Badger...
 

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[Closed] Badger...

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 Haze
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'Trapped' in our garden overnight...he's dug himself a nice bed for the day under our conifers, but not before trying to eat his way through 3 fence panels!

So what to do, assuming he'll keep his head down through the day do I wait until dusk and maybe try to encourage him to use the gate?

Obviously from a safe distance and maybe with shin pads on...


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 8:28 am
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http://www.foodsofengland.co.uk/badger.htm

Bring out the BBQ and report back on how it tasted.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 8:32 am
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You will need more than shin pads if you corner him! Having freed a couple of them in the past from fox snares that our local game keeper used to put up all over the place, the humble cute Badger comes a close second only to the African Honey Badger in terms of snappy, bitey, self preservation, viciousness, and is not to be messed with lightly. Badgers are Badass MFs 🙂


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 8:40 am
 Haze
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Reckon it'll go well with the halloumi?


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 8:41 am
 scud
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Went on a bivi recently where all i could hear was the sound of crunching and munching really loudly, when i got up in the morning i realised how close to a large badger set i was, noisy buggers!


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 8:41 am
 Haze
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snappy, bitey, self preservation, viciousness

Yeah my fence panels bear testament to this!


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 8:43 am
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Yes, but was your patio covered with tubeless spaff? That was a particularly angry badger.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 8:45 am
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I saw a badger DJing once.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 8:47 am
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... great sett.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 8:47 am
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badger stunt


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 8:52 am
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Yes, but was your patio covered with tubeless spaff? That was a particularly angry badger.

Out in the daytime as well.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 8:54 am
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We had exactly the same last night. There was a loud clang from the side gate then a lot of bashing around the garden as it couldn't find a way out.

It dug under the back wooden fence in to the nature reserve behind but got stuck between that and the chainlink fence the previous owner couldn't be arsed to remove before putting up the wooden fence.

I had to get very close the poor wee bugger whilst cutting the fence to let it out. They are pretty terrifying close up specially when they growl and snap at you.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 9:22 am
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Mushroom! Mushroom! Snake!


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 9:23 am
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Didn't someone on here run one over on a night ride, and was then chased down the hill by the angry 'victim'?

Badgers are ace..


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 9:30 am
 Haze
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I do like them, would have preferred he didn't try to eat his way through my fences but a couple of them needed replacing anyway.

He was fast asleep in there when I left for work...


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 9:35 am
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Send in a baboon and we can answer the age-old question.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 9:42 am
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Soak some cloths in Jeyes Fluid, hang them around the garden and on the grass near where he’s sleeping.

They ain’t keen on the smell.

We had some try and attack the chicken sheds, just hung some Jeyes Fluid cloths near them and that was the last we saw of em’ in the farm. They still romo around the Beck and Woods, so are still around and happy.. all be it with one less meal.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 11:37 am
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"Marking your territory" in the garden should keep it away. My mate had a small-holding and this was the only way to keep them off his veg garden.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 11:44 am
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My mate had a small-holding

I don't think this makes a difference to the smell.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 11:48 am
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small-holding

does your mate know you question his manhood on forums?


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 11:49 am
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It does make it easier to hold when marking your territory.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 11:54 am
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Mushroom! Mushroom!

Came here to post this. Pleased someone else got there first.

Life is good knowing that 15 year old internet banter is being honoured.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 12:09 pm
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“My mate had a small-holding and this was the only way to keep them off his veg garden.

Post is target-rich environment


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 12:15 pm
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I rescued a lamb that had got itself stuck in a wire fence at the weekend. My riding buddy transferred a bucket full of tadpoles that were living in a rapidly drying out puddle.

Really not the same level of jeopardy at all.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 12:27 pm
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Surely someone still had a photo of the “angry badger”


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 12:44 pm
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I hear he's gone into politics.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 1:04 pm
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Fence panels you say

Lift the damaged one up..... and prop it up something (upturned bucket)

Escape to Victory

Good luck

But got to say ... you must have a rubbish Badger there .... the sods in my back garden just dig under the gravel boards.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 1:34 pm
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Life is good knowing that 15 year old internet banter is being honoured.

15 years? Blimey.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 1:39 pm
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Whatever you do OP please promise to film it and post it up on here.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 1:39 pm
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Actually saw my first living badger the other day, or more than just a fleeting glance I may have seen in the past. All others I've seen have always been dead ones, by the side of the road. Never in the middle of the road and don't look squashed. More like some farmer has dumped them there to claim as road kill 😉

Maybe there are more of them about now. I blame Brian May.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 2:04 pm
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Came here to post this. Pleased someone else got there first.

