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Saturday, 21 March 2026

Bristol City Council Want To Dig In A Badger Sett Area UPDATE

  APHA and Natural England will take up to 8 days to respond. Bristol City councillors named and holding cabinet positions are all using the old "We cannot reply if you are not in our ward" trick. They all know and have been informed by email and their responses show they have been made aware of the facts so no ducking the issue.

The leader of BCC is also aware so if people in this area are concerned they need to get in touch with him asap Monday morning.

Councillor Tony Dyer is the Leader of Bristol City Council as of May 2024, representing the Southville ward. You can contact him via email at Cllr.Tony.Dyer@bristol.gov.uk. For general council enquiries, call 0117 922 2000 or email customer.services@bristol.gov.uk.


Despite last year's battle to stop a £400K land sell off by Bristol City Council  which resulted in the sale being cancelled I was informed yesterday that a digger was now on site. Bristol City Council tends to ignore notifications and phone calls are never responded to.

In this case I have suggested that any digging starts it should be reported as a wildlife crime since we have no idea how far spread underground setts are and this is cub season. I have removed the exact location for wildlife safety but here are the emails sent out.

Hello.
Despite previously carrying out a survey and informing the relevant members of Bristol City Council that a planned development sell off of land was a long established badger sett area (pre 1970s) and that sell off having been cancelled (knotweed is also prevalent in the area) I was informed on Friday 20th March that a digger had been moved onto the badger area to "excavate foundations for Bristol City Council".

I have contacted BCC (email attached) senior leaders and explained, again, that digging would disturb badgers (how far underground from setts their tunnels run we do not know) especially as it is now cub season. BCC tends to ignore these notifications and I wanted to make sure that other agencies were aware of what is planned.

My thanks in Advance

Terry Hooper
Bristol Badger Group f 1994
Hello.
Last year there was an attempt to sell off land at xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx despite the evidence provided by local residents and I submitted the same evidence to BCC.  The area also has knotweed.

On Friday 20th March it was reported that a digger had been moved onto the site and the driver when challenged told residents that he was there to "uncover foundations for Bristol City Council "to look at".

I will be forwarding details to Natural England as well as DEFRA to ensure that this activity is noted as I assume that the council has not had any wildlife surveyor check for location of badger setts near to the dig site. Also this is cub season so any such activity can cause great distress to  badgers with cubs.

Badgers and their setts (tunnels, chambers, and entrances) are strictly protected in England and Wales under the Protection of Badgers Act 1992, making it a criminal offence to damage, destroy, or obstruct access to a sett, or to disturb a badger while it is occupying one. 

  • Exclusion Zones: As a general rule, a 30-metre buffer zone should be established around active badger setts, where no heavy machinery or excavation work should take place.
  • Work Distances:
    • < 10m: Only hand tools/light work.
    • < 20m: Light machinery/digging.
    • < 30m: Very heavy machinery.
I have advised locals that since they and Bristol Badger Group have previously identified the area as a long established badger site and informed Bristol City Council of this that if if any work takes place near to setts it is reported to Avon and Somerset Police as a wildlife crime in progress.

I hope BCC will refrain from any digging work especially in cub season.

Terry Hooper
Bristol Badger Group f 1994

Friday, 20 March 2026

Can't Sell The Land Because of Badgers....send a digger in.

 


It never stops. This is all unpaid for time and advice.

Apparently the Eastville site that could not be sold due to established badger setts there now has a digger on it.
Everyone should have the law regarding disturbance of badger setts. In this case as that is all known by the landowner if the action planned is to dig up the area and disturb badgers or the area then it is a criminal offence.
Simply telephone Avon and Somerset Police and report a "possible wildlife crime"
Report wildlife crime to Avon and Somerset Police immediately by calling 999 if in progress, or 101 for non-emergencies, including incidents like poaching, badger sett disturbance, or illegal bird trapping. Use their dedicated online rural crime reporting form for detailed reports. Do not approach suspects and report anonymously

We NEED Badger Post Mortems

 We have a big problem when it comes to badgers reported dead within the BBG area. How did they die?   



Back in 2020 a call went out about a badger found dead in some undergrowth in a part of East Bristol.  There was a search and the badger was found and a quick check revealed a number of breaks in its body. A few days previously there had been severe weather -gale force wind and rain; this badger was at the bottom of some cliffs. Everything looked consistent with the badger having fallen for some reason from a height.

