Crass.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 8:29 pm
 Drac
Posts: 50352
 

I can’t get worked up about it but shooting sheep though? Hardly something to be proud about or to display as a trophy.

Sums it up well. The goat seems equally as pointless, then the claim about not being able to wait to get back to the hotel for chief to cook the stag is laughable.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 8:37 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

retards

tart

Classy.

We have 70 cattle and 250 on our farm, instead of taking them to human slaughter we ought to get this tart over to shoot them all then post images of it in the same way it’s been done here..

Once you have slaughtered your animals in a cruel manner do you market your produce in any way? That's what she is doing, she runs a business.

Crass

Irony.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 8:40 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

the claim about not being able to wait to get back to the hotel for chief to cook the stag is laughable

Why? There are photos of steaks from the stag shown on her twitter or instagram. Why wouldn't someone want to get back to something tasty? You never bought a juicy steak and looked forward to cooking it? Not much of a difference.

Some folk on here really are clueless and can't wait to prove it.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 8:42 pm
 burt
Posts: 13
Free Member
 

Pity there's not a group of French hunters there at the same time.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 8:48 pm
 Drac
Posts: 50352
 

Why? There are photos of steaks from the stag shown on her twitter or instagram. Why wouldn’t someone want to get back to something tasty? You never bought a juicy steak and looked forward to cooking it? Not much of a difference.

Deer should be hung for a few weeks to make it worth eating a bit like the steak I buy.

Some folk on here really are clueless and can’t wait to prove it.

Indeed.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 9:11 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Deer should be hung for a few weeks to make it worth eating a bit like the steak I buy.

For most of the cuts yes, but there are parts that are eaten straight away, usually the backstrap, and by the hunter.

Indeed.

Yes, indeed.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 9:21 pm
Posts: 5720
Full Member
 

How exactly do you think farmers deal with sheep that need killing on the farm?

Go on then tell me?

Ideally a .22 free bullet to the top of the head. In the absence of a gun then a sharp knife can be used to severe the jugular. It is possible to dispatch baby lambs with an injection directly into the heart (but I won't tell you what to use).


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 9:22 pm
Posts: 7763
Full Member
 

Wild goats in the Highlands need culling...Why is that then? I am in the hills most weekends and they are a pretty rare sight, there is a herd around Creag Meaghaidh, and I have seem a few single/couples about the Fisherfields, but certainly no more abundant than 30 years ago. And yeah...you kind of shot yourself in the foot there renee, most meat is hung for a bit to make it tastier, but you knew that; right?


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 9:25 pm
 Drac
Posts: 50352
 

You've ruined it Welsh farmer I was waiting for his answer but cheers for pointing out to him it's pretty much no different to an abatoir.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 9:25 pm
Posts: 11605
Free Member
 

<p>I'm on the "so what" side of the fence.</p><p>Yes she is American and carrying the usual crassness but when all is said and done what has she actually done wrong?</p><p>There are plenty of animals out there meeting a far worse end than a quick shot to the head they never knew was coming, if you're that concerned about animal welfare maybe you should look at what's on your own plate before you judge what's on other peoples. </p><p>If you're wondering what my overall standpoint is, read The Ethical Carnivore by Louise Gray, it's a fair start. there's also a chapter about wild sheep around Caithness and how there is literally no other way of managing them as they are completely wild. Of course fact have no place in this discussion but I thought I'd mention it anyway.</p><p></p><p>As for calling a her a tart or hoping she encounters some French hunters, class act. I wonder, do you wish death and fire crude insults at anyone who kills animals or just the ones that kill the fwuffy wuffy widdle ones?</p>


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 9:27 pm
Posts: 25815
Full Member
 

Ideally a .22 free bullet to the top of the head

Yeah - from 200 yards, baby !


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 9:28 pm
Posts: 13554
Free Member
 

I’m most offended by the use of the words hunter and hunting when applied to goats and sheep. How do you hunt them exactly? It’s not like there is tracking and skill involved, they’re just there dawdling about all brightly coloured, standing out from the surrounding landscape and shit.

