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Old 20-03-2006, 02:14 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
michael adams
 
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Default Bonfires/ hedgehogs


"Dave the exTrailer" wrote in message
...
On Mon, 20 Mar 2006 10:58:28 -0000, "michael adams"
wrote:


"Janet Galpin" wrote in message
...

On the topic of hedgehogs, I found I think three dead hedgehogs at
different times and in different parts of the garden last season with

no
obvious signs as to why they had died. I could only think perhaps that
the neighbouring farmer had put down rat poison which the hedgehogs had
taken in. I don't know whether this can be a significant cause of
hedgehog deaths. Or reading the Wildlife Trust page you suggested I
suppose pesticide is another dismaying possibility.

Janet G


One feature of hedgehogs is that they really are the end of
their own particular food chain. While many of the things they
eat, beetles, caterpillars, earthworms, slugs and snails
are the sorts of things humans are already trying to
poison. Either deliberately or maybe through not being able to
be sufficiently selective. So maybe these hedgehogs in their
turn, came across dead slugs or beetles etc. and rather than
posting their experiences on UseNet as you did, they eat them
instead, with the resulting dire consequences.

While going in the other direction, given that there are no
carrion in the UK - vultures etc. not so far as I know at least -
coupled with the hedgehog's spiny coat, may mean that their
remains may sit around on the surface for a relatively long
time. The website gives them an average lifespan in the wild
of just two years. And so your finds may be unexceptional.
Just that they happened to die there, than somewhere else.
It also suggests that there may have been a growth in
the local population, maybe.

While given that they had no predators at all until the arrival
of the motor car and the use of pesticides, the only limit to their
reproduction - given their ability to hibernate presumably must
have been scarcity of food. So that prior to the arrival of the
motor car and pesticides, there were presumably many more hedgehogs
around than there are today - but correspondingly far fewer slugs
and snails.


michael adams


"Gypsies eat them covered in mud, y'know"



More hedgehog stuff including illuminated manuscript and
medieaval carving plus cooking method on here -

http://hedgehogcentral.com/myths.shtml


spoiler to hedgehog cooking method


spoiler


spoiler


spoiler


spoiler

spoiler


spoiler


spoiler


spoiler


The hedgehog is covered in clay then this hardens
during cooking - and enables the skin and spines
to be removed all in one.

Although whether the animal is dressed - giblets
removed, prior to cooking dunno.

Not an urban myth anyway.


michael adams

....

How many times have I heard that yet have yet to meet anyone who has
eaten one. Maybe they died ((