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  • 30
    Apr
    2013
    11:26am, EDT

    I smell a rat: New York City dogs hunt hated rodents

    Craig Ruttle / AP

    Susan Friedenberg of New York takes a rat from Tanner, her border terrier, in lower Manhattan on April 26.

    By Jennifer Peltz of The Associated Press

    NEW YORK — Bodies tense and noses twitching, the dogs sniff the fertile hunting ground before them: a lower Manhattan alley, grimy, dim and perfect for rats. With a terse command — "Now!" — the chase is on.

    Known with a chuckle as the Ryders Alley Trencher-fed Society — parse the acronym — the rodent-hunters have been scouring downtown byways for more than a decade, meeting weekly when weather allows. Read full story

     

    Craig Ruttle / AP

    A group of dog owners gather in a lower Manhattan park April 26 before a hunt for rats that takes their various breeds into New York City alleys. Participants say the hunts are less about killing rats than giving dogs the experience of chasing them.

    Craig Ruttle / AP

    A dog named Paco, owned by Bill Reyna of Wayne, N.J., looks over a dead rat in a lower Manhattan alley on April 26.

    Craig Ruttle / AP

    A wire-haired dachshund named Vina, owned by Trudy Kawami of New York, carries a rat after catching it in a lower Manhattan alley on April 26.

    Craig Ruttle / AP

    A number of rats are displayed in a lower Manhattan alley, caught and killed by small hunting dogs, on April 26.

    Previously on PhotoBlog:

    • Putin and his pooches frolic in the snow
    • Blind sled dog thrives with brother's help
    • Puppy refuses to leave his dead mother's side following ethnic violence in Myanmar

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    10 comments

    This is what these small breeds were developed for in the 1200s/1300s because the, Civilized religious Society at that time killed all of the reptiles [EVIL Satanistic Creatures who seduced Eve] which were keeping rodent populations under control. When they killed the reptiles it brought on over-pop …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: animal, hunting, new-jersey, rat, new-york-city, us-news, featured, vermin
  • 26
    Dec
    2012
    3:21pm, EST

    Boxing Day traditions: Shopping, hunting, and swimming are among Brits' picks

    Olivia Harris / Reuters

    Shoppers beg sales assistants for perfume products at Selfridges on the morning of the Boxing Day sales in London on Dec. 26. Retailers in recent years have started sales online on Christmas Day, ahead of the clearances in stores from Boxing Day, but are increasingly launching their online offers before Christmas after delivery deadlines for the day have passed.

    Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images

    Shoppers sit on benches in a busy Oxford Street on Dec. 26, in London, England. Thousands of shoppers are in London looking for a bargain in the traditional Boxing Day sales.

    Matt Cardy / Getty Images

    Stuart Radbourne, huntsman and joint-master with the Avon Vale Hunt, leads the riders and hounds for their traditional Boxing Day hunt, on Dec. 26, in Lacock, England. As hundreds of hunts met today, Environment Secretary Owen Paterson claimed that moves to repeal the ban on hunting with dogs in England and Wales may not happen in 2013, although he insisted it was still the government's intention to give MPs a free vote on lifting the ban.

    Darren Staples / Reuters

    A member of the Quorn hunt laughs before the start of the traditional Boxing Day meet at Prestwold Hall near Loughborough, central England, on Dec. 26. A ban imposed seven years ago states that foxes can be killed by a bird of prey or shot but not hunted by dogs. Hunts continue nowadays with pursuers accompanying dogs in chasing down a pre-laid scented trail.

    Matt Cardy / Getty Images

    Huntsman Mike Smith from the Avon Vale Hunt, joins supporters outside the Red Lion pub who have gathered to watch their traditional Boxing Day hunt, on Dec. 26, in Lacock, England.