I once nearly convinced a sheep to walk off a cliff without even trying very hard. She’s a massive cockwomble for wearing camouflage too. £10 says I could walk up to a goat or sheep whilst dressed as a clown and juggling and still kill it with ease. Hunting my arse.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 9:30 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Goats are not really 'native', but they have been living in the wild for over 300 years. And there's only a few thousand left around Scotland, they are now fairly rare.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 9:39 pm
Posts: 65918
Free Member
 

<div class="bbp-reply-author">rene59
<div class="bbp-author-role">
<div class="">Member</div>
</div>
</div>

<div class="bbp-reply-content">

Why? There are photos of steaks from the stag shown on her twitter or instagram. Why wouldn’t someone want to get back to something tasty?

If you care about taste and texture you don't rush back with a deer and cook it, let alone an adult red stag, they've not even taken time to bleed it let alone hang it so it'll be the shittest venison steak you'll ever eat. But then maybe it's more symbolic since the whole thing is one big advert for her business, for her clients "eating what I shot like a proper hunter" is probably worth grinding their way through a plateful of crap. They took 4 stags so no matter what they only ate a token amount anyway- a difference that makes no difference.

(in case anyone didn't gather that, she's not some idiot thinking she's a super boss hunter for taking down a deer- she runs paid hunts for rich clients, so every post and every word is marketing. Her clients most likely will be holiday hunters so they don't want it to be difficult, but they want their mates to think it is.

It'd be kind of the equivalent of Stevomcd setting up a special riding week where you do nothing but ride dramatic looking piss-easy features in his back garden while he takes awesome photos so you can show all your mates your extreme alps photos. You know it's bollocks, he knows it's bollocks, but that's not the point)

</div>


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 9:41 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

And yeah…you kind of shot yourself in the foot there renee, most meat is hung for a bit to make it tastier, but you knew that; right?

Watch some hunting videos, good one is Meat Eater on Netflix. You will see them break down the carcass on site and they often take the fillet from the back for the frying pan and also the liver. Some cuts are so tender they don't need hung to make them tender and yes hanging can develop flavour, but the back fillet, like a fillet steak from a cow doesn't really pick up much in the way of flavour no matter how long it's hung for.

You’ve ruined it Welsh farmer I was waiting for his answer but cheers for pointing out to him it’s pretty much no different to an abatoir.

No different. Minus the journey in the back of a lorry to get there and the unsanitary conditions and stress during that journey. The wait to get into the abattoir not knowing what on earth is going on then watching your fellow cows/sheep/pig whatever take a bolt to the head to stun them, then hung from a hook and throat slit whilst often squeeling in pain/fear. If your extra unluck you might get one of the bored workers abuse you for a bit first.

Yes, no different at all.

**** me.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 9:43 pm
Posts: 25815
Full Member
 

It’d be kind of the equivalent of Stevomcd setting up a special riding week where you do nothing but ride dramatic looking piss-easy features in his back garden

will the dates be going up on his website ?


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 9:44 pm
 burt
Posts: 13
Free Member
 

Hunter??


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 9:50 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Image result for undercover chicken factory

I know which one I'd rather eat.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 9:53 pm
 Drac
Posts: 50352
 

Watch some hunting videos, good one is Meat Eater on Netflix.

You mean the staged for TV stuff?

the back fillet, like a fillet steak from a cow doesn’t really pick up much in the way of flavour no matter how long it’s hung for.

Oh but it does.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 9:55 pm
Posts: 13554
Free Member
 

^^Second from the left? The one with teh evil eyes 👀


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 9:56 pm
 Drac
Posts: 50352
 

Funny looking sheep.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 9:56 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Nope. The one on the right with the cankles.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 9:57 pm
Posts: 65918
Free Member
 

"I know which one I’d rather eat."

They're both pretty nice tbh


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 10:00 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

You mean the staged for TV stuff?

They stage stuff for TV?!? Oh noes, that must mean everything on the show never happens anywhere else then.

