Thanks Chris, must have been too hard to look at a map
So just who is running goats as a commerical enterprise in the marine park again?
Do they have boats? Do the goats swim? Is the Sudanese goat fk'er involved?
Are they farming goats in the Cape Range National Park and DEC is covering it up?
So many questions
The Sudanese goat f'ker is running the pastoral lease and turned into a panty wetties snuffer.... that what I understood off the whole saga!![]()
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I think the sudanese fella has got it sussed, he has married the goat she will inevitably get fat no divorce he can just eat her. they will be an easy to spot couple when they get to Christmas Island![]()
LOL
If you are going to troll, then learn to fkn quote its not even as complex as feral goats eating bushes.
Why don't you take your goat beef up with the relevant leaseholders, DEC and others who can do something.
Posting on seabreeze like a retard will probably get you more piss takes than anything else.
Oh i almost congratulated you on the quotes thing. but sadly you failed again.
Also consider an avatar, they add character to your ananonimity
It is easier to have a sook here, incorrectly claim the pastoral leases are "marine park" and complain that the lawful lessee of the property doesn't like people illegally camping at Turtles
Not a fence sitter lePrechaun. If the goats, horses, camels, foxes, rabbits, wild dogs or euros in wicked vans are out there ruining the land through over-grazing or poor management practices on the pastoral leases adjacent to the ningaloo world heritage area then you have my support.
But your first few posts on seabreeze allege a problem that doesnt exist. The world heritage area at ningaloo does not, I say again, does not include areas of Pastoral lease. Even when I provide links to a map you still sick your head in the sand and insist it does. Provide us with some evidence to support your case and I will happily eat a serve of humble pie and admit I was wrong but I think you are going to have trouble finding evidence of a goats destroying ningaloo coral and sea grass beds.
Many of the guys here are quite passionate about preservation of the coastline and adjacent land especially the Places mentioned in this thread and you would get lots of support if you presented a sound case that didn't make you look like a tool the moment your first post popped up.
no big conspiracy here.
Yes Leprechaun live stock is detrimental to the coastline nobody will disagree there.
But like Chris said the stations are not in the final world heritage listing
They are also not in the marine park or the national park.
The marine park covers the water not the land and the national park spends probably millions on eradicating pests of which the goats are included. If you new the amount that goes into removing them you would realize no station would have the money to even come close. As far as I know the stations just ship out whatever they catch. As for the millions spent by tourists visiting the area what a load of crap it doesn't even cover an environmental scientists wage let alone the time they spend keeping everyone off the dune grass.
Well said mate.
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So what's the consensus...will I be looked upon poorly if I bag myself a goat next time I'm up there?
I wouldn't need a gun to bag a goat. Sorry, probably should have mentioned that. Can easily catch them by hand and do the dirty work with a knife ![]()
hey Turtle hunter
quote
"As for the millions spent by tourists visiting the area what a load of crap it doesn't even cover an environmental scientists wage"
end quote
while I agree with most of what you said, do the maths on the above
(visitors a day x daily fee) then let me know where I can get one of those environmental jobs
as far as I know you can pay an environmental scientist by collecting aluminium cans![]()
I am with you there Turtlehunter, I mean I am no lover of goats
but the last thing I want to see in the north west is more DEC camp ground franchises (ban the copper log)