Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
Forum/Server Upgrade If you are reading this you have made it to the upgraded forum. Posts made on the old forum after 26th October 2023 have not been transfered. Everything else should be here. If you find any issues please let us know.
Ooooh now theres a question, I dont think they can, theyre a totally different species, but not 100%.... I saw a hare last Friday, stunning and huge, nearly crashed the car stopping to see him.
I hope not...Norway doesn't have wild rabbits but we have wild hares, and I know there's myxi in Sweden so a wild hare could easily catch if from there and spread it on....but seeing as there hasn't been confirmed any case of Myxi in Norwegian buns then I'd say they don't...
Hmm when after more Googling it seems this isnt as black and white as first thought, it looks like there have been comfirned cases of Myxi in hares. :? Not many but enough to confuse me. Heres one discussion mentioning some facts.
According to the guy from a wildlife place who was on the local BBC radio last night, NO hares can not get myxi but they have their own really bad illness (can not rememdber what began with L i think?. Only know this is becuase that is one of the questions that was asked.
According to the guy from a wildlife place who was on the local BBC radio last night, NO hares can not get myxi but they have their own really bad illness (can not rememdber what began with L i think?. Only know this is becuase that is one of the questions that was asked.
Most hares live up in scotland and a few in the peak district (mountain hares)and cannot contract myxo they are brown in colour which turns white in winter i done a bit of research on them and visited them in the peak district where they are protected.