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[Closed] Game birds on the road when you're driving

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[#4343646]

So what do you do?

Run 'em over so tea's sorted?

Stop and let them wander from one side of the road t'other and back again?

Sound your horn?

We're talking mainly youngsters here. 🙂


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 9:49 pm
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It's been a long time since I've met a game bird!
Chance would be a fine thing!


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 9:51 pm
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Oh, that sort of game bird.


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 9:52 pm
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Sound my horn, which is what I always do when I see wildlife or domesticated animals on the road. Animals generally respond to loud noises better than humans.


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 9:53 pm
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OK, completely not the topic I was expecting!

But on topic, if you do run them over, you can't have them, but the car behind you can! So quickly phone a mate!

Where we live we just stop and let them do their thing (as we also do with deer, peoples ruddy chickens, fearless cats, snakes, OAPs...)


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 9:53 pm
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I'd let em out the way, don't want to destroy part of the local economy!


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 9:54 pm
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You wouldnt run over sheep in the road would you.. just slow down


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 9:55 pm
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Usually I sound the horn so they fly off.

Give them 75 yards

Then shoot them with my 12 bore.


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 9:56 pm
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They are a bloody menace. A few years ago I hit one on the A40. It was early morning and the stupid thing took off just before I hit it. It made a big hole in the front plastic panel which cost £300+ to fix. I


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 10:00 pm
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You wouldnt run over sheep in the road would you.. just slow down

I came to a complete halt and all the young pheasants did was dither! But you never know what's coming up behind you on a country lane so felt I was a bit of a sitting duck.

And, yes, could make a nice mess of the car. 🙁


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 10:04 pm
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Ah, well i wouldnt stop for long, theyre only worth 50p once dead


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 10:07 pm
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All just been released ready for the start of the shooting season, thick as a couple of short planks


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 10:08 pm
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I give them a damn good plucking because I'm a pheasant plucker.


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 10:12 pm
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When cycling today I came across many nurseries, both pheasant and partridge. I even pinged my bell but to no avail.

But when they suddenly fly, when you don't realise they're there. 😯


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 10:15 pm
 bruk
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Care you don't collect them on the front. My old boss hit 1 and bust his radiator when it lodged there, cooked both bird and engine.


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 10:24 pm
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I was on the Leeds Outer Ring Road, Wortley area one saturday afternoon. There's a beck (small stream to non-Yorkshire folk) in the area.

Mama Mallard & 8 ducklings decided they didn't want to use the culvert under the road, oh no, they were going to use the green cross code.
Fantastic sight, 2 lanes of traffic held up in both directions by a duck & her offspring.

They all made it across the road 🙂


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 10:34 pm
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[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 10:34 pm
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what the fox is that?


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 10:35 pm
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[img] [/img]

[img] [/img]

[img] [/img]

[img] [/img]

Not sure it might have been a deer.


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 10:41 pm
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Uranium filled fox by the look of it, driving at er, 30 ish?


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 10:43 pm
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Blimey, that is seriously grim. 🙁


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 10:44 pm
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I just don't see how that's possible!


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 10:44 pm
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mmm, venison


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 10:51 pm
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good job it wasn't a moose, eh?


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 10:51 pm
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Did it survive?


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 10:57 pm
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the car?


 
Posted : 08/09/2012 10:58 pm
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I'd that a still no eye deer ?


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 7:59 am
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Brake fairly hard.

I nearly hit a pheasant on track at Cadwell, came round Barn, onto the start/finish straight, flat out, starts walking into the track a few hundred meters up the road.

I didn't fancy hitting it and having a broken bumper/radiator/oil cooler or windscreen!

Over here with Kangaroos/Wombats etc, hit them straight on with the middle of the car and don't swerve, more chance of having an accident that way. Only hit one wombat up to now luckily I was in the work Land Cruiser and it bounced off the diffs and didn't do any damage.

The car two lanes over from me on the motorway in Sydney cleaned up a roo once though when I was coming back from the airport. That was an eye opener as it was in my lane only seconds before!


