POZOR! LOVNA SEZONA 2025. - 2026.

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Radi vaše sigurnosti izbjegavajte hodanje po poljima, šumi ili drugim otvorenim prostorima tijekom lova!

Na temelju Zakona o lovstvu (NN: 99/18, 32/19 i 32/20) i čl. 39 st. 6 Statuta Lovačke udruge otoka Hvara “Hvar”, po prijedlogu Izvršnog odbora udruge donesenom na 9. Sjednici održanoj dana 14.08.2025., Skupština LU „Hvar“ na 4. sjednici održanoj dana 28.08.2025. donosi

O D L U K U

O POČETKU I TRAJANJU LOVNE SEZONE 2025/2026 U ZAJEDNIČKOM LOVIŠTU BR. XVII/144 „HVAR“ – LU „HVAR“

- Jelen lopatar – 16.09.2025. – 15.02.2026.

(košuta -1.10.2025. – 31.01.2026.)

(tele – 1.10.2025. – 28.02.2026.)

- Srnjak – 16.04.2025. – 30.09.2025.

- Srna – 01.09.2025. – 31.01.2026.

- Svinja divlja – pogonom od 21.09.2025. – 31.01.2026.

(lovi se nedjeljom od 21.09.2025. do 12.10.2025., od 18.10.2025. do 11.01.2026. lovi se subotom, te 18.01.2026., 25.01.2026. i 31.01.2026.)

Čekom 3 dana do 21.09.2025.

Zaštitni pogoni i čeke po potrebi.

- Prepelica – 21.08.2025. – 30.11.2025. – 10 kljunova po lovnom danu

U odnosu na lov prepelice na području Pišćene – LP Hvar, članovi drugih LP love do 10.10.2025.

- Šljuka – 01.10.2025. – 28.02.2026. – 3 kljuna po lovnom danu

- Golub – 01.10.2025. – 31.01.2026.

- Puh – 01.10.2025. – 30.11.2025.

- Zec/fazan – 19.10.2025. – 14.01.2026. (srijede od 19.11.2025.)

Lovni dani zec/fazan: 19.10., 26.10., 02.11., 09.11., 16.11., 19.11., 23.11., 26.11., 30.11., 03.12., 07.12., 10.12., 14.12., 17.12., 21.12., 24.12., 28.12., 31.12.2025., 04.01., 07.01., 11.01. i 14.01.2026.

U jednom lovnom danu lov traje od 07,00 do 14,00 sati.

Lov započinje sa zbornog mjesta i završava na zbornom mjestu.

Više u ovoj kategoriji: Fires: Take Care! »
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Eco Environment News feeds

  • Trio argued orange powder protest day before 2024 solstice was justified because of focus on climate emergency

    Three Just Stop Oil protesters have been cleared over a protest at Stonehenge during which orange powder was sprayed on to the prehistoric circle.

    Rajan Naidu, 74, Niamh Lynch, 23, and Luke Watson, 36, targeted Stonehenge the day before last year’s summer solstice.

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  • Indiana Jones star calls US president one of history’s greatest criminals for attacks on science and boosting of fossil fuels

    Harrison Ford has said that Donald Trump’s assault upon measures to address the climate crisis “scares the shit out of me” and makes the US president among the worst criminals in history.

    In a blistering attack upon the president, Ford told the Guardian that Trump “doesn’t have any policies, he has whims. It scares the shit out of me. The ignorance, the hubris, the lies, the perfidy. [Trump] knows better, but he’s an instrument of the status quo and he’s making money, hand over fist, while the world goes to hell in a handbasket.”

    Continue reading...

  • Decision to stay away from Cop30 meeting in Brazil underscores administration’s hostility to climate action

    The Trump administration has confirmed that no high-level representatives will be sent by the US to upcoming UN climate talks in Brazil, underscoring the administration’s hostile stance towards action on the climate crisis.

    The US has always sent delegations of various sizes to UN climate summits over the past three decades, even during periods under George W Bush and in Donald Trump’s first term, where there was scant desire to address the global heating crisis.

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  • Category 5 storm is most powerful to strike Jamaica and has caused death and destruction in Cuba and Haiti

    Hurricane Melissa has wreaked havoc across parts of the Caribbean in recent days, after first making landfall in Jamaica on Tuesday night as a category 5 storm – the highest strength. This was the most powerful storm to strike the island nation, packing winds of up to 185mph at its peak.

