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Tuesday, 9 June 2026

Can someone stop a rescuer treating sick wildlife?(and, YES, they do regularly)



legally, they generally cannot prevent authorized professionals or a member of the public from taking a sick, injured, or orphaned wild animal to a vet or rescue for adequate treatment. However, in practice, bystanders can create conflict, and there are varying rules depending on the situation and location. [1, 2]
The Legal Standing (UK)
  • Taking for Treatment: The Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 legally permits anyone to take a sick, injured, or protected wild animal from the wild for the express purpose of providing it with adequate treatment and supportive care until it is fit to be released. [1]
  • Prevention Rights: A member of the public does not "own" the wildlife on their property. Therefore, they do not have the legal right to stop an authorized person (like an RSPCA officer or a licensed wildlife rehabilitator) from recovering or helping an animal in distress.
Private Property and Trespass
  • Access Rights: Private landowners can prevent rescuers from physically entering their land based on trespass laws. However, if an animal is in distress, rescuers often work with local authorities to negotiate access or involve the police to prevent an animal from being subjected to unnecessary suffering. [1, 2]
  • Interfering with a Rescue: Intentionally obstructing a lawful wildlife rescue or abusing a rescuer can escalate into a civil dispute or even a criminal offense, particularly if the prevention leads to cruelty or a protected species being harmed. [1]
Handling and Ethics
  • Intervention Debates: While people generally cannot stop rescuers, there is an ongoing ethical debate surrounding the rescue of wildlife. Some individuals believe in the natural order of things (survival of the fittest) and may voice frustration or try to stop well-meaning rescuers from intervening, though this does not grant them a legal right to stop the rescue. [1, 2]
  • The Danger of "Killing with Kindness": The British Wildlife Rehabilitation Council actively warns that while the public's intentions are compassionate, unlicensed or untrained individuals attempting to keep and treat wild animals themselves can cause more harm or delay necessary veterinary care. [1]
How to Handle Confrontation
If a property owner or bystander is attempting to obstruct a rescue, professional organizations strongly advise the following steps: [1]
  1. Avoid confrontation: Step away to ensure personal safety.
  2. Document the situation: Note the location, the animal's condition, and the person preventing the rescue.
  3. Involve authorities: Contact the Police or a national animal welfare charity (such as the RSPCA in the UK) to handle the dispute and ensure the animal receives the care it needs. [1, 2]

One Less Cub

 


A cub left by the side of the road is 066. No idea what happened to the mother.

'Thank you' to  the driver who simply drove on. About time it was made illegal to not report hitting wildlife with your vehicle.

Note to the person who said these posts are very depressing.  Well, I have had to record and look at photos of dead wildlife daily and it is what is going on in the real world.  "Mr and Mrs Badger" are not having tea under a mushroom every night with Mr and Mrs Fox.

Monday =TWO Dead Badgers

 Bristol City Council declares it is fighting for the environment and wildlife which is struggling wildlife dies because developers money is far more important than taking any action.

064 Monday 08 06 2026 (reported) Dead badger A4174 ring road heading north just near entrance to Holiday Inn near UWE turnoff ( looks like this poor thing has been there for a while so it might have already been reported - it's pretty decimated)

065 Monday 08 06 2026 Dead badger found on Southmead Rd, by the turning to Felstead Rd.
We think we know where 065 may have come from although it is possible that there is a sett in a garden in that locale. If anyone knows and can message me privately I would appreciate it.
Thanks


Monday, 8 June 2026

Badgers Can Climb? How Ridiculous!

 I was just looking at this image from South Essex Wildlife Hospital and it reminded me of other clips I have seen since trail cams and CCTV have become a thing.


I once had a chat with a woman who had a nice, 6 feet high (1.82m) wooden fence put up around her back garden. One night her husband sat up in bed quickly. "What's wrong?" She asked him. His reply was "Some ------ getting over our fence!"

