Congratulations to vtecmec for winning May/June's Lude Of The Month, with his DIY Turbo BB1 build.
>>> Click Here For Profile <<<

>>> Click Here For Profile <<<

Badger survey! Please look, will take 2 minutes!
- Donald
- Supporter 2015
- Posts: 9894
- Joined: Sun Jun 12, 2011 10:17 pm
- My Generation: 0G
- Location: Earth 3.0
- Been thanked: 7 times
Try to think more along the lines of disease preventionbristol_bb4 wrote:deffo not the vaccination! you should see some of the horrendous growths cattle seem to develop from receiving a shot! its disgusting

Trap and vaccinate badgers would be vaccinating badgers that DON'T have TB.106pete wrote:How can I trap and vaccinate them and kill if already infected?
If they were trapped but could not be vaccinated, they go to quarantine.
Take the trap and kill option as just killing badgers, regardless of them being TB carriers or not. That is what the government research culls have been doing so take that as the only option.
Just the one option I'm afraid!Tashini wrote:okay, so i wish you could have picked two. but surely, the only sensible option would be to vaccinate cattle as that is what you're trying to protect. i mean, we don't vaccinate/kill animals to defend ourselves. though, obviously upgrading security and minimising contact would be a sensible move...and would work best as a joint effort between the two options. when you start vaccinating badgers (or indeed killing them) you mess with the natural order. we don't vaccinate rabbits for mixymytosis (unsure as to speling of that).
There is a vaccine for myxomatosis, so most rabbit owners have that as part of their vaccine programs (if they actually bother) so the spread between wild and domestic rabbits is next to zero. The problem with mixy is that the virus has actually begun to mutate to beat the vaccination, so trying to rid the wild population of it would be difficult and very very very expensive. It's a bit like painting a huge bridge, by the time you finish you have to go back and start again to keep it fresh. But that's a whole other topic

Vote for whatever you think would be the most effective. Vaccinating badgers or cattle?Pushki wrote:I'd be unhappy about our foodstuffs being given more drugs.
I'm also unhappy about our wildlife being slaughtered.
I'd vote for either of the other two, whichever is the most effective.
And a final addition, this is Bovine TB (Mycobacterium bovis) -> bovis I am presuming is etymologically related to Bovinae, the family in which domestic cattle are ordered. Badgers are from Melinae. So I think it's safe to assume that Bovine TB is named so because it originated from them, not just because it affects them.
- bristol_bb4
- LotM Winner
- Posts: 3369
- Joined: Mon Oct 10, 2011 2:19 pm
- My Generation: 4G
i do totally understand that and see it from that point of view. but by vaccinating the animal (which annoyingly enough usually ends up going into one of the most valuable parts of meat) almost makes the whole carcass non profitable (when you take into consideration the butchers time to break it down and prepare for sale) which causes alot of problems especially if your unlucky enough to end up with a few of them!Gorgon wrote:Try to think more along the lines of disease prevention
im talking completely from a butchers point of view, the slaughter house does know which animals have the vaccination and they know that 9 times out of 10 that it will result in the above mentioned growths but they arent under any legal obligation to tell their customers about it so that they dont have to devalue the carcass. I think the farmers should 100% remove any chance of the animals being infected in the first place.

- jjmartin349571
- Supporter 2016
- Posts: 3344
- Joined: Fri Feb 10, 2012 12:41 am
- My Generation: 4G
- XBOX GamerTag: jjm349571
- Location: Newhaven, East Sussex
- Contact:
Surely vaccinating badgers is more effective. Consider the turnover of cattle and the amount of time/vaccines required compared to the amount of time and resource required to vaccinate a population of badgers which iirc is declining like most wildlife. Plus you'd only need to vaccinate populations likely to come into contact with cattle.
Tempted to say kill them though, you seen what a badger does to a car at 60?
Tempted to say kill them though, you seen what a badger does to a car at 60?

- jjmartin349571
- Supporter 2016
- Posts: 3344
- Joined: Fri Feb 10, 2012 12:41 am
- My Generation: 4G
- XBOX GamerTag: jjm349571
- Location: Newhaven, East Sussex
- Contact:
- toyracer69
- Posts: 304
- Joined: Tue Jan 31, 2012 4:31 pm
- My Generation: 0G
- rob quilter
- Supporter 2014
- Posts: 5331
- Joined: Mon Aug 09, 2010 1:40 pm
- My Generation: 5G
- PSN GamerTag: robquilter
- Location: Derby
KeithB wrote:now I've got that bloody song going through my head again![]()
![]()
ooooh it's a snake...........

PERFORMANCE PARTS FOR JAPANESE CARS - http://WWW.TOKYOSQUAD.COM
FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK - http://WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/TOKYOSQUAD
FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK - http://WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/TOKYOSQUAD