    Western parts of Jamaica were worst hit, with 90% of homes in the town of Black River losing their roof or being destroyed entirely. Roughly three-quarters of the country lost electricity, with at least 19 people known to have lost their lives at the time of publication. The cleanup operation was hampered by thunderstorms even after Melissa cleared to the north. The hurricane continued northwards, but was a slightly weakened category 3 storm by the time it made landfall in Cuba. Nonetheless, the storm continued to bring winds of up to 120mph and torrential rains.

    Continue reading...

  • Miteni factory closed after water pollution scandal but machinery and patents were bought and rebuilt by Indian company

    The thick green jungle and rust-red hills of Lote, on India’s west coast, give way to a small hill where a factory looms against the sky.

    The factory is almost brand new, but its machinery is not: it comes from the former Miteni factory in Vicenza, Italy. Miteni closed down in 2018 after one of the worst environmental scandals in the country’s recent history: after decades of producing Pfas forever chemicals, the company’s management was brought to trial for contaminating water resources in an area where 350,000 people live. In June, its former executives were found guilty at the Vicenza court of assizes of causing environmental pollution and other charges and given prison sentences, which they are expected to appeal against.

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  • Sydney researchers commercialising a product they say can cool indoor spaces and will cost little more than standard premium paints

    Australian scientists have developed roof coatings that can passively cool surfaces up to 6C below ambient temperature, as well as extract water from the atmosphere, which they say could reduce indoor temperatures during extreme heat events.

    Heatwaves are becoming more intense, more frequent and more deadly due to human-caused global heating.

    Continue reading...

  • Research by marine scientists in Thailand is revealing how shipwrecks can benefit the undersea environment

    Sitting at the bottom of the Gulf of Thailand about 20 metres below the ocean surface is the HTMS Hanhak Sattru. Snappers, yellowtail fusiliers and bannerfish swim through the ship’s corridors,while barnacles, algae and young coral cling to the iron ladders and machine-gun on deck. Nearby is another wreck, the HTMS SuphairinBoth were intentionally submerged by the Royal Thai Navy in 2023 to create artificial reefs and dive sites. Their planned scuttling has enabled marine scientists to produce some of the first research on how much shipwrecks change the marine environment.

    There is already plenty of existing research that shows that shipwrecks create a new ecosystem. But whether they pull fish from natural reefs or promote production of new fish (known as the attraction-pollution hypothesis) has historically been hard to say.

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  • Caitlin Cassidy takes a test-drive in some of the cutting-edge vehicles at the Sydney International EV Motor Show – with a mixed verdict

    I am many things, but a car person is not one of them. I know how to drive, I can fill my tank with petrol, but that’s basically the extent of my knowledge.

    The first time I rode in a Tesla was after booking an Uber, and I didn’t know how to open the door. For a long time, if you’d asked me what a Maserati was, I’d have guessed a type of fancy salami.

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  • The discovery that affluent neighbourhoods have more diversity of nature has implications for human wellbeing – and sheds light on the structural injustices in cities

    Read more: The nature extinction crisis is mirrored by one in our own bodies. Both have huge implications for health

    For a long time, ecology tended to ignore people. It mostly focused on beautiful places far from large-scale human development: deep rainforest or pristine grassland. Then, in the late 1990s, in the desert city of Phoenix, Arizona, scientists shifted their gaze closer to home.

    A team of ecologists went out into their own neighbourhood to map the distribution of urban plants in one of the first studies of its kind. Equipped with tape measures and clipboards, they documented trees and shrubs, sometimes getting on all fours to crawl through bushes under the curious watch of local people.

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  • Both are cyclones, or circular storms, but they form in distinct places and vary in terms of scale and impact

    Cyclones are circular storms. Those that form in the Atlantic are called hurricanes while those in the Pacific are typhoons. They are essentially similar, but the difference between the areas where they form makes them different in scale and impact.

    Typhoons tend to be larger because of the vast size of the Pacific. The two have similar wind speeds but are reported differently. Hurricanes are rated on the Saffir Simpson scale, with a five indicating sustained winds of more than 157 mph (253 km/h). There is no equivalent international scale for Pacific cyclones, but various scales exist with categories such as “typhoon” for wind speeds of 74-114 mph and “super typhoon” for those with winds above 115 mph.

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Novosti: Cybermed.hr

Novosti: Biologija.com

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