    Rebecca Naden / Reuters

    Hundreds of swimmers wearing costumes take part in the annual Tenby Boxing Day swim in Tenby, Wales, on Dec. 26.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

     

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: hunting, shopping, united-kingdom, boxing-day
  • 6
    Oct
    2012
    4:42pm, EDT

    Hunting with eagles in snowy Kyrgyzstan

    Vyacheslav Oseledko / AFP - Getty Images

    A hunter holds his golden eagle during the "Salburun" hunting festival in Bokonbayevo, Kyrgyzstan, Oct. 6.

    Vyacheslav Oseledko / AFP - Getty Images

    A hunter holds his golden eagle in Bokonbayevo, Kyrgyzstan, on Oct. 6.

    Related content on PhotoBlog:

    • Eagles soar when an ancient tradition comes to life
    • The last stag hunt: 45 years of stalking deer in Scotland

     

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    3 comments

    This is a Goshawk. Decidedly not an eagle of any sort! Responsible journalism includes captioning after the picture is developed.

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    Explore related topics: central-asia, animals, hunting, kyrgyzstan, world-news, eagle
  • 1
    Oct
    2012
    11:35am, EDT

    The last stag hunt: 45 years of stalking deer in Scotland

    Jeff J. Mitchell / Getty Images

    Head stalker Peter Fraser leads a shooting party up to Milstone Cairn on the Invercauld Estate in Braemar, Scotland, on Sept. 28, 2012.

    Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images

    Peter Fraser prepares to load a freshly shot stag onto a pony.

    After forty five years as a professional stalker, and 43 years as the head stalker on the Invercauld Estate, Peter Fraser is working his last red deer stag season before his retirement in November. (Stalking is the term used in Scotland for hunting and shooting deer.) The stalking season runs from July until October.

    According to the Invercauld Estate website, "the land has been in the ownership of the Farquharson family for many centuries and extends to approximately 200 square miles of spectacular scenery. The Estate is managed commercially but with great respect for the natural environment."

    Read more about gamekeepers and Peter Fraser on the Scottish Gamekeepers Association website. 

    Editor's note: This series of pictures was made available Oct. 1.

     

    Jeff J. Mitchell / Getty Images

    Peter Fraser, right, and his hunting party look down on a stag at Loch Kander on the Invercauld Estate on Sept. 29, 2012, in Braemar, Scotland.

    Jeff J. Mitchell / Getty Images

    Peter Fraser drags a shot stag at Milstone Cairn on the Invercauld Estate on Sept. 28, 2012.

    Jeff J. Mitchell / Getty Images

    Peter Fraser disembowels a deer in Corrie Kander on the Invercauld Estate on Sept. 29, 2012.

    Jeff J. Mitchell / Getty Images

    Peter Fraser stands in the larder doorway on Auchallater farm on the Invercauld Estate on Sept. 29, 2012.

     

    6 comments

    Thats a pretty impressive buck.

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    Explore related topics: britain, hunting, deer, scotland, great-britain
  • 11
    May
    2012
    11:07am, EDT

    Python hunter searches Florida Everglades for snake invaders

    Erik S. Lesser / EPA

    Python hunter Edward Mercer searches through the Southern Glades area of the Everglades outside Florida City, Florida. Pictures taken March 24 and 25, 2012 and made available today.

    Erik S. Lesser / EPA

    Mercer searches through the vast Southern Glades.

    European Pressphoto Agency reports — Meet 39-year-old Edward Mercer, one of a handful of permitted python hunters in South Florida.

    Since the 1990s, non-native Burmese pythons, one of the world's largest species of snake, have been flourishing in the Everglades National Park and surrounding areas. Pet owners have been known to release the snakes into the wild, where they quickly revert to their natural state.

    Crocodiles thrive as neighbors of Florida nuclear plant

    Burmese pythons are voracious feeders and prey on the native wildlife of the Everglades, including American alligators, raccoons, rabbits, bobcats and many different birds. The National Park Service is concerned about the impact of the pythons on the delicate ecosystem of the area.

