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pigion bait


waynemac
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has any tried this before,?

yesterday,after four days of laying down approx 4pound of pigieon feed(mainly corn) I set out to see what I could bag.

After a few hours I had 10 woodys which I discoverd later had been feeding on this every day.they seemed to be very slow in landing and changing direction.

has any one else tried this. I have with fish but its a bit different. all most as if I am cheeting! :evil:  :evil:

lets here your veiws guys!

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My opinion is.....................in the interest of pest control,feeding a field, can work!We all go out to shoot pigeons for sport & pest control! Putting feed down onto a field can draw the birds to one place, enabling you to shoot them. But,you must get permission off of the landowner to do this.I have'nt used this method myself,but if I was asked to control the pigeons in a particular place, I don't think the landowner would have a problem feeding a barren field!

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Kev, thanks for your reply.......wrong though.

I am a guide and as far as I'm aware, it IS NOT illegal to bait fields in the U.K., though it may be morally wrong.

We are not all motivated by money, I charge £60 per day REGARDLESS of the bag size, if there are no birds in the area, I don't take clients out, I don't charge more for bigger bags, therefore, no need to bait, unless I WANTED to.

Seems you don't like guides..........WHY?  :)

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Kev, personally I have never baited a field for pigeons, probably 'cos I'm too tight to spend money on pigeon grub, but to be honest I don't see the problem. I've baited traps for other pests and I've used feed to keep pheasants. No problem.

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Kev, I think you're being a little unfair to Malc, there is a world of difference between shooting pheasants in a pen and throwing some corn on an old stubble field to attract pigeons.

On my shoot, I release 1000 pheasants to provide myself, family, and the other members of our syndicate with 8 mini driven days each season..........anybody who shoots low or unsporting birds is asked to stop shooting immediately, nobody (well, almost) would want to shoot a pheasant on the ground.

We all seem happy to shoot lots of pigeons as they 'pile into the peas', or whatever, and the 'sportiness' of the shot is seldom taken into account, despite the fact that the birds may be desperate to feed.

If there are large numbers of birds in an area, and they are difficult to come to terms with, and the farmer is pulling his hair out and giving you hell, then why is baiting a field so very different to letting birds build on a crop for a few days just "so I can have a good day at them on Saturday"?

I agree with you that if done purely for commercial reasons,i.e.,greed, then the practice is certainly not ethical.....but who are we to de-cry the occasional shooter who just wants a decent day?

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If people are going to slag off guides then they really ought to be naming them.  I am sure a lot of rumor that is passed around about guides will get exagerated along the way.

 

Feeding fields is just not on....

 

We all know that we shoot Woodpigeons in the U.K. all year long under special licence, granted purely for pest control purposes.  Feeding fields to lay on bigger bags goes against the reason that the licence is granted in the first place.

 

Guides operate in areas where there are plenty of pigeons = lots of crop damage.  If they haven't got plenty of pigeons then surely they haven't got a viable business.

 

I operate in an area where pigeons can do £1,000.00 worth of damage on a single pea field in a day.  Especially in May/June when they are eating the pea flower.

 

Controling the pigeons in my area saves the farmers huge sums of money and this forms the basis of good crop protection.

 

Shooting pigeons on fields where they are not really causing damage eg. Stubble, set aside.  Is a means of lowering numbers to more acceptable levels.

 

We would all like to shoot more, but crop protection should be our main reason for doing it in the first place.

 

GARY WILSON (G.I. country sports U.K.)

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