Y know, thats a comment often made by the advocates for aerial poisoning, but when one examines similar occupations to trapping such as high country shepherding or commercial fishing or forestry work of general hands on farms a similar problem exists but not to the same extent. The difference is that the outdoor semi isolated jobs I listed are leading to recognised qualified and regularly paid professions. Plenty of people just simply love the outdoors including hunters trampers fishers mountaineers skiers etc; so if trapping became formalised as a regularly paid profession and given the respect as such and with adequate rewards incentives including proper project planning then the pest management scenario wpuld change radically, bearing in mind investing similar billions of dollars invested in that direction instead of aerial bomb and repeat repeat with its collatetal damage and socio economic disadvantages. The universal committment to the industry formalising it has never been prolumgated by goverment and should be. The closest govt had come was deer culling by internal affairs and nzfs but even that did not go much beyond badic training at Dip Flat. The stagnant mindset needs to change.
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