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After months of letting them get away with it, farm manager Andy Crow's fields are turning blue with pigeons. And when his fields go blue, Crow sees red. He is out with 'plus one' to knock back the numbers in order to save his crops decoying them to a hide made with dried bracken.
Andy is sponsored by:
▶ Blaser www.blaser-spor...
▶ Gamebore www.gamebore.com
▶ Vario Ear Plugs varioplugs.co.uk
▶ Jack Pyke www.jackpyke.co.uk
▶ For all our films with Andy, go to www.fieldsport...
▶ Join the Fieldsports Nation. Just £/$/€4.99 a month gets you Fieldsports Channel membership. Click here: / @fieldsportstv
This item appears on KZbin in Fieldsports Britain, episode 480 Fcha.nl/fieldsp...
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Why shoot pigeons?
The woodpigeon is recognised as the UK’s number one agricultural pest and causes millions of pounds of damage (AHDB consultation 10-40% loss in yield. Equivalent loss of £125/ha for Oil Seed Rape, £250/ha for peas, £350-£1250/ha for brassicas) to agricultural crops every year including cereals, brassicas, oilseed rape, peas and salad crops. Pigeon damage reduces the yield, quality, appearance and ultimately the saleability of the crop. Pigeons can also cause damage in gardens and allotments - pecking at the leaves and ripping off portions, often leaving just the stalks and larger leaf veins. They may also attack and strip buds, leaves and fruits off trees and bushes.
The UK woodpigeon population was last estimated at 5.4 million pairs in 2009. Densities of wood pigeon are the highest in Eastern England, coinciding with the highest concentration of horticultural production.
Wild pigeon (game) is natural and free range, and it is one of the healthiest meats available today. It’s low in cholesterol and high in protein… and, quite simply, delicious.