• Disrupting Power Since 2015
  • Donate
  • Login
Friday, May 9, 2025
  • Login
  • Register
Canary
MEDIA THAT DISRUPTS
  • News
    • UK
    • Global
    • Analysis
    • Trending
  • Editorial
  • Features
    • Features
    • Environment
    • Lifestyle
    • Health
    • Money
    • Science
    • Business
    • Tech
    • Travel
    • Sport & Gaming
  • Media
    • Video
    • Cartoons
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
MANAGE SUBSCRIPTION
SUPPORT
  • News
    • UK
    • Global
    • Analysis
    • Trending
  • Editorial
  • Features
    • Features
    • Environment
    • Lifestyle
    • Health
    • Money
    • Science
    • Business
    • Tech
    • Travel
    • Sport & Gaming
  • Media
    • Video
    • Cartoons
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
Canary
No Result
View All Result

An investigation into the horror of UK fox trapping leads to calls for a ban on snares

Glen Black by Glen Black
22 May 2020
in Environment, Other News & Features, UK
Reading Time: 4 mins read
171 2
A A
1
Home Other News & Features Environment
321
SHARES
2.5k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Hunt Investigation Team (HIT) has exposed the actions of a fox trapper in Wales. The news has led to calls for a ban on snares in the British countryside.

£15 a pelt

HIT published a report on David Sneade, who the group says traps and kills foxes in the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park area. Sneade then sells the fur abroad for as little as £15, HIT claimed. BBC News also stated that the “cost of a fox pelt today is about £15”. The UK government banned fur farming in 2000. But there is currently no law against snaring or trapping foxes for their pelts. As a result, Sneade’s trade is legal.

HIT shared images of Sneade’s business that it said had been taken from his previously-public Facebook account. They included Sneade surrounded by dozens of fox pelts, bagged fox furs in a bloodied chest freezer, and the freshly skinned body of a fox with the skinning knife laid on top. It also published footage showing Sneade beating a fox with a wooden stick before standing on its chest to stop its heart. This technique kills the fox without damaging its fur.

HIT also said that, at his home in Pembrokeshire:

Sneade skins and dismembers the bodies, using gruesome knives and stretching racks. He prepares the pelts, using the foxes’ own brain fluid in the process. Numerous pelts are strung out and the stench is palpable from the road. The garden is littered with fox skeletons and he prepares carcasses as bait to entice his next victims in to snare.

Although snaring isn’t illegal, HIT accused Sneade of using snares “without landowners’ permission”. But Sneade denied this, telling the Independent that he always gains landowners’ permission before setting traps and snares.

“Helping the environment”

Sneade justified his trade to BBC News, saying:

I’m helping the environment by keeping the fox population down

The fox population needs keeping down because they do so much damage to ground-nesting birds, also for sheep farmers, they take a considerable number of lambs each year.

It’s got to be done whether people like it or not and the only effective way is to snare them.

And the Independent reported that Sneade said he left the dead bodies of foxes in his garden for carrion birds to feed on. In this way, he said he was ‘recycling’ them. The article went on to say:

He said sometimes he leaves carcasses behind if the fox was suffering mange so the fur is of no use but he removes them later. … Killing them was sparing foxes from mange and disease, he said. And he claimed he shows respect to the animals he kills: “It’s very hard to explain but it’s fairly deep down.”

“Absolutely disgusting”

HIT called for a ban on snares, telling BBC News that they are “inherently cruel on every case”. The public echoed this in its outrage, not only at Sneade’s actions, but at a lack of legislation preventing them in the first place:

https://twitter.com/VanityXv/status/1234877766413299713

I can't believe this is still happening in UK… We need to be the voice of the foxes who have no voice. https://t.co/41AcKyAfPj

— Phillippa Jane (@pgillett2024) March 4, 2020

⁦@holly_elsie⁩ ⁦@radicalhoneybee⁩ ⁦@BBCSpringwatch⁩ ⁦@nature⁩ ⁦@RSPCA_official⁩ Snaring causes absolutely unnecessary suffering to foxes. It needs to be banned now! https://t.co/CaCxOLPWGA

— John Adams (@JohnAdamsEbble) March 4, 2020

Animal rights groups also responded to the news:

Foxes are being cruelly 'trapped' for their fur in the UK! 😟

URGENT: sign our petition to ban the sale of fur in the UK. ➡️ https://t.co/b03RPzuAAthttps://t.co/Vz2CQkfWp9

— Open Cages (@OpenCagesUK) March 4, 2020

Horrifying new exposé from @FoxHITeam released today! 🦊

Viewer discretion advised. This is the hideous reality of fur trapping in the UK. https://t.co/t3TVGgHSJQ

— Viva! (@vivacampaigns) March 4, 2020

BREAKING: @HSIUKorg today calls for action in response to a shocking @FoxHITeam investigation exposing U.K.’s hidden fur trade. Totally unacceptable that foxes are cruelly snared & killed in U.K. for fur. Urgent ban on fur trapping & trade needed NOW. https://t.co/XQosfova0P pic.twitter.com/ViXkuW88te

