Rats, mice, foxes, owls, pigeons, moles, snakes and pheasants: the makings of a pleasant episode of Winnie the Pooh, an autumnal diorama of woodland life at the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia – or, for one 44-year-old UK man, 30 years worth of dinner.
Owls are fairly common roadkill- seen a surprising number recently. Never eaten one though- I’ve had roadkill deer as a kid, I think, but that’s been it.
What I haven’t seen as roadkill in the UK is a raccoon- why did they choose to illustrate that article with one?
I think he might have been on a show about sustainable living a few years ago. Although perhaps there’s more than one roadkill culinary enthusiast in the UK.
You’d think birds would tend to have a built-in defense mechanism against being run over, what with being able to fly and all. I wonder what it is about their behavior that puts them in harm’s way. I was driving in a fairly rural area, early in the morning, and something came flying out of the tall grass beside the road. It was airborne as it hit the front of my car. I always figured it was just a coincidence, but maybe a big, fast moving object triggers that behavior but they’re not fast enough to get out of the way..
Does anyone know how raccoons were introduced to Great Britain?
Not necessarily. I once drove my parents to a marina in coastal Connecticut where we had been invited to spend the day aboard the boat of a family friend. As I was driving into the parking lot, there was a gull sitting in the driveway. I assumed that it would get out of the way so I proceeded forward. But it didn’t. I figured killing a gull was a bad omen (although perhaps not as bad as killing an albatross). So I didn’t mention it to the boat owner friend.
Not small creatures, but in some places where large animals roam and sometimes get hit by cars the meat gets eaten.
My dad had a friend who was on a list of people the RCMP called when such an accident occurred, dad had a truck (his friend didn’t). Whoever got there first got the meat, so for a couple years we ate a lot of deer and sometimes moose.
Articles such as thisone and this onesuggest that, like boa constrictors and pythons in the Everglades, the raccons in England were pets that have escaped or been “released.”
I’ve seen hawks and owls get creamed by cars. So sad. What happens is they are way on one side of the road. They see a mouse/rat/whatever on the other side and go into dive bomb approach mode to get thier prey. Its bad timing where they just happen to be in the same place at the same time as the front of the car zooming down the highway. They are so focused they never notice the car.
My husband regularly has to dodge owl suicide attempts while driving to work at night. They hang out on the power pole at the edge of our property by the road and swoop down in front of him as he turns out of the driveway.
We get a lot of turkey and pheasant roadkill around here. Living off that and the inevitable tons of roadkill venison wouldn’t be a bad thing.
As (and if) the raccoon population increases in Britain, they will become more common as roadkill. For whatever reason, raccoons and opposums are what I see most frequently here in Missouri.
LOL. I’ve only eaten roadkill a couple of times. It’s something I intend to do more of this winter (winter is better because there’s a greater chance of it staying fresh until I get to it).