Hunt Sabs prepare for second year of badger culling

Badger-4751-300x204 27 March 2014 from HSA

 

Badger-4751-300x204 27 March 2014 from HSA

 

At our AGM in June 2012 a spokesper­son from the cam­paign group “Stop the Cull” addressed those of us present on their belief that the cull could only be suc­cess­ful­ly sab­o­taged with a lot of help from hunt sab groups. We were told that we’d have to do thou­sands of hours of prepara­to­ry sett sur­vey­ing, that we’d get no sleep for weeks when it start­ed, we’d lose all our hol­i­day time from work and to top it all we did­n’t even know if we’d be even slight­ly suc­cess­ful in find­ing marks­men with silencers at poten­tial­ly any loca­tion inside 100’s of square miles. “Look­ing for a nee­dle in a haystack” actu­al­ly sound­ed eas­i­er.

We were also told that there was a lot of press inter­est in the bad­ger culls and that it might be good for hunt sabs’ pub­lic pro­file. Con­sid­er­ing that for decades we have been por­trayed in the main stream press as “thugs” no one was par­tic­u­lar­ly enam­oured with the idea of a media make over.

As it turned out the press did­n’t praise or recog­nise us for our behav­iour or endeav­ours, but what did hap­pen is that tens of thou­sands of peo­ple came into con­tact with us. Whether that was via speech­es on demo’s, from reports on Face­book or in the flesh in the cull zone. Peo­ple learnt about us and they liked what they saw — groups of com­pas­sion­ate peo­ple who work hard in the field to pro­tect wild ani­mals from being hunt­ed.

It is this very fact that we have “gone viral”, not just on social media, but in the real world, where it counts, that makes us an unstop­pable force. Whether that’s new sab groups form­ing across the coun­try or small sab groups being over­whelmed with new peo­ple. The HSA mem­ber­ship has more than dou­bled in size in under a year and dona­tions have increased dra­mat­i­cal­ly.

 

When we got to the cull zones in 2013, it quick­ly became clear that we were mak­ing a mas­sive dif­fer­ence. Right from the start groups, work­ing close­ly with bad­ger patrollers, engaged, and repelled, the bad­ger killers. The HSA sup­port­ed the sabs on the ground by giv­ing grants totalling many thou­sands of pounds to help with trans­port, and cru­cial­ly, the very expen­sive Gen2+ night vision equip­ment that enabled sabs to spot shoot­ers from huge dis­tances.

 

Many peo­ple will be unaware of the lit­er­al­ly thou­sands of miles walked by sabs in the run up to the culls, as they mapped out all the setts over hun­dreds of square miles so they could defend them against shoot­ers. The rea­son that the culls were sab­o­taged so spec­tac­u­lar­ly is due large­ly to that work.

That sur­vey­ing work in Dorset this year won’t rely on a few sab groups sup­port­ed by a dozen or so locals. This year it’s total­ly dif­fer­ent. The British pub­lic has engaged with us en masse & we are con­fi­dent that with their help, we will have every sett mapped in that zone eas­i­ly by June 1st.

In 2012 we were told to expect a roll out to ten cull zones and then a fur­ther forty in fol­low­ing years. Here we are in 2014 with a cull pol­i­cy in tat­ters and a roll out to one more cull zone a small pos­si­bil­i­ty. We are pre­pared to take Dorset by storm and destroy any attempts to kill bad­gers

We will help “Stop the Cull”

 

That’s what we do.

 

Join us.