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Dublin: 13 °C Tuesday 21 May, 2013

The week in photos: Tumble

This is is the week that was, in photos…

THIS IS THE week that was, in photos…

The week in photos: Tumble
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  • Go with the low

    A gull flies back dropped by the frozen waters of the Black Sea near the shore in Constanta, Romania. The death toll from Eastern Europe's severe cold spell has surpassed 120 people, with temperatures dropping as low as - 32.5 C. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)
  • The belle of the fall

    A model falls while displaying an Autumn/Winter design by Miguel Palacio during the Madrid's Mercedes Benz Fashion Week. (AP Photo/Daniel Ochoa de Olza)
  • Head over heels

    Kyle King (red collar) keeps his eye on the hare as Kyle Tankard tumbles during their Classics Club Champion Stakes semi final at the National Hare Coursing Championship meeting. (PA)
  • Tip of the ice

    Icicles hang on a rock during the sunset in the Thuringian Forest near Eisenach, central Germany. (AP Photo/Jens Meyer)
  • Money makes the world go down

    A Chinese investor looks at share prices (green for price falling) at a stock brokerage house in Shaoyang, central Chinas Hunan province. (PA)
  • Clouds will roll

    Surfers walk the shoreline as clouds roll in on South Point in Miami Beach, Flordia. (AP Photo/CX Matiash)
  • How low can you go?

    Roger Nonella of Klamath Falls, Oregon wrestles a cow to the ground in the Tie Down Roping event during the PRCA Championship Rodeo at Pershing Centre in Lincoln, Nebraska. (AP Photo/ Lincoln Journal Star, Francis Gardler)
  • Fall by the wayside

    Sunderland's Wes Brown (right) takes a tumble as he collides with team mate Kieren Richardson.
  • Slippery slope

    A child runs past a wave protection dam covered in ice as the waters of the Black Sea are frozen near the shore in Constanta, Romania: the weather is so cold that some areas of the sea have frozen near the coastline. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)
  • Election flutters

    Supporters shout slogans in support of an independent candidate Gurpratap Singh Tikka as a Cessna aircraft (unseen) drops his election campaign pamphlets on the last day of campaigning for upcoming Assembly elections in Amritsar. (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri)
  • Death and dearth

    A clay piece from the permanent collection is displayed on the museum's day off at the National Hispanic Cultural Centre in Albuquerque, New Mexico. The cultural centre, like other Latino art centers across the US, has seen its public and private funding decrease during the economic downturn. (AP Photo/Russell Contreras)
  • Snowfall

    The frost-covered Wendelstein church, Germany's highest, near Bayrischzell. (AP Photo/Matthias Schrader)
  • Rough and tumble

    Nike Lentz, right, bleeds as he is punched by Evan Dunham in a Lightweight Bout during an Ultimate Fighting Championship match in Chicago. Dunham won by technical knock-out after the second round. (AP Photo/Sun-Times, John J. Kim)
  • A drop in the ocean

    Iowa Wrestling Director of Wrestling Operations Luke Eustice participates in the Hawkeye Wrestling Club Arctic Plunge. (AP Photo/The Gazette, Brian Ray)
  • Fall from power

    An Egyptian protester wearing a flower in his headband attends a candlelight vigil honoring those killed by security forces one year ago during the 18-day uprising that ousted President Hosni Mubarak. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

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Comments (8 Comments)

