August 2009 Archives

A bag of bones

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After going clear of our almost five year TB breakdown, which I described in the first posting, we rumbled along with just a few IRs for the next couple of years. The RBCT badger trappers had caught the culprits of the dairy herd carnage in their second and final visit here.  But those inconclusives still snarled us up in movement restrictions until December 2007, when we finally shook ourselves free.

 

During this time, badger activity was low, but our deer management team reported that badgers had started digging what they thought was a new sett, about 100 yards from our boundary. As we had no badgers at all on the farm now, we welcomed these to act as a buffer against all the old, sick and excluded badgers, turfed out from setts on farms surrounding us.

 

But in the spring of 2007, a badger expired in a gateway to one of our fields, fairly close to this area. And on closer inspection, we found this was not a 'new build' at all. It was a huge old sett about sixty feet long, which had been abandoned. The new holes were singles and not particularly active. At our July 2008 test, we had a bunch of IRs and another reactor,  followed by two steers with lesions in January 2009.

 

Badger sett This week, a trip through the woods, revealed a 'spring clean' undertaken by a new tenant of this old sett.

   

Having asked some people who know about these things, they say that the skull and leg bones appear to be at least 6 months old, possibly up to year. (Which ties in nicely with our problems in July '08).

 

They could be older but are certainly no less. They are the skull, femur and tibia of a 'fully mature, well grown animal as shown by the very high parietal crest on the top of the skull.

 

The teeth are worn and from that, the animal would appear to be at least 5 years old. (in other words, not a youngster setting up house). The height of the crest of the skull, and the width of the jaws indicate a very powerful animal, likely to be male'.

 

I have heard about 'hospice' setts, and listened to descriptions of 'skeletons and skulls' ejected by another occupant, but until now, never seen one. The concept is vehemently denied by badger watchers and of course, Defra. But where do they imagine aged, sick, infirm or excluded badgers go to die? And where do they suppose population explosions of some 77 per cent in each decade, set up home? Are they expected to build tower blocks? Sit on each other's shoulders?

 

The blurb that accompanies public access to Woodchester Park's badgers describes sett-ling (sorry!) down to watch an active sett.  But of course, has no mention of the sort of 'accommodation' we found last week:

 

"The most common way to study or watch badgers in the field is at the sett" the paper purrs, and the notes advise watchers to 'choose a sett, sit downwind of it,  where you can see the entrance holes. Sit low in undergrowth, wearing clothing that doesn't rustle, with your back to a tree about 5-10 m away from the entrance, at dusk or dawn. Don't disturb the badgers and make sure they have either left their sett, or returned underground before you leave'.

 

Woodchester wouldn't have many returning visitors if they'd queued to see this pile of bones. And for any badgers which may be healthy, trying to refurbish this sett, their chances of remaining so if the previous occupant had got TB - and our tested, sentinel (and now dead) cattle indicate that it had - are minimal. M.bovis can survive years underground, and may also be present in the bone marrow of the deceased, should anything try to sharpen its teeth.

The news this week that a Woodchester Park operative has contracted TB, although unfortunate for the person concerned, is a timely reminder of why countries are bound by statute to eradicate tuberculosis.

 

In the 1930s and 40s the prime source of human bTB  was unpasteurised milk, and unfortunately those old text books are still around. But that loophole was firmly shut by GB's cattle TB eradication  scheme which operated from the early 1950s and 1960s.

 

Every herd, beginning at the coasts and working inland to the midlands was tested, and after a shaky start, reactors culled with full compensation. But a handful of stubborn 'hotspots' remained and in 1971, one in Gloucestershire yielded a mangy, tuberculous badger. It was then that the Ministry realised that they had a second reservoir of the disease, and not until they cleared it did TB incidence in the hotspots drop.

 

In 1986, at the end of the Clean Ring strategy, (when badgers were culled in response to a confirmed cattle outbreak which couldn't be attributed to cattle movements), GB recorded less than 100 herds under TB restriction and culled under 700 cattle.

 

After two decades of sanitisation and prevarication, not to mention reams of 'research' compiled by the operators of Woodchester Park, in 2008 almost 8,000 herds were restricted and 40,000 cattle shot.

 

Environmental contamination is now at such a level that other species are falling victim, including pet dogs and cats, sheep, goats and free range pigs. Alpacas and llamas seem particularly vulnerable, and in them, the disease develops quickly and dramatically, often spreading within the herd.

 

Most of these spillover victims have had no contact with cattle at all, much less drunk unpasteurised milk. But many will have had close contact with their owners.

 

I was up in the Midlands last week, and driving back, signposts to villages with familiar problems were a reminder of what happens when governments walk away from  problems.

 

I left TB restricted farms in Leicestershire - a county which until recently had none at all, but is now recording over 6% of its herds under restriction - and drove south through the Cotswolds, home to Woodchester's badgers. 

 

I saw the sign for the Cotswold Farm Park, often featured in BBC's Countryfile.  In a recent episode, Adam Henson was elated with his clear TB test. I bet he was, he'd been under restriction for three years.

 

I passed Stroud where a herd from which we'd bought pedigree cattle has had a TB breakdown, Dursley, where a few years ago a whole herd was taken and Thornbury, where just six months of badger clearance kept cattle farms clear of TB for the next decade.

 

 Driving through Somerset, farms that I know have problems were both sides of the motorway and Pic from Defra siteinto Devon where Tiverton is proposed as a site for vaccinating endemically infected badgers in a TB 'hotspot'.

 

 Finally over the Tamar into Cornwall, where we have three young 'sentinels' awaiting slaughter.

 

 That is the scale of the problem now: 250 miles of misery. And that's without going west into through Hereford and Worcester and into Wales, or further north into Cheshire, Staffordshire and Derbyshire, all areas which are filling the GB map solid red, as Defra's 2008 illustration proudly shows.

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