bluemike807
CGN Regular
- Location
- Eastern Ontario
Ok, prepare for a weird thread.
Out here in NS, there are no indiginous grey squirrels. I've seen one small population in the Middleton region, but noone knows how they got there.
Like alot of other places, I imagine that, if they gained a foothold, they would be difficult to remove - much as Great Britain and British Columbia have discovered; that they would encroach upon the habitats and food supplies of other species.
Here, as elsewhere, I imagine that the main 'victim' of this would be the red squirrels, which are largely unchallenged and I've noticed they grow quite a bit larger here than they do in West of NS, in say, Ontario.
As such, there is no 'season' for grey squirrels (for much the same reason there isnt a season for Zebra here, as... there aren't any) - but Im wondering about the practicalities and legalities of introducing some.
To start - no, Im not serious - but it's got me thinking. I miss squirrel hunting; when I was younger we did it, never wasted meat, never did it for the 'thrill' - it was a practical, serious and educational hunt. Here, I feel like my poor .22's never get much of a workout aside from at the range - I almost always bring a shotgun for rabbit or grouse, and beyond those, there's not much call for a .22, unless you're a trapper.
But I had this thought; say you owned a chunk of land, 10 acres or so, of which, say, 6-8 were wooded. Would you be able to introduce a 'seed' population of grey squirrels who would be able to survive and thrive - potentially even isolating them in the forested area (say everything around it for 500m was open grassland) and have a sustainable population of squirrels?
Do people think it would have a tremendous impact on the local ecology? My impression has been that there isnt much that they would compete with, aside from an already small population of reds that don't come close to fully utilizing their ecology.
Call me cracked for liking the idea of a sustainable, managed squirrel 'preserve' but it strikes me as an interesting thought experiment into human-managed ecology. Plus, you know... squirrel hunting.
Out here in NS, there are no indiginous grey squirrels. I've seen one small population in the Middleton region, but noone knows how they got there.
Like alot of other places, I imagine that, if they gained a foothold, they would be difficult to remove - much as Great Britain and British Columbia have discovered; that they would encroach upon the habitats and food supplies of other species.
Here, as elsewhere, I imagine that the main 'victim' of this would be the red squirrels, which are largely unchallenged and I've noticed they grow quite a bit larger here than they do in West of NS, in say, Ontario.
As such, there is no 'season' for grey squirrels (for much the same reason there isnt a season for Zebra here, as... there aren't any) - but Im wondering about the practicalities and legalities of introducing some.
To start - no, Im not serious - but it's got me thinking. I miss squirrel hunting; when I was younger we did it, never wasted meat, never did it for the 'thrill' - it was a practical, serious and educational hunt. Here, I feel like my poor .22's never get much of a workout aside from at the range - I almost always bring a shotgun for rabbit or grouse, and beyond those, there's not much call for a .22, unless you're a trapper.
But I had this thought; say you owned a chunk of land, 10 acres or so, of which, say, 6-8 were wooded. Would you be able to introduce a 'seed' population of grey squirrels who would be able to survive and thrive - potentially even isolating them in the forested area (say everything around it for 500m was open grassland) and have a sustainable population of squirrels?
Do people think it would have a tremendous impact on the local ecology? My impression has been that there isnt much that they would compete with, aside from an already small population of reds that don't come close to fully utilizing their ecology.
Call me cracked for liking the idea of a sustainable, managed squirrel 'preserve' but it strikes me as an interesting thought experiment into human-managed ecology. Plus, you know... squirrel hunting.


















































