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Thursday, 1 April 2021

The Fox Study and NARF Implications

 



Above: The North American Red Fox

 If you have not read The Red Paper: Canids then it is very unlikely that you know the true story of British foxes. What we see today can easily be categorised as New Foxes as opposed to Old Fox types. The Red Paper: Canids was described as "explosive" and "totally rewrites the history of the fox in the UK".

The follow up will certainly carry on that tradition. Bit-by-bit I have pieced together that really should shake natural history in the UK to the core. 

We have irrefutable evidence that coyotes, wolves and jackals were released by British fox hunts.  This along with the importation of foxes from Europe as well as breeding foxes for future hunts is something it has taken a good few years to unearth and the information comes directly from the hunts.

I have clearly identified two fox types that seem typical of those found around the country. One of these is quite obviously of North American Red Fox (NARF) or Vulpes fulvus. 

In recent years wehave seen an extraordinary number of cases of escapes of Silver foxes as well as other exotic pet foxes. In fact the evidence leads to the suspicion that hunt groups are releasing NARF as something larger and more spectacular to hunt. It is also possible that the intention in some areas (such as Wales) is to breed something bigger with a "better fur" that can be caught in snares for the hiome grown British fur trade. The evidence speaks for itself.

Hayley de Ronde notes that in some areas the NARF has hybridised with or overtaken the number of British Red foxes.  This raises the concern that they will eventually replace the current British fox. She believes that the NARF were released following WW 2 and the eventual end of fur farming.

The Fox Study which I began in 1977 was able to make significant breakthroughs in tracing the history of UK foxes. The current work is designed to try to identify fox types in the UK and note how far and wide certain types are.

There are important points to make.

1. This work is not going to be completed quickly. There is absolutely no funding so things can take a while as everything comes out of my pocket.

2. This is a private research project aimed at giving us a better understanding of UK foxes. There is no governmental involvement, funding and there is no private access to core data given to any government department or agency working with one. People deal with me and no one else. 

3. From 1977-2013 I was an exotic animals advisor to UK police forces and it that time absolutely no witness identification or location data was ever given out. Confidential is confidential and protection of the animals involved is paramount.

4. What I ask for from people who want to help out is simple; 

(a)how long have the foxes been coming to your garden/area? 

(b)Have the foxes always looked the same -no stranger colourations to coats? 

(c)Basic location info.  In Bristol I simply ask for the post code area such as BS2 or BS 11. Outside of the City & County of Bristol I simply ask for the town, city or village. This is to help me see what types are in what areas.

(d) Photographs. People may love their foxy visitors but they take them to be "just foxes". With a photograph or series of photos I can see a lot more and that information helps greatly.

(e) If you have a name for the fox(es) that visit please note that with photos because if there is something unique spotted at least I can say which fox I'm talking about.  All photos/videoes are logged with the photographers Name and Town or area. I do not claim any rights to the photographs or video clips received so please do not be concerned that these will be used widely or without your permission.

From all of this I can hopefully produce something useful to people interested in foxes.

If you can help then please email me at:  blacktowercg@hotmail.com

If you see a black fox it may well be an escaped pet and those have been killed in road accidents, shot and even snared in the past as they are domesticated pets and not capable of living in the wild. The best people to contact (if you can get a photo it helps) are Black Foxes UK and their contact info can be found here: 

https://www.blackfoxes.co.uk/contact-us.php

THANK YOU



Friday, 12 March 2021

The New UK 'Big Cat' -Silver Foxes?

I want to put a few thoughts here so I know where they are when I need them. As usual I am typing as I am thinking.

 



Trying to update the fox work has become a lot weirder because of, in the main, black foxes. Also, odd though this may sound, better communications.

When I first started out there  were no computers or mobile phones (please, do not faint -it was quite normal for us and we never suffered). You had to put an appeal in newspapers or talk to people and record what they had seen. You would ask for a detailed description and the response was very likely going to be: "Oh, right you are. It was a fox" and that was it.

 

I only noticed differences in fox fur patterns after studying a lot of footage and many photographs but even then nothing extreme in morphology. While running the Exotic Animals Register (EAR) I would speak to many people and ask what other sort of wildlife was in the area and apart from foxes being rarely seen I would get mentions of (in one case from a lady who was a night time taxi driver in Devon) of black foxes -not seen once but on several occasions. Then someone mentioned white foxes and it got slightly confusing when to this were added black and white or a small white or small black foxes seen in the Scottish borders area -all ridiculed until one was shot for "looking unusual". Then I traced back the releases of arctic foxes. Hayley de Ronde of Black Foxes UK has studied this matter and discovered a great deal about the once legal fox fur trade and fox farms in the UK.

