“Well, I’m getting’ ready to go up to Nookawarra out bush for a couple days and I could use a bit of help. I can’t lift the boomers onto the Ute like I used to, and I’m lookin’ for someone to work the light and go get the ‘roos after I shoot ‘em. I’ll take you up there, take care of all your food, and offer you 400 bucks flat.”
Enjoy your weekend
SBW
That is very desolate country there. Okay for a while when there is money to be made, but no way I would live there.
ReplyDeleteLe Loup.
New England, Australia.
Never even thought about culling kangaroos. Amazing the kinds of problems that are very similar to our own across the drink. Have a good one!
ReplyDeleter.
Quote r.hurd: Never even thought about culling kangaroos. Amazing the kinds of problems that are very similar to our own across the drink. Have a good one!
ReplyDeleteThink of Kangaroos as our deer. In many places they were just shot for sport and pet meat. Now Kangaroo meat is sold in the supermarkets! Farmers can shoot roos if they say they have too many and they are damaging the crops, but they have to tag them and leave them there to rot! They are not legally allowed to use the meat!
The problem here though, apart from the obvious waste, is that roos move about with the seasons and water availability. If suddenly a farmer thinks there are too many roos and he/she culls them, then that might have been the only mob for miles around.
Le Loup.
Left to ROT!!! That's outrageous, with all the pain Aussie farmers have faced during the drought I would thought the government would make every resource available to them. Including food and hides.
ReplyDeleteSBW
Perhaps the idea is not to encourage people to hunt indisciminately for hides and meat. But the thing is most farmers could not be bothered to hunt for hides anyway, and far less roos would be shot just for home food.
ReplyDeleteYuo have to have a special license to hunt professionally, so maybe this is to stop pet meat shootong without a license.
As someone who only hunts for food or culling ferral cats and dogs this is hard to take. Basically I am not legally allowed to hunt for table meat, but I can get a permit to hunt a few hundred roos and leave them to rot.
The number I would shoot in any given year would be very few if I were hunting for meat.
Regards, Le Loup.
LL
ReplyDeleteMadness! doesn't leaving them to rot create an abundance of food for Dingos? I would have thought a huge Dingo population would be a menace to cattle farming?
Thanks for adding to my (our) education
SBW
Just what I needed, a nice story of a warm adventure! We're in the midst of a cold spell here. No need for dreaming of a white Christmas -- have a good one!
ReplyDeleteYour friend,
HDR
HDR
ReplyDeleteif you're calling it a cold spell it must be brass monkeys
Cool Yule
SBW
Did you know that "brass monkey" was the name of the item that held the cannon balls on an 18th century ship? Hence freezing the balls off a brass monkey.
ReplyDeleteLe loup.
LL
ReplyDeleteyes triangular I believe, but is it a historical fact? I thought it may be an myth?
SBW
One famous Responsa dating back in the 18th century, Rabbi Ezekiel Landau, the Chief Rabbi of Prague, was asked whether hunting with a rifle was permitted or not. In his reply, Landau notes that the only hunters mentioned in the Tanakh are Nimrod and Esau—neither of whom happened to be Israelites. Hunting was never a common occupation among our people. Hunting for sport engenders cruelty within the human breast. In short, hunting for sport or for adventure, is certainly forbidden; however, if it is for other constructive reasons (e.g., clothing etc.,) it is then permitted. It goes without saying that if an animal poses a serious public health danger, e.g., a rabid dog, hunting such an animal is indeed necessary. Beyond that, Landau notes that anyone who recklessly exposes himself to danger violates the biblical precept of not endangering one’s health.[3]
ReplyDeletehttp://rabbimichaelsamuel.com/tag/heinrich-heines-wisdom-on-hunting/
Le Loup.