PDA

View Full Version : Is it possible to eat crows?



Abbe Osram
17-11-2004, 10:50
Hi Guys,
is it possible to eat crows and if its possible will I have to boil them for a very long time? We have to kill quite a lot and it would be a shame only to throw them away. Has someone tried them and could you tell me how they taste? :yikes:

cheers
Abbe

Paganwolf
17-11-2004, 11:15
Breast meat is ok not a lot on it mind you very dark meat tastes ok, bit gamey IMO, you can use the rest of the bird to make a stock perhaps, its good in a stew Rabbit, squirrel and crow, veg, pearl barley and dumplings, nice :-P .If I pop something even for my ferrets i always try it, you dont know if you dont try it eh :?:

george
17-11-2004, 11:27
never tried crows but young rooks are very tasty - I would assume that crows would be somewhat similar.

I'd want to be quite sure about where they had been feeding though!

George

Paganwolf
17-11-2004, 11:33
useless info,, they used to climb up into rookerys and tie the legs of the nestling birds to nearby branches so when they went back when the birds had grown large enough to eat they could easily catch them.

george
17-11-2004, 11:38
Also they used to go out poling for young rooks. Using huge long poles they used to knock the nests down just as the young birds were beginning to fledge. Apparently thats what would have been in the pie in the "four and twenty blackbirds baked in a pie" nursery rhyme.

George

tomtom
17-11-2004, 11:50
yup i have seen it done!! people dont like it very mich though, eating babys :yikes:

Buckshot
17-11-2004, 12:46
Crows tend not to be eaten too much in UK.

Rook shooting though, is traditionally done on the 12th May each year.
Generally you take the 'branchers', the young rooks old enough to jump around the tree tops but not strong nough to fly.

I've gone out and bagged several dozen in one go. Greta fun with an air rifle too.

In times gone by selling rooks to the local housewives was a good way to get pocket money for the younger lads. My father in law told me stories of him and a couple of mates going round the village with pushbikes laden with braces of rooks selling them to anyone who wanted them - housewives of course in those days.

Very tasty, nice with bacon in the pie as well.
The young rooks can be breasted just like pigeons, rip the wings and head off, then rip the rib cage and breast meat off the carcass in one go.
30 seconds - job done.

Worth a try if you get hold of some

Cheers

Mark

Abbe Osram
17-11-2004, 13:32
Thanks for all the info, I have to look up what a rook is, sounds like a funny little and tasty youngster :o): Why I ask you about crows had to do with me being unsure if I catch some wired sickness from them. At the same time I don't want to rule them out as a possible food source, they are quite big birds and easy to get. How is it in general with boiling unsure meat, like rats, who knows what they where just feeding on, if I boil them long enough will they be fit to eat?

cheers
Abbe

george
17-11-2004, 14:54
Well to be honest Abbe I'm not sure what diseases you might catch from a crow - I'm sure someone will be able to help though.

A rook is one of the crow family Corvus Frugilegus it's name means fruit gathering crow. That certainly suggests that it doesn't have quite the same eating habits as the Carrion crow - Corvus Corone whose english name pretty much describes what it eats! I know which one I'd prefer to eat given the choice.

George

Abbe Osram
17-11-2004, 15:10
Well to be honest Abbe I'm not sure what diseases you might catch from a crow - I'm sure someone will be able to help though.

A rook is one of the crow family Corvus Frugilegus it's name means fruit gathering crow. That certainly suggests that it doesn't have quite the same eating habits as the Carrion crow - Corvus Corone whose english name pretty much describes what it eats! I know which one I'd prefer to eat given the choice.

George

George, thanks a lot! The latin names will help me a lot, I am all with you in that I prefer the corvus frugilegus. :lol:

cheers
Abbe

Abbe Osram
17-11-2004, 15:18
Well to be honest Abbe I'm not sure what diseases you might catch from a crow - I'm sure someone will be able to help though.

A rook is one of the crow family Corvus Frugilegus it's name means fruit gathering crow. That certainly suggests that it doesn't have quite the same eating habits as the Carrion crow - Corvus Corone whose english name pretty much describes what it eats! I know which one I'd prefer to eat given the choice.

George

I just checked. I am too much up the north, we don't have the corvus frugilegus here. The birds we are taking out are: Corvus cornix, Pica Pica, Garrulus glandarius.

