Re: Would you risk your child's life?
- From: amacmil304@xxxxxxx
- Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2006 17:25:44 +0100
On Wed, 12 Apr 2006 11:13:32 +0100, Malcolm
<Malcolm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
In article <ilcp32pgu8kifho1uclq8rc7pa725rskeb@xxxxxxx>,
amacmil304@xxxxxxx writes
On Wed, 12 Apr 2006 08:05:52 +0100, MalcolmThe infected swan was not on a reserve, it was in a small harbour. There
<Malcolm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
In article <c9co3253q7b03map8bnelop37iu64ruuhv@xxxxxxx>,
amacmil304@xxxxxxx writes
Would you risk your life or your child's life by visiting a birdIs he just an expert or is he also advertising his firm's services?
reserve or sanctuary this year?
Read this letter for an expert and decide.
http://www.theherald.co.uk/features/59865.html
Your wholly unjustified extrapolation of what the letter writer said to
bird reserves is presumably based on the fact that you boast never to
have visited one (though I think you admit to parking on the verge
outside Vane Farm on one occasion). Had you ever entered a bird reserve
you would quickly realise that reserves are designed to keep the birds
and the public apart, using screens and observation hides, so that the
birds remain undisturbed, but the public can still have good views of
them. This means that opportunities for coming into close contact with
either the birds or their droppings are very slight.
You don't really know as much about bird reserves as you pretend or
you are deliberately being misleading. Many bird reserves are located
in places where large numbers of migratory birds arrive from a variety
of sources. The infected swan appears to have been one of them.
was some consideration given to the possibility that it had come from
Montrose Basin (an SWT reserve complete with hides and screened
approaches separating visitors from birds), but that was when it was
thought to be a Mute Swan.
And, as I've already said, the birds and the people are deliberately
separated at reserves which you would know if you had ever visited one.
Not seperated from their droppings.
It is also a fact that birds do not s**t where you want thenm to, soAs can happen in the middle of Glasgow with pigeon droppings, every
if there was an infected dropping it could easily be stood on by a
small child and later transferred to its hand when removing its shoes.
garden in the land, and, as I've said, every town or city park.
Sure but the higher risk seems to be from wildfowl from abroad that
congregate in high numbers at reserves.. It is obvious that the
greater the number the more chance the could be some infected.
So there is a risk at these locations whether you like it or not andNonsense. There are migratory birds in your garden, Angus, mixing with
more so where there is a mix of migratory birds and domestic ones.
your hens, ducks and geese (I think you've said you keep them) as well
as in every town and city park in the land.
Any migratory birds in my garden are likely to be swallows or swifts.
Are you saying they would pass on the virus to our ducks and geese
more than geese, ducks or swans infecting wildfowl on reserves?
Whether I have been to a reserve or not is irrevelant but I certailyWhich is a silly statement based on admitted ignorance. Are you going to
wouldn't want to take a small child there now. Safer to keep away.
advise that every child be prevented from playing in a park or in their
garden? The risk, such as it is, which is virtually nil, is actually
greater than visiting a reserve.
The risk in areas where the virus has been found must be significant
or you wouldn't have people running about in white overalls and masks.
I suppose you don't care what risk there is as long as the visitorsI see no reason to suggest to visitors that they should not visit
roll in:-(
reserves, as there is no more risk to them there than anywhere else,
and, indeed, a great deal less than any much more frequented locations.
Like where?
And vastly less than for someone working with poultry.
Why poultry specifically?
If you keep
ducks, geese and poultry, you're at greater risk than any visitor to a
bird reserve, even though that risk is extremely small even among people
who come into close contact with poultry and virtually non-existent
among people who might casually step in a dropping or even put it in
their mouth, as a child might.
Are you saying there's no risk to a child putting an infected faeces
in its mouth?
No, Angus, because migratory birds visit town park lakes and become tame
You might, but of course you didn't because it didn't fit your agenda,
have drawn attention to the much greater, indeed almost inevitable,
opportunities for coming into close contact with both birds and their
droppings by people feeding the birds in city and town parks. Those
parks with lakes will have often large numbers of ducks, geese and swans
which will take food from peoples' hands and whose droppings litter the
paths and grass.
Sure there's a risk but probably much less than a reserve for the
above reasons.
enough to be hand fed and to walk around, and drop their droppings, on
paths and grass played on by children.
Perhaps people should avoid them as well.
I'll take that as a 'yes', then :-)
I hope none of the buildings you own have a sparrow or pigeon problem.
No more so than the Scottish Parliament :-))
If I was a parent of a young child I would want to minimise the risk
of infection and would avoid contact with all birds in areas where
there is likely to be infection. Vane Farm and Montrose Basin
immediately spring to mind.
Of course fake conservationists will play down the risk; they don't
want to lose money :-(
Angus Macmillan
www.roots-of-blood.org.uk
www.killhunting.org
www.con-servation.org.uk
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Would you risk your child's life?
- From: Malcolm Kane
- Re: Would you risk your child's life?
- References:
- Would you risk your child's life?
- From: amacmil304
- Re: Would you risk your child's life?
- From: amacmil304
- Would you risk your child's life?
- Prev by Date: Re: Would you risk your child's life?
- Next by Date: Re: Would you risk your child's life?
- Previous by thread: Re: Would you risk your child's life?
- Next by thread: Re: Would you risk your child's life?
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|