Interesting point. You must be talking about Canada geese. Not sure if your 
native magpie geese would do that and I don't know if they could be more or 
less domesticated. Canada geese were introduced into New Zealand, so I guess 
you must have them in Australia. 

At one time in the eastern U.S., Canada geese were harvested in mass quantities 
with what is called a "punt gun". This is basically a gigantic shotgun mounted 
directly to a purpose-built boat. The operator would lie down in the boat and 
wait for migrating geese to land in a body of water. Firing the gun would kill 
several hundred geese at once. These would be mostly sold to restaurants.

I first became aware of this practice when I read James Michener's novel, 
Chesapeake. He describes a legendary punt gun called "the Twombly", known for 
its huge killing capability. This is fiction, of course, but in reality the 
practice was wide-spread until outlawed.

So more than the occasional meal.

Enjoy your Christmas goose.

MSF






<[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi,
> 
> A farmer can fix a snail/slug problem by letting geese loose on the crop. 
> They will happily hunt them down and eat them.
> With as side benefit that they leave fertilizer behind in the field, lay 
> eggs, and occasionally provide a meal
> themselves.
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Robin van Spaandonk
> 
> The future of computer memory clearly lies with multi-layered SOT-MRAM.
> Fast as SRAM, dense as NAND, very low energy due to non-volatility,
> and near infinite rewrites.

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