//Abbe

george
17-11-2004, 16:20
Pica Pica or magpie has certainly been eaten here in the past - I've seen some recipes for them. Don't know if they're commonly eaten now though. Same with Garrulus Glandarious - the Jay. Corvus Cornix is the hooded crow - I don't think I would eat that if I didn't have to. Interestingly one of the old gaelic names for the hooded crow translates as "the bird without mercy".

George

ChrisKavanaugh
17-11-2004, 17:33
Anyone who has toured a contemporary factory animal farm will become a vegetarian for at lest a year in repugnance. I did. Most bird borne diseases are actually carried in external parasites. Carefull handling and thorough cooking are your safeguards. I made the mistake of securing a recently dead seagull during a survival school session in service.It's amazing what cultural hangups can be overcome to placate hunger. But this is a subject I prefer not to bring up, literally :shock:

Abbe Osram
17-11-2004, 17:39
Interestingly one of the old gaelic names for the hooded crow translates as "the bird without mercy".

George

Thats the reason we are going to kill him, that bird makes a lot of harm here.
He is very smart and even kills small baby rabbits, he steals and kills the young of the Lagopus mutus and Lagopus Lagopus which we like to hunt here, so our teacher told us to shoot all crows and Pica Pica we can get hold off.

Its very interesting what you wrote about his old gaelic name.

thanks mate
//Abbe

Wind_Chaser
17-11-2004, 23:51
Of course it is possible to eat crows :roll: And it tastes like chicken..(j/k)
My ancestors have been doing that for centuries(well, not anymore, since supermarkets have been established ;) ) becuase nothing really grew in the sand of a beach those times and no other birds were around in such numbers.

Anyhow, their main recepie was to smoke the meat so it would last all winter. All of them did so and since I am here to tell this to you, that meat was probably good. ;)

Moonraker
18-11-2004, 02:43
In the UK you need a licence ( general licence covering owners and those with their permission) to shoot crows and magpies I believe. Also it is for certain purposes only. Here is more info:


Magpies and the law

Magpies are fully protected by the European Union Birds Directive. The UK Government has derogated (made an exception) from the Directive in relation to control of magpies.

Under annual general licence issued under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 (for which it is not necessary to apply individually), magpies may be killed or taken by 'authorised persons', using permitted methods, for the purposes of:
preventing serious damage to agricultural crops or livestock
preserving public health/air safety
conserving wild birds.

An 'authorised person' is a landowner or occupier, or someone acting with the landowner's or occupier's permission.

Legal control methods
The RSPB does not oppose legal, site-specific control of magpies, as long as control does not threaten the conservation status of the species. The RSPB is seeking to develop non-lethal methods of controlling crows (including magpies) on its reserves.

The Game Conservancy Trust will advice on the use of the Larsen trap. This is a wire cage trap with a spring-loaded door, designed to catch the bird alive. It can be baited with food, or with a live decoy magpie. This is legal as long as the decoy bird is humanely treated and given food and water daily.

The trap must be checked regularly, at least every 24 hrs. Any magpie or crow caught may be humanely destroyed. Any non-target species must be released. Further information is available from the Game Conservancy Trust, Fordingbridge, Hampshire (Tel: 01425 652381).

Magpies may be shot, again only by a landowner or someone acting with the landowner's permission, for the purposes outlined above. Shooting must be well away from public roads and houses, so is seldom possible in urban areas.

It is also legal to destroy a magpie nest, even if it is in use. However, old magpie nests are often used by protected species, such as long-eared owls in rural areas and blackbirds in suburban areas, so check very carefully first.

Source: Sites and species conservation department
30 January 2004

Magpie numbers declined a lot in the recent past history in the UK from persecution by game keepers etc and numbers only really built up again in the last 20 years and is apparently stable now. But I think although there are good reasons for controlling birds in specific situations, you should think carefully about such policies as:

shoot all crows and Pica Pica we can get hold off.


:wink:

Seriously many species common when I was a kid 30 years ago are now becoming endangered. Like Starlings, they used to be shot and great flocks were seen in the fields etc. But now I saw very few of these flocks and numbers are reported to be right down.

In this time of factory farming and increasing pressures on the countryside from house building, intensive farming and loss of our hedgerows and managed woodland, perhaps we need to look hard before adding to that pressure on wild birds.