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 8:13 am
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game bird meets game bird...


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 8:25 am
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Going over Buttertubs a couple of months back, I slowed, honked, then stopped for a sheep that would not move. In the end I had to gently cajole it out of the way with the bumper!

One past, it just went back to licking the tarmac where it was before 😯


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 8:32 am
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Not sure it might have been a deer.

Was just enjoying my breakfast as well..


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 8:37 am
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Apparently its a myth that the driver who killed the animal/game can't take it but following drivers can. Anyone including the first driver can take it. Anyone confirm this?!


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 8:42 am
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killing and eating game is poaching, taking home road kill you found for the pot is just called odd.


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 8:57 am
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depends on the roadkill.

neatly dispatched pheasant or deer, lovely!

hedgehog or rook, probably not.. though I bet someone will be along shortly to correct me!


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 9:01 am
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You hit a pheasant or anything else for that matter with your car and it's not worth eating anyway so drive on and leave the bugger where it is.


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 9:02 am
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You hit a pheasant or anything else for that matter with your car and it's not worth eating anyway so drive on and leave the bugger where it is.

Eh?


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 9:04 am
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You hit anything with your car and the meat isn't worth eating so leave it where you hit it.


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 9:09 am
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You hit anything with your car and the meat isn't worth eating so leave it where you hit it.

Depending on the animal in question, the speed of the impact, whether it was a glancing blow, and many other variables...


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 9:13 am
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As far as I know it's not illegal to eat roadkill and it's not poaching if the game birds are not on the landowners property ( may be wrong about this one but can't see how you police such things)

After quite a lot of close calls with Pheasants ( one was crossing the M25....gulp) and having one go bouncing off my windscreen last year on a local road after it flew out a hedge having been disturbed by traffic I think that they are the thickest animals in the world...."Shall I fly away from danger? No, I think I wil run instead...fly high into the air? No, I shall fly at about 2ft off the ground" TBH Clay pigeons have more brains.

Still, they do taste good roasted ( Pheasants, not clay pigeons) and there are many serving suggestions available :

[url= http://http://www.amazon.co.uk/Quick-Fix-Cooking-Roadkill-Buck-Peterson/dp/0740791303/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1347178101&sr=8-2 ]Roadkill cookbook[/url]


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 9:16 am
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The chances of a glancing blow are very slim. It's easy to see most of you on here are townies.


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 9:19 am
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I've had to perform an emergency stop before due to deer waiting in the trees jumping out and trying to commit suicide... whilst on my bicycle between Ciren & Stroud. In the car I had a very near miss with a big dear on the old Cheltenham - Ciren road, it happened so quickly before I could respond.

I've yet to come across any game birds waiting at the roadside, but I've heard they flock around truckers stops.


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 9:26 am
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The lack of of six fingers is a give away too. 😀


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 9:28 am
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It's easy to see most of you on here are townies.

Actually, chum, the things I tend to try to dodge whilst driving at night move at 30 mph and jump. They can also be over 7ft tall.

[img] [/img]

Perhaps its time to recalibrate your prejudice control?

One of my technicians had his car written off hitting one last year. The roo just carried on hopping...


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 9:28 am
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The last thing I hit was adeer not a bird , £4500 worth of repairs.....
I'll brake harder next time, but still won't swerve unless going slowly enough.


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 9:34 am
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My uncle told a tale about driving across the red centre (basically right across Aus) with an Aussie chap. Aussie bloke gave my uncle the wheel one evening and said "if anything jumps out onto the road, don't swerve, just hit it". Truck had huge 'roo bars on the front and the verges are apparently soft sand you might not get the vehicle out of again. Anyhow, nothing happened and my uncle woke the Aussie up and swapped seats again. Ten minutes or so later and.... BANG!!!!!!

blood all over the windscreen and big bend in the 'roo bars + one ver big and very dead red kangaroo on the other side of the road!


 
Posted : 09/09/2012 9:35 am
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