Oh but it does.

Ok, you're obviously an expert. I'll take your word for it.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 10:00 pm
Posts: 1318
Full Member
 

We get venison from that's come from deer that's been killed to keep the numbers down in Macc forest.   There's a team of rangers out every night shooting the wild boar in the FOD as they are completely out of control.  The goats on the Great Orme cause devastation to the surrounding properties. We live in a country where the largest predator is a fox, so these large mammals populations.  It's not like she's shooting a rhino or a tiger.  If they can bring money into the economy for something that needs doing anyhow good on them.

I don't get the photos especially the one with the sheep  but it's part of their hunting culture.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 10:03 pm
Posts: 13554
Free Member
 

There are deer in Macc Forest? Live about a mile away, have been cycling there for the last seven years and I’ve never seen one. Every day is a school day. I’m going off piste to find them this weekend.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 10:09 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Why is it always white blonde women who seem to get in the news for this?


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 10:14 pm
Posts: 1318
Full Member
 

I most often night ride on the forest and always see deer.  The most ive seen us about 20 on the cycle path down from the benches at the top of the white rabbit.  They ran in front of me for  about 200 yards it was amazing.  They'll be rutting in a few weeks, you can hear them for miles.

I've seen them in the fields around Langley and I think that's when they try and cull them to keep them within the forest.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 11:28 pm
Posts: 11269
Full Member
 

Meh, i've been veggie my entire adult life and i can't see what the outpouring of social media grief is all about, i'm perfectly happy for rich idiots to pay handsomely to shoot animals that need culling such as the galloway goats and red deer population that live close to me, they are going to be shot/culled anyway so it makes perfect sense to raise additional funds whilst controlling their numbers, although shooting is a bit ott though for goats and rams, it would be just as easy to walk up to a goat whilst offering it a bag of monster munch and give it a dunt on the back of the head with a hammer.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 11:44 pm
 poly
Posts: 8699
Free Member
 

She’s a massive cockwomble for wearing camouflage too.

I'm not sure that is newsworthy though - I could show you dozens of people in camo gear any weekend in Scotland.  Admittedly she might be the first woman.

£10 says I could walk up to a goat or sheep whilst dressed as a clown and juggling and still kill it with ease. Hunting my arse.

I'll take your bet.  It has to be a feral Scottish goat though, not some farm animal.  Please post the video of your successful clown antics and I'll happily send you a tenner.   So as not to offend the internet I don't need you to kill it - just touch it with your hand.


 
Posted : 24/10/2018 11:51 pm
Posts: 569
Free Member
 

I was visiting a friend in NZ in 2005 and we set off from Arrowtown with mountain bikes and a sporterised .303 SMLE for a 4-5 day combo gold mine visiting - goat stalking trip. The abandoned gold mining towns were great but we didn’t pot a single goat as they were wily AF. They seemed to know exactly what days our permit was active and on what land we weren’t allowed to shoot, so congregating there to mock-bleat in our general direction! We never even got close. Feral goats are/were a big problem on South Island due to degradation of indigenous flora and I’d have had no qualms.


 
Posted : 25/10/2018 5:41 am
Posts: 794
Free Member
 

You’ve ruined it Welsh farmer I was waiting for his answer but cheers for pointing out to him it’s pretty much no different to an abatoir.

I have to disagree with this. I've seen the stress the animals go through to get to an abattoir, and I've (unfortunately) seen a sheep take a quick bullet to the back of the head. The latter was instant - the former was not.

I know which I'd prefer if I were the animal.

FWIW, I don't buy meat any more. I don't think anyone should if they're queasy about the idea of animal suffering.


 
Posted : 25/10/2018 6:15 am
Posts: 13554
Free Member
 

I most often night ride on the forest and always see deer.  The most ive seen us about 20 on the cycle path down from the benches at the top of the white rabbit

Sorry for the derailment folks. I ride in the day which might explain it. Honestly can’t believe I’ve never seen any. I’m blaming Hope and their noisy hubs,

I’ll take your bet.  It has to be a feral Scottish goat though

How will I know it’s Scottish, do they bleat with an accent?