You can check out the species covered under the European Union Birds Directive here:

http://europa.eu.int/comm/environment/nature/nature_conservation/eu_nature_legislation/birds_directive/index_en.htm

SE has opted out like the UK and has the option to allow licenced hunting for Picqa Pica and some other corvids.

I think the advice from the RSPB is rock solid. Of course, if they do need to be controlled then much better to cook and eat them than chuck them.

Here is a recipe for Crow Pie:


Crow Pie





Ingredients
Crow
Guinness
Onions
Pastry
Mushrooms


Method


Fry chopped onions in butter until soft.
Line a deep dish with mushrooms and add the cooked onions.
Pour in enough Guinness to come halfway up dish.
Roll out pastry and cover dish
Arrange Crow on top of pastry
Cook for 20 minutes in a preheated oven
Remove from oven and discard crow
Serve pie with vegetables

Crow is a very unsatisfactory meat, this is the best recipe for it!

:rolmao: I think it says it all for the quality of crow meat :wink:

RovingArcher
18-11-2004, 03:26
Crow? I don't care much for crow. My wife makes me eat it once in awhile and it's kinda hard to swallow. :o):

Actually, I like to merinate the meat and stick it on the BBQ or cook it over some coals in the firepit and season with what I brought with me. Usually cayenne, salt, pepper, garlic and even some raw honey glaze is possible. :-)

Buckshot
18-11-2004, 09:22
This thread has now been moved to 'Fair Game'

Thanks

Mark

Abbe Osram
18-11-2004, 09:27
Hi Guys,
Thanks for answering!

Wind_Chaser: Very interesting to know about your family and that they have eaten crows, it gives a whole different picture about using and finding new food sources. Most people have no problems if you tell them that you are eating chicken but they find it wired if you tell them: "Well, I eat crows, cats or dogs too!" :wink: What I wanted to avoid is to kill something and don't use it only because my society was teaching me that that stuff is not to be eaten. We can easily see the difference between the nations, what is a nice food source for one nation is ugly meat to another culture. I want to be free from that kind of c**p. Thanks for the info mate.

Moonraker:
Hi! Oh, I hope I didn't get across as a mindless shooting nut. :yikes:
I love nature and prefer the animals living and not dead, I am thinking twice before I cut a tree or kill animals. Thanks for the link its new to me that the magpie is an endangered species.
The only birds protected from the crow family here is the Nucifraga caryocatactes and the Perisoreus infaustus. Thanks for the recipe. I found it interesting that it says that crow meat is unsatisfactory meat and Wind_Chaser says it taste like chicken. I guess I have to try it out it must be a personal question of taste. :lol:

Roving_Archer; LOL I was not sure if you pull my leg or if you eat them or not. I am confused: Is your wife really making them for you? And are you making them yourself as a BBQ? Your recipe sounds very tasty but I wonder if one should not boil them for a while to be sure about the meat. I read that they eat all kinds of stuff and mainly dead animals and other rubbish much like rats. Thanks mate for the honey idea, sounds tasty.

Cool that you guys stick it out with my wired questions!
:You_Rock_

cheers to all
Abbe

Buckshot
18-11-2004, 11:01
its new to me that the magpie is an endangered species.


To my knowledge the good old maggie is not endangered, we certainly have loads of them here.
It's possible thier numbers have dropped, this may be due to the grubbing out of hedges and therefore removing a food source :?: but again, not in this area.
As they are a predatory species controlling thier numbers will help other small songbirds and mamals.

Cheers

Mark

Lurch
18-11-2004, 13:09
I'm lead to believe that marianading the meat in milk makes the meat more palatable, but I've never tried it and don't plan on starting any time soon!

RovingArcher
18-11-2004, 14:36
Hi Guys,
Thanks for answering!

Roving_Archer; LOL I was not sure if you pull my leg or if you eat them or not. I am confused: Is your wife really making them for you? And are you making them yourself as a BBQ? Your recipe sounds very tasty but I wonder if one should not boil them for a while to be sure about the meat. I read that they eat all kinds of stuff and mainly dead animals and other rubbish much like rats. Thanks mate for the honey idea, sounds tasty.


cheers to all
Abbe

Sorry about the confusion. My response was done with tongue in cheek. Here in the US, when you have made a serious error and need to acknowledge it humbly, it is known as eating crow. Mainly because the crow, being carnivorous, is considered a rank meat and not easily swallowed or digested.

