Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Elphinstone's Army Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> stringvest is moving to the countryside

> I am not suggesting for one moment that I am ok

> with lads killing pigeons

> Why would anyone exhort the OP to ignore me when

> I am the only respondent taking a long term view

> most people see pigeons as vermin and ok to kill

> these are unpalatable facts of life and you are

> rsponding as soft townies

>

> I fear for her and anyone who saw/heard Spike

> MILLIGAN?s daughter describing how, when they were

> children in the family car ready to be off on

> holiday, a bird flew into the windscreen and broke

> its neck


I now realise that this statement is incomplete - how? why?


anyway, they were in the car, packed ready to roll, the bird was dead, Spike who would have been driving,

exited the car, went in the house, in his room, holiday ruined. He was so upset. Apparently he was a VSP

and I wonder if stringvest, with your heightened sensibilities and acute compassion and what we would call

in the north, being soft (not a pejorative term I assure you) and feel deeply for people, animals, abstract

emotions, suffer in the same way?


Do not be buying into the country idyll, as joeleg carefully described, things are not always as they seem,

remember the song 'how you gonna keep 'em down on the farm, now that they've seen East Dulwich'

>

>

> If this is how you are with pigeons in the road,

> what are you going to be like living in the

> country, with sounds of slaughter through the

> night, are you going to be running outside with a

> lantern and a stern expression?

> particularly when the hunt passes your door, dogs

> in a box on an open truck, beagles not always used

> unless it's a drag hunt, and oops, a fox, well

> dogs will be dogs ...buzzards and other birds of

> prey flapping past your window with baby bunnies

> wriggling, fixed in their claws, red kites

> swooping into your garden to attack, maim, carry

> away kittens, cats, small pet rodents, rats, mice

> and voles, pigeons and/or starlings in your loft,

> or crows as we had, sound like buffalo at 5 in the

> morning, making nests, then abandoning them and

> smelly dead birds unreachable, or the ganging up

> on injured, small, wounded birds by others,

> pecking them till they are bloody and dead, a

> bedraggled fox attempting to leap your fence with

> hounds pulling him back down and tearing him

> apart, crazy rabbits in the road with myxomatosis

> which we are assured by DEFRA does not exist any

> more, badgers hunted late at night, flickering

> lights and shouts, neighbours with Jack Russell

> terriers do not keep them because they are cute,

> roadkill, including cats, lambs with their eyes

> pecked out, Crows and foxes wait until the lambs

> are actually being born, to make their kill (did

> you know this), wayward dogs shot, legally by the

> farmer, dragged to and dumped at the side of the

> road, weaned/weaning calves calling their mothers

> who are bellowing in distress for them,

> never to see, lick or feed them again, milk needed

> for humans, bullocks for the abattoir, heifers to

> repeat the process, the lorry pulling out of the

> local farm, crammed with bewildered sheep, cattle,

> goats, where do you think they are going - on

> their holidays? the monotonous, dreary call sound

> of wood pigeons, will remind you nevertheless of

> how you head on tackled moronic youths to teach

> them a lesson they will never forget, because your

> distaste and dismay and involvement will go down a

> storm in the country, and don't forget that horses

> do not use a neat litter tray.

> Livestock attracts flies, blue and green bottles,

> blowflies big as a baby's fist, fruit attracts

> wasps aplenty, horseflies and mosquitos/midges

> abound.

>

> As your sensibilities are so heightened, you are

> soft hearted and further distressed yourself by

> attempting to call out callow youths who were

> having fun seeing helpless fluttering pigeons

> vermin or not, in death throes, it's probably

> better if you hurry away, and ignore beggars for

> the same reason and seriously consider how life in

> the country is no idyll believe me, for someone of

> your sensitivity, protect yourself better, as you

> will not become immune, neither will you be able

> to affect changes.



Good grief.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Rant ahead: You're not one of them but unfortunately, there's a substrate of posters here that do very little except moan and come up with weird conspiracy theories. They're immediately highly critical of just about any change, and their initial assumption is that everyone else is a total fucking contemptible idiot. For example: don't you think that the people who run the libraries will have considered the impact of timing of reconstruction on library users? (In fact, we know they have - because they've made arrangements at other libraries to attempt to mitigate the disruption). After all, these are the people that spend their whole working week thinking about libraries and dealing with library users (and the kids especially). You don't go into the library game for the chicks and fame - so it's fair to assume that librarians are committed to public service and public access to libraries, including by kids. Likewise the built environment people (engineers, architects, construction managers, project managers, construction contractors, subcontractors or whoever is on this job) are told to minimise disruption on every job they do. The thing that occurs to us as amateurs within 30 seconds of us seeing something is probably not something a full time professional hasn't thought about! Southwark Council, the NHS, TfL, Dulwich Estate, Thames Water, Openreach - they're not SPECTRE factories filled with malevolent chaosmongers trying to persecute anyone. They're mostly filled with people who understand their job and try to do their best with what they've been given - just like all of us. Nobody is perfect or immune from challenge, and that's fair enough, but why not at least start from the assumption that there's a good reason why things have been done the way they have? Any normal person would be pleased that their busy, pretty, lively local library is getting refurbished, and will have more space and facilities for kids and teens, and will be more efficient to run and warmer in winter. But no, EDT_Forumite_752 had kids who did an exam 20 years ago, and this makes them an expert on library refurbishment who can see it's all just stuff and nonsense for the green agenda and why can't it all be put off... 😡😡😡
    • I completely misread the previous post, sorry. For some reason I thought the mini cooper was also a police vehicle, DUH.
    • This has given me ideas for the ginger wine I love, that no one else likes!      
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...