 

Most people who had foxes visiting them, like the badger feeders, kept these quiet for obvious reasons (yes, there are people out there snatching foxes in towns and cities and we can only guess why though we do know fox baiting was taking place in the Midlands a few years back). Now a black fox could have been either a melanistic red fox or silver fox -all I had to go on was "a black fox" (raccoon dogs do not help in the confusion!).

 

But it seems that since the 1990s there are more black foxes being reported and I'm not sure if that is because more people are now wildlife aware or because of other factors. It may well be likely that many of the black foxes reported are fur farm escapees or dumps and that puts this in the same scenario as the non native cat issue.

 

I know that non native cats were kept in private as well as travelling menageries and escapes from these were not rare -even primates such as gorillas as I noted in one of my earlier books-and there is a very great suspicion that "excess stock" that could not be exchanged or sold off 'escaped' along some of the rough roads menageries often travelled. Oh, UK fox hunts releasing jackals, wolves and coyotes and even wolves for the ‘sport’ when they had almost wiped out the British fox added to the mix.

 

Now the press in the old days often reported any animal sighted as "probably having escaped from some travelling menagerie" as that was an easy explanation. True, there were gorilla and chimp escapes, wolverines escaping and even humorous accounts of kangaroo escapes. I know areas of England where cats have lived and bred and been known about by locals since the 1920s/1930s and each generation has warned the next of precautions to take if they come across one of the cats. The public at large knows none of this because the cats are seen as wildlife that takes care of the less wanted critters such as rats, mice and rabbits –foxes are also on the menu.

 

Sightings of 'big cats' are always funny season items or in today's sensationalist medium either funny or “Deadly Killers At Large!!!” (yes, even when some photos do only clearly show a domestic cat or dog and the zoos that tell repoirters “it could be a large cat” really need to have their training stepped up). Country shooters who work nights on farms "pest controlling" have told me of well known local large cats and they never attempt to even shoot them because "they help in the job". None of this is widely known.

 

If someone saw a black fox in the past they might mention it but who cares? It is either an "omen of ill will" so keep quiet or so rare "you were lucky to see it".

No one -because it was a blind spot in the public vision- thought about fur farms and if they knew of an escape they probably thought to be quiet and "let it live its life in the wild".

 

Being a joke or after effect of ‘too much drink’ cat reports were never seriously looked into but we know that they were either kept in pairs when they ‘escaped’ or were freed or a male found a female and they were breeding: there is an absolute piece of pure fantasy that is often cited by certain people claiming to be “big cat” experts (X= The Unknown and “spurt” is a drip under pressure) that if there is, say, a female puma in Wales and a male puma in Cumbria, the male will travel all the way to Wales hence why a cat is reported for a few days then it is gone. That is double-dumb-ass-with oakleaf cluster talk.

 

Have the cats really bred, though?  Well, unlike the copy and paste “experts” I do the research work.  I have a book, reminiscences of a clergyman in the 19th century in which he recounts an incident from the late 1840s in which a woman saw and perfectly described a black leopard near a Devon village. However, the locals assumed that this was a ghost because a coffin being transported to a church was dropped on the same road earlier. A ghost was far more likely an explanation –a leopard was not even considered! Other reports point to similar instances going on around the UK and even during the early years of WW 2 (before any US troops brought any type of exotic to the UK –another “experts” fantasy).

 

I have a letter from a nurse who used to visit Chester Zoo and would always visit the puma there (her favourite) and when, in the 1970s she saw one in the countryside and close to she KNEW it was a puma. But there was another smaller cat, spotted and the best she could describe it as was a "sphynx cat" and when I asked for more details I told her that what she saw was a puma cub (she had never seen one before).

 

Now we get "blur cat" photos or video footage of these cats and still no one really believes -this attitude is helped by "big cat" groups and bad reporting.

 

And the cats have a good diet out in the wild. These cats whether African wild cats, jungle cats, lynx or puma have been in the UK for at least two centuries and in that time not one person has been harmed by one. There have been faked incidents but there is only one genuine incident I can think of and that involved a scratch (very light) from a lynx that a woman received when she tried to take a wild rabbit it had killed from it –I have no idea why anyone would do something that daft.

