What did Charlie have for lunch?

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Mrs M

Guru
Location
Aberdeenshire
Our Tommy couldn't catch a cold!
But he did catch a (toy) mouse.
Very pleased with himself ^_^
image.jpg
 

Fnaar

Smutmaster General
Location
Thumberland
The fox that comes in my garden is after my cat :ph34r:
That's Miss Goodbody's "coded text", except she uses a different word for cat
 

nickyboy

Norven Mankey
There was a sickly juvenile woodpigeon in the garden a year or two ago. Just walking around, not well enough to fly. It settled down on the patio to sleep in the evening.

Some time later a badger trotted by (they come in the garden every night). It saw the woodpigeon and went for it. Massive explosion of feather. Once they settled the woodpigeon had gone and badger was happily trotting off with its dinner in its mouth

Yep, yours was a Collared Dove
 

shouldbeinbed

Rollin' along
Location
Manchester way
That was my thinking, until I read the comments on this article.

Our last cat, that flitted between us and next door but one, was torn to pieces in their fully enclosed back garden by what we assume was a fox. There were no dogs around and we've never encountered a badger or evidence of a sett nearby but something did a heck of a job on her.
 
OP
OP
Cubist

Cubist

Still wavin'
Location
Ovver 'thill
Wood pigeon (hopfully)
No, it's real, not a carving....
 

Cp40Carl

Über Member
Location
Wirral, England
So let's think about this...

Cats are destroying bird population. However, foxes eat cats so therefore protect birds. Unfortunately, foxes also eat birds.

Solution = introduce birds that eat cats and foxes. I'm off to buy an Eagle Owl and a tin of Whiskers...(now that would make a great photo!)
 

slowmotion

Quite dreadful
Location
lost somewhere
We live in a small mid-terrace house in urban west London. There is a small extension to the living room which has a lean-to glass room. Just above the highest point of the sloping roof is the window of my wife's office. A month ago, she looked up from her computer to see foxy staring in at her three feet away through the window. He languidly strolled away when she banged on the glass. Round here, the fox population is completely fearless. The rumour is that they wander down the Metropolitan line tube tracks from leafy Buckinghamshire, drawn by the lure of discarded hamburgers and overflowing rubbish bins. You are only allowed to put out your sacks of rubbish a few hours before the bin men arrive on Tuesday morning. In that short period, any bags with meat scraps will have been well and truly eviscerated. They have adapted well to urban living but I believe that the experts say they have a much shorter life expectancy than their country cousins due to mange. Some of them do look pretty unhealthy but others are quite magnificently sleek, bushy and bright-eyed.
 
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