Badger killed and moved off road Callington Road BS4.
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Monday, 25 May 2026
Nature Reserve Close By But Speeding Drivers....
Friday, 22 May 2026
The Badger Cull Is Over....It's All Very Confusing
Cheers all round? Read the part that says "Both the Badger Trust and Cumbria Wildlife Trust said they were concerned a culling licence remained potentially active in
I have already stated several times that until the Government gives an absolute, in writing, guarantee that there will be no more culls there is ALWAYS the threat of a "required special licence cull".
Sadly, if possible, it will take many decades for the population to recover although extinction in some large areas is likely. Over 300,000 badgers kill;ed due to bad science and corruption.
We should all be thankful for the work of anti cull groups who have risked a lot over the years including vicious assaults.
Federica Bedendo
North East and
Published
22 May 2026, 06:07 BST
2 Comments
Badger culling has effectively ended in
The practice was widely used in farming to control the
spread of bovine tuberculosis (TB), which resulted in the slaughter of more
than 270,000 cattle in the last 10 years, according to government figures.
The last badger culling licence, which was granted in
The Badger Trust said the move was "good news for
badgers" as culling was not an effective way to tackle bovine TB.
The trust's chief executive Nigel Palmer said: "You
can't solve a disease in one animal by killing another animal."
The government said it was planning to move towards
vaccinating badgers to control the spread of TB, but development of a vaccine
for cattle was still under way.
"Until they address the problem in cattle, which is
where the problem lies, they're not going to get on top of it," Palmer
said.
Nigel Palmer, chief executive at the Badger Trust. He has
short brown hair and he is speaking to a crowd, which is out of shot, holding a
microphone. He is wearing a t-shirt with the word 'badgers' on it.
Image source,Nigel Palmer
The National Farmers Union (NFU) said badger culling had
been effective in controlling transmissions, together with other measures such
as cattle testing and movement control.
NFU president Tom Bradshaw said a decision to end wildlife
control when effective cattle vaccination and testing were not expected to be
available until 2030 left "gaping holes" in TB control policies.
He said: "There needs to be much greater urgency,
attention and investment given to TB eradication. We still believe a
comprehensive approach is the best way to eradicate this terrible
disease."
Defra said the most recent data showed 5% of tested badger carcasses
were positive for TB in 2024.
It said cattle testing and surveillance had always been
"the foundation" of its strategy and a new plan to control TB was
expected to be announced soon.
"Bovine TB remains one of the most difficult and
persistent animal health challenges, causing devastation for farmers and rural
communities," a Defra spokesperson said.
Cumbria Wildlife Trust said bovine TB took a
"horrendous toll emotionally and financially" on farmers and they
were "very keen" to see the government develop a vaccine for cattle.
"We share a lot of sympathy and empathy with the
farmers who are affected," Cumbria Wildlife Trust's chief executive Steve
Trotter said.
He added wildlife organisations would be open to working
with Defra on a scheme to vaccinate badgers.
Steve Trotter, chief executive of Cumbria Wildlife Trust. He
has short salt and pepper hair and wears glasses. He is wearing a dark fleece
over a blue shirt. His arm is leaning on a drystone wall and there are green
trees behind him.
Both the Badger Trust and Cumbria Wildlife Trust said they
were concerned a culling licence remained potentially active in
"It's very confused messaging," Palmer said.
"We would rather see them end all licences and actually
focus on supporting farmers and supporting them to get on top of this terrible
disease."
The Hunt Saboteurs Association, which opposed badger
culling, said the practice had been a "disaster" for the environment
and it was important to ensure it would never happen again.
Chairman Simon Russell said: "We need to step away from this attitude that as soon as we have a problem with any form of wildlife the answer is to kill it - we need to see that - at best - as the very last resort."
Thursday, 21 May 2026
Badger Trust Still Trying To Push Out BBG
It HAS to be deliberate. Woke up this morning and there it was: The Badger Trust telling me it is setting up a Bristol badger group.
This is just to get more funding and the Trust has NEVER helped local badgers before and had I left it up to them more than a dozen setts would have been built on in the l;ast 6 years.
This is just the big corporate group wanting more groups for more funds.
Wednesday, 20 May 2026
"Caution Badgers"
Although drivers still do not slow down (it is THEIR road) it was good to see that someone fed up of badgers being killed on one stretch of road that Bristol City Council were not interested in doing anything about put up their own sign.
We still have not found out who put the sign up -BCC were quite annoyed at me and I will make it clear now that I had nothing to do with this BUT I commend the person who put it up.
Tuesday, 19 May 2026
A big problem for badgers
Monday, 18 May 2026
Badger Cubs
I had a report on Saturday night that a badger cub had been taken in to Highcroft Vets on the Wells Road.
Saturday, 16 May 2026
Island Badgers?
(c)2026 Badger Trust Isle of Wight
Island populations of any animal whether fox or badger is of interest. In my two Red Papers I looked at island foxes as well as island wild cats. Badgers on islands indicate two things:
1. They are an ancient population inhabiting the island since it became water locked.
2. They were transported to the island simply to introduce them there or for hunting/hunting reasons -badgers were being caught and transported all over England in the second half of the 19th century.
If (1) then they need DNA testing and to be studied and given full protection by the law and not subjected to any cull.
If it is (2) then records need to be search for when the introduction started. Foxes were transported to the Isle of Man, Isle of Wight, etc for hunting purposes.; Because of the introduction of mange due to the poor conditions imported foxes faced before being sold on it became a problem noted in thw 18th and 19th centuries.
Hunt masters would kill any population where mange was seen even if the foxes appeared healthy the fact that one had mange meant the entire population had to be killed -cubs and all. Some bright spark decided that foxes had mange due to them being dirty animals and not cleaning out their dens. Badgers didn't have mange and were seen as clean and they cleared out their setts daily. No one accused hunt masters of having high IQs but they worked out that if they got badgers and put them into fox dens their constant cleaning out would mean future foxes did not face mange.
Your brain can hurt if you try to work this all out logically. If the foxes were alive then badgers could not be moved in. If the foxes were gone and the badgers moved in to clean up an area before more imported foxes arrived...where did the badgers go? Where they killed or moved on to another hunting territory?
It is very odd to write that after centuries of melecide the badgers of England only survived because they seemed useful to fox hunts. Otherwise like the original British fox and wild cat badgers would now be extinct -for 'sport' they were not much use ("unless there is a shortage of foxes") so would not have been trapped in Europe and imported in their thousands as foxes, deer, hare, red squirrels and other species were.
Which means that if (2) then we know why -unless some local squire wanted to have a "typically English animal" on his property.
The history of island canids and felids is interesting but island badgers are never mentioned.
Interestingly, every search will tell you that foxes and badgers are absent on the Isle of Man and yet we know from records (written not online because internetters do not study archives) that there are foxes there -again, imported for 'sport' in the 19th century. And:
"No Extant Population: Reports of badger sightings are rare and usually considered to be escapees, not a established population." Escaped from where? The fact that there is no bovine TB on the Isle is stated to be proof that badgers do not exist there and yet that claim of badger introduced bTB can be shot down over and over again.
Removing a badger from an island population, say an orphaned cub, would or should be difficult since there would be questions re. any disease introduction OR if returned back to the island the risk of bTB.
There are a lot of questions about island populations but dogma (spread by armchair 'experts' and internet bloggers) has taken the place of field work. Why get wet and cold when you can just copy and paste 'facts'?
Badgers actually went extinct on the Isle of Wight by 1909. The current population stems from about a dozen badgers introduced in the 1920s by the local hunt.
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