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Aug 2020
Today is the so-called "Glorious Twelfth", the start of the shooting season for red grouse in the UK.
Grouse shoots are either barbaric or a crucial part of a rural life depending on who you ask.
They are held in the Harrogate district across Nidderdale and are legal. It's argued that the shoots are vital for the management of moorland but campaigners say a spate of birds of prey killings near to Patelely Bridge this year has raised fresh questions about the practice.
Leeds-based campaigner Luke Steele told the Stray Ferret that birds of prey such as buzzards, hen harriers or red kite are killed on moorland near to Harrogate because they eat grouse eggs, and shoots rely on an abundance of grouse when the season begins.
He said it's "inevitable" that more will be killed as the grouse shooting season begins.
Six suspected poisonings of birds of prey in Nidderdale
‘Nidderdale cocktail’ found in poisoned dogs in Pateley Bridge
North Yorkshire Police has issued several appeals for information this year after birds of prey were found either shot or poisoned in Nidderdale — but it's historically been difficult to prosecute.
The issue was highlighted in July by TV presenter Chris Packham when he told the Independent that not just birds of prey were being killed to protect grouse moors, but also foxes, weasels and stoats.
Andrew Gilruth from the Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust, a charity that promotes grouse shooting, told the Stray Ferret that birds of prey are killed by a small minority of landowners or gamekeepers.
He said:
However, Luke Steele called the tourism aspect "massively overplayed".
He suggested that more news reports of birds of prey being killed to protect grouse moors could even damage the reputation of Nidderdale and keep tourists away.
He said:
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