Life is good knowing that 15 year old internet banter is being honoured.

That was also my first thought on seeing the thread title.

All together now:

"Everyone loves Magical Trevor, 'Cause the tricks that he does are ever so clever, Look at him now, disappearin' the cow, Where is the cow hidden right now?"


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 2:13 pm
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Love badgers. An old guy I worked with once told me the dead badgers at the side of the roads round N.Wales are mostly killed and dumped to look like road kill. No idea if it’s true or why you’d not leave them dumped or buried in a field. He reckoned Badger sets are targeted, exits blocked and then gassed. More interesting tea break than usual with that firm anyway.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 2:16 pm
 Haze
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Fence panels you say

Lift the damaged one up….. and prop it up something (upturned bucket)

Escape to Victory

Good luck

But got to say … you must have a rubbish Badger there …. the sods in my back garden just dig under the gravel boards.

Yeah been thinking along those lines, at lot of the panels are skirted by decking or brick so he wouldn't be able to dig too close to them.

He probably is a bit stupid though, if he went down the steps and along the side of the house he'd find a perfectly passable gate with railings!

I'm hoping he'll have found his way out when I get home, assuming there's still a house left 😀

If not can someone lend me a GoPro?!


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 2:20 pm
 bruk
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I’d prop the fence panel up if possible it just cut a hole in it if you are going to replace it anyway. Don’t try and go anywhere near it. They are very strong solid evenly buggers.
Having hit 2 badgers with the car over the years ( joys of living rurally and being called out at night) I can testify that they don’t get squashed when you hit them. They do smash up you bumpers however. Those ones by the side of the road are likely to have been hit. Wear gloves and cover you mouth/nose if your are going to pick them up and move them though.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 2:21 pm
 Haze
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Don’t try and go anywhere near it. They are very strong solid evenly buggers

I had my hand in there this morning when I first went to investigate, pulled it out pretty sharpish when I heard grunting!


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 2:23 pm
 Haze
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Posted : 25/04/2019 2:28 pm
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Forget Norway.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 2:28 pm
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They do smash up you bumpers however

This I can attest to. Hit one at about 50mph of an evening, smashed the crap out of my front bumper, the bugger had the temerity to get up and run off! Didn't even leave his insurance details, the sod.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 2:51 pm
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We had a badger in our garden last night too. He/she may still be there. I’ve not checked. Hope my veggie patch is ok.

I once, on a solo night ride, hit a badger as it crossed the single track I was riding. Over the bars I went, then sprang to my feet expecting a fight. He just trotted off, nonchalantly.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 2:59 pm
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qwerty

… great sett.

I cete what you did there.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 3:20 pm
 Haze
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Other half has returned home and said he's gone, must have eventually found the obvious way out.

And he hasn't battered anymore fence panels.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 4:23 pm
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Had a badger run between my legs once. Late at night taking the dog (lurcher- born to chase) for a walk in the woods. He set off after one. Next thing I know there is two pairs of eyes coming towards me at full pelt. He was chasing a young badger which went straight between my feet. Luckily I was able to grab the dog else I expect he’d have come off worse if he did catch it.
Seen quite a few on the way back from the pub cycling through the parks. (I was on way back from the pub, don’t know where the badgers had been)


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 4:50 pm
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I hear he’s gone into politics.

Yay @MartinHutch

That's the one we were waiting for! 😀

Congratulations on bringing it up to date.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 5:17 pm
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Get a really big glass, and a sheet of A2 paper.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 5:22 pm
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I rescued a lamb that had got itself stuck in a wire fence at the weekend. My riding buddy transferred a "bucket full of tadpoles"

Did someone mention target-rich posts earlier ??


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 5:55 pm
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Posted : 25/04/2019 6:05 pm
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Seen quite a few on the way back from the pub cycling through the parks.(I was on way back from the pub, don’t know where the badgers had been)

Sod where the badger had been, what was it doing on a bike?


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 7:00 pm
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try a peanut trail to the open gate
one ran out in front f my bike one night, almost hit me.


 
Posted : 25/04/2019 7:39 pm
 Haze
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Back again last night, started on the lawn.

He's obviously found a way in and out which I'm guessing is somewhere under the conifers...

[IMG] [/IMG]


 
Posted : 26/04/2019 8:18 am

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