Kittyhawk
Established Member
Rabbits are terrible in NZ, particularly in the south island where they have decimated large areas of the high-country grazing land, bankrupting farmers.
I recall fly fishing once in one of the remote high country lakes. It was just before sunset in late summer and the tussock hills were pretty brown. I looked across to the hills and the whole landscape appeared to be shimmering - I thought it was a trick of the light but no, it was wall to wall rabbits. Thousands of them.
Meanwhile the authorities are sitting on their hands muttering oh dear, how sad..So a couple of enterprising farmers when to Australia and smuggled some of the Calisi virus back into NZ and this almost wiped them out but they are making a comeback.
We have 12 years in Whangamata and this is the first time I have seen rabbits here in the village.
And I notice that each new batch of young ones are bolder than their parents, now showing almost no fear of humans and not much of dogs either. And the latest is our dog is going berserk when out on the deck so I think a few have moved in beneath it but can't look without lifting the decking.
I have some experience with club archery but the worry is a non-fatal hit resulting in a rabbit galloping through the village with an arrow up its backside would not be a good look.
They are tame enough now that it's possible to get to within a few metres of them so I think the slingsht/catapult is worth a shot.
I know I won't make any impact on the numbers but hopefully word will spread throughout Bunnyville that our immediate neighbourhood is not such a desirable location to call home.
I recall fly fishing once in one of the remote high country lakes. It was just before sunset in late summer and the tussock hills were pretty brown. I looked across to the hills and the whole landscape appeared to be shimmering - I thought it was a trick of the light but no, it was wall to wall rabbits. Thousands of them.
Meanwhile the authorities are sitting on their hands muttering oh dear, how sad..So a couple of enterprising farmers when to Australia and smuggled some of the Calisi virus back into NZ and this almost wiped them out but they are making a comeback.
We have 12 years in Whangamata and this is the first time I have seen rabbits here in the village.
And I notice that each new batch of young ones are bolder than their parents, now showing almost no fear of humans and not much of dogs either. And the latest is our dog is going berserk when out on the deck so I think a few have moved in beneath it but can't look without lifting the decking.
I have some experience with club archery but the worry is a non-fatal hit resulting in a rabbit galloping through the village with an arrow up its backside would not be a good look.
They are tame enough now that it's possible to get to within a few metres of them so I think the slingsht/catapult is worth a shot.
I know I won't make any impact on the numbers but hopefully word will spread throughout Bunnyville that our immediate neighbourhood is not such a desirable location to call home.