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Here in Namibia poaching has steadily been on the rise and is certainly a big problem today. We now have an anti poaching team of 6 guys who live and breath the bush 24 hours a day 7 days a week. We caught a few poachers this year, most got fines and a couple ended up in jail for a few years for attempted murder after coming at our guys with a knife and a machete (our guys have even had spears thrown at them), luckily no one on our anti poaching team has been hurt so far. When needed they call for back up with their provided cell phones. We make arrests, usually shoot the dogs on site if present and call the police. Catching poachers is not an easy task especially over a large area. Having an anti poaching team in place is a little bit of a deterrent but does not stop the poachers just slows them down. Our team is constantly monitoring our hunting territory looking for poachers but also collecting snares and traps that they come across on game trails which they turn in. Here are the snares found over the last couple of weeks, since the beginning of November (19 days, 93 snares).
Here is a pile of snares found over the last 6 months which have been destroyed by cutting them apart to ensure that they are not ever used again.
Once the animal is in the snare, poachers use spears (the ones below average 1.40 meter/55 inches long) to finish off the animal if not already dead. Here are some recovered poachers' spears which I kept, all made of metal. The worst part about the snares is that the poachers leave behind many set snares that will continue to catch and kill animal that come into contact with them for years after the poachers have moved on.
Here is a pile of snares found over the last 6 months which have been destroyed by cutting them apart to ensure that they are not ever used again.
Once the animal is in the snare, poachers use spears (the ones below average 1.40 meter/55 inches long) to finish off the animal if not already dead. Here are some recovered poachers' spears which I kept, all made of metal. The worst part about the snares is that the poachers leave behind many set snares that will continue to catch and kill animal that come into contact with them for years after the poachers have moved on.
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