This is nothing to do with hunting and killing, it is about respecting native wildlife. When we camp, we are visitors, we should be respectful, clear up after ourselves and accept our host's foibles.
This is nothing to do with hunting and killing, it is about respecting native wildlife. When we camp, we are visitors, we should be respectful, clear up after ourselves and accept our host's foibles.
Consider yourselves most fortunate = wait until you have to contend with black bears or grizzly bears.
A grizz can sprint at 35mph to bring down a horse.
All food whatsoever, even chewing gum, goes in a pack, hung in a tree, 50+ honest yards from your camp every night.
Accidents happen: stumble across a partially buried recent kill. Get between the sow and her cubs.
Young grizz stalk little kids at the country school bus stops (that didn't go on for very long.)
But his talk of 'infested campsites' was in Australia, where the possums are native.Not defending his entire post, but he did state that this species is an invasive in NZ rather than native.
Consider yourselves most fortunate = wait until you have to contend with black bears or grizzly bears.
A grizz can sprint at 35mph to bring down a horse.
All food whatsoever, even chewing gum, goes in a pack, hung in a tree, 50+ honest yards from your camp every night.
Accidents happen: stumble across a partially buried recent kill. Get between the sow and her cubs.
Young grizz stalk little kids at the country school bus stops (that didn't go on for very long.)
But his talk of 'infested campsites' was in Australia, where the possums are native.
I hunted Possum in North Island New Zealand. Well stood in a forest clearing with a lamp and a .22 and shot over 100 of them in a night.
The key issue with Possum in New Zealand is the epidemic numbers, no natural predators and the enormous consumption of foliage on tree species that hasn't evolved to be browsed.
Shame they can't find a market for the fur.