The husband got up and switched on the exterior lights and looked out. Nothing. After checking no one was breaking in they settled down for the night again.

Next night at the same sort of time the woman heard the fence creak as though someone was getting over it. She woke her husband who turned on the outside lights and got a baseball bat (seriously, this is England and a cricket bat will do) and looked around. Both found it a bit unnerving and both thought at the same time that it was someone "casing" the house before breaking in.

The next night both sat up by the window and, same time, they heard something but not on the fence but on the patio. They quietly opened the window and looked down. Was it a burglar? No."It was the biggest bloody badger we've ever seen but we had no idea they were in this area!" The couple watched as the badger sniffed around and they were delighted but her husband told her "I thought we were going to catch our fence jumper!"

Both then fell silent as the badger scaled the fence, making the same noise they had heard twice before and jumped down into the garden behind. The couple had notice 'someone'[ had left a trail through the grass and realised the badger followed the same path.

The husband "made a badger hole in the fence"  and it seems the badger took that way out from then on.

Yes, badgers can climb onto low tree branches over walls and fences and, I am told, up a wall and into someone's house (makes a change from cat flaps!


Are Urban Badgers A Myth?



 We do not run around badger setts or clan territories looking for setts. After decades, including working with UK police forces, I learnt that such activity attracts the wrong sort of attention.

What we do is note where there is badger activity and although we know where a LOT of the setts are many are in private gardens and home owners protect them and do not allow anyone in to check although they do keep an eye on health issues and have our details just in case.
We know a great deal about urban foxes but there is little known on urban badgers which most 'experts' do no believe could survive in Cities.
The question is how many sett/activity locations are there in the City and County? The county as well as BANES, South Glos and N Somerset we know of some but people for specific reasons do not give out locations. Well, we are currently looking at one report and if it holds up there are a (known) total of 60 listed sites.
Even the old Avon Badger Group failed to find many of these and it is possible that their now 'lost' data may contain setts we do not know of.
Urban badgers are not myths and they are in the heart of the City.

The Badger Cub That (Didn't) Need Rescuing

 Last week Bristol Wildlife Rescue received a call about a badger cub out during the day and moving about. The rescuer went to the property and photographed the cub which was not happy that people were present so moved off into bushes. It was followed right back to a sett that the reportee had no idea was there.

This highlights two things. The main one is that badgers and particularly cubs when they get old enough will move around areas they feel safe in. They rely on smell and hearing rather than eye sight.
The second point is that such cubs should NOT be trapped and taken away as "at risk". Secret World removed two cubs from Ashton Court and were then stuck with two healthy cubs and nowhere to release them BECAUSE they had not carried out the most basic and first item on the list: contact the local badger group (BBG) and ascertain where any setts are so that the cubs can be observed and checked to see they do go back to a sett.
We need to get rid of the myths that have become 'facts' and are even promoted by rescues and wildlife hospitals because they accept dogma simply because they are not field naturalists and very few have seen a badger let along studied their behaviour.


photos (c) 2026 Bristol Wildlife Rescue/Sarah Mills


A Few Notes On The Blog and Views

 


Just checking posts on the Bristol Badger Group and posts per year 2024 =9 posts 2025 =43 posts 2026 =95 (up to 08 06). There have been 7, 287 views and 0 comments. Who is visiting the blog and from where?

United States
77
Germany
56
Singapore
31
Hong Kong
20
Vietnam
12
United Kingdom
8
Canada
6
Colombia
2
Netherlands
2
Bangladesh
1
Spain
1
Finland
1
India
1
Iraq
1
Jordan
1
Kenya
1
Moldova
1
Philippines
1
Palestine
1
Other
6


So there are the views and this is probably (can't find another) British blog on badgers with an almost daily posting schedule.  Interest but no one wants to ask questions or comment?

Can someone stop a rescuer treating sick wildlife?(and, YES, they do regularly)

legally , they generally cannot prevent authorized professionals or a member of the public from taking a sick, injured, or orphaned wild ani...