    Mercer doesn't get paid for hunting the snakes, but says he enjoys the rush of finding and capturing the elusive, semi-aquatic pythons. To date, he has caught 26 Burmese pythons, the largest of which was 12 feet long and weighed in at 43 pounds.  When he finds one, he turns it over to the state or federal wildlife authorities, depending on where it was found.

    According to the Park Service, more than 1,800 Burmese pythons have been removed from the Everglades since 2002.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Erik S. Lesser / EPA

    Mercer sets up an automated camera for homeowner Marty Ward in West Palm Beach. He searches for pythons in residential areas when contacted by concerned homeowners.

    Erik S. Lesser / EPA

    Mercer handles one of his pet Burmese pythons at his home in Tamarac. He owns seven snakes, including two pythons. Mercer was afraid of snakes until someone gave him one.

     

    2 comments

    The last picture is really amazing and for me the best thing to look at in this post. Watching a yellow and white burmese python is a great thing to see and every time I see one of these beautiful snakes it really excites me. Burmese pythons are probably the largest pythons and I am not sure that it …

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    Explore related topics: animals, python, florida, hunting, nature, environment, snake, us-news, everglades
  • 9
    Dec
    2011
    2:04pm, EST

    Eagles soar when an ancient tradition comes to life

    Shamil Zhumatov / Reuters

    A hunter releases his tamed golden eagle during an annual hunting competition outside Almaty, Kazakhstan Dec. 9, 2011.

    Shamil Zhumatov / Reuters

    A hunter with his tame golden eagle sits on a stage during an annual hunting competition outside Almaty, Kazakhstan on Dec. 9, 2011.

    By Natalia Jimenez, NBC News

    I would love to see these eagles in person. What beautiful creatures.

    These hunters are continuing their country's ancient tradition that originated in using eagles to hunt for food. According to the BBC, the Kazakhstan government has been encouraging these eagle hunting competitions actually as a way to help the falcon population, which was facing extinction. The audience the golden eagles attract helps fund a falcon conservation center.

    Shamil Zhumatov / Reuters

    A tame golden eagle is seen during an annual hunting competition outside Almaty, Kazakhstan on Dec. 9.

    A hunter releases his tame golden eagle during an annual hunting competition outside Almaty, Kazakhstan Dec. 9.

     

    2 comments

    I don't know where you live but hunting with birds of prey is legal in some states. Check around and you may find a group that have training trials and competitions with these type of birds.

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    Explore related topics: travel, eagles, kazakhstan, animals, hunting, birds
  • 12
    Nov
    2011
    7:52pm, EST

    Hunting alligators, a renewable resource in Louisiana

    Excerpted from Once Magazine:

    Spencer Strub writes: The one with pretty eyes almost got Curtis “Rebel” Rageur. All alligators' eyes are like cats’ eyes, marbled and iridescent, lined by the tapetum lucidum that flashes in the night. This particular alligator, however, had unusually beautiful eyes. (Editor's note: Some images in this post are graphic.)

    Matt Eich / LUCEO for Once Magazine

    A baited hook hangs low to the water of Shell Island, La., where commercial gator hunters Julius and Rebel are part way through the annual alligator hunting season. The state of Louisiana is home to the largest alligator population in the United States, estimated to be almost 2 million. Alligators are North America's largest reptiles and are considered a renewable resource in an industry that has thrived in America's deep south for centuries. The first large alligator harvests occurred during the early 1800s. The alligator farming industry in Louisiana alone annually harvests 140,000-170,000 gators which are valued at over $12,000,000.

    Rageur couldn’t help but stop and stare. The catch had been relatively simple: no bayou-bank scramble, no reaching under the boat to free a stuck line, only a hard pull, a quick haul to lift the alligator from the water into the boat, and a single gunshot to the head. The gator lay prone and still, dead enough.

