Jump to content

Recommended Posts

singalto Wrote:

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

> The Streatham vets still reckon this is the work

> of a human.


They also said they had only seen "four or five" cases, they "did not perform detailed post-mortems" and "We would very much hope that it just turns out to be foxes preying on cats post mortem however some of the wounds we have seen would be difficult to explain in this way." Difficult - not impossible. Also, ordinary vets are no more trained in post-mortem forensic examination than a GP is in comparison to a forensic pathologist; they're trained to treat wounds, not forensically identify causation. The Head of Veterinary Forensic Pathology at the Royal Veterinary College would, one imagines, have rather more expertise in this area than a small-animal practice.

Angelina Wrote:

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

> Foxes very rarely attack cats - they don't see

> them as something to eat or a threat. Foxes and

> cats keep to themselves.

>

> So, as long as it's rubber stamped it's gospel? I

> am surprised how gullible people are.


I had a male cat that used to roam the streets with a pack of foxes for years! So I agree, not all these attacks can be attributed to foxes.

As has already been noted, nobody is suggesting that many of these incidents are foxes predating on live cats. 230,000 cats are killed in the UK each year by motor vehicles. Foxes are scavengers, and they will scavenge on any road kill, including cats. They will take the head and the tail first as these are easiest to detach. The argument that "foxes don't attack cats therefore there must be a cat killer" is a total red herring; nobody has put forward fox attacks on live cats as an explanation.
I think you have to recall the density in SE London of both urban foxes and domestic cats. The apparent number of incidents around us may be explained simply by that statistic. Lots of cats in built up areas with traffic and lots of foxes. And once the suggestion of 'attacks' was made incidents that would otherwise have gone unnoticed began to be aggregated as a pattern.
  • 6 years later...

There's a ?new Radio 4 short documentary programme, The Cat Killer Detectives, that might be of interest to some. It talks to the couple who ran SNARL, and provides something of their account of how the project began, developed and ended, and the effect it had on their lives then and subsequently.  

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m002j5nr

Edited by ianr
  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1
5 hours ago, ianr said:

There's a ?new Radio 4 short documentary programme, The Cat Killer Detectives, that might be of interest to some. It talks to the couple who ran SNARL, and provides something of their account of how the project began, developed and ended, and the effect it had on their lives then and subsequently.  

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m002j5nr

Christ.

When the licence fee is under such scrutiny, this doesn't seem like a great time to spend cash exhuming this pair of swivel-eyed loons, even for comedy value.

Spoiler alert: Boudicca Rising (!) left Tony.

  • 4 weeks later...

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

    • They'd been there for days but I hadn't tied them to this thread. Nice work, it was bugging me!
    • Off topic, but when I was a kid in Streatham, long ago, apart from the milkman (rarely if ever milkwoman),  who also delivered yoghurt - very exotic - in little glass jars, we also had regular deliveries of coal, bread and cheesecakes (not the kind we know now, they had coconut on top), fruit and veg,  and paraffin (both pink and blue). I'm not entirely sure we have lost "something amazing" by buying milk in shops. The glass bottles were left on the doorstep and the metallic tops were pecked through by birds getting at the cream/milk. Or else the bottles were nicked.  And then there was the rag and bone man.... bell and horse and cart, just like Steptoe. God I'm old. We didn't have supermarket deliveries. We didn't have supermarkets. I remember the first supermarket opening in Streatham. It  was quite amazing having to walk round and  put your own shopping in a basket. As you were ..... Sorry OP and admin.
    • Yep, I hear you. Been waiting for modern milkman to these parts and plan to try them out. I still remember Dennis, our Egg-man, from my childhood, who used to deliver dozens in his Citroen 2C and came to collect the boxes the following week. Happy Days. 
    • I always feel we lost something amazing when we moved away from home milk delivery with glass bottles using electric floats to driving to supermarkets and buying milk in plastic bottles. Hindsight says we should have valued the good old milky more 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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