Sunday, December 5, 2021

Shooting Birds In The UK For Sport

 Question: How many pheasants and partridges would you guess are shot in the UK every year? Take a moment to make your guess, and then read on.

Animal Aid says that every year, around sixty million pheasants and partridges are bred to be shot. It doesn’t say there are all shot. Some might escape or die before growing old enough to be driven into the air. Or they might escape the guns and live out their lives. Or at least live until the next shooting season.


WildJustice says that at this time of year, 43 million Pheasants and 9 million Red-legged Partridges are raised and released to be shot.


The Shooting Seasons


The pheasant shooting season runs from the 1st October – 1st February in Great Britain and the partridge shooting season runs from the 1st September – 1st February.

In Northern Ireland the Pheasant Shooting season runs from the 1st October – 31st January and the partridge shooting season runs from the 1st September – 31st January.


So let’s say there are equal numbers shot in Britain and Ireland (probably not) and split the difference and say the season overall runs from 15 September to 31 January – that’s 138 days.


Let’s say that all the birds raised are shot and that an equal number are shot each day during the season – so that’s 430,000 per day. Is that credible?


How Many Birds Are Shot


Let’s see if we can approach this from another direction to find out how many are shot, starting with how many people shoot pheasants.


The Game Shooting Census and Shoot Owner Census is run by GunsOnPegs and Strutt & Parker. For their report in 2018 they surveyed 652 shoot across the UK. From that they extrapolated to the total number of shoots and arrived at 9,000 shoots and 1,724 birds shot per shoot.


Fifteen-and-a-half million birds shot each year during the 138 days of the hunting season.


Did you guess anything like that number? It is much bigger than I would have guessed.


Lead Shot


OK, moving on from the shooting, let’s look at the amount of toxic lead shot that is blasted into the air.

Let’s suppose that every shot bags a bird. It’s unlikely, but let’s go with that.


GunsOnPegs notes the advice of ElyHawk cartridge maker, with the following recommendations.


For November we would recommend the 12 bore Zenith 30g No.6 and the 32g No.5 which are 70 mm (2¾ inch) and have fibre wads. In the Zenith shells the copper coating on the lead reduces the number of deformed pellets and therefore increases the amount of pellets in the pattern. This cartridge has excellent recoil characteristics and keeps things manageable in lighter game guns. 


A pellet of No.6 weighs 1.6 g. So in 30g there are 18 or 19 pellets. Let’s say 18.


A pellet of No.7 weighs 1.28g. So in 32g there are 25 pellets.


Let’s assume that the shooters use 30g No. 6 and 32g No. 7 equally, and split the difference between 18.5 and 25, and say 22.


So with fifteen-and-a-half million birds, that’s 341 million pellets of toxic lead blasted into the air, some of which land up in the pheasants and partridges and a lot of it that ends up on the ground.


That’s happening each year. What damage does it do?


A study this year reported in Medical Expressthat was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, sampled more than 1.5 million people in 269 U.S. counties and 37 European nations. Researchers found that those who grew up in areas with higher levels of atmospheric lead had less adaptive personalities in adulthood—lower levels of conscientiousness and agreeableness and higher levels of neuroticism.


Friday, November 12, 2021

Distinguish Your Painters

 Jean-François Millet and John Everett Millais

John Everett Millais (1829 – 1896 ) was an English Pre-Raphaelite painter (one of the founders of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood) who painted colourful (too colourful?) paintings – mostly of people.

His most famous painting is probably Ophelia, lying back with her arms surrendering to the current.

Jean-François Millet (1814 – 1875) was a French painter and one of the founders of the Barbizon school in rural France.

Millet painted realistic rural scenes of peasant farmers, sheep, trees in a muted palette, paintings that were nonetheless romantic.

Living With Impermanence

Part of the love of quality and solidity in possessions is borne of the insecurity that comes from the knowledge that things are impermanent. Getting comfortable with the knowledge of the end of things enables enjoyment of things without fear of loss. So says the man who still has things he enjoys. What of the refugee from famine, civil strife, or war? 

Sudden Death After Near Drowning

Researchers at Rambam Hospital in Haifa, Israel have discovered that patients often develop a sudden reduction in kidney function within days of a near-drowning experience.

The symptoms include reduced urine output and an elevated creatinine level and can be fatal.

The researchers believe that kidney damage is due to a temporary lack of oxygen coupled with an increased demand for oxygen, increased heart rate, high blood sugar levels, constriction of kidney blood vessels, and reduced potassium levels.

Knowing the dangers helps doctors in the future to focus treatment for near-drowning victims on maintaining kidney health. 

Single Use Plastic Shopping Bags

 According to Government estimates the number of single-use bags given out in 2014 by the seven biggest supermarkets was 7.6 billion, with the average shopper getting through 140 bags per year.

Since the introduction of the 5p levy in 2015, that number has fallen to 19 bags per shopper.

Yorkshire Coast Nature

 Yorkshire Coast Nature  does wildlife and birdwatching (are birds not wildlife) and photography tours on the Yorkshire Coast, North York Moors National Park, Great Yorkshire Forest and Yorkshire Wolds and I was getting interested and then I saw the cost at £200 and £300 for a day. But then these are one-to-one days and the whole day, which puts things in perspective.

JusHooIt

 Product Hunt just pushed a new way to book a hotel that hotels like because other booking sites take a big cut, they say, from the hotels. It's Hoo at

Gussied Up

The origin of "gussied up" is unclear, but it probably stems from the American and Australian slang term "gussie," a nic...