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Hare Shoot According To Baw


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The Romans introduced new breeds of farm animals, such as the prized white cattle. Archaeological evidence suggests that guinea fowl, chickens and rabbits were probably introduced as farmyard animals. The rabbits, which they introduced, were a Spanish variety that would not have survived for long in the wild as the British winters were too cold. The Romans also brought new species of game into Britain including the brown hare and pheasants. Samian bowls, which were popular at the Romano-British dining table, often depicted scenes of dogs hunting hare or deer. Wild boar and oxen were native animals that were also hunted. Food finds from archaeological excavations confirm that a wide range of meats contributed to the diet of some Romano-British people.

 

The rabbits we have now are descended from ones the Normans brought from Normandy, not the Spanish ones the Romans brought over. Google confirms this! :laugh:

but were talking about the hares that they brought here purely for sport, so its in the same category as a pheasant as they brought them here for the same reason :laugh:
So hare coursers were the original fat lard arses who thought they owned the land? :laugh:
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It's a sad fact that the hunting "community" still attack each other at every opportunity; the shooters v the coursers, the Hunts v the foxing lads, even the lampers v the daywalkers !! I, personally,

Nothin worse than a hare thread on this site. You soon see who has a proper understanding of the countryside and who doesn't though.

Aye, it's almost as bad as killing tame park deer and getting all lurcher owners a bad name.....

Look you are both wrong :laugh: the rabbits were here way before the Normans and the variety we have is the IBERIAN Rabbit :laugh: Unless they fuuckers here are the twins of British rabbits because they look the bloody same :yes:

 

Hares are native the hare well the ones that ermine anyway :tongue2:

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Look you are both wrong :laugh: the rabbits were here way before the Normans and the variety we have is the IBERIAN Rabbit :laugh: Unless they fuuckers here are the twins of British rabbits because they look the bloody same :yes:

 

Hares are native the hare well the ones that ermine anyway :tongue2:

It's down to genetics, the ones on Lundy are possibly from the stock the Romans brought over but all the other ones can be traced back to Northern France.. :yes: You tend to learn what the Normans did and didn't bring with them when you grow up in an area surrounded by the castles and settlements they built here to keep us in our place. Not that things have changed here all that much since those days! :laugh:

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Look you are both wrong :laugh: the rabbits were here way before the Normans and the variety we have is the IBERIAN Rabbit :laugh: Unless they fuuckers here are the twins of British rabbits because they look the bloody same :yes:

 

Hares are native the hare well the ones that ermine anyway :tongue2:

the whole thread is re the brown hare so don't change it just to cover your lack of knowledge :laugh::laugh::laugh:

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Look you are both wrong :laugh: the rabbits were here way before the Normans and the variety we have is the IBERIAN Rabbit :laugh: Unless they fuuckers here are the twins of British rabbits because they look the bloody same :yes:

 

Hares are native the hare well the ones that ermine anyway :tongue2:

 

the whole thread is re the brown hare so don't change it just to cover your lack of knowledge :laugh::laugh::laugh:
Think that last line of his was a dead giveaway - he didn't know we had two species of hare here.. :whistling::tongue2:
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Look you are both wrong :laugh: the rabbits were here way before the Normans and the variety we have is the IBERIAN Rabbit :laugh: Unless they fuuckers here are the twins of British rabbits because they look the bloody same :yes:

 

Hares are native the hare well the ones that ermine anyway :tongue2:

the whole thread is re the brown hare so don't change it just to cover your lack of knowledge :laugh::laugh::laugh:
Think that last line of his was a dead giveaway - he didn't know we had two species of hare here.. :whistling::tongue2:

 

what do expect even the Spanish rabbit couldn't live here :whistling:

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i dont agree with shooting hares but at the end of the day there is huge numbers getting shot year after year and the numbers dont seem to be reducing now 1 of the previous posts stated a hare eats the same as 1 sheep if the hare drives didnt happen it seems like they could start causing a real problem now what options would that leave the farmers/land owners ????

3 hare`s consume the same amount of pasture as 1 sheep

 

shoot the sheep then :D

 

that's why theres no hares in Wales :laugh::laugh:

 

says who? :D

 

Me. There were some, but I shot them when i was in Wales last weekend. :laugh:

 

I don't believe that :no: you can't fooking shoot straight :tongue2::laugh::thumbs:
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Look you are both wrong :laugh: the rabbits were here way before the Normans and the variety we have is the IBERIAN Rabbit :laugh: Unless they fuuckers here are the twins of British rabbits because they look the bloody same :yes:

 

Hares are native the hare well the ones that ermine anyway :tongue2:

It's down to genetics, the ones on Lundy are possibly from the stock the Romans brought over but all the other ones can be traced back to Northern France.. :yes: You tend to learn what the Normans did and didn't bring with them when you grow up in an area surrounded by the castles and settlements they built here to keep us in our place. Not that things have changed here all that much since those days! :laugh:

 

Rabbits were introduced to Lundy in the thirteenth century (Linn, 1997) Wild mammals of Lundy. In R.A. Irving, A.J. Schofield & C.J. Webster. (eds), Island Studies, 107-115. Bideford: Lundy Field Society. :thumbs:

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it is also believed rabbits were introduced to Lundy by the de Marisco family in the 12th century

 

The castle was built by Henry III in 1244, paid for from the sale of rabbits, so they may have been there around the turn of the century?

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On ya feckin bike the pair of ya :laugh: Two types of hare and one rabbit :laugh:

 

I should have figured them Welsh rabbits had be different to the rest of the Rabbit population :laugh: :laugh:

Welsh rabbit = cheese on toast lol

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gotta laugh at people googling it........ :laugh: ffs even it was Normans who introduced the hare we have still had a fair seasons to hunt it.......... :blink::yes: its general talk on a hunting forum, theres gonna be for and against on each side!! the only way to kill a hare is the way your conscience lets you.........if you can live with blasting a 12bore at the ultimate running athlete then so be it......... :thumbs:

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