Little Book of British Quadrupeds W. May 1845
British Quadrupeds Second edition Religious Tract Society 1848 illo
Little Book of British Quadrupeds W. May 1845
I wrote this on a couple of wildlife groups pages:
"Really, I should not be surprised but it seems that other than a couple of people taking in grey squirrels and the odd hedgehog rescue there are no real wildlife orientated rescuers in Bristol.
What happened? There used to be people all over the City right up until the late 1990s and now...nothing.
I had hoped there were some about that avoided having to get over stretched rescuers from Secret World involved and the long trip down to Somerset for any animal/bird.
It is a sad thing to have to say that the UK really is not geared up for wildlife rescue but it's even sadder that a City the size of Bristol is totally and utterly unprepared for a sick or injured animal...and we have birds and wildlife on our doorstep north, south, east and west."
and someone responded:
"maybe you need to start one?"
All of that seems far more important now. Secret World had Zoe Webber working as a volunteer trapping and rescuing and Matt Lvy moved down from Scotland to work at the rescue where he was rushed off his feet. Despite what Secret World might say, depending on who answers the phone, it says it cannot cover Bristol and that has been proven over the past few years with only Zoe Webber's efforts keeping a regular presence.
Secret World is in Somerset and it is a long drive to take a sick or injured animal on. Once Secret World withdraws the number of sick and injured animals being "put to sleep" is going to increase. "First response" or "First treatment" vets, if you can find one willing to deal with wildlife, will generally resort to putting a fox or badger to "sleep". It's easier and cheaper and I write this having now had 50 years of experience with vets and wildlife -up until the 1990s most vets (unless a trainee establishment) would tell you (sometimes politely) to "get stuffed" if you said you had found a sick or injured fox or badger. Police officers on country patrols would invariably carry a lead pipe or other implement in the boot of the patrol car to swiftly put any injured badger or fox "out of its misery".
We are supposed to have improved since that time and to an extent we have as the "lead pipe blessing" no longer occurs. Rescues try their best but in the past individuals had to step in. In Bristol there were a few experienced fox watchers who kept an eye on the local foxes and handed out treatments where they could and got the occasionally "thank you bite" -"It's a wild animal and I grabbed it by the scruff of the neck to dose it and it had no idea what I was up to!" The 1994 mange outbreak in Bristol that killed around 94% of the fox population was the last time most of these people tried their hardest and many with no help from vets.
For some reason in the 1990s to mid 2000s people knew me as "that man that deals with sick pigeons". I did, true, but had no idea why until two youngsters arrived at my doorstep on a sunny bank holiday Monday with a squeaker (juvenile pigeon) they had fished out of the Feeder Canal. They cycled to the RSPCA centre only a few hundred yards away where someone told them a great big lie: "We don't deal with pigeons...we can give you the address where to take it though" -my address. I had rescued and kept racing pigeons until the local man, a Mr Truckle, could collect them to send back to the owners. I had also rescued a couple of wood pigeons -one dislocated wing and another had a broken leg. I pointed out to the RSPCA inspectors who called where the long time nests were (in my garden) and that I could look after them until release. All agreed. After a couple days I phoned the RSPCA to see what was happening and was told "It's policy to put to sleep wild birds" -twice I was told that and, yes, I made a serious complaint.
After that I would not trust the RSPCA again and Secret World were not that interested so, I tidied up an old wooden shed that was really only big enough to hold a few tools in but was warm, dry and secure enough to keep a boxed up pigeon with food and water in.
Once I moved home there was no longer a shed so things moved indoors. Having a "dog transport cage" I turned this into a pigeon holding cage. It is quite large so the pigeon can move about in it and a thick twig can be fixed for roosting.
Just as with foxes people feed badgers the wrong food. I have seen everything from cooked/raw sausages (I have looked in The Wild Food Book and sausages are not in it), doughnuts and the "usual stuff".
As if to emphasise what I have been trying to warn people about, and one reason why we carry out the post mortems on dead foxes, it is confirmed that Avian Influenza Virus (AIV) is now being isolated from some foxes. So the University involved is reviewing its health and safety routine regarding fox PMs re zoonotic risks (as it has re. Badger Pms and Bovine TB). Some post mortems may still be possible with some mitigations
Dead birds are a free meal to foxes and it was only a matter of time before this happened; the risk is bird to fox to humans.
The other crossing over we have been waiting to find (thankfully not yet) is covid in foxes. Again, the risk is fox to human through close contact.
This is serious advice: feed any fox at a distance and DO NOT hand feed or try to coax a fox into your home. This is not a joke. If you use a bowl to feed a fox (or badger) clean it out every day with a disinfectant. If you feed on one spot regularly -do not. Move where you place food nightly.
Foxes are best fed and watched from a distance, as are badgers. If you are a feeder you now have a serious responsibility to make changes to how you interact with foxes and badgers. Keeping AIV isolated to wildlife and not crossing over to humans is extremely important. If AIV spreads throughout UK fox populations that could lead to a cull. We do NOT want that.
Keep any AIV in foxes isolated and do not help to spread it.
Terry Hooper-Scharf
British Fox Study
I am fully aware of Badger feeders just as I am aware of fox feeders.
People keep posting online and saying that hedgehogs are recovering after being Red Listed. I keep telling them that the species has not...