Farmers Guardian reports: A farmer who lost 115 lambs to foxes over the past four years has called for the fox hunting laws in England and Wales to be changed. Wyn Jones, who farms nears Machynlleth, mid-Wales, keeps his sheep between two big blocks of private forestry.
He claimed the problems started when hunters were banned from taking more than two hounds into the forest to flush foxes to guns by the 2004 Hunting Act.
"This year, I started off lambing inside with the first lot of ewes, but some were going out for a couple of hours because the shed was so hectic," Mr Jones said.
"I was taking them out to the other farm we have just across the valley, and things were fine, no problem. Then one morning, bang. Foxes killed six. Bit four and ripped the heads off two."
Mr Jones' experience does not appear to be an isolated case.
In 2014, a survey of 650 Welsh farmers found 75 per cent had seen an increase in the number of lambs killed by foxes since the Hunting Act was introduced, while 95 per cent lost money as a result of fox attacks.
FUW president Glyn Roberts said: "Those who dismiss this evidence and argue against a change, or worse still, scrape the barrel by claiming foxes do not kill lambs, demonstrate a willingness to sacrifice animal welfare and the incomes of hard-working people at the altar of misguided anti-hunting prejudices."
Read the article in full on the FG website here: https://www.fginsight.com/news/farmer-demands-hunting-act-change-after-foxes-kill-115-lambs-21429