 
Posted : 25/10/2018 6:34 am
Posts: 26725
Full Member
 

Cant see what the issue is she shot some animals that can be eaten, was hardly a Giraffe or  a Lion or a Bear was it.

I shot a goat once and I've been to abatoirs a few times, I know how I'd rather be dispatched if I was a sheep or a goat, especially a feral goat that had never been handled.


 
Posted : 25/10/2018 7:43 am
Posts: 3378
Full Member
 

Wow Drac, you have shocked me. I would have thought you were a bit more grounded than that.

The industrialized killing of animals for human consumption, is just what it says on the tin. The end result - a dead animal, is pretty much the same and being shot on a Scottish Island.

However there is suffering caused by how we make it more convenient for ourselves.

Like Soma I've been a vegetarian for since my teens, 30 plus years.  That's my choice. If you want to eat meat that's ok, it's your choice. But be realistic about the process. Pigs are smart animals, they know the sound of another pig suffering. That's what they will hear at a slaughter house.

Ok back to the original point. She makes a living by advertisers paying money for attention. So that's what she is giving them. Looks **** to me thou.


 
Posted : 25/10/2018 8:26 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

She’s a massive cockwomble for wearing camouflage too

Think of it as a sort of uniform. The Americans wear camo to go hunting, its like wearing trainers even though you're not doing sports. Or at the risk of another argument, a helmet to ride to the shops, you (probably) don't need it, it doesn't really effect your ability to ride the bike but plenty of people do it because wearing a helmet is just what people do when they ride a bike.


 
Posted : 25/10/2018 8:30 am
Posts: 11605
Free Member
 

Pigs don't suffer all that much since asphyxiation by CO2 is the general method used to kill them (hence why the recent shortage was such a big deal). They just go to sleep.

There are also ways to design abbatoirs to be far less stressful and more humane but that still doesn't get around the fact the animals have to be transported there in the first place.

Camo - good luck hunting in anything else. If any statement is going to out you as someone with no clue about what it is they're commenting on this is it. Cockwomble indeed.


 
Posted : 25/10/2018 8:33 am
Posts: 17273
Free Member
 

How will I know it’s Scottish, do they bleat with an accent?

It’ll call you a baaaaaastard


 
Posted : 25/10/2018 8:37 am
 Drac
Posts: 50352
 

Wow Drac, you have shocked me. I would have thought you were a bit more grounded than that.

The industrialized killing of animals for human consumption, is just what it says on the tin. The end result – a dead animal, is pretty much the same and being shot on a Scottish Island.

I've seen both, I use to shoot years ago too neither or exactly pleasant or clean evrrytime.  I've also seen sheep dipstached on the farm and again it's not all joyful and happy experience for the animal as they're not stunned first and it can also fail first time.

Eating meat means you kind of have accept that the animals haven't had a great end to their lives, you can be comfortable with that or become a vegetarian/vegan. I choose to live with it but reaslistic enough killing an animal either way is not pleasent. However killing a sheep is hardly hunting or a sport.


 
Posted : 25/10/2018 8:38 am
Posts: 2248
Full Member
 

The reason she’s dressed in camo is the same reason some of us on here dress in neon flouro enduro pyjamas to go for a bike ride in the woods.


 
Posted : 25/10/2018 8:51 am
 Drac
Posts: 50352
 

It’s gives her an erection?


 
Posted : 25/10/2018 8:57 am
Posts: 11605
Free Member
 

However killing a sheep is hardly hunting or a sport.

Again, that comes back to context. If its feral then good luck getting it any other way.


 
Posted : 25/10/2018 9:06 am
Posts: 1205
Full Member
 

Like other's here, I find the pictures of the two hunters posing with the dead goats quite absurd. However, the goats are on an island, their numbers need to be kept under control, these folk are paying good money into the local economy to do that, and quite frankly, I'd rather they went out and shot a goat, than a Lion or a Tiger.

