badgers
Meles Meles - Sow - Boar - Cub - Setts - Cetes - Clan
Other animals in the Mustelids family include weasels, stoats, otters, polecats, martens, pine martens and skunks.
How can you not love these? They are just like little bears. They are full of character and fun and make fantastic viewing for those fortunate enough to get a glimpse of them. They are both striking visually and fascinating to watch. They have strong family ties and some setts have been recorded in the same place for over 300 years.

They are very territorial and will protect their home. Badgers are clean animals and clear out their home daily and even have their own toilets. Badgers live underground in setts. One group usually has a maximum of 13 badgers. They sometimes have winter and summer quarters. During the winter they can spend days at a time underground sleeping. They are a really tight community and protect each other well a group of badgers is known as a clans or cetes. They will play with each other tumbling and nipping and this helps strengthen their ties. Badges are one of the few creatures to have delayed implantation. This means they can have their young when they choose. Sound pretty good to me. Badger are rarely seen during the day.
The dominant male of the clan or boar will fight to maintain his status and if challenged by a lower ranking male will fight aggressively to hold his position. This fight will often end up with one of the badgers leaving and they will start their own clan. The characteristic ear and bottom bitten males will occasionally take refuge in hedges in the first instance before digging a sett, their powerful bodies and long claws make this digging easy work. Badgers live in woodland areas but often appear in the garden looking for food. They are creatures of habit and will take the same route on nightly outings. Their main diet is earthworms and these can often be found on pastures. They scratch the grass for bugs, grubs and larva that lay just below it's surface and have no respect for a well turned out lawn. They have been known to remove fences to get back into a garden. Such a determined action can only be in pursuit of food. Badger are omnivores and will eat cereal based dog food, meat, peanuts and fruit. Badgers are creatures of habit and if food is left regularly they will come to expect it and can be nuisance if you stop feeding.
As with all our wildlife they are scared of humans and history has taught them to flee but they can be observed from hides and often houses where food is laid to interest the badgers.In 1997 a survey estimated that there are about 50,000 social badger groups. Accounting for approximately 310,000 badgers. It’s estimated that 10,000 to 20,000 badgers die at the hands of diggers each year. Badger baiting was banned in 1835 but still exists today in many areas. It estimates some 30 - 40,000 get killed on the roads each year
Badgers in your Home
Anyone interested in the re-locating injured badgers or providing homes for orphaned cubs should contact us to discuss further. Badgers can be encouraged into your garden and synthetic setts can be built, these are used in relocation situations. Contact us for more details and advice on badgers.

Injured Badgers
If you find an injured or abandoned badger please contact a vet or your nearest wildlife rescue immediately. If you have a trapped badger do not approach it in a confined space they can be very aggressive and have very powerful jaws.
A small cub can give a very nasty nip so be careful too if you need to take it to a vet or wildlife rescue you will need a safe strong box or call us and we will collect.
Badger Rescue and Rehabilitation
Each year we rescue and rehabilitate badger cubs and successfully release them back into the wild where they belong. We carefully survey and monitor any release sites to ensure that the area can accommodate a badger sett. We must ensure we don't interfere with the balance and that the sett is placed a determined distance form existing established setts. We are fortunate to have the support of some large landowners. We establish a location for next years setts this year to ensure all cubs have a home. We have been very successful in our release programs and our on going monitoring. BADGER SOFT RELEASE
This information not only helps us to understand badgers but also gives us valuable information to improve our ongoing programs. There is a balance of care and duty to ensure these secretive and protected mammals are not only "human weary" but also have the ability to defend themselves from other badgers and are able to forage well.
Our strict program allows for both. Not only is it successful but it is extremely rewarding. If you have a sick injured or abandoned badger cub please contact us on 0795 508 0901.
Badgers are very sociable and need to be kept in groups. When a cubs arrives with us we always try to ensure he has some playmates. Below shows the first cub of the season joining in with a small group of fox cubs. Badgers and foxes get on well and in the wild foxes have been know to have cubs in parts of the badgers sett.
Badger Cull
From 1998 to 2005, Defra killed nearly 11,000 badgers as part of the Randomised Badger Culling Trial (RBCT, also known as the Krebs experiment). At the time it was reported that the badgers were being culled to eradicate of bovine TB (bTB) in cattle. The results of the RBCT was to reveal whether or not badger ‘culling’ actually worked as a means of controlling the disease in livestock. It concluded that's whilst TB dropped within the area it increased outside the zone.
See full report www.defra.gov.ukIn June 2007 the Independent Scientific Group (ISG) published its Final Report. In his foreword, ISG Chairman Professor John Bourne wrote:"After careful consideration of all the RBCT and other data presented in this report, including an economic assessment, we conclude that badger culling cannot meaningfully contribute to the future control of cattle TB in Britain. "The UK badger cull had been dropped by he previous government in favour of the more cost effective, scientifically sound and logical option of vaccinating However in Wales the Welsh Assemble gave the go ahead to trail cull again. This has been halted after a successful appeal by the Badger Trust but it is still expected this will be challenged.

It is incredible in this century that we are killing wildlife based on myths and gang mentality. We are losing creatures from our planet through ignorance. We all have a responsibility to address these issues and ensure that no more creatures will be wiped out or persecuted.BBC News - Queen guitarist Brian May joins fight over badger cull
How we started
Whilst out walking with my dog in the early 1980's I found a small hedgehog stuck in a fence. He was too fat to go through and his prickles wouldn't let him go back.
He had been pushing so long in an attempt to free himself that the wire had cut into his body and his leg was bleeding where he had pushed and pushed against the ground. I had in my handbag a pair of pliers (no surprise to anyone who knows me) I cut the wire and removed the hedgehog READ MORE
why we do it
Once upon a time, there was a wise man who used to go to the ocean to do his writing. He had a habit of walking on the beach before he began his work.
One day, as he was walking along the shore, he looked down the beach and saw a human figure moving like a dancer. He smiled to himself at the thought of someone who would dance on the beach, and so he walked faster to catch up.
As he got closer, he noticed that the figure was that of a young man, and that what he was doing was not dancing at all. The young man was reaching down to the shore, picking up small objects, and throwing them into the ocean READ MORE
To find out a little about the people that run our rescue Click here Our Team
long term goals
Our long term goal is to set up an exciting Education Centre for school and groups ·with a fully equipped 24 hours wildlife hospital with full time vets and ambulances. Anyone able to help with this progress this in relation to land and finance should contact Anne for more detail on. info@harperaspreywildliferescue.co.uk.
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