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September 9 , 2010

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News

Rising number of geese to be discussed

20/11/2009 08:46:00

The increasing number of greylag geese is being addressed at a meeting at Rennibister Farm, St Ola today, Thursday.

In recent years the problem has grown considerably and some claim that the numbers have increased by 1000% over the last three years. The geese are damaging and eating the crops. Sometimes the damage forces the farmers to reseed in some fields and it has delayed the cattle being able to graze in others.

According to one of the affected farmers, Al Watson, who runs Rennibister with his parents, the problem isn't quite as big as it has been at the moment. There has been a bit of culling by tourists lately. Last week he had a group of Italian tourists on the farm who managed to shoot 20-30 geese a day, but he's expecting the problems to pick up in spring: "By February, March they'll be eating all of the grass in some fields," he says.

This year hasn't been quite as bad as last year when they counted as many as 2500 geese a day in one field. The average is about 600-700 a day. The numbers decrease during the summer but pick up again in the autumn.

"Lately I've been seeing some pink foot geese as well," Al says. He finds this worrying since they're a new variety in these parts.

"They have been common further south in Aberdeenshire and in other areas. There are around a 100,000 of them coming to winter in Britain each year and if they start coming here in bigger numbers we've got a serious problem."

Efforts to scare the geese with canes and attached streamers have worked poorly. The geese were affected for little more than a three weeks after which they simply returned to the fields and grazed underneath the streamers.

Al Watson also mentions trying to scare the geese with gas guns, but that only makes them move into adjacent field.

Scarecrows have also worked poorly, saying: "Within a day they were grazing ten yards from the scarecrow."

His view is that the problem with the geese is a general problem affecting most Orcadian farmers. The geese come in such numbers that when they graze they can empty a field or trample and ruin a crop. He has seen estimates showing that six geese eat as much as a ewe. Although most of the geese leave by late spring he has seen fields recently sowed with barely in April being invaded by flocks of geese who stay behind: "They get straight onto them and simply pick all the seed out of the ground," he says.

Mike Girvan of the Scottish agricultural college has organised the meeting. On the agenda are discussions led by the RSPB: on Geese in Orkney, and the SNH, who wants to discuss the scare issue. Mike Girvan wants an open discussion: "Is there a problem? I have the feeling it's a small number of farmers being affected. I also heard that the greylag geese normally scatter and graze. They don't concentrate in one area."

On the other hand the chairman of NFU Scotland's Orkney branch, Michael Cursiter, sees the geese as a major problem.

"They seem to have become resident. It's out of control. The efforts of bringing in Italian tourists to shoot them don't seem to work. The numbers are still growing," he says.

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