Sadly an avoidable death in this case. We have had a number of deaths because people cannot empty inflatable pools and cubs fall in and drown or because people are so lazy that they put up netting for football etc but will not consider wildlife and pull it up in the evenings. Another net caused death.
Friday, 22 May 2026
Fox Cub Dies Due To Netting -AGAIN
Monday, 18 May 2026
So How Much Would It Cost To Fund The Fox Study?
above: Fig. 1: Analyses of the relationship among aggressive, tame and conventional red fox populations.
From: Red fox genome assembly identifies genomic regions associated with tame and aggressive behaviours
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Someone asked, specifically, what financial figure would be needed to continuer just the fox study.
To be honest I have never stated a specific amount because
in the past I did try PayPal donations as well as Go Fund
An example: "One of the most famous ridiculous GoFundMe campaigns that successfully raised a surprising amount of money was a $35,000 fundraiser started by a fan to "purchase" Foo Fighters frontman Dave Grohl, which managed to raise nearly $2,000 before the campaign creator stated that if they couldn't legally buy him, they would just spend all the money on beer. "
DNA testing the Old type foxes and wild cats is one big expense because of the species cross-checking needed:
Wild animal DNA testing in the
Specific testing costs and services vary based on your
specific requirements:
Species Identification: Identifying a general biological species (e.g., mammals, birds, bats, insects) usually ranges from £60 to £130 plus VAT per sample.
eDNA (Environmental DNA): Testing soil, water, or other
environmental samples to detect the presence of wildlife (like great crested
newts) typically starts around £248.
Wildlife Forensics: For complex, accredited forensic analysis (such as parentage or specific individual identification for badgers or deer), fees range from £250 to £400 plus VAT per sample.
When I have enquired to laboratories the cost they range far higher than the amounts noted above. For DNA testing what specimens we have £4-5,000?
Purchasing other taxidermies to preserve them for testing and
correcting the record might be a similar amount. Once a specimen is gone it is
lost forever and cannot contribute to our knowledge of Old Foxes or Old Wild
cats. You can see that the combined amounts so far are at roughly £10,000
which, as far as I can see, are amounts that cannot be raised in the
No
Covering everything as an ongoing study would be around the
£20,000 mark and for the
Last month the blog had 10,140 visitors and if each donated £2/$2 that takes care of a lot of expenses from the study. 198,460 views of the blog for All Time –that £1/$1 idea sounds wonderful!😂
I have spent 50 years on the fox study and the one thing I
have always come up against is the total lack of interest in the species and
the history of foxes in the
When I read something like this online I have to take a deep breath and grit my teeth BECAUSE no Old fox types or knowledge of Old fox types was involved. “Vulpes vulpes has always been here” is a dogmatic statement based on poor research.
“
Sunday, 17 May 2026
There Really Must Be DNA Testing
It took many years to acquire specimens of what were the last vestiges of Old British fox and Old wild cat. The Colquhoun Mountain/Greyhound fox is seen as the classic example and my colleague LM managed to acquire it through sheer luck. Colquhoun, at the time a very noted naturalist-'sportsman' described the fox as being a perfect example of the species. It was killed during the 1830s -a period during with the three Old type foxes were heading intro extinction.
There is little doubt that the Old British mountain fox was a fox -in the past before testing there were many often silly suggestions as to its origins- and that similar foxes existed in Western/Central Europe. The Red fox (Vulpes vulpes) gradually moving from the East into Europe along human migratory routes. Taxidermy specimens are rare to find due to age or lack of interest. No single museum in the United Kingdom or N. Ireland/Eire possess any specimens. I know because I communicated with each and every one of them and the oldest foxes they had were post 1900. The Extinct Fox and Wild Cat Museum (EFWCM) has the largest collection including two foxes from the noted French naturalist Sarrazin -which may be either the first examples of old North American fox or specimens of Old European fox.
Similarly, in the 1830s, Colquhoun also shot what are thought to have been the last pair of Old wild cats from Scotland before the European wild cat was introduced for hunting and then interbred with feral domestic cats. The Old wild cats were known in as "The English Tiger" but after extinction that title moved north to be adopted for "the Highland Tiger" of Scotland.
These cats were much bigger than the wild cats of today, were sandy/yellowish and had "tiger stripes" and were so powerful that hunters attached metal spiked leather collars to their hounds as hounds could be easily killed by the cats. Human fatalities were also known as the cats gave no quarter when bordered or wounded.
The Colquhoun cats are probably the last of the genetic line and, again, there seems to be evidence that such cats existed in Western Europe (we know of a specimen at a museum in Ireland that looks to be Felis lybica in origin and was probably introduced there during the Iron Age).
Without going into overlong hypothesis the Old wild cat would be a distinct species that was killed off and later replaced by what we know as the European wild cat of today. This makes sense since Ireland, Britain and Europe were once joined and animals roamed freely with no obstacles in their way.