— Humane Society International/UK (@HSIUKorg) March 4, 2020

This man needs to be stopped.https://t.co/AapIahWxxh

— Hunt Saboteurs Association (@HuntSabs) March 5, 2020

 

Impact on other wildlife

The National Anti-Snaring Campaign (NASC) has long campaigned to end the use of traps and snares in the UK. It told The Canary:

The Welsh Government’s Environment Committee had considered banning snares in 2016 and the National Anti Snaring Campaign and League Against Cruel Sports gave oral evidence. However, they decided only to promote a “Code of Best Practice”. We know from DEFRA’s own study into snaring where they used code compliant snares, that more non target animals, particularly badgers are caught than foxes. And also that snares were found to be causing serious injury and death. In the best practice guidelines it asks “whether the need justifies their use,” bearing in mind the risk of capture of non-target species and welfare implications.

The group also added that “snaring for profit does not meet the code of practice” and hopes the Welsh government legislates against snares.

End snare use now

The Canary asked HIT if this is practiced elsewhere in the UK. The team said that Sneade is the only confirmed practitioner of this type of trapping for fur, although rumours persist that others may do it too.

This is a clear case of something that’s legal but unethical. It’s unbelievable that fur farming is banned but this is permitted to continue. And, as NASC highlights, the harm caused by traps and snares goes much further than just foxes. The government must take a serious look at the laws on traps and snares right now.

Featured image via Hunt Investigation Team/YouTube

Share128Tweet80
Previous Post

It turns out the ‘blue’ passport was just more Brexit bluster

Next Post

MPs set to receive 3.1% pay rise from April

Next Post

MPs set to receive 3.1% pay rise from April

Gordon Brown – the failed politician who bailed out banks rather than ordinary people – backs Keir Starmer

Gordon Brown - the failed politician who bailed out banks rather than ordinary people - backs Keir Starmer

Stephanie Peacock and Rebecca Long-Bailey

A Labour MP piles in for the BBC's latest ludicrous attack on Rebecca Long-Bailey

The DWP logo in front of an explosion

The DWP just let slip two Universal Credit bombshells

Former US Vice President Joe Biden

Joe Biden is 'basically Hillary Clinton, but even worse', author of new exposé tells The Canary

Please login to join discussion
Swiss Cottage protests
Analysis

Police ban Jewish anti-genocide protests outside Israeli ambassador’s home in London

by Ed Sykes
8 May 2025
BREAKING: Starmer facing a formal rebellion over proposed DWP cuts
Analysis

BREAKING: Starmer facing a formal rebellion over proposed DWP cuts

by Maryam Jameela
8 May 2025
US backs down amid Yemen resilience, leaving Israel to fight its own battle
Analysis

US backs down amid Yemeni resilience, leaving Israel to fight its own battle

by Ed Sykes
8 May 2025
VE Day 80 commemorations are misusing the past to push for more militarism
News

VE Day 80 commemorations are misusing the past to push for more militarism

by The Canary
8 May 2025
DWP minister Stephen Timms is under pressure after a petition was launched calling for him to go
Analysis

DWP minister Stephen Timms under pressure as petition calls for him to be sacked

by Hannah Sharland
8 May 2025
  • Contact
  • About & FAQ
  • Get our Daily News Email
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

The Canary
PO Box 71199
LONDON
SE20 9EX

Canary Media Ltd – registered in England. Company registration number 09788095.

For guest posting, contact [email protected]

For other enquiries, contact: [email protected]

The Canary is owned and run by independent journalists and volunteers, NOT offshore billionaires.

You can write for us, or support us by making a regular or one-off donation.

© Canary Media Ltd 2024, all rights reserved | Website by Monster | Hosted by Krystal | Privacy Settings

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • UK
    • Global
    • Analysis
    • Trending
  • Editorial
  • Features
    • Features
    • Environment
    • Lifestyle
    • Health
    • Money
    • Science
    • Business
    • Tech
    • Travel
    • Sport & Gaming
  • Media
    • Video
    • Cartoons
  • Opinion

© 2023 Canary - Worker's co-op.

Before you go, have you seen...?

Swiss Cottage protests
Analysis
Ed Sykes

Police ban Jewish anti-genocide protests outside Israeli ambassador’s home in London

BREAKING: Starmer facing a formal rebellion over proposed DWP cuts
Analysis
Maryam Jameela

BREAKING: Starmer facing a formal rebellion over proposed DWP cuts

US backs down amid Yemen resilience, leaving Israel to fight its own battle
Analysis
Ed Sykes

US backs down amid Yemeni resilience, leaving Israel to fight its own battle

VE Day 80 commemorations are misusing the past to push for more militarism
News
The Canary

VE Day 80 commemorations are misusing the past to push for more militarism

ADVERTISEMENT
Travel
Nathan Spears

Hungary Vignette Adventures: Discovering Hidden Gems by Car

How Social Media Affects the Mental Health of Young Adults Today
Tech
The Canary

How Social Media Affects the Mental Health of Young Adults Today

voice assistant
Tech
The Canary

Maximizing Your Voice Assistant for Real-Time Sports Updates