I have eaten it and a couple of times, with a lot of help, it was palatable, but still not very good. Even after boiling and marinating, most are rank and I suppose that's because they have eaten a lot of carrion. Ok to try them on a survival type of need, but if there are other critters available, I'll pass on eating crow.

Abbe Osram
18-11-2004, 18:28
Sorry about the confusion. My response was done with tongue in cheek. Here in the US, when you have made a serious error and need to acknowledge it humbly, it is known as eating crow. Mainly because the crow, being carnivorous, is considered a rank meat and not easily swallowed or digested.

I have eaten it and a couple of times, with a lot of help, it was palatable, but still not very good. Even after boiling and marinating, most are rank and I suppose that's because they have eaten a lot of carrion. Ok to try them on a survival type of need, but if there are other critters available, I'll pass on eating crow.

:lol: Aah, now I understand it much better! Simply said crows can be eaten but most people would only eat them as a last resort and if eaten they will need a lot of help to make it palatable.

thanks mate for all the interested in helping me out.

cheers
Abbe

Moonraker
19-11-2004, 00:02
Abbe, rest assured I am quite sure it was your way to shot that way hence the smiley :-)

Buckshot I read an interesting bit on info which included this:

Magpies are despised by almost everyone owing to being wrongly blamed for the widespread decline in many of our songbirds by preying on their eggs and nestlings. In fact, many of our songbirds are in decline owing to poor survival rates after leaving the nest, which has nothing to do with the Magpies.
It got me thinking about my preconceptions of birds like Magpies and realising that the real situation is often a lot more complex than we imagine from word of mouth experience and lore. We see Magpies raiding a birds nest and blame it for predation and decline in smaller songbirds etc when actually it is much more likely that loss of habitat through intensive farming practices and use of insecticides depriving these same songbirds of food are the much deadly factor.

The RSPB did an extensive study between the correlation between Magpie numbers and decline in song bird populations:

Magpies and songbirds

Most British members of the crow family (including magpies) will take eggs and nestlings. This can be upsetting to witness but it is completely natural. However, some people are concerned that there may be a long-term effect on songbird populations.

Many of the UK's commonest songbirds have declined during the last 25 years, at a time when populations of magpies increased. To find out why songbirds are in trouble, the RSPB is undertaking intensive research on species such as the skylark and song thrush.*

To discover whether magpies (or sparrowhawks) could be to blame for the decline, the RSPB commissioned the British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) to analyse its 35 years of bird monitoring records.

The study found that songbird numbers were no different in places where there were many magpies or sparrowhawks from where there are few. It found no evidence that increased numbers of magpies have caused declines in songbirds and confirms that populations of prey species are not determined by the numbers of their predators.*

It is the availability of food and suitable places in which to nest that decide the population.

Having discounted predation as a possible factor, the RSPB continues to study the loss of food and habitats caused by intensive farming. The change from spring to autumn sowing and the increase in the use of agricultural chemicals have reduced the amount of insects and weed seeds available for songbirds to eat.

These changes, and others, including the removal of hedgerows which are used for nesting, roosting and feeding sites by some birds, have probably played a part in the severe declines in many of our farmland species.

Many people are concerned that the use of some garden chemicals may also remove the birds' natural food supply, and may be a problem when they are raising their young. If you are worried about garden chemicals, please write to the Henry Doubleday Research Association, at the National Centre for Organic Gardening, Ryton on Dunsmore, Coventry CV8 3LG, who will advice you on alternative methods of pest control.

Source: Sites and species conservation department
30 January 2004

So, where it may appear that there are large numbers of potential predatory birds, this probably has little to do with the decline in songbirds. Then the justification for culling them appears flawed and a more practical and effective solution would be to take steps to reverse the sad lose natural habitat especially hedgerows in our landscape.

And, as with 'weeds' a plant or bird or animal is only a 'pest' or 'weed' if it is in the wrong place for out liking (invasive introductions perhaps excepted). Where they pose a real threat to other wildlife then control makes sense but I feel that, as with other 'old enemies' they tend to get a raw deal.

For me I only feel mostly joy when I see Magpies flighting cheekily across the road or path in the way they do with their shrill cackle and always remember to say 'Hello' to them in the morning and never in the afternoon or else bad luck will come my way :wink:. They are intelligent and curious birds who often have weird and expressive mannerisms and also tend to stay in the same place.

