He fucked the poultry.
A Canadian Arctic hunter ruffled the feathers of a group of student “goose detectives” after he killed and ate one of the birds the students were tracking from more than 3,500 miles away.
Inuit hunter Devon Manik said students in Dungarvan, Ireland, had tagged about 100 Brent geese during a school project to monitor the flight paths of the geese as they migrate between Ireland and the polar regions. Without realizing it, after shooting the gun to death, he cooked the gun. According to the region irish times.
Manik said the waterfowl arrive in the area in June to lay eggs and provide hearty meals for her mother and grandmother, who “love goose.”
“It was delicious,” Manik told the magazine.
“The reason we hunt today is because the cost of living here is so high.” [in Arctic Canada]. Without hunting, all food must be shipped. We hunt geese relentlessly every time they pass by. ”
Fourth graders at St Mary's Girls' Primary School are working with scientists from the University of Exeter to track the migration routes of small dark-colored geese, which spend the winter in Ireland before flying to northwest Canada to breed. The paper reported. .
The bird then returns to the Irish coast with the baby goose.
Anne Quinn, the children's former teacher, said the students gave each goose an identification tag that Manik found after killing it before releasing it into the wild for monitoring.
The report said students were shocked to learn of the geese's deaths, but she said they could confirm that many of the geese had indeed returned to Ireland.
“The North Pole is a far away place,” Quinn said.
“This was evidence, in a weird way, that they had this amazing journey…It shows how connected we are. Geographically and culturally.”
Ecologist Kendrew Colehoun, who worked with the students, said after meeting with Manik that there was no bad blood between him and him.
“There's a bit of sadness there because obviously they're very heavily protected in Ireland and we love them, but at the same time we're really grateful that the local community here doesn't have access to supermarkets. “I'm doing it,” he said. Irish Times.
“These communities definitely need to do something like that. So who gets to decide?”
The bird's death will be featured in a new 13-part animated documentary called Where the Wild Geese Go, which will be broadcast on Irish television later this month.
The film crew learned of the goose's fate after visiting Resolute Bay, one of Canada's northernmost communities, the report said.
