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npinks Member Since: 28 Jun 2007 Location: Ls25 Posts: 20090 |
From another forum, a members reply to similar question
Former Mod/Member, with the most post & Chicken George Arch nemesis |
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16th Aug 2014 6:56 pm |
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AW14 Member Since: 07 Mar 2014 Location: South East Posts: 142 |
Thanks, then what did he do with the fox? Put it in the plastic wheely bin? |
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16th Aug 2014 7:02 pm |
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npinks Member Since: 28 Jun 2007 Location: Ls25 Posts: 20090 |
A further reply was
Or a local Takeaway Former Mod/Member, with the most post & Chicken George Arch nemesis |
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16th Aug 2014 7:08 pm |
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taztastic Member Since: 03 Feb 2011 Location: North West Posts: 8652 |
Someone in our local kebab shop, only last night said " what the fox this" apparently wasn't happy with his meal.
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16th Aug 2014 7:11 pm |
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npinks Member Since: 28 Jun 2007 Location: Ls25 Posts: 20090 |
I don't see many here either, I guess they are more interested in the farmer surrounding my town
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16th Aug 2014 7:20 pm |
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The Doctor Member Since: 09 Jul 2010 Location: Gallifrey Posts: 4615 |
I can understand a farmer taking lethal action if his livestock are terrorised by foxes but to kill them just for hanging around on gardens, messing and raiding bins is cruel and cowardly. We back onto fields and get them regularly. If they mess, we clear it up. They don't tend to do much on our garden probably due to the scent of our 2 dogs Sam and Toby/The Hulk LL.B (Hons) - University of Derby
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16th Aug 2014 7:30 pm |
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npinks Member Since: 28 Jun 2007 Location: Ls25 Posts: 20090 |
Since there is no natural predator to a urban fox, no stray dogs or anything that might have kept the numbers down, then the abundant food available in towns and cities, the urban fox has gone up in numbers, unlike countryside foxes who shy away from man, urban foxes are said not too, they are growing in size, not so long ago a 4 foot dog fix was culled, weight 2 stone too, now, think if that fix had been clipped by say a car/van and was injured, it would take easy prey, cats small pet dogs, a young child playing in a garden, of course, was the case of Isabella and Lola Koupparis, the nine-month-old twins savaged by a fox that crept into their North-East London house through an open back door and then slunk its way upstairs to the girls’ bedroom where it attacked, injuring one child on the arm and the other on her face. The wound on poor Isabella’s arm was described by her reconstructive surgeon as the worst animal bite he had ever seen.
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16th Aug 2014 7:44 pm |
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The Doctor Member Since: 09 Jul 2010 Location: Gallifrey Posts: 4615 |
I think the parents should have exercised more caution than they did there. If foxes are such a problem then don't leave a door open when a child is unattended. What if a stray pitbull or some other similar dog got in? What if a perv got in?
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16th Aug 2014 8:06 pm |
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AW14 Member Since: 07 Mar 2014 Location: South East Posts: 142 |
And I know 2 people near me who actually buy food and feed them......
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16th Aug 2014 8:09 pm |
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The Doctor Member Since: 09 Jul 2010 Location: Gallifrey Posts: 4615 |
^ Encouraging them is a bad idea full stop. Regardless of the intentions of the fox. LL.B (Hons) - University of Derby
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16th Aug 2014 8:13 pm |
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npinks Member Since: 28 Jun 2007 Location: Ls25 Posts: 20090 |
Agree about secure doors, not just for foxes
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16th Aug 2014 8:17 pm |
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AW14 Member Since: 07 Mar 2014 Location: South East Posts: 142 |
Not everyone has or wants a dog. |
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16th Aug 2014 8:18 pm |
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Steve D Member Since: 19 Jan 2013 Location: Essexshire Posts: 4109 |
Hate them. They have attacked both our cats. One nearly died through shock - luckily I caught the bastid ragging it in our garden and chased it away. The other just escaped and ran up our apple tree. On both occasions you could have stuffed a pillow with the fur that came out of the cats in our garden. Past: FL2 TD4 HSE Auto
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16th Aug 2014 11:57 pm |
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Graham t Member Since: 24 May 2014 Location: Herts Posts: 96 |
A few weeks ago, we awoke to fing a fox lying dead on our driveway - not a mark on it. We rang the council who said that as it was on private land, they'd charge to remove it but if we dragged it onto the pavement....... From a time when dinosaurs weren't just confined to zoos! |
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17th Aug 2014 9:56 am |
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