03-05-2013, 20:21
|
#1
|
Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Posts: 20,929
|
Battleground: Rhino Wars
This is great, a war I can get behind! Way to go gents!!!!!!!
Battleground: Rhino Wars
The world renowned Greater Kruger area of South Africa, just north of Johannesburg, is the new ground zero in a war to protect magnificent creatures on the edge of extinction. Rhinoceroses are being hunted to death by poachers who will stop at nothing to kill them just to take their horns. The death toll is astonishing; last year alone, nearly 700 rhinos were killed with baby rhinos and calves separated from their mothers and left to fend on their own. The human toll too is steep. More than 100 park rangers have been killed by these poachers in the battle to halt these criminals. The situation is worsening. Park rangers and security forces are desperate for help. And now four U.S. Special Forces (SEALS and SF) veterans have come to help fight for the rhinos…
http://animal.discovery.com/tv-shows...und-rhino-wars
Thursday 9:00PM
|
Team Sergeant is offline
|
|
03-05-2013, 20:35
|
#2
|
Area Commander
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Harmony Church
Posts: 2,634
|
Quote:
And now four U.S. Special Forces (SEALS and SF) veterans have come to help fight for the rhinos…
|
I feel sorry for the poachers.
I grew tired of the whale wars and will now look forward to some new entertainment.
|
mojaveman is offline
|
|
03-05-2013, 20:53
|
#3
|
Quiet Professional
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: NorCal
Posts: 15,370
|
I saw a news report on it from a San Diego, CA, station - 3 ex-SEALs and 1 ex-SFer - looked like an interesting gig.
Richard
__________________
“Sometimes the Bible in the hand of one man is worse than a whisky bottle in the hand of (another)… There are just some kind of men who – who’re so busy worrying about the next world they’ve never learned to live in this one, and you can look down the street and see the results.” - To Kill A Mockingbird (Atticus Finch)
“Almost any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.” - Robert Heinlein
|
Richard is offline
|
|
03-05-2013, 20:54
|
#4
|
Quiet Professional
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Undisclosed Safehouse in South Texas
Posts: 573
|
I was interested until I realized it wasn't about the John MCain/Lindsey Graham break up......
__________________
“Whether we come from poverty or wealth; whether we are Afro-American or Irish-American; Christian or Jewish, from big cities or small towns, we are all equal in the eyes of God. … May all of you as Americans never forget your heroic origins, never fail to seek divine guidance, and never lose your natural, God-given optimism. … My fellow Americans … God bless each and every one of you, and God bless this country we love.”
– Ronald Reagan, Aug. 17, 1992
|
nousdefions is offline
|
|
03-05-2013, 21:06
|
#5
|
Quiet Professional
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Location, Location
Posts: 4,000
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by nousdefions
I was interested until I realized it wasn't about the John MCain/Lindsey Graham break up......
|
Which one is the baby calf?
__________________
The two most powerful warriors are patience and time - Leo Tolstoy
It's Never Crowded Along the Extra Mile - Wayne Dyer
WOKE = Willfully Overlooking Known Evil
|
MR2 is offline
|
|
03-05-2013, 21:18
|
#6
|
Area Commander
Join Date: May 2011
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 1,423
|
I spent a couple days with two Tanzanian Rangers in Arusha Park in/around the Little Serengeti on a climb up Mt Meru a few years ago.
Some good fellas......one of their requirements for making it as a Tanzanian Ranger was Up/Down Meru in 24 hours.
Fit and motivated guys......not much kit and not much pay unfortunately, but it seemed like a prestigious job locally.
Around the time I was there, there was a fair bit of poaching going on.......that included poachers lighting big chunks of the park on fire to flush game.
I'd just about pay money to work some counter-poaching patrols.
There was a show on a few years back about a Royal Marine Conrad Thorpe OBE(and ex SBS) who put together an anti-poaching unit in the Congo with a "smell of an oily rag" sized budget.
Good on them for trying......I know the hunting industry that the animal lovers hate so much has done more for sustaining wildlife than any other single group.
|
Flagg is offline
|
|
03-06-2013, 06:28
|
#7
|
Quiet Professional
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: 18 yrs upstate NY, 30 yrs South Florida, 20 yrs Conch Republic, now chasing G-Kids in NOVA & UK
Posts: 11,901
|
Good "Hearts & Minds" PR..
__________________
Go raibh tú leathuair ar Neamh sula mbeadh a fhios ag an diabhal go bhfuil tú marbh
"May you be a half hour in heaven before the devil knows you’re dead"
|
JJ_BPK is offline
|
|
03-06-2013, 10:42
|
#8
|
Guerrilla Chief
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: South Africa
Posts: 911
|
Although Rhino poaching is tragic, the media dont tell the full story.
