Registered yes, not sure about have to be inside at night. But again, never going to argue with it being a good idea to do so. For many reasons.
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Registered yes, not sure about have to be inside at night. But again, never going to argue with it being a good idea to do so. For many reasons.
Foxes have been well established in Melbourne for decades. I remember hearing a summary of a study a few years ago, they stated that you are never likely to be more than a few hundred meters from a fox anywhere in Melbourne.
WRT hunting, I do find it puzzling that if I am hunting deer in the permitted areas of the Alpine National Park, I'm not permitted to shoot a fox that I encounter. In state forest (with many exceptions), I can hunt deer and can also opportunistically destroy foxes, rabbits, pigs etc. Camping on the Caledonia River last year we had a pack of dogs come through our camp one morning; they live on native wildlife, are a threat to humans, there is a $100 bounty on them but I could have been fined heavily if I had shot one.
I can give you an explanation of why this is.
Allowing us to hunt deer in selected parts of the Alpine National Park was enacted via being part of legislation passed by parliament.
This is different to most of our hunting rules which are regulations written and enforced by what ever government department is involved. These regs can be altered, with draewn etc at a departmental level and without reference to parliament.
If we want to change the legislation to allow us to hunt feral/vermin species alongside deer in National Parks then it has to be done through parliament aka irst the lower house and then the upper house.
The politicians are unlikely to give us increased hunting opportunities but rather more likely to take away our right to hunt deer in the Park.
I can recall as a kid wandering the streets of Northcote and later on Lalor with a rifle shooting slugs at sparrows and starlings off the streets power lines....and no-one got upset, panicked or called the cops brecause it was normal and accepted behavior. When encountering adults in their front gardens they would ask how many have you got.
When we graduated to .22s we were relegated to empty house blocks and nearby paddocks. Again with the tacit approval of the community and the farmers who owned the paddocks.
A very different world from then to now.[bigsad]
What do you use Tombie?
So how many did you get?[biggrin]
Favorite spot there for dog hunting deer too..
On the subject of Foxes in Melb, I drove Taxi's night time in the 70's to 90's & have seen them in just about every suburb. Ones that stood out were the one at the big flagpole top of Elizabeth St city & the one that committed suicide in front of the Kingswood in Queens Rd Albert Park.