Re: 2020 Potential Economic Collapse
Posted: Sat Oct 17, 2020 8:02 pm
I think anybody who lives deep in the country dislikes foxes, only folk in towns seem to think they're cute.
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Even the cutey wutey ones with fluffy like white chest hair? Awww...jansman wrote: ↑Sat Oct 17, 2020 7:50 pm Keeping stock, as I always have, poison is a major prep. Killing vermin is a constant battle. The only good rat/ mouse is a dead one. As for foxes, they all need exterminating. Until you have had your entire poultry stock killed by one, and your best buck rabbit too, you will never understand; and don’t say you need better housing, as foxes are tenacious, murderous vermin.
Sadly, it is ever decreasing habitat that causes Reynard to inhabit urban areas, although they adapt as they are opportunistic. My poultry are behind twin walled weld mesh, which is buried into the ground by a two feet, the bottom foot being folded outwards at 90 degrees to prevent digging under. I have learned the hard way. I don’t keep rabbits now, but I have had pens torn open by foxes. I moved over to steel breeding units after the third time.Bosworth wrote: ↑Sat Oct 17, 2020 8:26 pmEven the cutey wutey ones with fluffy like white chest hair? Awww...jansman wrote: ↑Sat Oct 17, 2020 7:50 pm Keeping stock, as I always have, poison is a major prep. Killing vermin is a constant battle. The only good rat/ mouse is a dead one. As for foxes, they all need exterminating. Until you have had your entire poultry stock killed by one, and your best buck rabbit too, you will never understand; and don’t say you need better housing, as foxes are tenacious, murderous vermin.
Nah. You are right. I live in North London. No stock to worry about, but they crap everywhere, drag rubbish around, and make weird noises. Much bigger problem during lockdown as there was far less takeaway debris in the park opposite.
One morning it looked like someone had had a property party in my back garden. CCTV footage showed a fox dragging bin bags of rubbish down the side of the house (I’d foolishly left the gate open!) and taking its time dissecting its contents...
Not off topic at all.Unemployment is/will be part and parcel of economic decline.Vitamin c wrote: ↑Sun Oct 18, 2020 10:30 am Sorry slightly off topic.
Iv been checking the net for a up to date number for unemployed in Britain many sites only give a percentage the ones who give numbers are very different.
Lowest 1.3 million highest 2.7 million and no official numbers from government.
Do any of you have an idea and are government playing with numbers like thay were accused of in the 80s.
Thanks.
I do tend towards your thought that we are already in an economic collapse...we just don't know it.Arwen Thebard wrote: ↑Wed Oct 28, 2020 3:58 pm What a horrible day for global economies.
The German market DAX falls 5% - French markets CAC down by a little less and the UK FTSE following close behind down by only 3.5%. In the U.S. the DOW opens nearly 3% down and getting worse, NASDAQ and S&P500 not much better. Bonds are volatile, gold and silver are getting hammered down, while oil and crypto currencies are falling as well. Did I miss anything? Oh yeah, commodity prices including agricultural and livestock futures are also falling if you can believe that.
Red-downward-pointing arrows across the board and in large(ish) amounts, yet it doesn't get a mention on daytime news programs, maybe they are saving it for a big announcement around the six o'clock schedule.
This sort of action looks more like panic than a sensible sell off, seems to me like investors are liquidating what assets they can while they are still worth something. But no doubt the FED and other central banks will try and print their way out of it yet again.
Could this be the week? Or maybe yet another false start?