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pugboy wrote:does shooting pest pigeons on private property require a permit ?
88sins wrote:Anybody know if anyone has JSB Knockouts locally?
daring dragoon wrote:is the wild meat from guyana safe to eat? masters duck farm selling tattoo etc from guyana and i looking to buy one but idk how they get them to trinidad if its on ice or is it alive and killed here.
where can i get a local tattoo?
88sins wrote:Be careful what yuh buying, and from whom. What sweet in goat mouth does sour in he bambam
Food poisoning eh nice, no matter is is from chicken or gouti
pugboy wrote:they actually advertising that it is imported wild meat?
i guess ministry has health inspectors who have inspected the meat and it was also inspected by guyana export authoritiesdaring dragoon wrote:is the wild meat from guyana safe to eat? masters duck farm selling tattoo etc from guyana and i looking to buy one but idk how they get them to trinidad if its on ice or is it alive and killed here.
where can i get a local tattoo?
88sins wrote:Be careful what yuh buying, and from whom. What sweet in goat mouth does sour in he bambam
Food poisoning eh nice, no matter is is from chicken or gouti
A bewildered capybara spotted in the busy hub of Brian Lara Promenade in Port of Spain was rescued by conservation group the El Socorro Centre for Wildlife Conservation this morning.
The group shared an update via social media about the surprising discovery and the resulting rescue efforts for the animal in the nation's capital.
"This morning started at 4.40am as I rushed to leave Freeport and beat the brutally painful traffic going into the capital. On the road at 5:15am I get a call from the TTPS about a capybara on the Promenade in front of First Citizens Bank.
"Yup, you read that right! A capybara in the middle of the capital city."
"Fortunately I was headed that way and gave an arrival time of 20 minutes. I made it in about 16 minutes and observed rapid response police guarding the area to keep the animal safe."
The group said a frantic chase resulted as they tried to capture the capybara.
"Some video may emerge of a crazy man in a burgundy shirt chasing a capybara around the Promenade as it bolted for its life with me giving frantic chase."
The group said they were finally able to corner her and safely secure her.
"We were able to corner it by RBC on the opposite side of the Promenade and a helpful citizen and myself were anlee to grab her back legs out from under her and put an end to the morning exercise. We restrained her as onlookers gathered to witness a couple grown men holding this beast in Tong."
"We were able to get her restrained and into the trunk of my wife's car...much thanks to all the hunters, and experts who offered their assistance in the capture."
The group said the capybara was unharmed.
"She is alive and well and will be released after her examination is complete."
It's not quite clear how the capybara ended up on the promenade.
Capybaras are not endemic to Trinidad and Tobago but it's thought that the animals may have been brought here from South America.
In 2019 the animals were declared vermin by the Ministry of Agriculture, Lands and Fisheries amid allegations that the animals were eating some farmers' crops.
As a result the animals can be hunted as vermin on private lands.
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