I am not sure if other countries have the same traditions with Magpies but because they tend to gather in Spring especially into groups or 'parliments' we have a saying or nursery rhyme which most school kids in Britain know:


One for sorrow, two for mirth,
Three for a wedding, four for a birth,
Five for silver, six for gold,
Seven for a secret not to be told.
Eight for heaven, nine for hell,
And ten for the devil's own sel'.

or a similar adaption. Do you have a similar folk lore and tradition in your country?

There is a place in the countryside for the gun; there is also a place in the countryside for the Magpie :-)

Abbe Osram
19-11-2004, 08:35
Moonraker,
thanks for the info it was very interesting to hear your thoughts on the subject and I appreciate them very much. I am going to check if they have here in sweden a old rhyme about the magpie.

My question came up through my interested to overcome cultural limitations and to find new food sources. I don't like to waste anything.That is my way to show my respect to the animal I have to hunt. I don't want to shoot or kill any life if I don't need it for food or if I cant see a higher purpose in doing so.

all the best to you
Abbe

:pack:

Buckshot
19-11-2004, 08:42
Hm, interesting one Moonraker.

I agree modern farming techniques will have a far greater impact on any wild species than a couple of extra predators.
However, I'm only going on what I've seen myself, both in the 'wild' and in back gardens. Predatory species do affect the local population of prey species, it has to. I'm talking local population here, overall I doubt it makes much difference to the country as a whole though.

I tend to take what the RSPB say with a pinch of salt. They've said various things in the past that when proved wrong, in thier own studies, have glossed over them or ignored that part of the study. Not showing the whole truth seems to be part of everyday life these days. :shock:

Not trying to cause an argument here, just reporting my observations.

Cheers

Mark

Lurch
19-11-2004, 15:56
I'm with Buckshot. I am always extremely sceptical about what the RSPB say, they are a highly politicised organization.

Moonraker
19-11-2004, 20:21
Not trying to cause an argument here, just reporting my observations.
I appreciate that Mark. The important thing is that people care enough to have a point of view and also that these type of issues are discussed openly.

The posts reflect my own thoughts and reflections on this, questions to myself as well as others. I very nearly ended up going to Sparsholt and training as a river keeper when I left school. In some ways I wish I had. :wink: I used to own a shotgun and do some rough shooting around our village in Wiltshire. Rabbits, pigeons the occasional hare and rooks. Now I look back and think about why I did that. Not so much the rabbits which were prolific and I ate and skinned them. But shooting the rooks was just something everything I read up about said to do but eventually I found I had no heart for it and grew to love them. I am not anti shooting and see rough shooting (1 man and a dog) as a very natural part of the countryside.
I do have more problems with the commercialisation of traditional sports including organised shoots but it is another debate I think.

Times change and so do the pressures on wildlife and indeed us. So I think it is important to consider and question accepted practice as part of what keeps the countryside a vibrant and living place.

I'm with Buckshot. I am always extremely sceptical about what the RSPB say, they are a highly politicised organization.Are not all organisations political Lurch? Each has an agenda to progress. The same would be equally true of the The Game Conservancy Trust (http://www.gct.org.uk) for example.

The fact that the RSPB (http://www.rspb.org.uk/) have an interest for both the Magpie (and other Corvids) and songbirds makes me feel that they have more the interest of the wild birds at heart and the statistics came from the British Trust for Ornithology which appears to be well respected in the field. I have no real understanding of the background and politics of the RSPB so could not comment about any other agendas.

The GCT present some useful reports and I found those interesting to read alongside those of the RSBP, as well as some others. I am not naive enough to believe either of these organisations do not put a spin on their presentation. :wink:

Perhaps the difficulty here is to separate out the needs of any one lobby; the shooting interests who would more likely view the corvids as a pest, being that they predate the reared and introduced young sporting birds directly affecting their investment and livelihood; and the desire of the conservation lobby to protect all wildlife where practicable (given the understanding that control of such birds effects the potential well being of other birds under more pressure).

I do not see either of these two as being indivisible (and the many other interested parties in the countryside and into the urban environment increasingly) because many people involved on both sides do great work to help and protect wildlife and our natural heritage. More, that perhaps what is need is a wider independent assessment of such issues so that traditional entrenchment on either side of any fence, and historical assumptions and practices can be better considered; with more effective practices and tolerance by all becoming part of how we may nurture a more natural balance in the stewardship of the land.

