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AUS Press: Free beer for toads

Mar 22, 2006 08:31 PM

NORTHERN TERRITORY NEWS (Darwin, Australia) 20 March 06 Free beer for toads (Ben Langford)
Territorians are being offered free beer in return for live cane toads.
The RSPCA, Coopers Brewery and the Cavenagh Hotel have teamed up in the name of animal welfare and the result is that toads can be turned into beer.
In a move designed to turn seasoned Top End beer drinkers into lean, mean, toad-catching machines, the three Darwin organisations have got together to set up a toad-for-beer exchange.
Anyone over the age of 18 who captures a toad and delivers it alive to the Darwin RSPCA qualifies for a glass of icy cold Coopers beer at the Cavenagh Hotel.
``Everyone who takes a cane toad to the RSPCA to be disposed of humanely gets a voucher for a free pot of Coopers ale at the Cav,'' Coopers Brewery's NT sales executive Sean Gould said.
He said there would be a beer for each toad - up to a limit of six a day.
``It's an idea we had from the locally-produced movie Bufo Marinators that screened at the Cav last week,'' Mr Gould said.
The film, which featured a posse of toad hunters and a simulated orgy of bufo killing, caused quite a fuss.
``We want to encourage the humane treatment of animals,'' acting chief executive of RSPCA Darwin Lindsay Wilkinson said yesterday.
``If you get a free Coopers out of it then it's a bonus.''
Cavenagh Hotel general manager Brett Simmonds said: ``It's all about the toads, not about the beer.'' But the toads must be alive.
``No coupons for squashed toads,'' Mr Wilkinson said.
He was keen to make it clear he wasn't starting a roadkill collection. ``Healthy, live, no squashed cane toads,'' he said.
And Mr Simmonds agreed, saying the deal was ``fresh toads for fresh beer''.
While the toad catchers are enjoying their cold ale, the RSPCA will be busy euthanasing the toads with sodium pentobarbitone, an overdose of barbituates administered with a few drops on the skin that kills toads immediately.
``It's the most humane way to kill an animal,'' Mr Wilkinson said.
``They just go to sleep.''
But beer fiends shouldn't get too worked up.
Mr Simmonds said there would be a six-pot maximum per person per day.
``The idea is to get people catching toads and taking them for humane disposal, not to get people too drunk,'' Mr Simmonds said.
``If you take six toads in to the RSPCA, you get six vouchers. If you take 100 toads, you get six vouchers.''
But he's worried people will get the wrong idea and deliver a bucket load of toads to his pub hoping to trade them for a few cold ones.
Mr Simmonds said no one would get a beer for taking a toad to the pub.
He said the toads must be taken to the RSPCA at 80 Boulter Rd Berrimah between 1pm and 5pm on weekdays.
Vouchers for the promotion will be valid until April 30.

= = =
I try not to editorialise, but the item above brings back good memories.
The item reminds me of spring of 1995, when I was serving as a peacekeeper in Croatia. My garrison was situated near a woods that was a home to Fire salamanders (Šareni daždevnjak) …. most of whom had to trot (slowly) through our camp, spring and fall, on their way to-and-fro the breeding and hibernation sites.
The locals had previously identified these salamanders to the multi-national peacekeepers as the equivilant of ‘venomous vermin’, and my peers had been warned that the Fires were absolutely dangerous.
By the time I got to the camp for my tour, soldiers wearing blue berets had been stmping caudates flat on the camps’ roads for over three years.
I immediately started an education campaign in the various messes (soldiers clubs) about the local herp wildlife, and emphasied that the omni-present Fire Salamanders and some-times seen ‘Glass Lizard’ (or ‘Glavor’ in local parlance) were in fact harmless and both deserving of our protection. To emphasise the value of the migrating amphibians, I put up a bounty of a bottle of Heiniken for each Fire Salamander turned into the Intelligence trailer. (My staff by this time were well used to my idiosyncrasies). Later, the bounty was offered on the honour-system … if you moved a Fire off of the road or out of the vehicle compound, the beer would appear. After two months … the Canadians and Czechs were moving the by-then-infrequently-seen Fire salamanders out of pits and trenches without benefit of beer! (The Argentinians were still having problems handling the sudden appearance of Glass Lizards from within the collapsed buildings on their side of the camp – they were convinced that the criers were not only venomous … but had supplemental stings in their tail!)
So, while the intentions of our (mine and Australia’s) two beer-bounties are completely at odds, it does go to show that … at least with young male herpers … a proper education and modest incentive program can have significant effects.

