Depends on which helo company too, one in particular doesn't have a reputation for leaving anything.
Depends on which helo company too, one in particular doesn't have a reputation for leaving anything.
Happy Jack.
Exactly an assumption. And of course they shot animals as they came across them, you don't shoot any if you don't come across them.
Head quality in general has gone down not because of DOC, feed etc. It's because of recreational hunters targeting stags and generally shooting them too young just like YouTube shows. If there is way too many deer in places you don't solve it by shooting stags.
Also bigs mature trophies were once spiders, don't think the Fiordland Wapiti Foundation goes round shooting Wapiti spikers.
Not my book @cb14 so can't lend it or sell it sorry. It has been an interesting read tho. Lots of old farming history.
One thing I have learnt is they have been shooting shit from the air in there for a long time!
This from 1968....
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Its not what you get but what you give that makes a life !!
Yes, chopper shooting is very effective but also expensive. $6 was good coin back in ‘68. About 13 year’s ago Nokomai stations Hughs 500 cost something like $374/hour to sit in the hanger let alone fly. So you try and maximise animals shot per hour.
@cb14 I think I have a copy somewhere. Will have a dig around and let you know.
For 52 hours flying in the Clarence now you'd get closer to 15,000 goats
DOC shooters, six I think, flew into Molesworth on morning of 04/11/24. They used the same chopper as us before we flew out of Upper Spray. We used to see bugger-all goats over most of station in the 80's-90's, bit different now. There's always been heaps of goats in the Clarence. Rafted down the river from Accomodation House back in 80's, we all ran out of ammo from memory before we got to Gibson Stream. Two .222's, one 270 and a 308 in the group from memory. Good times.
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