In article <48280008$0$764$4c56ba96@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
"Mary Fisher" <mary.fisher@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> writes:
|>
|> > |> What risks are there from mice???
|> >
|> > Try infection :-)
|>
|> How?
|>
|> Mice run away from humans, unless they're pets.
All I said was that they were more danger to humans in the UK than
spiders are :-)Bizarre.
|> I suspect more humans acquire infections from dogs and cats than forom
any
|> other fauna.
In the UK and except for other humans, yes.
|> You should watch where you're walking. If you tread on them you deserve
to
|> be stung.
|>
|> I walk about the garden with bare feet and have never been stung.
I have bumblebees that nest in the lawn, and sometimes visit flowers
that are invisible under the grass. Your eyesight must be very
exceptional - are you, perhaps, allergic to kryptonite? :-)
|> > You also need people who are capable of stalking them, shooting
safely,
|> > willing to put the time in, and allowed to do so. Those used to be
|> > common characteristics, and are now very rare.
|>
|> Not VERY rare, perhaps more rare.
|>
|> My game supplier always has lots of venison.
I believe that most of the venison eaten (let alone sold) in the UK is
now farmed, and the majority of the rest is from a small number of
large landholdings. Essentially none comes from the roe and muntjac
in the smaller woodlands of the south and midlands, where the problems
are.
Regards,
Nick Maclaren.


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