The numbers of rhino poached per year is horriffic. However, these numbers show the sucess of the rhino breeding programmes run throughout our country. There are many more rhino killed per year now that existed thirty years ago. Private game farmers are breeding rhino all over the country from the tiny seed herd that was all that was left of the White Rhino a few decades ago. Two things are hampering this re-breeding campaign. Firstly poaching is rife because the Far East has a strong appetite for rhino horn, both as an afrodisiac and a decorative substance. Secondly, and more importantly, the restrictions placed on the legal trade of rhino products and the legal hunting of rhino, has pushed up prices of these products to astronomic levels. Because hunting is being restricted, mainly because of the well-meaning influence of countries who dont have a clue about conservation, the actual worth of rhinos is devalued as far as the game farmer is concerned. Why should a farmer breed rhino he is unable to sell to a hunter and costs a fortune to protect from poachers? What is needed is more open trade in rhino products, not less. Any economist knows that restricting supply of any product will tend to increase its price, but this is something Western conservationists have great difficulty understanding. There is undue influence from countries in which you have to visit a zoo to see wildlife, on countries that are actually breeding it .
|
Guymullins is offline
|
|
03-06-2013, 11:09
|
#9
|
Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Posts: 20,929
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Guymullins
The numbers of rhino poached per year is horriffic. However, these numbers show the sucess of the rhino breeding programmes run throughout our country. There are many more rhino killed per year now that existed thirty years ago. Private game farmers are breeding rhino all over the country from the tiny seed herd that was all that was left of the White Rhino a few decades ago. Two things are hampering this re-breeding campaign. Firstly poaching is rife because the Far East has a strong appetite for rhino horn, both as an afrodisiac and a decorative substance. Secondly, and more importantly, the restrictions placed on the legal trade of rhino products and the legal hunting of rhino, has pushed up prices of these products to astronomic levels. Because hunting is being restricted, mainly because of the well-meaning influence of countries who dont have a clue about conservation, the actual worth of rhinos is devalued as far as the game farmer is concerned. Why should a farmer breed rhino he is unable to sell to a hunter and costs a fortune to protect from poachers? What is needed is more open trade in rhino products, not less. Any economist knows that restricting supply of any product will tend to increase its price, but this is something Western conservationists have great difficulty understanding. There is undue influence from countries in which you have to visit a zoo to see wildlife, on countries that are actually breeding it .
|
That's a two way street..... you kill enough poachers and no one is going to want to do that job.....
|
Team Sergeant is offline
|
|
03-06-2013, 14:00
|
#10
|
Guerrilla Chief
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: South Africa
Posts: 911
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Team Sergeant
That's a two way street..... you kill enough poachers and no one is going to want to do that job.....
|
Dead right Team. It is very difficult to catch them though because, until they have killed a rhino, they are completely innocent and you must catch them with the horn in their possession. In thick bush at night, it is easy to ditch the evidence and turn into a tourist again. Part of the problem is that white rhino are very tame animals and not scared of man, thus are very easily poached. Black rhino on the other hand are bad tempered and dangerous, but there are very few left. Basically, you will always find someone in Africa to do the job if the fruits are so rewarding. A single rhino horn can set a family man up for life.
|
Guymullins is offline
|
|
03-06-2013, 15:17
|
#11
|
Quiet Professional
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Florida
Posts: 1,511
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Team Sergeant
That's a two way street..... you kill enough poachers and no one is going to want to do that job.....
|
I don't know. It hasn't worked with Somali pirates yet...... Maybe if they had an OSHA rep.
|
ddoering is offline
|
|
03-06-2013, 15:49
|
#12
|
Guerrilla
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Behind Enemy Lines
Posts: 370
|
The people who use the rhino horn never heard of Viagra.
__________________
It is those who believe that written constitutions can protect the individual from the exercise of state power who
hold to a baseless idealism, particularly when it is the state’s judicial powers of interpretation that define the range of such authority.
J. Albert Nock
Don’t let facts interfere with your insanity
|
Stiletto11 is offline
|
|
03-06-2013, 16:36
|
#13
|
Guerrilla Chief
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: South Africa
Posts: 911
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Stiletto11
The people who use the rhino horn never heard of Viagra.
|
It is probably used in hopeless cases Stiletto, and Viagra makes a poor dagger handle.
|
Guymullins is offline
|
|
03-06-2013, 19:43
|
#14
|
Guerrilla
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Behind Enemy Lines
Posts: 370
|
What's wrong with wood?
__________________
It is those who believe that written constitutions can protect the individual from the exercise of state power who
hold to a baseless idealism, particularly when it is the state’s judicial powers of interpretation that define the range of such authority.
J. Albert Nock
Don’t let facts interfere with your insanity
|
Stiletto11 is offline
|
|
03-06-2013, 19:49
|
#15
|
Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Free Pineland
Posts: 24,780
|
Not trying to be insensitive here, but....
You are an poor African, and your family is starving.
A foreigner offers you more than a year's salary (if you could find a job) to bring him a rhino horn.
The future of the rhino is probably not a primary concern right then.
What would you do?
Is there an unqualified right or wrong answer?
I don't think the tribesman doing the poaching is necessarily the CARVER target.
I think the answer lies a little further up the food chain.
Guy, I hear what you are saying, and have heard the same thing about the ivory trade.
TR
__________________
"It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat." - President Theodore Roosevelt, 1910
De Oppresso Liber 01/20/2025
|
The Reaper is offline
|
|
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
|
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 13:55.
|
|
|