Information about Hunting In The United Kingdom

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A Cocker Spaniel in a typical English shooting scene


Hunting and Shooting in the United Kingdom have been practised for many centuries and are a major part of British rural culture.

In the modern day, game shooting is carried out in the UK, alongside deer stalking and fox hunting, although the latter has been made illegal and "drag hunting" principles are now the main sport.

The British Association for Shooting and Conservation (BASC) says that over a million people per year participate in shooting, (including game shooting, clay shooting and target shooting). [1]

History

Hunting has been carried out for millennia in the United Kingdom, predating the formation of Great Britain itself. Hunting was a crucial component of hunter-gatherer societies before the domestication of animals and the dawn of agriculture.

During the last ice age, humans and neanderthals hunted mammoths and wooly rhinos by driving them off cliffs, as at La Cotte de St Brelade on Jersey.

In Britain, hunting with hounds was popular in Celtic Britain before the Romans arrived, using the Agassaei breed. [2] The Romans brought their Castorian and Fulpine hound breeds to England, along with importing the brown hare (the mountain hare is native) and fallow deer as quarry. Wild boar was also hunted.

The earliest known attempt to hunt a fox with hounds was in Norfolk, England, in 1534, where farmers began chasing down foxes with their dogs as pest control. The first packs to be trained to specifically hunt foxes were found in the late 1600s, with the oldest fox hunt likely to be the Bilsdale in Yorkshire. [3] By the end of the seventeenth century many organised packs were hunting both hare and fox.

Shotguns were improved during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and game shooting became more popular. To protect the pheasants for the shooters, gamekeepers culled vermin such as foxes, magpies and birds of prey almost to extirpation in popular areas, and landowners improved their coverts and other habitats for game. Game Laws were relaxed in 1831 which meant anyone could obtain a permit to take rabbits, hares and gamebirds.

Hunting was formerly a royal sport, and to an extent still is, with many Kings and Queens being involved in hunting and shooting, including King Edward VII, King George V (who on 18 December 1913 shot over a thousand pheasants out of a total bag of 3937)[4], King George VI and the present day Prince Phillip, although Queen Elizabeth II does not shoot. Shooting on the large estates of Scotland was particularly popular. This trend is generally attributed to the Victorians who were inspired by the romantic imagery of the Scottish Highlands.

Methods of hunting

Shooting

The shooting of game birds, in particular pheasant and grouse, is a popular sport in the UK, on large, traditional driven principles on estates and on small-scale rough shoots. Shooting of game birds is carried out using a shotgun, most often .12, .410 or .20 bores.

Game birds are shot in different ways: Driven Game shooting, where beaters are employed to drive game towards a line of standing guns through woods and over moors or fields, dependent on the quarry and time of year. The guns will have paid in the region of £25 per bird, and the total bag (total) will be anywhere between 80 and 300 birds, again dependent on quarry etc. The day will be very formal, and gamekeepers or a shoot captain will oversee procedings. Pickers-up are also employed to make sure all shot game is collected. On such estates, large numbers of pheasants, partridge and duck, but not grouse, may be released to maintain numbers.

Rough Shooting, where several guns walk through a woodland, moor or field and shoot birds their dogs put up, is increasingly popular. It is often informal and funds are sourced from several people grouping together to form a "syndicate", paying a certain amount each year to go towards pheasants, habitat maintenance etc.

Wildfowling, an often lonely and sometimes uncomfortable sport, where a single gun sits in pursuit of wildfowl by a body of water, or on the coast, mainly often at dawn or dusk, and waits for birds to "flight" in. This is sometimes undertaken in total darkness or by the light of the moon. Duck are also shot on the two former methods.

Deer Stalking

See also Deer stalking

High powered rifles are used for shooting deer species, in a practice know as deer stalking. This may take place high on moors, or from a "high seat" in woodland. Venison is also a highly popular meat.

Hunting

See also Fox hunting, Fox hunting legislation

Hunting should not be confused with the aforementioned methods. Hunting with dogs (including hunting for fox, deer, mink and hare coursing) was banned in the UK under the Hunting Act 2004.

Fox hunting is often thought of as a primarily British activity in which trained dogs pursue red fox, followed by human hunters who are usually on horses but sometimes on foot. A traditional equestrian activity, many animal welfare campaigners object to it as a barbaric "blood sport", while proponents and participants view it as a crucial part of rural history in England, vital for conservation, and a method of pest control.

The Hunting Act has been criticised as being "illogical and unclear" by the Countryside Alliance, although this view is strongly disputed by anti hunting campaigners like the League Against Cruel Sports.