What we do not have, because of the lack of museum specimens (there is an 1845 British fox in a Netherlands museum) is any DNA test results because of that. DNA results could well re-write British, Irish and European natural history on these two species.
No labs seem interested in testing samples and such tests are beyond any finances we have.
Friday, 8 May 2026
It Has Been A While -Who Cares?
Apart from a while living in Germany I was born and raised in Bristol. From an early age I had an interest in wildlife from the smallest insect to the largest mammal. I think it amused my gran when I used to pick up worms from her garden in St Werburgh's and just hold and examine them.
St Werburgh's was great as we lived in Sevier Street with the brook and Mina Road Park to our rear. The odd owl landing on the window sill at night was "fun" (huge glowing eyes outside the window); I interacted with a pretty smart jackdaw and even observed a large caterpillar that after all of these years (I was about 10 years old at the time) I have never been able to identify what species it was.
In 1975 whilst walking to work down Pennywell Road I saw by first fox out in the daylight (it was around 0630) -not far behind it was a pursuer: a chunky black and white tom cat that looked determined to teach "that damned dog" a lesson for coming into its area. A year later I set up the British Fox Study here in Bristol. I also looked into wild cats and badgers. In 1977 I was rather accidentally drawn into exotic animals and spent 1977-2018 acting as a UK police forces wildlife consultant (and later as part of the Partnership Against Wildlife Crime -PAWS).
Yes, I did get interviewed in newspapers 9national and regional) and even on local, national and non UK (Australia and Forces Radio Europe) on my work.
So I started out all those decades ago and tried as best I could to avoid publiciity while I also helped people build wildlife pounds, remove the odd adder that had wandered into their garden and tried to persuade local authorities (Conservative, Labour and currently the very non Greens) to help do more for the environment and help conserve our rapidly dwindling wildlife.
I had the first ever post mortem study into fox deaths set up in Bristol which yielded some interesting results. Outside the UK I am known for my research on canids and felids -particularly extinct ones and I managed to identify which fox inhabited Hong Kong before hunting drove it extinct -something naturalists there had been unable to do.
In 2000 I wrote a paper that clearly stated there WAS a genuine Corsican wild cat (aka "fox-cat") -science caught up with me about five years ago!
I have researched and discovered what the original British fox looked like as well as the wild cat -al archived and published for posterity.
British academia's response? "You aren't with a university are you?" which is their way of saying "you ain't part of the club". Far more interest outside the UK.
The question I keep getting asked by people who wonder WHY I still do all of this with no financial reward or official recognition (I liked it when someone pointed out that a lady who was a public toilet attendant for 30 years got an MBE for her work but "You just get tones of ------ thrown at you!" -it stops any ego developing)
From the 1970s when things were bleak -the Energy Crisis and power cuts- to the 1980s when people seemed to be trying to at least do something to save the environment and wildlife we have seen, since the late 1990s, a downward spiral of not many caring about all of the UK species going extinct, all the trees being cut down and Green Spaces grabbed for selling off.
Local authorities and national governments all have the same mantra: "**** wildlife and the environment -there is money to be made!"
When I am gone very few are going to even know about the work I have done. The UK as a whole doers not care what is going on outside of TV or on the internet. Otters, badgers, foxes and deer are all piling up on the roadside (former wildlife track) but build under or over passes for wildlife to cross? No. That would cost money -it's just wildlife after all.
Friday, 24 April 2026
STOP! CHECK! REPORT!
We hit 100 dead foxes (reported) in Bristol on Wednesday. Today I listed foxes 101 and 102 and awaiting info on (possibly) 103.
Thursday, 23 April 2026
It;s Earth Day -The Planet Is Saved?
Wednesday, 22 April 2026
100th Fox Death
It is sad to think that it is only the 22nd April and we have reached 100 dead foxes reported. With lactating vixens dying the death toll would be much higher if we knew the number of cubs they had that would die once the mother was gone.
100 Wednesday 22 04 2026 Stoke Bishop
Vixen 4.7kg Collapsed in a garden. Strong smell of infection but no external wounds.
After arriving at vets puss like blood came out of nose Vet wasn't sure but fox was too poorly to save Pts at Highcroft Shirehampton
Fox Cub Dies Due To Netting -AGAIN
Sadly an avoidable death in this case. We have had a number of deaths because people cannot empty inflatable pools and cubs fall in and dr...
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The painting depicts "A Fox Stalking a Brace of Partridges" by Jean-Baptiste Oudry, a renowned 18th-century French Rococo pain...
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In one of those "we are stupid and so are people" items on the interest it asked "What is a naturalist?" It answered...
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Field Naturalist specialising in Mammalogy and wild canids and felids in particular. From 1977- acted as a UK police forces advisor on ex...