Moonraker
19-11-2004, 22:42
Abbe, I had a look around and found a nice recipe for 'Rook Pie'. And old English speciality :-) It gives some tips about how to prepare the rook which I guess could be used for crow too.


5th - Rook Pie


Ingredients
3/4lb Puff Pastry
4 Rooks
½ Beefsteak
½ teaspoon of Liebig Company's extract of meat (meat extract like Bovril or reduced beef stock as option as I do not think it is possible to get this?)
1 tablespoon flour
1 teaspoon of salt
powdered mace
½ pint of water
1oz butter
1/4 teaspoon pepper


Method
Skin the Rooks, cut out the back-bone and draw, remove the head and feet, and wing bones to second joint. Soak in milk water with salt for 4 hours; divide the steak into strips, mix the flour, mace, salt and pepper on a plate. Roll each piece of steak in the seasoning, put a small amount of butter in each and lace on the top of the steak, pour in a little of the water, with the pastry, brush over with beaten egg, make 2 or 3 holes in the pastry to ventilate the pie and bake for 90mins in a moderate oven. When cooked add the remainder of the water, boiling, in which the Liebig Company's Extract of meat [or option see above]has been dissolved and serve.
I also have some information in an old English cook book from which I have scanned the relevant section here:

http://www.planetluna.org/graphics/nat-rook_pie_hartley.jpg

source: 'Food In England', Dorothy Hartley, 1954, Pub: Clays Ltd, St Ives plc, ISBN 0 316 87900 2


Happy cooking :wink:

Abbe Osram
19-11-2004, 23:50
Hi Moonraker, Buckshot, Lurch

Its cool that the thread gave us more than my carnal needs of crow food or a recipe for me. :o):

all the best to you all
cheers
Abbe

:chill:

Gary
20-11-2004, 12:19
I've not read the entire thread so this may have been said already but the origin of the '4 and 20 black birds baked in a pie' comes from the old English custom of taking crow chicks from the nest and eating them.

Of course I have never tried myself but I am sure with a nice thick gravy and some HP brown sauce (steak pie style) they would be tasty. :super:

Top tip - any carrion eating bird boil the meat to be safe, although I usually fry it and that seems to work ok too.

ScanDgrind
20-11-2004, 17:43
I also have not read the whole thread. But I have eaten crow myself. I grew up in poachers headquarters. This was my Grandfathers house in the countryside of Worcestershire. Not far from a very historic pub called the Mitre Oak,

I was told that the only part that was any good was the breast which we cut into strips and soaked into milk over night. I have to say it still seemed quite a tough meat with what I can only describe as a "dirty" taste. Of course this could have been my imagination as I had built in thoughts about eating a creature that feeds on carrion.

Cheers,

Tony

BIG-TARGET
21-11-2004, 02:07
Have you ever heard the term"tastes like chicken" Well, according to a friend that does alot of hunting/camping, crow tastes more like Goodyear(the tire)!!

Lurch
22-11-2004, 10:24
Are not all organisations political Lurch?

Yes I suppose in some way this is true, however it was my understanding that a registered charity was not supposed to be politically active in the way that the RSPB is.
Certainly charitable status is given as one of the reasons that the UK NRA avoids political activities.

gurthang
24-11-2004, 19:04
Crows, I'f youve got somewhere to shoot them thats great as their awfull pests just like giant winged rats but I wouldnt recomend eating them, Rook is palatable but I'll stick to pigeon their real pests as well but taste 100000000 times better than rook

Moonraker
24-11-2004, 19:48
I have posted an Inuit story of the crow called 'Crow brings Daylight' in the Story Forum here:

Crow brings Daylight (http://www.bushcraftuk.net/community/showpost.php?p=53507&postcount=7)

Cheers

Simon

shinobi
25-11-2004, 02:21
Crows, I'f youve got somewhere to shoot them thats great as their awfull pests just like giant winged rats

What is the definition of a "Pest animal"? As far as I can see, carrion animals spend most their time clearing up everything that no-one else will eat and therefore serve a valuable service in the scheme of things. In the same way as rats clear up the rubbish in the cities. If it's down to the fact that they eat anything they can, maybe it's because they're better at adapting than we are? Just the same way as Wolves and foxes are classed as pests by Farmers.
This is not meant to be personal Gurthang, i'm just using your quote as an example of how animals are perceived in the public perception.