Cheers all,

Wes
Free beer for toads

Replies (2)

Apr 03, 2006 12:11 PM

AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION 21 March 06 Slow take-up of beer-for-toads deal
The Darwin branch of the RSPCA says only two cane toads have been handed in so far in exchange for free beer.
The male toads were handed in yesterday morning.
The RSPCA's Lindsay Wilkinson says he is pleased people have not tried to pass off toads collected before the free beer offer.
"If people just turned up with cane toads you'd have to think they were hanging on to their cane toads," he said.
"I think by tomorrow and the next day it will start to build up as people go out and find the cane toads."
Slow take-up of beer-for-toads deal

Apr 03, 2006 12:13 PM

HERNANDO TODAY (Florida) 31 March 06 Tortoises must move to make way for school (Angeline Taylor)
Spring Hill: A 30-acre parcel off Northcliffe Boulevard and Azora Road has served as home to 20 gopher tortoises for years.
All that will change this year.
The gopher tortoises will be moved to make way for the county's newest three-story school. But, in moving the ancient creatures, the county school district's facilities team ran into problems.
It would seem logical to relocate the tortoises to land owned by governmental agencies such as the Southwest Florida Water Management District, also known as Swiftmud.
That process, however, is mired in paperwork, according to the facilities' team that inquired with representatives of Swiftmud about the best place to move the tortoises.
"I think we need to make a request to Swiftmud for consideration since they own a lot of property," said school board member Pat Fagan. "And, again, it is taxpayer property."
Board members decided for a second go round in asking the water agency representatives for help in relocating the 20 gopher tortoises.
When Swiftmud was first approached, said one facilities team worker, they didn't sound as if any land was available.
"That's ridiculous if you ask me," said board member Robert Wiggins about the Swiftmud response. "It's just funny all the property they're buying around the state ..."
As a result of the early response from Swiftmud officials, the facilities department needed to use other resources to relocate the turtles currently living on the site that will be home to the county's second kindergarten through eighth grade school.
Their back-up plan was school district property located by Lake Lindsey. Property, however, that could eventually be sold by the school district.
"That piece of property has a lot of issues," said schools executive director of facility and support operations Ken Pritz during the board workshop on the new school. "It's free and clear to do what we want with it."
Pritz advised that no school should be built on the property but suggested it might be ideal for offices. Either way, moving the turtles to the Lake Lindsey property didn't sit well with one school board member. Fagan said he believed moving the tortoises to the Lake Lindsey property could bring problems for school district officials later if they decided to build or sell the property.
"I totally agree with you," Fagan said to the facilities' team. "We've got to mitigate. Again, it's on the lake. It's a very expensive piece of property. But I don't know if that's the site where we need to locate the tortoises."
Schools facilities director Roland Bavota explained that the places to relocate them were dwindling especially since there are several mandates placed on tortoise relocation.
"They're not readily available," Bavota said about acceptable types of land to transfer the tortoises. "There aren't many places you can put them now."
Typically, said one facilities workers, they like to move the tortoises to a corner of the property where they already live. However, the way the school is designed that can't take place.
"Mr. Fagan, if (the Lake Lindsey property) would sell to a developer, I don't think he would care much about the turtles," Bavota said. "I don't even think it would diminish the price of the property."
Fagan disagreed.
"You know as well as I know what the developer would do if they bought the property and I don't think that's something we need to make comments about," Fagan said.
Right now, the 20 tortoises are being trapped for blood samples that will determine if any of the tortoises are too ill for the trip to another location.
The Lake Lindsey property consists of 40 acres with a portion of the land under the lake.
Tortoises must move to make way for school

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