We have had badgers found in or near parks but a fair distance from roads but those roads were close enough. As with foxes we have found that a badger hit by a car will follow a path back towards its sett area before internal injuries kick in.

At one point in two areas unusual blue pellets were found -one lot in a food dish on a street frequented by badger5s and foxes. The other pile of pellets was found in a Bristol park where three badgers had died some distance from a road. 

The material was reported to Bristol City Council and South Gloucestershire both authorities were disinterested. From one source (Friends of Eastville Park) I tried repeatedly to get samples of the blue material to pass on to the Wildlife Incident Investigation Service and DEFRA for analysis. I was told several times that they would wait for the City Council to decide what action to take and despite my stating BCC had said it had no interest the group refused to give up samples. Slug pellets, poison -we have no idea because no one was interested. Even a badger stool sample and fox stool sample with the blue material in them were handed in to the establishment that carried out our fox necropsies) : not even checked.

When I broached the subject of badger necropsies with Langford Veterinary School I was told that "we are not allowed by the Health and Safety Executive to carry out badger post mortems" -the reason given was the "possible risk of bovine TB".

After severing ties with Langford I discovered that badger post mortems were being carried out there; I had been told a lie from the outset. 



The head of the old Avon Badger Group conducted his own post mortem examinations in the garden but Bristol Regional Environmental Records Centre and Avon Wildlife Trust who had copies of the ABG records will not allow access.  The only remaining member of the old group I found has stated that all her data will "proudly go to the grave with me" so all of that data is gone.

PMs on badgers are carried out in Wales.

Why is it important to carry out badger PMs in the region? Firstly, it tells us what the overall health of the population is, Secondly it will give a lot of information on parasites and other issues faced by badgers. Thirdly, it would give a proven cause of death.

Despite what people believe there are still local "badger men" who get paid by farmers or landowners to "deal (kill) with badgers" .  People involved in badger baiting (yes, it still goes on) as well as people using snares often try to hide what they have been up to by dumping dead badgers by the roadside. People tend to treat dead animals by the side of the road as nothing and certainly do not check or ask questions -far enough into the road cars soon take care of any evidence.

In our area we have had two cases of foxes snared but "dying from car strike" (we assume). We have had an otter snared and then dumped into the road to cover tracks. Dumping badgers into the road to stop questions being asked is an old trick -taxidermists buy road kill badgers and the seller has a photo of the badger in front of the car or on the roadside as "proof" of how  it died. I got removed from two taxidermy groups after asking what area was having 4-6 badgers killed a week on what seemed a quiet country lane as the local badger group might want to check. Photo of the dead badger for sale in front of a parked up car.

Now we simply list as (possible) RTA if badgers are found by the road and simply as "dead" because no examination has taken place.

It would be good to get badger post mortems carried out but with no funds or even qualified vets willing to do the work we are just left with a lot of "dead" badgers.

Wednesday, 18 March 2026

Has The Badger Population Reached or Passed Crisis Point?

 By Friday 18 04 2025 we had recorded 33 dead (reported) badgers in our area.

We have just recorded the 20th death so either people are simply not bothering to report badger deaths OR the death toll year after year has finally caught up with our badgers and there are not as many.
With the cull and cars (and illegal killing of badgers) I think we have reached a population crisis point.
Urgent action should be taken but no one from national or local government cares. Development of green sites and no interest in conservation is dictated by the £ and corruption.


I Often Wonder Why People Think Playing Politics is More Important than Wildlife

 I have now informed a website -Badgerlands- a number of times in recent years of our contact details. This is what people see when they check out local groups:

The Avon Badger Group c/o RSPCA, 78 Gloucester Road, Bristol, BS7 8BN. Phone. Phone 07776 090 816

That information was out of date in 1995. I have no idea why they will not correct details so people can contact the existing group of the last 30 odd years.



I wish it was better news

 


I wish I could post some better news but the 20th dead badger was reported yesterday evening bringing the total this year to 20 (known).

Unfortunately, we were all betrayed in the City when we decided to vote in a Green Party controlled Council which, like the Long Ashton Parish Council, has no interest in wildlife or the environment. Development and £ are far more important.

Bristol City Council Want To Dig In A Badger Sett Area UPDATE

    APHA and Natural England will take up to 8 days to respond. Bristol City councillors named and holding cabinet positions are all using t...