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Bluetongue1
Guest
Thanks thepythia- great pics and just as Crodoc described them.
A few general comments on wild feeding and related interaction with animals,which I split off an earlier post because this "anti bump" software will not allow two consecutive posts...
With respect to feeding wild animals so that you can interact closely with them, there are some realties that need to be taken on board. Unless you can guarantee a continuing food supply, day after day all year, as an on-going activity, then feeding wild animals should be a spasmodic thing only. Otherwise these animals become dependent on the food you are providing and once it is removed they have a problem obtaining sufficient food to support the population that has developed as a result of the artificial food supply.This is aside from any behavioural issues.
There are some significant differences between feeding animals confined to the “unnatural environment” of a domestic dwelling and block and those that are mobile enough to come and go from adjacent bushland. The guidelines outlined above should be applied to mobile visitors. What one chooses to do with permanent residents is up to the individual. Personally I would be inclined to maintain normal hunting/collecting behaviour through occasional feeding so that should the animal decide to move on or should the householder do so, the animal will still be in a position to look after itself. Under certain circumstances it may well be appropriate to treat it as if it were a captive even though it is has free-range.
Someone mentioned wild animals appreciating what you do for them. Timothy Treadwell spent 13 summers living with Grizzly Bears, at the end of which he and his girlfriend were killed and eaten by them. Not so long ago a chap in Europe who had a collection of King Cobras he had free handled for some 20 plus years was found dead from a bite. Records have him saying that his snakes would never try to harm him as they know he looks after them.
Blue
A few general comments on wild feeding and related interaction with animals,which I split off an earlier post because this "anti bump" software will not allow two consecutive posts...
With respect to feeding wild animals so that you can interact closely with them, there are some realties that need to be taken on board. Unless you can guarantee a continuing food supply, day after day all year, as an on-going activity, then feeding wild animals should be a spasmodic thing only. Otherwise these animals become dependent on the food you are providing and once it is removed they have a problem obtaining sufficient food to support the population that has developed as a result of the artificial food supply.This is aside from any behavioural issues.
There are some significant differences between feeding animals confined to the “unnatural environment” of a domestic dwelling and block and those that are mobile enough to come and go from adjacent bushland. The guidelines outlined above should be applied to mobile visitors. What one chooses to do with permanent residents is up to the individual. Personally I would be inclined to maintain normal hunting/collecting behaviour through occasional feeding so that should the animal decide to move on or should the householder do so, the animal will still be in a position to look after itself. Under certain circumstances it may well be appropriate to treat it as if it were a captive even though it is has free-range.
Someone mentioned wild animals appreciating what you do for them. Timothy Treadwell spent 13 summers living with Grizzly Bears, at the end of which he and his girlfriend were killed and eaten by them. Not so long ago a chap in Europe who had a collection of King Cobras he had free handled for some 20 plus years was found dead from a bite. Records have him saying that his snakes would never try to harm him as they know he looks after them.
Blue
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