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john b

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Everything posted by john b

  1. Thanks Arry, we'll have a look at that but I do know that browsers and software seem to be updating all the time so keep ahead of the security issues, so it might be something to do with that. If you and / or your mate want a catalogue just pm me an address Cheers, John
  2. Hi Arry Yes we are still very much alive and well so can you tell me if you're still struggling to get on the website please ? Sometimes bits of software get out of sync so it would be handy to know Cheers John p.s. did your mate find what he needed ?
  3. No we have not got it wrong. It is approved for Stoat and Rat in England under the 2015 STAO variation. “Goodnature A24 Rat and Stoat Trap manufactured by or under the authority of Goodnature Limited, 4-12 Cruickshank Street, Kilbirnie 6022, Wellington, New Zealand. The trap may be used only for the purpose of killing stoats and rats. ”; http://faolex.fao.org/docs/pdf/uk146000.pdf
  4. Well done TC. The two I was thinking of are http://www.thehuntinglife.com/forums/topic/9243-squirrel-trap/ and this one, but unfortunately most of it seems to be missing http://www.thehuntinglife.com/forums/topic/10886-see-saw-trap/ you might also find this helpful https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-6geHi4m97o cheers John
  5. Somewhere on here there should be a couple of good threads on seesaw traps from about 10 years ago But no they don't need baiting
  6. I only have to look at the picture and I hear the rain
  7. Oh it's the extension springs you need ? Not torsion ones. These are about 150mm so if you only want 90mm they're really easy to cut down. Just cut through with a pair of snips and then bend the first complete right out to 90 degrees If you could get away with 75mm you could get two out of each. https://www.fourteenacre.co.uk/shop/pair-extension-springs-long/
  8. I know there's a thread running on the trapping section on this but I thought it worth a shout here too. Glenn Waters is a man who knows snaring inside out and in this new book he shares the knowledge and experience which can only come from a lifetime of rabbit snaring. Very much in Glenn’s own style, Professional Rabbit Snaring has been compiled from a large box of his original articles, hand drawn illustrations and photographs. It is probably the largest concentration of rabbit snaring advice ever to be put into print. Over twenty nine chapters the book covers a wide range of topics incl
  9. OK, they're here now and have started shipping out.
  10. Excellent, glad you've found something that suits you.
  11. Unfortunately we haven't had any of these for ages. We bought up about 300 that were end of line stock and now they're all gone. Game and Country had them from us so that is likely to be a dead end too John @ Fourteenacre
  12. The MINKPOLICE trap-monitor is IP67 tested (waterproof down to one meter).
  13. When I looked into this last year Three Pay as you go https://www.three.co.uk/Support/Free_SIM/Order It charges 1p per data transfer. This leaves you with 60p communication cost per month (assuming two daily notifications). Additionally, you would have to pay 2p per text messages.
  14. It was developed in Denmark where they can have traps out at long distances, too far to be practical to check every day. It has been used extensively in this country already in the Scottish Islands as part of their mink trapping program. Again the same issue, too much ground to cover and not enough people and it would seem that in that scenario it has been excepted as the daily legal check. This is because it sends a signal twice a day to confirm that it is still active and untriggered, so there is a failsafe. In most of the UK I see it having a relatively limited trapping application
  15. Not necessarily true. Suppose for the sake of argument I went to a manufacturer, gave them a bmi 116 and asked them to produce me one 'as cheaply as possible'. What I would end up with might very well look the same but it certainly wouldn't perform the same and not give the same humane results. Now I am NOT saying that all other makes of bgrip are rubbish - that would be nonsense but there clearly does need to be some form of test applied. The way things stand at the moment are that either a) you submit it and get DEFRA to test it for you or b ) YOU test it against one that has been Defr
  16. Yes I can - it's on the STAO. http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2012/13/pdfs/uksi_20120013_en.pdf Section 2 on the first page states: Approval of Spring Traps 2.—(1) For the purposes of section 8(3) of the Pests Act 1954, the following spring traps are approved, namely— (a) any spring trap of a type and make specified in any entry in Column 1 of the Schedule; and (b ) any spring trap which is equivalent in all relevant respects to a spring trap of a type and make specified in any entry in Column 1 of the Schedule It then goes on to define what equivalent means (3) For the
  17. As I suspected might happen, the official position has now changed. My reading of this now is that they are NOT legal "Under Sec 2 of the Spring Traps Approval (England) Order 2012, any spring trap which is equivalent in all relevant respects to a spring trap of a type and make specified in any entry in Column 1 of the Schedule, is approved. A spring trap is equivalent in all relevant respects to a spring trap of a type and make specified in the Schedule if it corresponds to the spring trap so specified in construction, in materials, in impact force or momentum, and in all other respec
  18. I wouldn't jump to any conclusions just yet, I think we may see some further 'clarifications' in the coming weeks. What really puzzles me is why anyone thought it was a good idea to go to the trouble of naming specific 'clone' traps but then NOT to record that anywhere permanent and referenceable.
  19. If anyone still wants to know the story of why the traps were approved without being Approved, you can now read the article here.
  20. I agree with unclepesta and have received the same response from Natural England. There's an article in next weeks Countryman's Weekly which explains a bit more about where the lack of clarity came from and why these traps appeared briefly on a published DEFRA 'list'. It's worth pointing out that so far I have only had a response from Natural ENGLAND, so the position is unconfirmed for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
  21. I think what you're describing is also known as a kist trap
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