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Leverets.


JDog
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Let hope they don't attract the wrong sort. My GF and I got to within a couple of feet of a sleeping leveret last year, it was stretch right out enjoying the sun. We stood next to it a few minutes before it woke, realised we were there and took off.

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I have never seen so many as this year. Three quarters grown ones are everywhere around here. Fantastic creatures the hare.

my favourite animal, I remember stumbling on leverets when I was a boy in east anglia and was once lucky enough to watch a group fighting and playing at very close quartrers to where i was hiding, long may they prosper

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I think your part of the world has always had a healthy supply of Hares, people from all over the world have come to Lincolnshire to shoot hare on those spectacular Hare drives.

Nice if you're into that sort of thing!

 

I also agree with Penelope big numbers could well attract the 'dog lads', a worrying prospect with the future of police helicopters in doubt.

 

Nice creatures as you say though JDog.

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I was sat out on my permission on Saturday. Saw lots of hares of varying size. Seem to be in abundance. Also lots of cock pheasants and a good number of partridge. However very few pigeons. Not a good time of year I suppose.

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Three got up infront of the dog this morning as he was having his morning poop! He turned his head back to me as if to say " aren't I a good boy for not chasing" - yeah right been different if he was having a mooch lol

 

Hares and rabbits compete. I have seen rabbits run many yards just to see offa hare and the seeing off will send fluff flying! I suspect as they are here rabbit numbers suffered with the winter floods so it's to the benefit of hares.

 

No new hedges or trees presently so they are quite safe from my attentions for the next year in more

 

As a guess they are about 1/3 up with no great big older ones ( these are better removed as they hold territory from younger more effective breeders imo) coursing when legal was very good at selecting the old but the lamping of hares with two practiced dogs is and was totally unfair and unsporting practice

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How many have seen new born leverets? I found a nest of them a few years back at the back of my gardens. Photographed them and dropped the darn phone down a wall cavity within a few days - doh!

 

Cute as and very dark chocolate colour

 

Should be able to find them regular away but they are very good at hiding thier young. Well on the moorland environment at least

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How many have seen new born leverets? I found a nest of them a few years back at the back of my gardens. Photographed them and dropped the darn phone down a wall cavity within a few days - doh!

 

Cute as and very dark chocolate colour

 

Should be able to find them regular away but they are very good at hiding thier young. Well on the moorland environment at least

 

Was building a school and a digger dug up a nest of 3.

Took them home and we brought them up in the hoose.

They are pretty hard to raise from very young but all 3 were coming fine till Mac stood on one that was hiding in his jumper on the floor but the other 2 lived to tell the story.

They were comically tame and just one of the many species we have had the pleasure to do this with.

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Numbers up here are rising, lads with dogs finished most of them off a few years back but nowadays I usually see a couple at night if shooting, seen a lot in daytime. Problem here is you can stand next to the bloody things and they wont budge, just lie down and drop there ears :( lets just hope the poachers don't go after them again...

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Was building a school and a digger dug up a nest of 3.

Took them home and we brought them up in the hoose.

They are pretty hard to raise from very young but all 3 were coming fine till Mac stood on one that was hiding in his jumper on the floor but the other 2 lived to tell the story.

They were comically tame and just one of the many species we have had the pleasure to do this with.

Interesting, I always believed they were one of those things that didn't take to being domesticated in any way

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Not seen any leverets but was out foxing Monday night and counted 4 lots of lapwing chicks in the field.

Nice to see, and nice to bag a fox too in the same field.

Not seen any leverets but was out foxing Monday night and counted 4 lots of lapwing chicks in the field.

Nice to see, and nice to bag a fox too in the same field.

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Absolutely not,but then they were very young when i got them.

When they were let out of their box in the lounge they used to run around playing as

you see them in the wild and climb up on your lap.

Not realy into keeping wild things like that but it sounds sort of cool

 

I rescued and returned to the wild a kestrel a few years back ( wrote about it one here) tried hard not to familiarise it but it did come down to me for food a while after successful release

 

I like hares even though I shoot them when needed. Fascinating creatures

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Not realy into keeping wild things like that but it sounds sort of cool

 

I rescued and returned to the wild a kestrel a few years back ( wrote about it one here) tried hard not to familiarise it but it did come down to me for food a while after successful release

 

I like hares even though I shoot them when needed. Fascinating creatures

The old fella done the kestrel thing when we were very young and i remember him training them to the swinging thing with something on the end and that was amazing to see.Also long eared owls and also a roe doe he saved from the snare and it gave birth to twins in a shed and stayed around the farm for ages.

Not long went by before one of us came home after finding something to nurse back although i remember coming home with a stoat that had been hit by a car when i was 7-8 and the old fella not best pleased.

Obviously some things shouldnt become too tame but if its a flip between leaving to die or give it a chance we always tried.

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We are very lucky, heavily keepered estate and as such we have fairly significant hare numbers, have done for a long time. I generally thin out the older ones during the winter months (Giorgio Locatelli recipe for 'pappardelle alla lepre' is stunning)

Have to say this year though a lot less rabbits and hares on territory not seen before.

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The wolds part of Lincolnshire has always had a healthy Hare population for as long as I have been shooting (some 19 years). The area where JDog and I have permission on is well keepered and I believe that it helps massively. A healthy population which is controlled and, at the same time protected from predators, will always thrive. The estate that I pickup on has always taken around 50% of the hare population by shooting during November when all late litters of leverets can fend for themselves. During lamping in September and October I regularly see leverets not even half grown.

 

They are a wonderful creature to watch when courting.

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Seeing a lot here in Sth Norfolk too. Paid a visit too a keeper buddy recently and lots of leverets near his house and in two fields saw 4 Chinese Water deer. These tasty creatures are now appearing near my house daily. We used to only get a few reds, occasional roe and lots of muntjac. Last week on my early morning dog walk saw a roe, a CWD and a couple of munties.

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