 

So we are now getting reports of black fox cubs (but all fox cubs are black so...) but far more people are noticing and photographing and filming black foxes so we can tell what is a melanistic red fox or a silver fox. Recent escapees or the current generation of offspring of escapees that have realised, as red foxes have, that humans chuck food out willy-nilly so why struggle looking for rabbits during hard times or when there are extra cubs to feed? (yes, the correct term is “kit” but using that term usually gets blanks looks but you say “cubs” everyone knows what you mean!)

 

Unlike the large cats we have to look at whether escapee offspring are moving into towns (which they have not though they are observed on the outskirts –as are rats and rabbits) and whether this might lead to interbreeding between the red fox and North American Silver fox –the silver fox is a domesticated pet fox.

 

I was once told that if I received one or two reports (totally different field) of something to plot them on a map. Then I ought to go back a year and see whether there were similar reports and plot those on a separate map. And I ought to do this for each year I could find reports. I did that with cats and found there were territories as well as patterns. On a combined map it looks impressive!

 

What the mapping showed me were how reports increased but more importantly no one was told of the sighting reports - until they contacted me.

 

I can see the same thing happening with black/silver foxes. In this case the only way to tell if silver foxes have bred "in the wild" is if photos or film turns up showing a really young individual and this is why licensing or registration of these foxes is needed because you have to ask whether this was a young individual bred from two pets and it escaped, is a young silver fox that was purchased and escaped or is it the offspring of wild living silver foxes?

 

I hate to say it but the similarities are far too similar and so are the areas in which the escapes/sightings are reported. This leads me to conclude that Hayley de Ronde

may well suffer quite a few confusion headaches in future ðŸ™‚

 

The 'big cat' mystery of today could soon be the "black fox mystery" and sadly there is no current legislation to tighten up the controls on who can keep these foxes -control of cats, primates, etc had no legislation until 1976 after all and now any exotic in the wild is on a government public hit list. They are classed as an “invasive species” and this means that they are trapped, poisoned, snared and shot with impunity. An escaped pet raccoon dog can be shot or even euthanized (killed) and the owner still be looking for it.

 

Humans have slaughtered and made extinct many, many species. We have introduced rabbits and rats (the former deliberately for ‘sport’) as well as rabbits to countries such as Australia which has already made species extinct and thinks nothing of shooting huge numbers of kangaroos from helicopters as well as snaring, poisoning, shooting and even clubbing feral cats and dogs and that includes foxes while shouting “protecting a unique natural environment!”  Yet that is just an excuse to allow killing to continue and a lot do it more for ‘fun’ than anything else. Prey numbers (rats, mice, rabbits) increase but that’s fine –they can shoot, poison, snare and club those and there is never a clear thought that tells them that if you leave the Predator they will take care of the Prey and the predators numbers do not increase as there is natural regulation (breed then food is plentiful but stop breeding when there is little food –that is scientifically proven).

 

In the UK the use of snares is abhorrent. They kill pet cats, dogs, hedgehogs and badgers (the latter two supposedly “protected species”) as well as foxes. Badger baiting and hunting foxes with dogs is still taking place on the Shropshire-Cheshire border weekly…and local police know it. Protected birdsre-introduced are also killed –shot, poisoned and nests smashed.  Yet the UK is “a nation of animal lovers”.

 


What we should be doing is letting the new introduced species that have been here for at least two centuries get on with living.  The economic value to local communities of “Tours of the Big Cat sighting territory” etc could be great but when mentality allows badger baiting, culling as well as fox killing to continue there is little chance.  We are in a country where a farmer spots an escaped pet lemur and shoots it “because it looked odd” or where another farmer kills an arctic fox for the same reason.

 

The UK wants to maintain the reputation –the chocolate box fake image- as a nation of animal lovers and Her Majesty’s Government declaring all invasive species must be killed because “they will wipe out our native wildlife”  which is a lie. Canada Geese are not native…well they have been accepted as native now and there are many others that can be listed. Ancient woodland and countryside is torn up to allow railway lines and motorways to be built and each of these results in a bigger negative impact on the environment than any raccoon dog or lynx. In my own city, Bristol, the City Council brags about the environment and its pledge to encourage wildlife and birds and yet time and again they have torn up hedgerows and chopped up trees (in nesting season) destroying nests and I have witnessed this first hand on several occasions.

 

We need to understand that evolution is evolution and it has had a lot of assistance from humans in the past.

 

With Silver foxes –I didn’t forget- there are reputable breeders but the bottom line is that they breed to sell.  For every legitimate breeder there are a dozen who want only the money.  We have heard the rumours of attempts to breed silver foxes with red foxes. We have seen the silver fox escapes: and one is showing a leg injury while another lost its leg through a snare all while keepers shrug and declare “not mine!” (the silver foxes ‘obviously’ arrived here in a flying saucer).

