'Broteong' - the traditional Cambodian quail trap
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'Broteong' - the traditional Cambodian quail trap
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- hanno
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Re: 'Broteong' - the traditional Cambodian quail trap
God, how I hate to see this:-) Incidentally, they look like Button-quail.
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Re: 'Broteong' - the traditional Cambodian quail trap
While I don't share Hanno's love of birds and birding I nonetheless recognize their value as a natural and powerful substitute for insecticides.
Our land is one of the few house plots that is still well forested-especially with a variety of fruit trees. And every year an itinerant Cham goes to the back of our property where he is less visible from our home to trap doves. His method differs from that of the video. He has two cages one which holds a male dove and an empty one with a trap door. When the male sings in the first cage a female enters the empty adjacent cage where the door snaps shut. While doves are his specialty he does trap or kill other species. He really can't understand 1) why he isn't allowed to trespass 2) why anyone would object and 3) what right a foreign owner has to throw him off the land
In all of my time here I have never seen a parrot in the wild. The locals have ravaged the snake population, especially cobra and sangsoea and now they have to electrify a low wire around the rice paddies to kill the rats which like the small birds are sold quite cheaply at the local market.
The only monkeys I have seen have been at wats.
My mother-in-law claims they were plentiful in her youth, in fact prior to Pol Pot times there was the occasional tiger. The Cambodia I fell in love with is quickly being destroyed by the rich and the desperate.
As an addendum the word used for the trap in the video appears to be dialectical. My wife knows a variant of that word which I've not included figuring it would B of next to no use for the bulk of the readership.
Our land is one of the few house plots that is still well forested-especially with a variety of fruit trees. And every year an itinerant Cham goes to the back of our property where he is less visible from our home to trap doves. His method differs from that of the video. He has two cages one which holds a male dove and an empty one with a trap door. When the male sings in the first cage a female enters the empty adjacent cage where the door snaps shut. While doves are his specialty he does trap or kill other species. He really can't understand 1) why he isn't allowed to trespass 2) why anyone would object and 3) what right a foreign owner has to throw him off the land
In all of my time here I have never seen a parrot in the wild. The locals have ravaged the snake population, especially cobra and sangsoea and now they have to electrify a low wire around the rice paddies to kill the rats which like the small birds are sold quite cheaply at the local market.
The only monkeys I have seen have been at wats.
My mother-in-law claims they were plentiful in her youth, in fact prior to Pol Pot times there was the occasional tiger. The Cambodia I fell in love with is quickly being destroyed by the rich and the desperate.
As an addendum the word used for the trap in the video appears to be dialectical. My wife knows a variant of that word which I've not included figuring it would B of next to no use for the bulk of the readership.
As my old Cajun bait seller used to say, "I opes you luck.
- bolueeleh
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Re: 'Broteong' - the traditional Cambodian quail trap
do not impose western ideology on people barely able to eat enough to survive, im sure anybody would do anything if their survival is at stake
Money is not the problem, the problem is no money
- hanno
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Re: 'Broteong' - the traditional Cambodian quail trap
Right, that is why nothing moves in Cambodia's forests anymore? Wait, the starving people also cut down the forests to eat....
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Re: 'Broteong' - the traditional Cambodian quail trap
"do not impose western ideology on people barely able to eat enough to survive, im sure anybody would do anything if their survival is at stake"
First, as I told you they sell them at the markets, so it's not for personal consumption alone. If it was I would not like it, but I could understand the need.
Secondly. I will most assuredly" impose western ideology " on motherfuckers who poach on my property. We are not wealthy and deserve to harvest the fruits (especially mangoes) of our labor.
First, as I told you they sell them at the markets, so it's not for personal consumption alone. If it was I would not like it, but I could understand the need.
Secondly. I will most assuredly" impose western ideology " on motherfuckers who poach on my property. We are not wealthy and deserve to harvest the fruits (especially mangoes) of our labor.
As my old Cajun bait seller used to say, "I opes you luck.
- bolueeleh
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Re: 'Broteong' - the traditional Cambodian quail trap
yes it wrong for them to be stealing from ur landtaabarang wrote: "do not impose western ideology on people barely able to eat enough to survive, im sure anybody would do anything if their survival is at stake"
First, as I told you they sell them at the markets, so it's not for personal consumption alone. If it was I would not like it, but I could understand the need.
Secondly. I will most assuredly" impose western ideology " on motherfuckers who poach on my property. We are not wealthy and deserve to harvest the fruits (especially mangoes) of our labor.
they are cutting down trees to sell for money for food, im not saying the rich deforesting a whole forest (those need to be hanged by their necks), im saying people who cut trees trap animals to feed themselves. chillhanno wrote:Right, that is why nothing moves in Cambodia's forests anymore? Wait, the starving people also cut down the forests to eat....
Money is not the problem, the problem is no money
- hanno
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Re: 'Broteong' - the traditional Cambodian quail trap
I tbhink that you will find that you are mostly wrong, but whatever; I bow to your infinite wisdom.
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Re: 'Broteong' - the traditional Cambodian quail trap
Out in the hills, the boys have run out of wood to pilfer from the forest so now they're all chasing meat for a dollar. Last chance to see a whole lotta wildlife.....
Sent from my SM-G570Y using Tapatalk
Sent from my SM-G570Y using Tapatalk
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