To answer the question of who views this blog (apparently the Badger Trust can't see us 😂 here are the all time stats:

To answer the question of who views this blog (apparently the Badger Trust can't see us 😂 here are the all time stats:

Re the Foxes and Badgers Death Registers (now combined).
The rule we go by is that we take all dead badgers and list them up to 30/31 December. We then add any late reports but by mid-January stop since by them the data analysis etc is completed and would need to be totally re-written if even one report was added.
The fact that no one is interested in the data posted means a 1 or 2 day re-write is not worth the time and effort. How many of the 364 members have read the published badger death results or even the fox deaths results?
Most views are from outside the UK which is strange -or shows more interest in badgers outside the UK?
I was asked whether I use Google maps to plot locations of badger setts as "it's an handy tool".
The answer is no. Google maps may be saved as "private" but it is far from that. Allow me to explain. When we carried out the Bristol Fox Deaths Study - https://terryhoopernaturalist.blogspot.com/2026/01/results-from-bristol-fox-deaths-and.html- we used a Google map set to private. There were just two people with access to that map and yet, in the space of two days, over 50 views were recorded.
It made no sense that a private map under the Google terms had so many views. According to Google the maps you make are private unless you share a link. We did not. Somewhere and somehow persons not allowed to view the maps were seeing them. I stopped using Google maps after an extra 25 views were recorded in one day.
As far as I am concerned animal safety is paramount. If I cannot guarantee 100% privacy on locations I am not using any internet tool. Before the internet I started out with index cards and a good quality road map top plot locations etc of other animals. I still use the map and index cards -no one sees them if I do not want them to.
If I give someone my word that a location will remain private then I stick by that. Since 1977 I have never broken that promise to anyone and I intend to keep those promises.
What happens to the information once I slip this mortal coil? I have someone to pass it all along to. Avon Wildlife Trust will certainly not get a hold of it. the Bristol Regional Environmental Records Centre (BRERC) will not get them. Both organisations have been asked for assistance in the past and the Trust has failed to respond on every occasion. BRERC considers (I apologise for the ego but I need to quote others) "a noted naturalist" with n international reputation not worthy of seeing any records kept -remember that I was a UK police forces wildlife consultant from 1977-2018 and a m,ember of the Partnership Against Wildlife Crime but that, it seems is not enough to make me trustworthy.
So Index cards and map it will remain and after I am gone it is up to the successor what they do.
I have just recorded the 7th and 8th (reported) badger deaths today. The latest was found in a back garden and thought to be a pet cat. One of the local Lost and Found Pets people went out with a scanner to check for a chip and saw it was a badger.
Sadly, badgers and foxes often go unreported as people assume they are pet cats. Makes no sense but that's humans.
Anything concerning the welfare of Bristol wildlife or the environment is posted publicly so that everyone can see whether I am being open or not. It also shows full responses that I receive.
"Dear Terry,
"Thank you for your further reply and for explaining more about your work and background. It’s clear that you and your colleagues have invested a great deal of time in protecting wildlife in and around Bristol, and I want to acknowledge that commitment.The fact that I am literally being told by some people to just give up my work or "carry on quietly" is very insulting and shows how backward the UK is for wildlife. There was no one dealing with badger calls in the City in 1992-1993 because the old Avon Badger Group had folded and the RSPCA were not responding.
I started setting things up and the Bristol Badger Group was formed in 1994 (officially). It has taken 32 years to build up trust with people who have regular badger visitors and to list and map out where there is badger activity and setts. We even have a qualified wildlife rescuer who can handle badgers if required.
People in the City and County are generally of the "Who gives a crap" but there are people who do care for and keep badgers safe. I had to earn their trust and here is the problem: the only person from the old Avon group is getting on in years and flatly refuses to forward information ("I will proudly take it to my grave") that will make it possible for us to protect setts,
That written, in the last five years alone I have had to advise as well as fight to stop established badger territories within the City from being destroyed ('accidentally') by developers and also land being sold off without declaration of their being badgers present. That is not a cushy 9-5 job but one that goes on day in and day out and it has gotten me a lot of negative kick back and a lot from the City Council.
A new group sets up in Bristol it will takes decades to get where BBG is today. To show that Badger Watch knows full well of the Bristol group here is a response from them on FB in 2023 (they already had my details after asking in 2015, 2017, 2018)
"Hi
Terry, thanks for your message and getting in touch. We list Badger Trust
groups on our website, who are full or associate members of Badger Trust - do
you think this in something you'd be interested in for your group? I can ask
Sally, our groups coordinator, to drop you a line. Either way please let me
know the name and any contact details for your group, so I can add it to our
contact list for badger rescues. I believe
To be listed as on the Badger trust it would cost £50 per year and inclusion on its map was it. Everything else "do what you are already doing". No support or back up. Re the "rescues for that area" -they could supply no details.
When I have asked for support in a case all I get are the same responses that they can do nothing but this is the legislation. I was involved in wildlife law and legislation since the 1970s so I know the law full well.
Here is the call by the Trust for a badger group in Bristol to prove this is a genuine thing.
To answer the question of who views this blog (apparently the Badger Trust can't see us 😂 here are the all time stats: United States 7...