Blogging About Critters Since 2007

Sunday, September 6, 2009

France's Ugly Secret: Eating Endangered Songbird

Now France can add another to its long list of gastronomic sins...eating ortolan, an endangered songbird.

From the Guardian...
In a co-ordinated protest, members of the League for the Protection of Birds (LPO) destroyed hundreds of traps and set free the birds inside. The time had come, they said, to prioritise biodiversity over gastronomy.

"For 10 years now, not only has the state turned a blind eye [to the poachers] but it has been complicit," said Allain Bougrain-Dubourg, president of the LPO. "It is time to make the state face up to its responsibilities."

The hunting and selling of ortolans, which have suffered a Europe-wide decline of 40-50% in the last 40 years, has been illegal in France since 1999.

But that has not stopped hundreds of poachers setting traps to catch between 30,000 and 50,000 of the songbirds a year.

During the hunting season, which lasts from mid-August until the end of September, the birds are taken from their cages, fattened up in the dark and then drowned alive in Armagnac. Plucked and roasted, they are served whole.

3 comments:

Bea Elliott said...

That's horrible. Guess there's more than one way to insure a "Silent Spring". Eating songbirds - unbelievable. :(

Flu-Bird said...

Those pouchers are doing far more damage to the songbirds then pestisides ever did and all for the $$$$$$ and barbaric frenchmen

Bird of Paradise said...

Eating little songbirds is totaly barbaric those poachers need to get a long time in prison maybe 25 years or more

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