Game animals

In the UK game is defined in law by the Game Act 1831. Other (non-game birds) that are hunted for food in the UK are specified under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. UK law defines game as including:

Species Season (England, Scotland and Wales) Season (Northern Ireland)
PheasantOctober 1 - February 1October 1 - January 31
Partridge, Grey and Red-leggedSeptember 1 - February 1September 1 - January 31
Black GrouseAugust 20 - December 10N/A
Red GrouseAugust 12 - December 10August 12 - November 30
PtarmiganAugust 12 - December 10N/A
Brown HareNo closed seasonAugust 12 - January 31
Other animals which are hunted in the UK include: Please note that this is the situation at the time of writing and close seasons etc are subject to change, and that the situation is in many ways different to that in Ireland.

Notes

The aforementioned species are those primarily pursued for game shooting. To this list can be added Feral Pigeon, Jay, Magpie, Carrion Crow, Jackdaw, Rook and Collared Dove, which are shot in the interests of vermin control rather than as game birds.

Black Grouse are no longer shot on a regular basis, due to an on going decline in numbers, and those that are most likely to be females mistaken for Red Grouse.

Capercaillie are no longer shot in the UK, as they are now protected due to a long term decline.

Eurasian Coot and Moorhen are also shot, but not as much as in the past, they have a closed season which follows the Wildfowl season and are classed as game.

See also

External links

References

1. ^ BASC
2. ^ [1]
3. ^ Ridley, Jane (Oct 1990). Fox Hunting. HarperCollins
4. ^ [2]
Hunting is the practice of pursuing animals for food, recreation, trade or for their products. In modern use, the term refers to regulated and legal hunting, as distinguished from poaching, which is the killing, trapping or capture of animals contrary to law.
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March 2007.


Shooting is the act or process of firing guns or other projectile weapons such as bows or crossbows.

The word shooting can refer to game hunting which implies the hunting of upland game birds such as grouse or pheasant, rabbits, deer or other
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Motto
"Dieu et mon droit" [2]   (French)
"God and my right"
Anthem
"God Save the Queen" [3]
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Deer Stalking is the art and craft of pursuing wild deer for sporting purposes, typically with a rifle. The use of the term "stalking" serves to denote the extreme stealth and wariness which are often necessary when approaching wild deer in their natural habitats.
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Fox hunting is a type of hunting in which trained dogs pursue a prey animal, which is traditionally the red fox,[1] although in other countries adopting the same hunting form, other prey animals are chased.
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British Association for Shooting and Conservation

Conservation
Founded 1908 (WAGBI)
Headquarters Marford Mill, Wrexham

Key people Stanley Duncan, founder; Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, patron
Area served United Kingdom
Employees 103
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Motto
"Dieu et mon droit" [2]   (French)
"God and my right"
Anthem
"God Save the Queen" [3]
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This page is protected from moves until disputes have been resolved on the .
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The Wisconsin (in North America), Devensian (in the British Isles), Midlandian (in Ireland), Würm (in the Alps), and Weichsel (in northern central Europe) glaciations
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H. neanderthalensis

Binomial name
Homo neanderthalensis
King, 1864

Synonyms
Palaeoanthropus neanderthalensis
H. s.
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Mammuthus
Brookes, 1828

Species
  • Mammuthus africanavus African mammoth
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La Cotte de St Brelade is a Paleolithic site of early habitation in St Brelade, Jersey. Cotte means "cave" in Jèrriais; the cave is also known as Lé Creux ès Fées.
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Ancient Rome was a civilization that grew from a small agricultural community founded on the Italian Peninsula circa the 9th century BC to a massive empire straddling the Mediterranean Sea.
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Several species of hare are commonly called Brown Hare:
  • The Cape Hare (Lepus capensis}
  • The European Hare (Lepus europaeus) may be commonly called the Brown Hare, or the European Brown Hare

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Cervinae

Genus: Dama

Species: D. dama

Binomial name
Dama dama
(Linnaeus, 1758)
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S. scrofa

Binomial name
Sus scrofa
Linnaeus, 1758

The wild boar (Sus scrofa) is the wild ancestor of the domestic pig.
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A gamekeeper is a person who looks after an area of countryside to make sure there is enough Game for hunting, and or fish for angling, and who actively manages areas of woodland, waterway, farmland etc for game birds/animals.
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Edward VII (Albert Edward; 9 November 1841 – 6 May 1910) was King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, of the British Dominions beyond the Seas, and Emperor of India from 22 January 1901 until his death on 6 May 1910.
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The Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (born Prince Philippos of Greece and Denmark, 10 June 1921)[2] is the husband and consort of Queen Elizabeth II.

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Scottish Highlands (A' Ghàidhealtachd in Gaelic) include the rugged and mountainous regions of Scotland north and west of the Highland Boundary Fault. The Great Glen divides the Grampian Mountains to the southeast from the Northwest Highlands.
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