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Post: 20 May 09:25

ASTANA (AFP-Jiji) — Kazakhstan on Oct. 16 said it would legalize hunting of the once-threatened Saiga antelopes to manage their population — a sensitive subject in a coun

ASTANA (AFP-Jiji) — Kazakhstan on Oct. 16 said it would legalize hunting of the once-threatened Saiga antelopes to manage their population — a sensitive subject in a country where the animals are widely revered. The government said there are currently around two million Saiga antelopes. Once threatened with extinction, the antelopes are still on the red list of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature. “Regulation of the Saigas is necessary. This species is damaging farming,” Ecology Minister Erlan Nysanbayev told a press conference, adding that damage caused by them to farms totaled 12 million tenge ($25 million). “There are two methods — capturing them during the day using nets and hunting them at night. I won’t avoid the question. We will also have to use the second option,” he said. A ministry spokesman said that “up to 337,500 Saiga antelopes have to be captured or killed by November 30.” The culling of Saiga antelopes is a frequent subject of debate in Kazakhstan. President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev intervened last year by warning a former ecology minister about hunting the “sacred” animals. Nysanbayev said the population had “exceeded its historical record because of an absence of natural predators.” Saiga antelopes have a distinctive rounded snout and live mainly in the steppes of central, western and northwestern Kazakhstan. Poaching exploded after the break-up of the Soviet Union, while dangers to the antelope population were exacerbated by a lack of water and disease. https://japannews.yomiuri.co.jp/science-nature/environment/20231028-146235/

Post: 11 November 21:24

Karabin Vepr-12" čekić " (VPO-205) su karabin s glatkim cijevima koji je dio obitelji Vepr karabina. Proizvodi se na Vijatsko-Poljanskom Strojarskom tvornici "Molot". Diz

Karabin Vepr-12" čekić " (VPO-205) su karabin s glatkim cijevima koji je dio obitelji Vepr karabina. Proizvodi se na Vijatsko-Poljanskom Strojarskom tvornici "Molot". Dizajn karabina temelji se na dizajnu lakog mitraljeza Kalašnjikov. Karabin se može koristiti za samoodbranu, za sportsko pucanje, kao službeno oružje za sigurnosne i snažne strukture. Karabin je glavni konkurent karabinu Saiga-12. Karabin Vepr-12 čekić (VPO-205) može imati cijev duljine 305, 430, 483, 570, 680 mm. Na njušci cijevi karabin ima uklonjivi odvodnik plamena, što vlasniku karabina omogućuje ugradnju vanjskih suženja njuške. Automatska karabina radi na principu korištenja energije praškastih plinova koji se u trenutku ispaljivanja iz provrta ispuštaju u plinsku komoru. Karabin ima odvojivu plastičnu kutiju s jednorednim rasporedom naboja, kapaciteta 4, 8 ili 10 naboja. Karabin Vepr-12 opremljen je sklopivim metalnim skeletnim priborom prekrivenim crnom plastikom kako bi se povećala udobnost korištenja u vrućini ili mrazu. Težina pištolja je od 3,9 do 4,55 kg.

Post: 3 August 09:56

Hunting in the Middle Ages

In the modern US, hunting is not considered an elite activity.  One tends to think of country folk and good old boys going hunting, often beca

Hunting in the Middle Ages In the modern US, hunting is not considered an elite activity. One tends to think of country folk and good old boys going hunting, often because they could use the food. The last time hunting was considered something for the wealthy and powerful was back when it was considered appropriate to go to Africa or Alaska to shoot elephants or lions or polar bears in Africa or Alaska. In the Middle Ages, in contrast, hunting was very much an activity for elites. Nobles loved to hunt, to the the point that giving up hunting was a sign of serious penance. Several saints started life as rich lords but were converted to the religious life when, on a hunting trip, they saw an animal carrying a cross. Fantastic stories often involved hunting, such as capturing a white (albino) hart or trapping a unicorn, as seen in this late medieval tapestry. Probably the main source of meat on a noble table was from hunting, rather then livestock raising. Nobles hunted various kinds of deer (hart, roe) and also boar, though boar were both rarer and a lot more dangerous. Hunting was both sport--competing to see who could catch the most--and a chance to show off. Until extremely recently, England had fox hunts, where well-to-do riders and their hounds chased foxes across the countryside, leaping hedges and having a great time. This was the last vestige of the medieval style of hunting, though in the Middle Ages they preferred to hunt something worth eating. Medieval men and women also hunted with hawks. A "mews," where the hawks were kept, was found in every castle. Training a hawk to fly off, catch a bird, and bring it back was an important and time-consuming skill. A variety of hawks went to the hunt on a rider's (gloved) fist, including goshawks, that could take a full-sized goose. Then as now, over-hunting will reduce the game. Nobles thus did not want the peasants to hunt, though no one particularly cared if they trapped a few rabbits or caught song-birds using lime spread on twigs. Great landowners created game preserves where only they could hunt. The New Forest in England is not actually "new," being established as a game preserve in the late eleventh century by King William II ("Rufus"). Although we think of the word 'forest' as just a place with trees, it originally meant a place set aside. The New Forest now is mostly known for its semi-wild ponies, to be feared for liking to eat an unattended picnic lunch.

Post: 23 December 14:18

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