They are just one species of bird, and their numbers in the UK have increased a bit over the last couple of decades, but still the hen harrier's plight is resonant of a distant age when nature was persecuted freely.

I believe, and the RSPB believes, that this is a species which is ruthlessly killed by some of those involved with grouse shooting.  The evidence for this comes from science, rumour, film evidence, a few court cases and the more honest members of the shooting fraternity.  And this regular killing is of course totally illegal.

Things have got worse over recent years - by which I mean that the degree of honesty on this subject has decreased in the 'sporting' press and the organisations which claim to represent 'shooting folk'.  It was not so long ago that honest men from the shooting community accepted that hen harrier persecution was common and unacceptable - some even wrote scientific papers on the subject.

The pity of it is that we do not believe that everyone is 'at it' but that view would be easy to maintain since the number of voices raised against these practices in the shooting community is very small and rather quiet.  The community that protects its evil-doers has to share some culpability, surely?

Personally I get on rather well with many members of the shooting community - their and my love of the outdoors and of nature gives us quite a lot to talk about.  I wouldn't be interested in shooting grouse or pheasant but I am not personally that worried that people do - and the RSPB which remains strictly neutral on the ethics of field sports.  But illegal activity is different - and that's what raptor persecution is.  And the shooting community has gone down in my estimation because it is not honest about what so many of its members know to be true - that illegal persecution of birds of prey (hen harriers included) is widespread and covertly encouraged.

I have had moments when I have wondered whether this issue is so small in the big scheme of things that we should simply move on.  But then I always come back to the fact that if the RSPB does not speak up about this issue then precious few others will.  And it's wrong - killing protected wildlife is wrong.

But what do you think?  Should the RSPB take a deep breath and calm down on this subject - or perhaps redouble its efforts?  You tell me.

Previous blogs on this subject are (here, here, here, here, here and here) and here too.

 

A love of the natural world demonstrates that a person is a cultured inhabitant of planet Earth.

Parents
  • I too have wondered whether the RSPB should calm down on this issue and take a more pragmatic view. It is, after all, the habitat that matters most, not the fate of individual birds. However, it is difficult to see how RSPB could do this without more of the shooting community taking a responsible attitude to the problem.

    Things are not helped by the anti-shooting prejudice of some birders / conservationists. In an ideal world it should be legal to remove problem birds where the circumstances justify it, whether it be Hen Harriers on a grouse moor or a Peregrine at a Roseate Tern colony. The trouble is that that could be the thin end of a very large wedge.  

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  • I too have wondered whether the RSPB should calm down on this issue and take a more pragmatic view. It is, after all, the habitat that matters most, not the fate of individual birds. However, it is difficult to see how RSPB could do this without more of the shooting community taking a responsible attitude to the problem.

    Things are not helped by the anti-shooting prejudice of some birders / conservationists. In an ideal world it should be legal to remove problem birds where the circumstances justify it, whether it be Hen Harriers on a grouse moor or a Peregrine at a Roseate Tern colony. The trouble is that that could be the thin end of a very large wedge.  

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