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Yesterday, we went for a walk in an off-leash area, especially designed for dogs, with poop bags and bins and all. Somebody told us to go there, and we hadn’t been there before. The area is adjacent to some bush land, which is not fenced off. Fine, we thought, that’ll be fun for the ‘kids’. So we had a good run, until right at the end, we spotted a small signpost “Warning – 1080 bait”. The dogs were with us all the time, under our supervision, but, of course, we left. Not only can that stuff be ingested; it can also be inhaled or absorbed through wounds and skin abrasions.
Arriving at home, I went on the Internet and learnt that 1080 is highly poisonous, there is no antidote, and it can take up to six hours to show signs of poisoning. Of course, the following six hours were a nightmare. 1080 is used across Australia, and on publicly accessible land.
“The kids” are well and kicking, but there is more to it. We feed our dogs with kangaroo meat, which is said to be ‘harvested’ – God knows from where and what that means. How do we know that these kangaroos didn’t ingest 1080?
How are things in other countries such as Germany or England (apart from the fact that you don't feed kangaroo to your dogs...)Do forestry people lay out bait in the forest?
My question is also addressed to our hunters – your dogs roam bushland, don’t they? How do you protect them?
And aren't there laws on that?
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