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Thread: Geese- Fair Game ?

  1. #1
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    I've noticed that geese come in very low across the fields near me, at a sit spot i was using in the summer, under a single oak tree, set out in a large field.
    At dusk large flocks of geese come in , swooping low over the field and splitting around the tree, to land on a marshy field and lake over the river.
    Now these geese are low enough, and in such dense flocks that i reckon i can easily take one down with a throwing stick.
    I kinda fancy trying it, to see if it would work, but I'm not sure.
    I don't think my dog is smart enough to pin the bird down, and i don't know I could dispatch it quickly. They are large birds and as i recall from my childhood quite vicious.
    Is this fair game?
    Rich

  2. #2
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    Sounds like fair game to me. :-D

    I should perhaps point out that to take game (including wildfowl) in Britain you are legally required to possess a valid Game Licence. Available from the post office for £6 per year, July to July. You also need the landowner/tennant's permision. Fuller explanation on the BASC website.

    Good hunting,

    Dave
    So many look, so few see.

    I'm not tight! I'm frugal!

  3. #3
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    I don't think a game licence is required for wildfowl. The Game Acts define game as hares, pheasants, partridge, grouse, heath or moor game, black game and bustards.

    Alasdair Mitchell in his book Goose Shooting describes how he once had geese fly so close to him he could have taken them with his walking stick.

    Legally, you can take quarry species of geese (pinkfoot, greylag and canada) during the season if you are an 'authorised person' ie, the landowner or someone with his permission. You can't sell dead wild geese.

    They are tough birds however. I think a shotgun of 12 bore or larger (ie 10 bore to 4 bore) would be more humane.

  4. #4
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    I should add that you are doing very well to get within throwing/shooting range of wild geese. They are exceptionally wary. hence the use of decoys for most inland wildfowling.

  5. #5
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    If I stand out in the field, the flock will actually split and go around me. They are only at a height of about 15 feet at this stage.

  6. #6
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    I may be wrong abouit the wildfowl, if so I appologise profusely. I will read the back of my game licence tonight and see what it says.

    Personally I'd take 1 1/4 oz of No4 or larger shot for geese, 12 bore minimum.

    Dave
    So many look, so few see.

    I'm not tight! I'm frugal!

  7. #7
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    If these are Canada Geese don't bother = they tast absoloutly disgusting (I was going to say foul but saw the unintended pun as I typed it.

    Silas

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    Silas, that might be a result of what those particular Canadas were eating. We often eat Canada geese, and they are wonderful. Just like other goose meat.

  9. #9
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    You may well be right, perhaps the one we had had been eating old tyres and unwashed socks! :-D

    I will try again, this time from a different scource.

    Thanks

    Silas

  10. #10

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    What about using a bolas? Get a good hit and they'll be tangled up.

  11. #11
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    Yeh, but u think i,m far more proficient with a heavy stick.
    So whats the best way finish a goose off? Quick and painless as poss
    Rich

  12. #12

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    Quote Originally Posted by Roving Rich
    Yeh, but u think i,m far more proficient with a heavy stick.
    So whats the best way finish a goose off? Quick and painless as poss
    Rich
    IWhen I watched geese being slaughtered on my friend's farm they had their legs tied together and were hung upside down on a tree and were killed with a sharp blow to the head with a stout stick - when hit right they died instantly and blood spurted out of what I imagined was the temple. The person doing the killing was one of those very experienced, grizzled old farmhands who'd been doing that sort of thing since about 1795

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