rabbit in cider

bushtank

Nomad
Jan 9, 2007
337
2
51
king lynn
snared a nice big rabbit the other day and my wife cooked it in cider with panchetta and vegatables recipe from hugh fearnleys river cottage meat book .
Lovely grub:beerchug:
 

Alex...

Tenderfoot
Feb 2, 2007
51
1
50
Silverstone
Humm...

As a fan of Rabbit meat, it sounds good. But am I alone in thinking Snaring isn't necessary unless you have to do it?





My first post so thought I would go for something controversial
 

dommyracer

Native
May 26, 2006
1,312
7
46
London
thomasturnbull said:
snared a nice big rabbit the other day and my wife cooked it in cider with panchetta and vegatables recipe from hugh fearnleys river cottage meat book .
Lovely grub:beerchug:

I agree, this is a beautiful and simple recipe, as is the variation on it where you reduce the stock and add grain mustard and double cream....

I have 2 more bunnies courtesy of Mr Silverback that will be getting this treatment this week, I will endeavour to take pics....
 

British Red

M.A.B (Mad About Bushcraft)
Dec 30, 2005
26,858
2,101
Mercia
Alex,

Snaring done properly is fine. It simply holds the animal and isn't intended to strangle or maim. Theres even a government endorsed code of practice on how to carry it out these days!

Red
 

British Red

M.A.B (Mad About Bushcraft)
Dec 30, 2005
26,858
2,101
Mercia
madrussian said:
Red. Could you provide a link to the government code of practice or maybe cut and paste? I think it would be good to know. Even for us in the states. Thanks.


No worries,

This is a little cobbled together thing on snaring I did for someone else - theres a useful link at the end mate

Construction
Rabbit snares should be constructed with 3 or 4 -stranded brass wire (doubled so that whilst there are 3-4 strands around the eye, there are 6-8 in the noose) with a loop of 4” (10 cm) diameter for the head of the rabbit. The snare must have a fixed stop about 5” (14 cm) from the ‘eye’ of the snare.

Legitimate target species
Snares are used most commonly in fox and rabbit control but are also set for a variety of other purposes including, for example, to capture rabbits for food and foxes in research programmes. In addition to fox and rabbit other target species that can legally be snared include rats, grey squirrels and mink.

Assessing your ground
Before using snares or other capture/control methods, an assessment should be made to determine whether the need (eg regarding damage or the threat of damage) is sufficient to warrant action being taken, taking into account the possible welfare impact on target animals and any risks to non-target species. Where capture/control is deemed to be necessary then an assessment should also be made of the most appropriate method to use, again taking into account the welfare impact on target animals and any risks to non-target species, and steps should be taken to minimise these risks.

Free running snares
This is the basic type of legal snare. The wire is threaded through a simple eyelet at one end, allowing free movement of the wire in both directions. The noose should relax when a caught animal struggles, reducing the chance of strangulation. However, snares designed to be free running often begin to act as self-locking if they become rusty, kinked or matted with the hair of captured animals. Care of snares is therefore of paramount importance

Laws covering snares
Under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 it is an offence to set in position any trap or snare calculated (intended) to cause bodily injury to any wild animal included in Schedule 6 of that Act which comes into contact with it, or to use a trap or snare for the purpose of killing such a wild animal; relevant species listed in Schedule 6 include badger, polecat, otter, red squirrel, hedgehog and pine marten. Snaring of protected species is not permitted unless the person has been authorised by a specific licence under section 16 of the Act.
The Deer Act 1991 makes it an offence to set in position any trap or snare calculated to cause bodily injury to any deer coming in contact with it, or to use any trap or snare for the purpose of killing or taking any deer.
Under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 the use of a ‘self-locking’ snare is unlawful; only free-running snares can lawfully be set. The term self-locking is not defined in the Act and there has been no successful prosecution within a court high enough to clarify the law by legal precedent.
In Scotland, the Nature Conservation (Scotland) Act 2004 contains the same ban on self-locking snares, but goes further to make it a crime to sell or possess a self-locking snare
In Northern Ireland the Wildlife (Northern Ireland) Order 1985 prevents the use of self-locking snares.

Checking snares
How often a snare must be inspected varies slightly . The situationin England and Wales, where the law says that snares must be checked every day.can mean an animal can be trapped in a snare for up to 48 hours, as the snare may be checked just after midnight one day, and just before midnight the next.
In Scotland, the law says that snares must be checked every 24 hours.
In Northern Ireland, the Welfare of Animals Act (Northern Ireland) 1972 requires that snares are inspected at least once every day between sunrise and sunset.
The Deer Act 1991 makes it an offence to set a snare to catch a deer


For me, its dawn AND dusk according to the best practice guide (lots of good info in this too)

http://www.defra.gov.uk/wildlife-co.../snares-cop.pdf

Hope that helps
 

filcon

"Neo-eisimeileachd ALBA"
Dec 1, 2005
846
0
64
Strathclyde
Rabbits introduced by the Romans as an alternative food, hunted ,trapped and snared for hundreds of years. Relished during the last war ,stuff our grandparents relied on. Now the tree huggers and anti antis, have rabbits in minefields trapped with red tape.Hunting, fishing ,any form of catching game now frowned upon .Thank god we,ve chicken nuggets , fish fingers and kebabs available to feed the nation. fil
 

Ed

Admin
Admin
Aug 27, 2003
5,977
38
51
South Wales Valleys
Alex said:
Well, I'm here to learn, and like many of the other threads, I've learnt something new again!
Well that's what this forum is here for:D One thing I would point out though..... If you (or anyone else for that matter) wants to learn snaring then get someone to show you. Learning trapping/snaring from a forum will give you alot of theory..... but to understand it fully and the subtle tips and tricks, you really need for someone who knows what they are doing to take you out and give you a few pointers...... otherwise you could end up with a non target species, body or leg captures (rather than the neck) or a whole host of other issues.

:)
Ed
 

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