Hi all
Yes, the thread set up by the wonderful National Fox Welfare Society has been removed by Channel Four. This was the response I presume they dislike:
Meet The Foxes
With regards to the Channel Four documentary 'Meet The Foxes' NFWS (
National Fox Welfare Society) were asked to be featured by its producer. We
were informed this was just a simple documentary highlighting the plight of
the urban fox showing people that love them and people that hate them and
people that care for them, we were not advised the show's bias would be
anti-fox feeling, neither were we advised that the filming they done would
be mocked up for the storyline they tried weakly to portray.
Firstly, the fox shown in one of our rescuers arms , is in fact a resident
fox that can not be released back to the wild due to slight brain damage,
wild foxes that are caught needing our care and attention are brought in to
our facilities in Northamptonshire where they are treated and returned back,
they are not taken to Essex. The fox in the film being rescued was actually
put to sleep at the vets within an hour of being caught due to internal
injuries most likely caused by an RTA ( Road Traffic Accident). The fox
shown to be released was one that was in our care in Northamptonshire and
that came in suffering from a bad case of Sarcoptic Mange.
The shows main focus was around the man that kept chickens and again the
producers tried to portray the fox as an animal that kills simply for fun,
something the pro hunt lobby have been trying to do for years. Foxes will
only kill chickens if they can and it's the duty of the chicken keeper to
ensure their chickens are safe. Foxes don't carry keys or wire cutters, if
they can't get in, they can't cause any problems. To have your first lot of
chickens wiped out is ignorance, to have your next lot wiped out is cruelty,
cruelty that is from the two legged problem, not the four! A fox, given the
opportunity will kill more than it will eat in one sitting, this is not
killing for pleasure, it's common sense. Kill when it's available and cache
the surplus, no different to us going shopping, rarely do we shop for the
day, we shop for the week and store the rest!
Facts
Fox repellents are available to stop foxes fouling on your lawn, putting
lion dung around weak fencing in the hope that this will deter the fox from
killing chickens is laughable if not so serious, the only animal this would
possible repel would be another lion, not many of them in urban London!
Catching urban foxes and releasing them in another area i.e. woodland,
farmland etc is technically illegal and would fall under the Abandonment Of
A Captive Animal. The fox would not survive as it is a territorial animal
and would be seen off and possibly killed by the territory holding foxes in
that area. Furthermore, relocating foxes can also cause more problems than
it claims to help; relocating foxes can also relocate Sarcoptic Mange to an
otherwise mange free area.
Urban foxes do not live off the contents of peoples bins, if they did, in
areas where the wheelie bin is common place, one would expect to see a
decline in fox numbers, this hasn't been the case. Many see the urban fox as
an asset as they kill rats and mice. Foxes also collect people's discarded
items that could attract both the latter.
Foxes don't have any natural predators, this is true, but neither do badgers
and we don't see masses of them. Lions don't have any natural predators so
why haven't they eaten their selves out of house and home?
Apart from the obvious cruelty of shooting foxes and cubs starving to death
without their vixen mother, so called pest control companies make a good
living out of this killing spree, failing to inform householders that this
night time shooting wont solve any long term problems as all it does in the
short term is create a vacant territory for another fox to kill. The program
finished with the chicken keeper actually saying more foxes were back, his
money would have been far kinder and more beneficially spent on proper
secure fencing and housing
Sarcoptic Mange can be treated we have been successfully treating mange for
fifteen years. If they are just going down with mange we send treatment out
free of charge that is added to a little food each night that will see the
fox return to health. If the fox is suffering from a bad case of mange we
set a cage trap, catch the fox and then treat it, once treated the fox is
returned back into the garden from where it was caught.
What can be done: Please write and complain to Channel Four for its biased
misleading approach to urban foxes follow the links from their web site
http://www.channel4.com/documentaries/index.html?hpos=DocumentariesPlease write to your local and National papers letters page, give the fox a
positive voice
Kind Regards
Martin, National Fox Welfare Society