Thank you my man. Sorry for the late reply. Working many many hours at the moment. However part two will be along tomorrow at 4:00pm I think it was I scheduled it for. All the very best.
Fantastic video footage Robin always a pleasure to watch. I’ve been smashing a few litters of cubs myself up in North Wales lately. Hope you’re well buddy. Nige
Thank you Nigel, Everyone here is great thanks. I’m flat out on the farm at the moment. Only another few months to go 😜 then we can get out big time after the harvest. Thanks for your continued support. Part two is out this Sunday.
@@TeamFoxer awesome I’m looking forward to part two, I took out five foxes last night and the dozen rabbits but my work commitments are also making it difficult to get out on a more regular basis. Catch up soon buddy thanks for the awesome videos.
just found a new den near my town house we knew we had one behind the back garage as we call it the dog picked up on another fox when walking down to the local super store / trading estate
Well I’ve been doing it for over a decade without any issues. These arn’t townie mangy foxes. There all in pretty good health with out much in the way of disease.
To be fair we’re not no. But then we’ve never been in a massively big tick ridden environment. Must be all the insecticides that get sprayed on all the farms.
I’d say no. Not in picture quality. But most certainly the condor is better for a right handed person plus has the range finder which is such a useful tool.
Id be interested in how people think the uk fox population should be dealt with, for example you could erect a 6 ft high fence around your land to protect your livestock, I wonder how much it would cost to surround say 1000 acres of land? Of course a fox can easily climb a 6ft fence so.... You could trap them, but of course you then have to release them on someone else's land and the problem becomes theirs, unless it's an urban fox in which case it will suffer starvation, or you could just leave them alone, but then the farmer could lose several thousands of pounds worth of livestock (every year), the cost of which would be passed onto the average consumer (you and me) during your weekly shop. Not to mention uncontrolled numbers of foxes could decimate ground nesting bird populations, some of which will be endangered, domestic pets, wild mammals etc . On top of this we are constantly building new housing and industrial units, therefore reducing the foxes natural countryside habitat, eventually even rural foxes will move into town and create yet more problems, fox attacks are rare but if large numbers live in close proximity to humans I would imagine the risk would increase. The fox has no natural predators here so if not for human intervention to keep numbers down they could soon spiral out of control.