The illustration on the left is a painting from around 1800, showing a Scottish wildcat being hunted by a pack of dogs. You will note the yellow colouration and stripes -hence the "English wild cat" becoming "the Highland Tiger".
When the environment and wildlife are under threat I have learnt after two decades that there are two ways to deal with authorities. The Left Hand and the Right Hand.
The Left is ever so polite and simply states facts trying to be as polite as possible.
The Right is the sledge hammer. I basically stop being "ever so polite" but am polite while showing my teeth. The Right Hand rarely fails.
I was alerted to a recent development but had no photos of badgers setts, no area plans showing where badgers were so as that stood I had nothing to back me up. However, I knew about badgers at the site in the 1970s and while people tend to be uninterested in them I am.
I found that BRERC had a record of badgers and though they would not give the exact location the term they used identified the spot.
The person from the old Avon Badger Group refused to allow me to see maps and info the group had gathered pre 1994 and told me "I shall proudly take them to my grave" -the logic there escapes me.
It happens that one person contacted me ands though unconnected to the group involved gave me a lot of info on badgers on the site in question.
THAT gave me ammunition.
I was polite for as long as possible but the council ignoring things I posted on all my blogs and social media, emailed and poked DEFRA, Natural England, and more for two weeks -even threatening exposure of the auction house (who claimed it was a Bristol company auctioning the site) trying to sell land illegally by not declaring badger setts.
I literally spammed several of the City Councillors who were involved with legalities and I posted here previously my "no more warnings" email to them.
Basically a couple weeks of morning until...morning and despite Chris Packham being seemingly uninterested (again) I tried everything.
I am now told that the auction is off. A little bird at the Council tells me I am a very unliked dirty word now. My big bow out fight back.
I am now awaiting the kick back ("they are going to be causing problems") as BCC do not like me and just lost £400K
Never EVER wait until it is too late to contact someone to help take action but if you do reach out you better make bloody sure you share the information you have.
The documented evidence along with full references as to the Old British foxes and Old British wild cats along with photographic evidence (added to on this blog) is contained in the 2022 Red Papers. Interestingly, 'experts' have rejected offers to send them copies which seems very unscientific since we are all supposed to be studying the environmental and other factors from the loss of native species.
I have written articles summarising the work of the last 50 years -rejected out of hand. I suppose this is a case of "How dare you submit an article -you are not with a university or college!"
DNA labs have all greeted by proposal to carry out DNA work on the Old fox and wild cat species held at the Extinct Fox and Wild Cats Museum -which I can think of at least three angles for t technical papers - all ignored.
"Citizen Science" is another term for "You lot do all the work and we'll take the credit as the professionals".
DNA testing could reveal the long lost species that were not just living in Ireland and Britain after the Doggerbank submergence but also lived in Western Europe. That would, of course, smash dogma and rather than jump in and embrace any discovery (again, there are papers and possible funding in that) the attitude seems to be "If we ignore it and just keep pushing dogma our jobs will be safe".
Is Sabine Hossenfelder correct and science just can't be bothered and simply turn out nonsense papers -in zoology as in physics?
Is carrying out DNA work and studying the data that terrifying. Will it hit that many egos and challenge zoology and natural history and its dogma? It seems so.
The illustration on the left is a painting from around 1800, showing a Scottish wildcat being hunted by a pack of dogs. You will note th...