From tomorrow's Observer £7,000 to bag a rare deer … how trophy hunting came to the home counties
From tomorrow's Observer £7,000 to bag a rare deer … how trophy hunting came to the home counties
They've always taken a venison crop off their deer herds, and culled Bison for meat back in the day too (read between the lines of The Years of Transition) as I'm pretty sure Whipsnade did in less politically correct times.I was in Woburn Park two weeks ago. Some of their Red Deer Stags have unbelievably complex antler development. I can believe people would pay to shoot them as 'trophies'. Woburn have always managed their Deer Park as a commercial business. On their website they advertise Red Deer stags for sale, to improve the antler development in other herds, as if they were stud racehorses... I know they cull even the Pere David deer and this perhaps provides a more lucrative way of doing it. Perhaps they won't welcome this report though.
What is the endangered status of Pere David?
So you choose, let supervised amateurs shoot the ones that would need to be culled anyway, with a professional on standby, then the head (normally discarded or in any case low value) being taken as a trophy and the body going off to meat processing.Extinct. However the deer are Extinct in the Wild I believe.
Apologies, couldn't resist!
Surely there is a difference between culling surplus animals (then using the meat) and breeding stock specifically for commercial trophy hunting.
Commercial deer farming is much more similar and I believe that some deer farms actually shoot their animals in their fields, to avoid the stress and danger of capturing and transporting them to a slaughterhouse (but I am no expert on this, and would welcome correction if I am wrong).