PayPal Donation Link

PayPal Donation Link
PayPal Donations For continued research into British foxes and canids world wide

Saturday, 30 August 2025

Deer stalking: Durrell Trust refuses to engage with members – again

 When I was involved in Exotics work which included keeping an eye on Zoos and wildlife parks the Durrell Trust was one of the very few organisations I trusted. WAS

From Protect The Wild

Members of the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust (DWCT) have been pressuring the organisation to end its support for pay-to-shoot deer stalking on the Dalnacardoch Estate in the Cairngorms, which the Trust manages. DWCT’s leadership has just “unambiguously refused” to discuss a motion from Trust members calling for the issue to be debated at Durrell’s upcoming AGM in September.

The Trust recently performed several U-turns after its support for deer shooting at the Scottish Estate caused an outcry from its members and supporters. DWCT has since said that pay-to-shoot will end in November, but many Trust supporters say that is nowhere near soon enough.

The recent refusal of the Durrell trustees to listen to their members has garnered interest from the national mainstream media.

Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust

Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust is a well-known Jersey-based conservation charity founded by the popular late British author and naturalist Gerald Durrell. It has been involved in a rewilding project at Scotland’s Dalnacardoch Estate since 2023.

The Trust attracted controversy last year after former-Durrell chief executive Paul Masterton told the BBC that DWCT’s support for “trophy hunting and blood sport” at Dalnacardoch – where “people pay a licence fee where they stalk and kill animals” – was a sign that the Trust had travelled “far from its roots and its values”.

Scotland is a popular destination for blood sport enthusiasts from around the world, with some tourists paying £700 or more to kill a stag. Protect the Wild interviewed an anonymous conservation worker earlier this year who said that stags often suffer painful deaths when targeted by tourists. They said that: “amateurs are well known to inflict awful wounds and suffering on deer which then die slowly.”

Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust recently bowed to public pressure and said it would end pay-to-shoot tourism at Dalnacardoch. However, the Trust said it planned to honour its bookings until 2026. After its supporters said this wasn’t good enough, Durrell made further concessions, releasing a statement saying that the last booking would be completed no later than November 2025.

But Protect the Wild and many Durrell Trust members maintain that this still isn’t good enough. The Trust is complicit in causing suffering to animals on its land and continuing to profit from it.

Lack of Democracy

In August 2024, Durrell members tabled a resolution for Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust’s September AGM, as is their right. They proposed:

That all Commercial Shooting for Pay, Blood Sports and Trophy Hunting, be stopped with immediate effect, on all Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust owned or managed properties, including pay to kill hunting at the Scottish estate known as Dalnacardoch.”

But the Trust leadership refused to discuss the motion, using a recent change in the Trust’s rules to prevent the issue from being debated. Protect the Wild contacted Durrell’s media department to ask them why and they told us:

We have already publicised our intention to stop paid stalking. The last contractual obligation for paid for stalking is on 20th October 2025 and bookings ceased to be taken before the End of Commercial Shooting Resolution was received.

The Trust’s press spokesperson said that “the Trustees have unanimously declined to accept” the members’ resolution.

River Garry at Dalnacardoch Estate

“Troubling message”

We spoke to Peter Brookes of ‘We Love the Zoo’, a grassroots advocacy group made up of concerned Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust members and supporters. He expressed deep shock and outrage at the Trust’s refusal to engage with these issues. Brookes told Protect the Wild:

“Durrell have at last agreed to stop deer shooting for pay, although it is disappointing that they are committed to 30 more bookings until the end of October, allowing people to shoot deer for fun until 23rd of that month.

The trustees have “unilaterally” rejected a member’s resolution, that demanded shooting for pay stops immediately. By rejecting the legal resolution, most members will now not know that Durrell have been allowing this activity on trust land for the past two years. They have not given an answer as to how many deer have been shot for sport during that time.”

Lack of transparency

Protect the Wild asked the Trust’s press department to comment on the number of deer shot by tourist at Dalnacardoch since the Trust took over. They declined to answer.

Protect the Wild’s Rob Pownall also criticised the Trust’s decision not to listen to its members:

By refusing to even discuss this motion, the Durrell Trust has sent a troubling message to its own members. Conservation should mean protecting wildlife, not selling the right to kill it. Members have raised a legitimate concern about pay-to-shoot deer stalking at Dalnacardoch, yet instead of engaging openly the Trust has shut the door on debate.

Landowners in Scotland are legally obliged to carry out a deer cull and Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust are saying that this will now be carried out by paid and trained staff.

However, former Trust employee Joya Ghose recently expressed in the media that DWCT should consider other options, including the reintroduction of apex predators which have become extinct in Scotland such as wolves and lynx. The member also expressed support for exploring contraception options for deer at Dalnacardoch as an alternative to a cull.

DWCT’s pledge to end trophy hunting at Dalnacardoch is to be welcomed, but it would never have come about without the concerted efforts of Trust members. However, the Trust need to end this cruel practice now, not carry it on for months to honour existing bookings. The fact that the trustees are prepared to countenance animal suffering for another two months reflects badly on the organisation’s respect for wildlife.

  • Read more about Deer and the Law on our Protectors of the Wild page here.

  • Read our original article calling out Durrell Trust’s shameful support for deer stalking

  • Durrell Trust are uniquely placed to advocate the reintroduction of predators at Dalnacardoch as an alternative to the cull which is being required by the Scottish government to manage deer numbers. Read more here.

River Garry at Dalnacardoch image via Anne Burgess (Wikimedia Commons), image of stag in the Highlands via Unsplash

Saturday, 21 June 2025

The Red Paper 2022 Volume II: Wild Cats, Feral and New Native Species

 




226 pp
Paperback
Interior Color and Black and white
Dimensions  A4 (8.27 x 11.69 in / 210 x 297 mm)
https://www.lulu.com/shop/terry-hooper/the-red-paper-2022-volume-2-felids/paperback/product-n48529.html?
£25.00

In 1896 Scottish naturalists and zoologists declared that the true Scottish wild cat had become extinct by the 1860s. What we see today is nothing more than a wild tabby cat. In this work the true history and destruction of wild cats from England, Wales (where hybrids clung on into the 1940s) and Scotland is explored and after decades of research the true look of the wild cat is revealed. The "English Tiger" and "Highland Tiger" truly lived up to that name.

Dogma is finally thrown out.
There is also a look at the "New Native Cats" ranging from Asian Golden Cats, Lynx, Puma and others and the evidence leading to their being so designated.

No silly press or media stories just solid facts backed up by evidence.

The author acted as an exotic species wildlife consultant to UK police forces from 1977-2015 as well as cooperated with university projects on the subject.
Island cats as well as feral cats their lifestyles and problems mare also covered .
Fully referenced and including maps, illustrations and very rare photographs -some never before seen in print- make this a book for amateur naturalists and zoologists.

The Red Paper 2022 Volume I: Foxes, Jackals, Wolves, Coyotes and Wild Dogs of the United Kingdom and Ireland

 





361 pp
Paperback
Interior Color & Black and white
Dimensions A4 (8.27 x 11.69 in / 210 x 297 mm
£25.00
https://www.lulu.com/shop/terry-hooper/the-red-paper-2022-volume-1-canids/paperback/product-r97ywj.html?

 When the Doggerland bridge flooded the British Isles became separated from

Continental Europe and its wildlife developed uniquely. The British Isles, for the purpose of this work includes Ireland, and isolated the wolves on both became what would be island species not affected by the usual island dwarfism. These wolves, after millennia. Became “unwanted” and forests and woodland was burnt down or cut down for the specific purpose of lupicide; the killing of every and any wolf –and there was a bounty for “a job well done”.
At the same time there also developed three unique island species of Old fox from the coyote-like Mountain or Greyhound fox, the slightly smaller but robustly built Mastiff or Bulldog fox and the smaller Common or Cur fox –the latter like today’s red foxes had a symbiotic relationship with humans.

These canids were mainly ignored until it was decided that they could provide fur and meat and those things earn money. From that point onward, especially after all other game had been killed off, the fox faced what writers over the centuries referred to as vulpicide –extermination through bounties paid, trapping or hunting and despite all the hunters noting that the Old foxes were nearing extinction they continued to hunt until by the late 1880s the Old were gone and replaced by the New –foxes imported by the thousands every year for the ‘sport’ of fox hunting and this importation also led the the UK seeing the appearance of mange (unknown before the importations).

The travelling British sportsmen went coyote, wolf and jackal hunting and on returning to England wanted to bring a taste of this to “the good old country”. Wolves, jackals and coyotes were set up in hunting territories from where they could learn the lay of the land and provide good sport later. Some hunts even attempted to cross-breed foxes, jackals and Coyotes.
Then there were the legendary –almost mythical– “beasts”; the black beast of Edale, the killer canids of Cavan and the “girt dog” of Ennerdale.
In more recent times raccoon dogs and arctic foxes have appeared in the UK; some released for ‘sport’ while others are exotic escapees long since established in the countryside.
If you thought you knew what fox hunting was about prepare to be woken up by a sharp slap to the face and the reality that, by admissions of hunts themselves, this was all about fun and sport and nothing to do with “pest control”.

Friday, 30 May 2025

Update 30 05 2025

 The current update on fox and badger deaths in and around the City and County is:

135 foxes and 52 badgers.
I have not started a deer deaths register or one for any other mammal/birds other than otters.


People still seem to not be willing to report dead badgers or foxes and I assume the stress of typing a message is far too much for some people.
We have had three fox cubs trapped in netting in gardens in the last week and, luckily, Sarah Mills (The Bristol Fox Lady) got to them fast and all three were taken to Vale Wildlife Hospital in Gloucestershire and are doing fine.
The danger to wildlife of paddling pools left overnight without being emptied needs to also be highlighted as we have lost some fox cubs in these. Left6 full of water overnight is a danger to wildlife as well as children and some adults.
There was been no sign of the pair of hedgehogs that visited nightly for over a week now which is concerning. Neighbours are far from interested in stating whether they have seen any hogs.
Birds continue to visit and insect life seems to be doing well and not just in my garden.
Slow worms are also being reported more these days from a round Bristol so they seem to be doing well. Again, I need to point out that slow worms are non-venomous legless lizards and seeing them in your garden is an indicator that the garden is healthy.
I am still looking into the use of electrical wiring and "deterrents" to keep otters away from fish ponds. It is far more advisable to look at ways to cover your fish ponds as use of electrical devises could involve a fine if caught.
The other "perennial problem" for people with fish ponds are herons. This was first reported in Ashton Vale back in the 1990s when people with large gardens decided that ponds would look nice. Unfortunately, if you put heron and otter food (fish) into ponds then you need to protect the fish.
There are some very belligerent pond owners who "think out loud" in posts about what they can do to "dispose" of herons. These people need to understand that herons are protected in the UK under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. And it is illegal to intentionally kill, injure, or take them. This includes destroying their nests while they are in use or being built, or taking or destroying their eggs.
Penalties for violating this law can include fines or even imprisonment.
We have built on wildlife territory and then place food out for them (even if unintentionally) and then see then as "pests" or, as several people have described them, "vermin". Firstly, they are not "pests" -you create the pond and put the fish in to show off then you need to study how to protect them. The term £vermin" has never been used by any faction other than pro hunt groups because "game of the chace" (yes, spelt "chace") was too long winded for them.

Someone asked about the Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust. This is in fact, as the use of the word "game" in its title indicates, a pro hunt group so I have NOTHING to do with them or their schemes which at one point involved radio collaring a fox to see where it went before killing it "just because) (it was out in woodland and had been living off rats, etc so was causing no problems but if you are a psycho with a gun who likes killing wildlife....
Learn to live with wildlife not try to injure or destroy it.

Still Unknown After 30 Years of Constant Work?

 

 


Interesting that I started seeding wildflowers and have been monitoring w3ildlife in Ashton Vale since I set up the Vale Wildlife Group in 1995 and over those years I had to put up with people very anti wildlife or "rewilding" as it is now known.

 

Now I get sent this item via Face Book messenger:

 

""Upcoming Meetings Saturday, 31 May (2-4pm). Ashton Vale Together are looking at improvements, including in biodiverity, for their neighbourhood. The BS3 Wildlife Group has been invited to set up a table and chat to locals.Come along if you want to know more. The meeting is at the Ashton Vale Community Centre on Risdale Road."

 

My response was:

 

" Really? How difficult was it for people in Ashton Vale to looks up Vale Wildlife Group since its been going since 1995 and monitoring wildlife in the area since then?"

Where were all of these people when grass snakes or adders needed moving on from gardens? Or when wildlife was handed in with a range of injuries? When requests were put out for help to survey local wildlife for 6 years or help in any way?

 

I could also add that when requests were put out on BS3 groups in an attempt to track down injured foxes or foxes that needed urgent treatment there was resounding silence from BS3 Wildlife.

 

All I have had from some members of the BS3 group is that I ought to hand over all my data and let them take over. 

 

Seriously, I give up on asking for cooperation (it is why I changed the group name so that it can advise people throughout the City and County) but to send me the post quote is pushing things. I will continue to do in Ashton Vale what I have been doing for the past 30 years.


https://www.facebook.com/groups/315237280619688

Bristol Wildlife Rescue