The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Bloonsport: Police linking sheep deaths to brutal wildlife crime.

DOGS: Maulings reported as barbaric practice on the rise

- mark mackay mmackay@thecourier.co.uk

The barbaric practice of hare coursing could be to blame for a sickening increase in sheep worrying incidents across Perth and Kinross.

Prize livestock has been savaged with increasing regularity in recent months, with seven maulings now reported since November. Two have now been linked to hare coursing.

In each incident whippet-type dogs have been spotted loose in fields and the police believe they may have been deliberate­ly set free.

Though there has been a lull in hare coursing in recent months, Tayside has previously been a hotspot for the crime.

During 2013-14, almost half of all Scotland’s recorded incidents of hunting with dogs were in Tayside.

Groups have been reported travelling from all over the country to the area’s farmland to send greyhounds, whippets and lurchers hunting for a kill.

Bets are often taken and any hares caught are torn apart before those responsibl­e disappear as swiftly as they arrived. The whole practice often lasts no more than 10 minutes.

Farms near Alyth, Auchterard­er, Blairgowri­e, Crieff, Dunkeld, Balado, Muthill and Kinross have all been affected by sheep worrying recently.

Last month one of Scotland’s top breeders, farmer Tom Paterson from near Muthill, was left reeling after discoverin­g his prizewinni­ng flock of pedigree animals had been targeted.

With many of the animals heavily pregnant, the full impact of the dog attack will not be known until lambing time, although Mr Paterson estimated the loss at thousands of pounds.

Inspector Kevin Chase said: “I would not be surprised if there had been even more incidents we don’t yet know about.

“On two recent occasions in the Kinross area the animal involved has been a whippet and it may well be that hare coursing was taking place.

“It might be that another form of wildlife crime has led to sheep worrying.

“There has been informatio­n provided to our officers suggesting that hare coursing is once again on the increase.”

 ??  ?? Bets are often taken and any hares caught are torn apart.
Bets are often taken and any hares caught are torn apart.

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