Hunting season
Krammetsvogel (Wacholderdrossel) Extremadura
The fieldfare (Turdus pilaris), historically known in German as Krammetsvogel, is a 22 to 27 centimetre thrush with a grey head, chestnut back and yellow-orange bill. It is fully protected year-round under the German Federal Nature Conservation Act and no longer counts as a huntable species in Germany.
— Closed today
When may Krammetsvogel (Wacholderdrossel) be hunted in Extremadura?
Open ranges are highlighted. Closed (Schonzeit) months show as empty rows.
Exact dates
Zorzal Real · Modalidad: Puesto fijo · Cotos privados · Zorzal real
- 2025-11-01 → 2026-01-31· Forbidden weekdays: mon,tue,wed
(Incluida prorroga - En cotos intensivos se podra cazar durante los periodos hábiles establecidos todos los días.). En un mismo paso: únicamente se puede colocar una línea de escopetas en el mismo coto, sólo se podrá cazar una vez por semana y los puestos sólo podrán ser de mañana o tarde
Zorzal Real · Modalidad: Puesto fijo · Cotos sociales y ZCL · Zorzal real
- 2025-11-01 → 2026-01-31· Forbidden weekdays: mon,tue,wed,fri
(Incluida prorroga - En cotos intensivos se podra cazar durante los periodos hábiles establecidos todos los días.). En un mismo paso: únicamente se puede colocar una línea de escopetas en el mismo coto, sólo se podrá cazar una vez por semana y los puestos sólo podrán ser de mañana o tarde
About Krammetsvogel (Wacholderdrossel)
The fieldfare inhabits semi-open cultural landscapes with scattered trees, woodland edges, field copses, avenues, traditional orchards and larger parks and gardens. It prefers fresh to moist ground with short grass vegetation that serves as feeding habitat. The species is highly gregarious: outside the breeding season it travels in large flocks, often mixed with redwings, and feeds extensively on berries such as rowan, hawthorn and juniper during winter.
During the breeding season the fieldfare nests sociably in small colonies, typically of five to ten pairs, in tree rows or field copses. Colonial breeders defend their nests very vigorously against predators such as carrion crows and birds of prey, using coordinated mobbing flights and even targeted defecation on intruders.
Under the historical name Krammetsvogel, fieldfares were trapped in very large numbers until the early twentieth century, particularly on autumn migration using specially prepared heath sites and horsehair snares known as Dohnenstieg. Snare trapping was outlawed in 1908 by the Reichsvogelschutzgesetz. Today the fieldfare is listed as a specially protected species under the Federal Nature Conservation Act and has no open hunting season; its former role as game is only of cultural and linguistic significance.
Other species in Extremadura
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Source & disclaimer
All information without guarantee. Hunting and closed seasons are sourced from the state hunting associations. Spotted an error? Email us at info@hunterco.de.