If you don't like the
idea of traps, how about using a ferret instead?
This is the first time I've tried ferreting. The concept is
simple: Find a rabbit burrow with multiple holes. Using little purse nets,
cover every hole you can find. Pop the ferret under a net into the burrow and
let her (females are best) hunt the rabbits. The rabbits run in fear, bolt out
of a hole covered with a net, and get caught. Rabbits can be dispatched quickly
(and turned into rabbit curry later).
I shadowed Winsor, a keen ferreter. He was hired to clear
out some rabbit burrows undermining the formal lawns at the big house. Moles
and rabbits create soil mounds and hollows when burrowing. Mounds and hollows
are tolerated around the informal parts of the garden, parts that are mowed
with a giant tractor or grazed by sheep. But, in the formal gardens, the soil
mounds ruin the blades on fine cylinder mowers, upset the flat surface of a
croquet lawn, and are generally unsightly.
Ferrets are of the mustelid
family. Most mustelids in Britain are
the bane of a keeper’s life: mink, weasels, stoats, polecats, even badgers. Ferrets are unique as most can be tamed by
feeding and handling (there’s always some that hold on to their independence
and bite when handled.)
Unlike working dogs, ferrets aren’t trained. Ferrets simply
follow their instincts to hunt, and rabbits follow theirs to run away. The
ferreter's job is to set the nets
and redirect the ferret when it emerges from a hole by popping it down the next
nearest hole.
I spent most of my time in this position -
Face down under a bush setting nets. Or popping ferrets back
into holes. There's not a lot of training required for the humans either. The ferret does all the work; the ferreter just adopts the laying down position. As far as vermin control goes, this is pretty low cardio.
We worked along the walled vegetable garden. There were so
many rabbit burrows underneath the wall that I was surprised it hadn't fallen
into a giant sinkhole long ago.
The ferreter and I worked the outside of the wall, and
underkeeper Ian waited inside the wall. We set nets on both sides to block both
ends of a tunnel. It's easy to hear when the ferret is on her prey: the rabbits
make a rumbling noise stamping their feet and fleeing. Then, WHAM! out of the
corner of your eye you catch sight of a rabbit bouncing about, the drawstring
purse net pulled taut around it. The ferreter’s only other job is to despatch and gut the
rabbit (and, in my case, make the curry later.)
When it works, it's magic. But the odds are in the rabbits'
favour. No matter how many bushes you crawl under, there is always one hole left
uncovered. Inevitably that’s the hole a fleeing rabbit will choose for its
escape. No net = no rabbit = no rabbit curry for dinner. We caught 3 rabbits this time. We lost 5 more to an overlooked hole.
Ferreting works best in winter, and by spring/summer we are
back to shooting the odd rabbit when we see it. And rabbit salads instead of
curry.