Falconers have played an…

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019-1806

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48455

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Falconers have played an important role in raptor conservation and by allowing more falconers to have access to wild birds, the MNRF is encouraging more active conservation and citizen science.

The MNRF is adopting an approach that has been used successfully in other provinces and U.S. states. There is no reason to think they won’t succeed here as well.

This proposal enhances an important part of falconry heritage, which is recognized by UNESCO as “Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity”

I hope the MNRF will continue to expand the regulations so other birds of prey can be taken in the wild

I have missed getting a bird a number of times including this year . Now all falconers and apprentices will have access to birds. You know longer have to wait or purchase a bird from a breeder that you really didn’t want.

Thank you for finally doing away with the draw. I heard about people who had birds that would apply in case they didn’t get the bird from a breeder. Now everyone who really wants a bird can have one.

Eliminating the draw a huge improvement. It enables all apprentice falconers to be able to trap their first bird of prey. Not only does the apprentice gain experience trapping, but they can release their bird back to the wild at the end of the hunting season, knowing that they'll be able to trap a new bird for the next season. This is the way that falconry has been practiced for thousands of years.. Releasing birds back to the wild to breed in the spring and trapping a young bird the next fall season is an important falconry tradition. In this way, the effect of falconry on the wild raptor population is inconsequential.