    Matt Eich / LUCEO for Once Magazine

    Rebel eyes the shore for a gator that had taken the baited line into the reeds while alligator hunting near Shell Island, La., on Sept. 19, 2009.

    Rageur turned, breaking his eye-to-eye reverie to attend to the other side of the boat. With his legs splayed over the alligator’s mouth, he noticed the alligator start to move. “When they start moving around in the boat,” Rageur says, “you get nervous.” The alligator leapt upwards, but Rageur leapt faster, saving his legs and other vitals.

    Matt Eich / LUCEO for Once Magazine

    Rebel plants a second bullet in the head of a gator that kept moving after being hauled into the boat while hunting for alligators near Shell Island, La. Each gator is then tagged before being piled in the bottom of the boat.

    Jaws closed on air. Rageur drew his handgun and fired again. And again. This experience isn’t entirely uncommon: Rageur says that an alligator that looks dead may revive, even after being shot in the head. He has had to shoot alligators as many as eight times to keep them down. “It gets a little hairy at times,” Rageur admits. 

    Matt Eich / LUCEO for Once Magazine

    Bodies of recently caught alligators line the bottom of the boat. Julius Gaudet, 62, and Rebel average nine gators a day but this day landed thirteen.

    Msnbc.com is starting a partnership with Once Magazine. They attracted our attention on a couple of fronts. First, in an age of ever more bite-sized journalism, they were setting out with a contrarian goal; to publish long-form stories each month. Second, they wanted those stories, which touch on a wide range of topics, to rest on “visually arresting” imagery. And they’ve done that, which is why we wanted to share an excerpt from one of their first stories here.

    Finally, the founders are trying to change the traditional publishing model. Thanks to the democratization of online delivery and app development, they are trying out their ideas with an iPad app. The free pilot issue debuted in September, followed by their first paid issue in October. If you decide to download their app, part of the revenue from that sale will be shared directly with the contributing photographers.

    For the full stories and more from Once Magazine:

    Once magazine online

    Once magazine iPad app

     

    3 comments

    In our "artificial" environment someone has to kill the predators. Gators are known to kill and eat your pets. Gators will kill and eat you if they get a chance. Learn a little about zoology before you start preaching about animal rights. PETA is another word for Ignorant. (Get Educated!)

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    Explore related topics: hunting, louisiana, environment, alligator, us-news, once-magazine
  • 3
    Feb
    2011
    9:01am, EST

    Martin Meissner / AP

    A man touches a stufffed lion between an elephant and a rhino at the international hunting fair in Dortmund, Germany, Thursday, Feb. 3, 2011.

    Europe's biggest hunting and fishing fair begins

    By Mish Whalen

    "Jagd & Hund" is Europe's biggest fair for hunting and fishing. See more information on the fair here.

    5 comments

    gruesome why are they displaying rare and endangered animals which have decimated by trophy hunters and poachers.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: germany, hunting, fair, fishing
  • 29
    Dec
    2010
    5:58pm, EST

    Brad Dokken / AP

    Ryan and Josie Muirhead of Roseau, Minnesota, display the massive rack of a bull elk in East Grand Forks, Minnesota on Dec. 28. Ryan was hunting deer with a muzzleloader in Kittson County in northern Minnesota on Dec. 12 when he and a couple of buddies came across the bull lying on its back with its antlers mired in the mud after tripping while crossing a fence. Muirhead and seven others managed to free the elk, but it died two days later. The rack was green-scored at 456 1/2 inches. If the score holds to become official after the mandatory 60-day drying period, it will become the No. 5-ranked elk rack in the world.

    Hunter nabs massive elk rack in Minnesota

    By Jim Seida

    As incredible as this rack is, it still falls short of the world's record elk rack by 22-1/8 inches. You can read about the current world record rack, confirmed by the Boone and Crockett club, here.

    1 comment

    Nice Rack, eh.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: hunting, minnesota, hunter, elk

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