Sarah Perriam believes her grandfather, Charlie Perriam, would be delighted at the introduction of a new rabbit killing virus. Photo / Stephen Jaquiery
Sarah Perriam believes her grandfather, Charlie Perriam, would be delighted at the introduction of a new rabbit killing virus. Photo / Stephen Jaquiery
Sarah Perriam finds it ironic her late grandfather spent his lifetime fighting rabbits - and he is still plagued by them in death.
Looking at signs of rabbits digging on Charlie Perriam's grave in the Cromwell cemetery yesterday, Perriam recalled how the Central Otago farmer, who died in 2009, evenhad a team of ferrets to try to keep numbers down on his Lowburn property.
But they were serious times. Farmers were plagued by rabbits, and they were driven to despair.
Perriam was thrilled about the K5 rabbit virus release, saying she believed rabbit numbers in the Lowburn area were as bad before the 1990s RCD release.
Since then, land use had changed, with the likes of open subdivisions and vineyards without rabbit-proof fencing, she said.
Now she was working as a broadcaster in Auckland, it was interesting to see the urban perception of rabbits and how people were worried about the wellbeing of their pet rabbits.
"We have to be PC about rabbits. It's quite hard when the only good rabbit is a dead one," she said.