Dear Lloyd,
Spot on as usual. However I have only one comment to make. No one really knows what the results of our trials on rabbits are likely to do over a large area. The initial work was only conducted over a small area. Results indicated that it was worthwhile conducting further trials.
As for the point about breeding patterns being disrupted that is what I suspect will happen. When we know for sure what is happening then we will be able to confirm that is what happens.
The initial ideas was only to stop rabbits from eating trees planted by Greening Australia.Unfortunately that trial never got off the ground, but what I did learn from it was that there was an energetic difference between the areas where rabbits choose to live, and where they dont.
Change the energy of the area and hopefully you will change the critters that choose to live there. It should also change the types of herbage that grows. Should even control the serrated tussock , if the theory and trials are correct.
Let's just see what we can do over a small area of 500 odd acresof some of the worst country on the monaro.
Regards
James
Hi Roger
> Yes. In terms of mammals I have an innate dislike of peppering for
> several reasons, not least of which is that it does nothing about the
> actual problem, just moves it on to someone else's shoulders.
There's a multitude of ways to skin the cat of course but I think that your
argument against peppering is a little simplistic here. It asssumes that the
critters will just breed on regardless of the changed conditions, and while
it often looks that way, thats not what happens in nature. When Rudolph
Steiner wrote of peppering there was quite a lot of emphasis on the effect
on the reproductive ability of the target. OK, when we get an instant result
we are probably just scrambling them up so they go somewhere else and
initially there may be an increase in pressure at "somewhere else" , but
after moving house I dont think those new critters will become a part of the
effective breeding population for quite a while, if ever!. I believe over
time the overall population will reduce because of peppering and the only
way that the neighbor will be affected long term is if he already had
favourable conditions in place for an increase of population - which case it
was going to happen anyway.
Nothing wrong with your method of course, but the other 95% of us need to
figure out something that will work for us.
Anyway how different are we? Its all about the energy! I can't do it on my
own but with the aid of a field broadcaster anyone can implement beneficial
changes to the energies of their farm.
Cheers
Lloyd Charles


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