  • Avril, you say that the dogs can’t bite or “eat” (?) the hares…unfortunately they can and do forcibly strike the hares…maul them… pin them to the ground…and toss them into the air like rag dolls. Face the facts Avril. When a hare suffers internal injuries such as bone breakages, these cannot heal. And hares that don’t measure up are fed LIVE to greyhounds in so-called “blooding sessions”. Sport”? I don’t think so. Regarding stress…the hare is one of a number of wild species that fall victim to Stress Myopathy…an extremely stressful experience can literally kill the animal, not immediately, but hours or even days after the ordeal. Hare coursing a “tradition” in Ireland? What has that got to do with whether it’s acceptable or not? The industrial schools where all those innocent boys and girls were horribly abused, and the Magdalene Laundries where girls who conceived “out of wedlock” were detained in concentration camp like conditions were also deemed part of our great Irish “tradition”. Does that make them any less cruel or indefensible? The fieldsport of dog fighting was once also a great tradition in Ireland. Not any more. Open your eyes. See Hare coursing for what it is: A cowardly, deliberately cruel, and one-sided non-sport in which hares are terrorized for fun and profit. Are you not even a LITTLE BIT curious as to why Australia banned it…or why Scotland banned it in 2012…England and Wales in 2004…and Northern Ireland in 2011? Your defence of this despicable abuse reminds me of how Irish politicians and their clerical side-kicks covered up and tried to whitewash the hallowed “traditions” of another era. I suggest you have a re-think Avril. Take off the blinkers and emerge from denial. In years to come, people will look back and wonder how this generation could ever have tolerated an obscenity like hare coursing. Do you wish to count yourself among those who backed this thuggish and disgusting form of animal cruelty?

    Reply
  • Savage photo

    Reply
  • Re Week in Photos…that picture of a hare “taking a tumble” is another reminder that muzzles on the dogs have not taken the cruelty out of coursing, as the “sport’s” apologists have been claiming. Hares are still mauled, tossed about like toys, and subjected to a variety of injuries, internal and external. They are terrorized for a cheap thrill and a gamble- nothing to do with “upholding a great tradition” etc. Re the crowds at the National Coursing Meeting in Clonmel, many of the fans came from countries where hare coursing is a criminal offence. Ireland is one of the last bastions of this organised animal baiting event. Hardly something to be proud of.

    Reply
    • More Hares/Rabbits/Badgers are killed by loose Dogs let out of the house.
      As for Cats and the carnage they cause to the bird population . . . .
      A bit of perspective, us and our pets kill more wildlife than any organised sporting fixture involving animals.

      Reply
  • Ed, the objection to coursing is not so much about killing. Coursing involves snatching the hares from their nautural habitat, confining them in unnatural captivity, and then frightening the living daylights out of them for a bit of a laugh. Hares are injured or traumatised or both. Hares also die AFTER coursing due to the effects of Stress Myopathy. In the wild a hare is either killed quicked by a predator or it escapes…by contrast the coursing ordeal lasts weeks and is one hundred percent unnatural. What cats get up to has nothing to with coursing. I agree dogs should be kept under control, and that includes hunt dogs that kill or mutilate many farm animals every year owing to continuous incursions by fox and harrier hunts.

    Reply
    • Your bias shines through. You possibly went nuts when a certain celeb cook was photographed with her dinner on the bonnet of her vehicle.
      Like I said, a bit of perspective required Domestic animals cause more carnage to wildlife, better controls of cats and dogs required if we really care about wildlife.
      Good night.

      Reply
    • The two days following the coursing is when the hares are released back to the areas where they we’re caught. Both dogs wear muzzles which mean the cannot bite/eat the hares. There is a trap door which the hare is running towards which is not big enough for the dogs to get through. They are not kept in small cages they are kept in fields, and I’m sure they are well used to be chased by foxes other animals so I can’t seeing too much stress being caused. Just because it’s not something you agree with doesn’t mean it’s not a tradition in Ireland. Going to mass is , but id rather stick needless in my eyes than be caught near a church , I’m not saying it should be banned tho ….
      Hope you think of the poor little piggies that were killed to make your fry up in the morning ;)

      Reply
  • Biased? Were the legislators in all those other countries that banned hare coursing also biased, Ed? Biased in favour of animal protection perhaps. Biased towards not wishing to cause unnecessary suffering to a defenceless animal for “sport”. I made no media comment whatsoever on the celeb cook you refer to. You must be confusing me with someone else. I notice that coursing apologists very often use diversionary tactics (“whataboutery” some call this) when they can’t defend their “sport”, like drawing attention to what cats might be getting up to, which has nothing to do with the issue. Or they ramble on about hares getting killed on the roads etc. Dogs get killed on roads too, but that doesn’t make dog-fighting any less cruel. These are distinctly separate issues. Each cruel practise must be judged on its own merits.

    Reply

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