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Thread: Cormorants

  1. #11
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    On Rice Lake for Pickerel last week and went trolling around West Grape Island. The Cormorants have virtually defoliated all the trees and it looks like the bird crap is ankle deep. There were dozens of them continually diving on fish. What a mess! Permission to shoot on sight won't come soon enough.
    If a tree falls on your ex in the woods and nobody hears it,you should probably still get rid of your chainsaw. Just sayin'....

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  3. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by js4fn View Post
    Bad weekend to really do any shooting Comorants move on by 7:00am

    But on a side note this pond had a tremendous frog population where you couldn’t sit outside after 8:30 pm without going deaf
    last two mornings I would say the Cormorants have removed 70% of the frog population fish were taken early in the spring

    Bring on the mosquito’s ?
    There are other explanations for the frogs going silence apart from Cormorant predation, although that may be factor. There are other factors that can switch them off such as changes in temperature or an increase in wind, “ ... the frogs of any one species in one area are similarly adapted to conditions of that locality, they can all switch on or switch off with amazing synchronicity. One night, the chorus frogs (Pseudacris feriarum) are calling like crazy, and the next night there is silence. High temperature in particular seems to have this effect. And the effect of high temperature is fairly universal across many species of amphibians, which is why I suspect that if you had several species calling and then silence, it was probably a rise in temperature that switched them all off at once.”

    You don’t stop hunting because you grow old. You grow old because you stop hunting.
    - Gun Nut

  4. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by Gun Nut View Post
    There are other explanations for the frogs going silence apart from Cormorant predation, although that may be factor. There are other factors that can switch them off such as changes in temperature or an increase in wind, “ ... the frogs of any one species in one area are similarly adapted to conditions of that locality, they can all switch on or switch off with amazing synchronicity. One night, the chorus frogs (Pseudacris feriarum) are calling like crazy, and the next night there is silence. High temperature in particular seems to have this effect. And the effect of high temperature is fairly universal across many species of amphibians, which is why I suspect that if you had several species calling and then silence, it was probably a rise in temperature that switched them all off at once.”

    You don’t stop hunting because you grow old. You grow old because you stop hunting.
    - Gun Nut
    Do you believe that the over abundance of cormorants, and the spreading of their range is beneficial to the enviroment? If yes, please explain why.
    The best argument against democracy is a five-minute conversation with the average voter.

  5. #14
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    My question is what are people going to do with all the cormorants they shoot?

    Not a big fan of just shooting stuff for the fun. Would imagine they would taste like &;$$; but don’t know. Anyone ever tried one?


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  6. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by Saskfly View Post
    My question is what are people going to do with all the cormorants they shoot?

    Not a big fan of just shooting stuff for the fun. Would imagine they would taste like &;$$; but don’t know. Anyone ever tried one?


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
    What do you do with : ????
    Gophers
    Groundhogs ( if you had any)
    Crows
    Starlings
    English Sparrows
    Magpies
    Jackdaw
    Take the warning labels off. Darwin will solve the problem.

  7. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by js4fn View Post
    Seen a couple a week ago counted 22 this morning on my property sitting in a maple tree over looking a pond
    can we shoot them yet legally?
    the tree is already showing leaf thinning

    Yes you can shoot any animal destroying your property legally. I think it’s in the hunting regs. Let some steel fly[emoji16]


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  8. #17
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    Shot gophers out west for the bounty. Ground hog tastes pretty good, like it roasted. Never shot any of the other species.

    I’m in if the government puts a bounty on the cormorants.

    Just curious if anyone has tried one before.


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  9. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by Saskfly View Post
    Shot gophers out west for the bounty. Ground hog tastes pretty good, like it roasted. Never shot any of the other species.

    I’m in if the government puts a bounty on the cormorants.

    Just curious if anyone has tried one before.


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    I have seen recipes in a couple of old Irish CookBooks, but the Irish....they...I mean....you know tha.....

    They have a "taste" for the .........Whiskey.
    Take the warning labels off. Darwin will solve the problem.

  10. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by zoli 16ga. View Post
    Do you believe that the over abundance of cormorants, and the spreading of their range is beneficial to the enviroment? If yes, please explain why.
    If you read my initial premise carefully, you might understand where I’m coming from.
    Do you believe that the over population of the human specie, and the spreading of their range is beneficial to the environment? If yes, please explain why. The Cormorants haven’t begun to be as detrimental to the environment as our specie. Why should we attempt to eradicate a specie that doesn’t stand a chance of messing up the environment half as much as we have. The Cormorant may even be an asset in dealing with some of the invasive species that have been devastating our fishery. The last great population of a specie that use to break tree limbs and wreck forests was the passenger pigeon. It’s number were so extensive while flying over head they could literally blot out the rays of the sun. It was hunted to extinction by market hunter to provide table fare an expanding population of humans. Maybe it’s a good thing that the Cormorant isn’t that eatable.

    You don’t stop hunting because you grow old. You grow old because you stop hunting.
    - Gun Nut

  11. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by Gun Nut View Post
    If you read my initial premise carefully, you might understand where I’m coming from.
    Do you believe that the over population of the human specie, and the spreading of their range is beneficial to the environment? If yes, please explain why. The Cormorants haven’t begun to be as detrimental to the environment as our specie. Why should we attempt to eradicate a specie that doesn’t stand a chance of messing up the environment half as much as we have. The Cormorant may even be an asset in dealing with some of the invasive species that have been devastating our fishery. The last great population of a specie that use to break tree limbs and wreck forests was the passenger pigeon. It’s number were so extensive while flying over head they could literally blot out the rays of the sun. It was hunted to extinction by market hunter to provide table fare an expanding population of humans. Maybe it’s a good thing that the Cormorant isn’t that eatable.

    You don’t stop hunting because you grow old. You grow old because you stop hunting.
    - Gun Nut
    No one said anything about "eradication" which would be impossible,at any rate. What we need is a concerted effort to cull the species from over population. Declaring them as varmints is only a first step. Biologic methods are also useful. There's simply far too many of them,nobody can deny that. Your analogy to human over population is ridiculous.
    If a tree falls on your ex in the woods and nobody hears it,you should probably still get rid of your chainsaw. Just sayin'....

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