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Wild animal welfare
Leave this posting up to the animal experts on here?
Wild animal welfare or otherwise?
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Photos of deseased chamoi with horn rot or otherwise normal genetics. Photos taken about 1974 period.
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Move on from that time period to the present day chamoi hunter. Horn rot still a factor?
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Still is around - shot a Chamois in the Lake Brunner area a couple of years ago that had horn rot.
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One shot, clean kill, do `t leave all the meats behind is my principle.
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I guess they loose the fight against the horny chamois( pun intended) and don’t get to reproduce and might even get eaten by the big bad wolf ( in Europe at least)…
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If your post is just about horn rot - its definitely still about. I shot a cham nannie this year with one horn (the other wasn't too far off going either).
Cheers
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To people on here in the know re animal genitics....
Ramblings and chit chat, the horn rot photos were taken in the Landsborough / Huxley areas.
As I wrote more or less on the other forum at one time.
Met a NZFS guy who went into the Landsborough in 1973 and saw some 500 animals for about a week.
An Austrailian chap and myself went in there about the same time period and saw about 150 animals.
A Dutch tourist and myself went in there 3 years later and saw only 14 animals in two weeks.... Helicopter pressure?
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By memory... we flew into Toetoe Flat and the pilot took the doors of the plane, flew up the valley and had our air drops at Hinds Flat etc.
In the photo a hunter can be seen leaning against an air drop sack? The blurry chamoi photo in the top left was there amongst the horn rot animals... go figure?