Cheers,

Martin

Abbe Osram
25-11-2004, 08:41
Moonraker that was a cool story, thanks mate for sharing.

Shinobi: I agree with you and thinking about what is actually a pest in this world I would consider that humans are the cancer of this world. But when I started this thread I was mainly interested if there are people around who eat or have eaten crows and maybe even think that it is great meat while we kill them and throw them away.

Why birds from the crow family are often considered a pest has to do with the fact that they are predators and steal eggs and kill young birds. Here in Sweden we have clouds of crows, which are very very big, they fall into the cities because of the warmth and the light they get there in wintertime. I have seen scenes near to Uppsala where the sky was black filled with crows, when such things happen because of the lack of predators hunting the crows down; we have to step in and shoot them to get the population healthy and smaller. Shooting and throwing them away feels bad to me, and out of that grew the thought...”are people somewhere in the world eating them?"

Only think about what if pigs would be a problem somewhere and people would kill them and simply throw them away because they are not used to eat them, we would say that this is a shame to dump all the good meat. To study the cultural limitations I started the thread but still with a love and respect for the crows and other animals.

I have more problems with humans and their doings but hunting and eating that ugly animal I guess is not and option. :yikes: :naughty:

cheers to all of you sending so great thoughts on a simple thread like this.
:You_Rock_

Abbe

Buckshot
25-11-2004, 08:56
What is the definition of a "Pest animal"? As far as I can see, carrion animals spend most their time clearing up everything that no-one else will eat and therefore serve a valuable service in the scheme of things. In the same way as rats clear up the rubbish in the cities. If it's down to the fact that they eat anything they can, maybe it's because they're better at adapting than we are? Just the same way as Wolves and foxes are classed as pests by Farmers.
This is not meant to be personal Gurthang, i'm just using your quote as an example of how animals are perceived in the public perception.

Cheers,

Martin

Quite right Shinobi, they do provide a valuable service.
Without the influence of man they're numbers would be naturally stabilised by the amount of carrion avaliable, as is the case with any wild animal and it's food source.
However, when man is allowed on the scene the amount of food avaliable increases hugely, therefore allowing the numbers of carrion animals to increase as well.
That's when they become 'pests'
I don't think many people would mind if the occasional crow, rook, fox etc wandered through, the problem is when thier numbers increase enough to put pressure on man and what they're doing.

As an example, the farmer next to my shoot rears pigs outside. Fair enough, the problem is all the pig food left in troughs in the fields is very good food for rooks. There are litterally thousands of rooks that decend on the pig farm to feed. This lowers his profit - which is pretty tight as it is, effects the health of the pigs, increases the pressure on the surrounding farms and woods for roosting and other food sources as, inevertably, some rooks will not go to the pig farm every day.

So to my mind it's not the species that is a pest, it's the circumstances that the species is found in. You could say it's unfair to kill them if it's not thier fault, and to a certain extent, you're right. But what other realistic option is there ? :?: We all know that man's unlikely to change - unless it's forced on him.

Cheers

Mark

Lurch
25-11-2004, 13:23
I have seen crows work in pairs to distract a ewe in order to get a vulnerable lamb. They will peck a vulnerable animal's eyes, tounge and back end out given the chance.

woodrat
06-01-2005, 03:22
I have some reciepes for crow if you want them, never tried them, but under right circumstances hunger makes all things yummy.

Ed
06-01-2005, 13:26
Feel free to post them :biggthump

Are they modern recipes or traditional old time use of crows?

Ed

BIG-TARGET
06-01-2005, 16:33
I eat crow every day!!! work, home, family, etc. they always make me eat crow!! :cry:

beachlover
06-01-2005, 19:39
I eat crow every day!!! work, home, family, etc. they always make me eat crow!! :cry:
Same sort of diet served up here too. I go out every Sunday afternoon with my mates and when I get home it's always hot tongue and cold shoulder :yikes:

BIG-TARGET
07-01-2005, 00:35
Same sort of diet served up here too. I go out every Sunday afternoon with my mates and when I get home it's always hot tongue and cold shoulder :yikes:

And no K.C.Masterpiece to be had,,,,anywhere!!!!!! :shock: