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Larson traps.
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<blockquote data-quote="HolzKopf" data-source="post: 7468369" data-attributes="member: 44622"><p>We used to use a ladder trap for corvids and very successful it was too, sometimes 20 or 30 at one haul and that trap was generally most successfully sited at the back of a nine acre field just in front of a shaw of roost trees. Not obvious but certainly visible from a footpath if you knew what you were looking for.</p><p></p><p>Now, thanks to Packham and the general woke climate we have scaled our trapping right down and we no longer have neighbouring farms that trap or brancher shoot at all. As I have posted before, the skies and pastures are now black with corvids. This year's General Licences are based on last year's but again have tightened somewhat. Just more aggro to deal with.</p><p></p><p>Here is a good BASC link for how pest birds should be dealt with in Scotland <a href="https://basc.org.uk/gl/scotland/" target="_blank">https://basc.org.uk/gl/scotland/</a></p><p></p><p>HK</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="HolzKopf, post: 7468369, member: 44622"] We used to use a ladder trap for corvids and very successful it was too, sometimes 20 or 30 at one haul and that trap was generally most successfully sited at the back of a nine acre field just in front of a shaw of roost trees. Not obvious but certainly visible from a footpath if you knew what you were looking for. Now, thanks to Packham and the general woke climate we have scaled our trapping right down and we no longer have neighbouring farms that trap or brancher shoot at all. As I have posted before, the skies and pastures are now black with corvids. This year's General Licences are based on last year's but again have tightened somewhat. Just more aggro to deal with. Here is a good BASC link for how pest birds should be dealt with in Scotland [URL]https://basc.org.uk/gl/scotland/[/URL] HK [/QUOTE]
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