When you read the woman's actual tweet thingy at the bottom of the pictures, she's making a big point of highlighting the equipment she used. She's advertising her sponsor's (or potential sponsor's) kit in these pictures that are aimed at a niche audience, it's her job to post this sort of stuff to social media. No matter how ludicrous it looks to me, there'll be someone out there with a stack of money thinking that Islay is their next stop for a bit of shooting action.

I'm struggling to get worked up about it. If it was a picture of my mate Bazz, sitting at the edge of a pond with a 7kg Trout in his arms, and the caption...."Look what I just bagged at Wellside Farm fishery with my Shimano reel and Diawa rod"*, I'd be thinking, "Where's me Trout fillet ya jammy git". I'd struggle to be outraged in all honest. I don't see the difference between popping off a Goat or  Deer with a gun, or pulling a fish out of the water on the end of a rod.

Forgive me if I'm exhibiting moral bankruptcy, but I really can't get outraged about this.

C.

* Awaiting sponsorship calls


 
Posted : 25/10/2018 9:14 am
Posts: 7076
Full Member
 

Pigs don’t suffer all that much since asphyxiation by CO2 is the general method used to kill them (hence why the recent shortage was such a big deal). They just go to sleep.

There's a video somewhere of pigs in a slaughterhouse being killed with CO2. They quite clearly do not enjoy the experience. They don't just go to sleep.

Apparently pigs are very sensitive to CO2.


 
Posted : 25/10/2018 9:25 am
Posts: 24498
Free Member
 

Pigs don’t suffer all that much since asphyxiation by CO2 is the general method used to kill them (hence why the recent shortage was such a big deal). They just go to sleep.

Not true. Try and hold your breath for as long as you can - just before you give up, that feeling of having to take a breath isn't lack of oxygen but the build up of CO2 (hypercapnia) which you can overcome by taking a breath and expelling the CO2 / rebalancing the O2 to CO2 ratio.

But if you're breathing CO2, that won't rebalance and yet you still have enough O2 in your system to stay conscious for a while. So you are simultaneous desperately breathing with no effect, making the process very stressful even if it's for a short period.

Inert gases like nitrogen have the effect you describe - the concentration of O2 in your system drops until you become 'drunk', then drowsy, then fall asleep and then die. Some US states are investigating it as a new execution method, and it's well known among jet pilots, etc., as a result of failing cabin air pressure (there was a case a few years back where the pilot became disorientated so quickly he just carried on flying rather than descend to higher O2 atmosphere, and also why they say fit your own mask before helping others - the time to fit others masks might be long enough for you to forget why you need to fit yours)

Positive note - if you want to impress your kids by swimming lengths of a swimming pool underwater, start by doing some deep, slow inhale/exhales to push as much CO2 out as you can before a final breath and swim. Also adds to the theatre, as if you're about to perform something truly death defying!!


 
Posted : 25/10/2018 9:28 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I've got an article written in the 1940s about bow hunting for wild sheep and goats in the Rockies.

Apparently they were considered a really tough animal to hunt because of the terrain and because wild sheep and goats are a lot cleverer and a lot more timid than the sheep you see on your average UK farm.

I've no idea if these Scottish sheep are the same, and it would be a lot easier with a rifle,  but I could see why some American hunters might consider this a challenge (though I have no idea if it is or not).


 
Posted : 25/10/2018 9:36 am
Posts: 17273
Free Member
 

Let’s make it a fair fight...,


 
Posted : 25/10/2018 9:44 am
Posts: 41642
Free Member
 

Drac
Subscriber

Go on then tell me?

Welsh Farmer got there first, but yes, generally shot from the other end of the barn (close enough to guarantee an accurate shot, not so close that you're spending the next week picking sheep brain off the barn walls).

it’s pretty much no different to an abatoir.

I think you need to see an a abattoir, it's not dignitas.


 
Posted : 25/10/2018 9:52 am
Page 1 / 3

6 DAYS LEFT
We are currently at 95% of our target!