 

If you want a pet silver fox –fine.  However, there should be responsibility on the breeders to ensure that whether a vixen or dog fox before they are sold to anyone they should be incapable of breeding. Anyone saying “I’m looking for a male and female pair” should sound alarm bells.  Recapturing and then treating and re-homing the escapees - if they survive the cars, snares and shooters- costs a lot of money and that should be the responsibility of the owner though there seems to be an attitude of ducking out of responsibility: not only should prospective new homes be checked as well as facilities before and silver fox is sold but it should also be ensured by law that every animal is micro-chipped  and local authorities should check the new owner’s facility at least once a year (as with old Dangerous Wild Animals Act regulations) to check for potential escape risks.

 

It is a sad thing to write but if this type of legislation is not brought in then we may one day find silver foxes escaping, breeding and at some point replacing the red fox but at the same time being labelled an “invasive species” –and the horrors that entails.

 

Time for coffee

https://www.blackfoxes.co.uk/

k

Sunday, 28 February 2021

Foxes and Mange -You CAN Help



 In case anyone needs this in future as mange has been reported in a fox from St Werburgh's...

If you contact the Nationsal Fox Welfare Society they offer free mange meds (drops that go in food) and I've used it and it seems to work, If you contact them just tell them I gave you the contact details.

Saturday, 20 February 2021

The Red Paper: Canids

 


202 Pages
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maps, illustrations and photographs
Price: £20.00 (excl. VAT)
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The Red Paper: Canids Up-dated  edition includes section on sarcoptic mange in foxes and treatment plus a list of wildlife sanctuaries and rescue centres in the UK.

By the 1700s the British fox was on the verge of extinction and about to follow the bear and wolf having been hunted for sport for centuries. The answer was to import thousands of foxes per year for sport. But foxes kept dying out so jackals were tried. Some were caught, some escaped. Even wolves and coyote were released for hunting.


The summation of over 30 years research reveals the damnable lie of "pest control" hunting but also reveals the cruelty the animals were subject to and how private menageries as well as travelling shows helped provide the British and Irish countryside with some incredible events.











Foxes in Bristol and Nationally

  It appears that a newer survey of foxes in the Bristol area is needed. As I noted in The Red Paper: Canids I began my fox project in the 1970s and that was after observing a huge tom cat chasing a fox along Pennywell Road early one morning. 

Since that time I have had first hand experience in observing interactions between foxes and cats, hedgehogs and even magpies and seagulls. The fox is never the aggressor and never comes out of the situations well.

I have seen a pair of adult foxes kept at bay by a large hedgehog taking its fill of food. I have seen hedgehogs "allowing" a fox to eat next to it. I have seen the semi wild cat that covers the few gardens near me chase after foxes and even jump onto the back of one -and attempting a nape of neck bite! Several times I have had to intervene as a fox has been cornered by a cat and attacked. Not exactly the cunning, devious killer some of us were told the species was.

From the 1970s on I found that no one was really interested in foxes and books on them were rare (I have a neart little collection) though there are hundreds on how to hunt and kill foxes and on the great "fox sports hunters" of the 18th-20th century. Come TV and a few more get involved though, sadly most leave the subject through boredom or frustration at the lack of financial reward or funding (I have spent a good few thousand since the 1970s!).

What I want to do is take a look at foxes in Bristol now -people contributing information, etc may do so and request anonymity (but to stop fakers or hoaxers I need to know who they are). This is not a survey for hunting or pointless 'pest control'; this is part of a long term study because foxes are still not fully understood and there is the need to educate the public on foxes.

How can you help? Whether a wildlife group or just someone interested here is what you can help with (and as this is an ongoing project those from outside Bristol can still add to our knowledge):

 Fox Study Project 

I am looking for:

(1) Photographs of foxes that people see in their gardens or while out walking.  This is so that I can see what colour coats and tail markings foxes have in different areas of the country.

(2) Information on whether foxes in your area have been hit by mange at any point and what happened to the fox (if known)

(3) If you have foxes in your area and whether local people are feeding them.

Again: Please note that when you do get in touch I will need to know at least the street and town you live in. This is due to hoaxing in the past.

That is how simple it is to help broaden our knowledge of foxes in Bristol (and the UK) so if you can contribute please do.

THANK YOU

Hedgehogs, like the Fox and Badger, Heading for Extinction

    People keep posting online and saying that hedgehogs are recovering after being Red Listed. I keep telling them that the species has not...