How would that work laser pointers and .410s? Catnip bait pile? Empty cardboard box decoys?Well that was rather informative. You never know @Bob Nelson 35Whelen might start doing cat hunts. Seriously though the Aus gov might want to get on a mass cull of them
@norfolk shooter - might not be worth the cost of a flight from U.S. to Australia…but IF I lived there a Feral Cat hunt would be fun !Well that was rather informative. You never know @Bob Nelson 35Whelen might start doing cat hunts. Seriously though the Aus gov might want to get on a mass cull of them
@norfolk shooter - might not be worth the cost of a flight from U.S. to Australia…but IF I lived there a Feral Cat hunt would be fun !
I find that not only possible, but highly probable.Then there are the local legends of the Victorian Black Panther.
Everybody here has a mate, or a relation, or a cousins-ex-boyfriends-next door neighbour who swears they have seen one.
One theory is that some US military units bought them here as mascots during WW2, and they escaped / were set free at war's end.
Yep same here a county over. People swear there are a mating pair of black panters and every now and again someone will report seeing one or both and or with kittens.Then there are the local legends of the Victorian Black Panther.
Everybody here has a mate, or a relation, or a cousins-ex-boyfriends-next door neighbour who swears they have seen one.
One theory is that some US military units bought them here as mascots during WW2, and they escaped / were set free at war's end.
I would use laser pointers and heaps of really good catnip. You the stuff that gets them all screwed up and stoned. Then you can capture them and drop them off in the cities where the greenies liveHow would that work laser pointers and .410s? Catnip bait pile? Empty cardboard box decoys?
Sounds like a job for the mighty 243 Winchester!
;-)
A long time back we could sell the skins to the local Roo & Fox skin buyer in QLD not sure on other States ?I think the video is shall we say stretching the truth (one measure of its credibility is including commentary from a bigfoot hunter and also the bloke in Gippsland who sold his 'black panther' story to the media but threw the carcase in the river before it could be verified.)
Yes, feral cats are a huge problem, and yes they do grow larger than their domestic cousins. However I've yet to see anything approaching a "mega cat". It's also telling that most of the photos of 'huge' feral cats use the old fisherman's trick of holding the carcase as close to the camera as possible.
There is a Government program to try and reduce the cat numbers, but its as massively ineffective as most Government projects. Governments like to talk up conservation actions but are fearful of the cat lover lobby and the animal rights groups. In Victoria we have the ridiculous situation where on one hand cats are protected by the Domestic Animals Act. They are not a declared established pest animal on private land. A farmer can destroy feral cats on his farm, but only with a lot of red tape and potential legal risk. On non-farming private land, the land holder, if the cat has trespassed more than once , has to trap the cat and hand them over to the local council. On some Crown Land, cats have been declared as established pest animals under the Catchment and Land Protection Act but only Government agencies and government supervised volunteers, ie pandering to the cat lobby,, can shoot them. Recreational hunting of them is prohibited. Basically this means that the Government is trying to be a little bit pregnant. Pretending to do something while letting the problem go unchecked. Anyone not in Government service who attempts to do anything about feral cats puts themselves in legal jeopardy.
Just include a buff, a wallaby, and a roo. Now it's justified.