571 THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESENTED BY PROF. CHARLES A. KOFOID AND MRS. PRUDENCE W. KOFOID THE SPORTSMAN'S DIRECTORY; BEING A SERIES OF INSTRUCTIONS, IN TEN PARTS, FOR THK CHASE IN ITS VARIOUS CLASSES: COURSING SHOOTING FISHING THE PRESERVATION OF GAME AND DECOYS SELECTION AND TRAINING OF THE POINTER AND SPANIEL BREEDING PHEASANTS PARTRIDGES RABBITS, ETC. WITH COPIOUS DIRECTIONS FOR TRAPPING AND DESTROYING VERMIN, AND DETECTING THE OPERATIONS OF THE POACHER. TO WHICH IS ADDED, AN APPENDIX, Containing numerous valuable Receipts, and useful Abstracts of the Game Laws, and the Laws of Coursing. BY JOHN MAYER, GAMEKEEPER. THE SEVENTH EDITION, Comprising the most recent Changes in the Theory and Practice of Sporting. LONDON: SIMPKIN, MARSHALL, AND CO. MDCCCXLV. LONDON . GEORGE WOODFALL AND SON, ANGEL COURT, SKINNER STREKT. PEEFACE. THAT conventional diffidence of tone, which is the ordinary characteristic of a preface, may con- veniently be dispensed with in an introduction to a seventh edition. Some half dozen years ago, the revision of John Mayer's quaint, honest little manual, for the professional sportsman, was en- trusted to the Editor of the present volume, who then almost wholly re-wrote it, and made such additions as rendered it, so far as it went, com- plete. The sixth edition being consumed, and the changes which time always brings about having affected some of its details, the Publishers resolved upon having them amended, and offering the old Gamekeeper a seventh time for public patronage and approval. He who has once again to crave allowance for his homely original, has the grateful duty to perform of returning his acknowledgments^ IV PBEFACE. for the flattering reception already extended to hisprotegg, added to the pleasant hope of success for his present, from the prosperity of his former venture. London, January, 1845. CONTENTS. PART THE FIRST: THE CHASE. PAGE, Stag Hunting ......... 1 Fox Hunting . ....,. 4 Hare Hunting . 9 Otter Hunting 12 Badger Hunting ........ 12 Training Hounds 13 Coursing . . . .. . . . . .17 PART THE SECOND : SHOOTING. Use of the Gun 20 Flint and Detonating Guns 22 Beating for Game 26 Deer Shooting 28 Pheasant Shooting . 30 Breeding Pheasants '.31 Partridge Shooting . . 33 Grouse Shooting . . . . . . . .34 Woodcock Shooting 36 Snipe Shooting ......... 37 Wild-fowl Shooting 38 Dotterel Shooting 40 DOGS USED IN SHOOTING. Breeding, Selection, Training, Treatment . . . .41 Selection .46 Training. To break the Spaniel ...... 50 To break the Pointer 50 Treatment . 54 Directions for the Gamekeeper . . . . . .57 VI CONTENTS. PART THE THIRD. PAGE Preservation of Game . . 59 Preservation of Fish . 63 Decoys for Ducks 65 Pigeons . 67 Description of the various sorts of Pigeon ... .70 PART THE FOURTH. Various ways of taking Pheasants , . . . .76 Resorts of Partridges . . . . . . . .80 Various ways of taking Partridges . . . . .82 Taking Partridges with Birdlime .83 To take Woodcocks by Draw-Nets, &c 84 To take "Woodcocks with Birdlime . . . . .93 PART THE FIFTH. Methods for taking Small Birds ... . . . .94 To take Birds with Birdlime 101 For taking Small Birds with Lime Twigs . . . .105 Another Method 108 To take Wheat-Ears, Larks, and Quails . . . .110 PART THE SIXTH: RABBITS. Rabbit Shooting 116 Ferreting Rabbits 117 PART THE SEVENTH. Fish Ponds 118 Fishing . 119 To take and preserve Eels . . - . . . . .126 Preservation of Live Baits for Angling . . . . .127 CONTENTS. Vll. PART THE EIGHTH : VERMIN TRAPPING. PAGE For taking Foxes 128 The Polecat 132 The Stoat 133 The Weasel 134 The Mole 135 Buzzards, Kites, Hawks, &c 137 PART THE NINTH. Technical Terms used in Sporting . . . . .142 Colours and Marks of Dogs 147 PART THE TENTH: RECIPES. To destroy Rats 148 For trapping Woodlarks and Nightingales .... 148 Food for them 149 Rheumatism in Dogs 149 To make a Dog inclinable to copulate . . . . .150 Hoveling in the Lights . . . . . . .150 Mange 150 Red Taint or Mange 152 To make a Dog fine in his Skin .152 To destroy Worms ..... ... 152 Another 152 Another 152 Distemper 153 Another 155 Worms 156 Wounds 156 For a green Wound ....... . 157 To cure Mange without Scent 157 Purges 157 When a Dog strips in his Feet 157 Sore feet . ... .158 Vlll CONTENTS. PAGE External Canker in the Ear . . . . . . .158 Another 158 Internal Canker .159 Swelling after bleeding . . . . . . .159 Canker in the Teeth 159 Films over the Eyes, Clouds, &c. . . . . . .160 Old Wounds or Sores 160 Distemper in the Kidneys 160 Another 160 Strains . .161 When a Dog looks heavy, &c .161 Swelled Seats 161 Bruises in the Joints . . . . . . . .161 To prevent Hydrophobia 161 When a Dog is Poisoned 162 Torn Ears 162 Staggers and Fits 162 Bilious Complaints in Dogs . . . . . . .162 Food for Greyhounds when Training . . . . .163 Fleas 163 To Cure the Skins of Dogs, Foxes, &c., &c 163 How to administer Medicine to Dogs 164 To case-harden Locks . 165 To colour the Steel Furniture of a Gun . . . . .165 To bring the Grain up in Gun Stocks, &c. . . . .165 To preserve Gun Barrels from Bust . . . . .166 To colour Gun Barrels . 166 To render Boots Waterproof ...... 167 APPENDIX. Selections from the Game Laws, more immediately appertain- ing to the Duties of Gamekeepers 169 The Laws of Coursing 176 THE SPORTSMAN'S DIRECTORY. PART THE FIRST : THE CHASE. STAG-HUNTING. THE red-deer, or stag (cervus elephas), with the excep- tion of the roe, the only species of the deer tribe indi- genous to this country, is still an animal of chase in England, though no longer drawn for, or hunted as a wild animal. Stag-hunting, as a wild sport, gradually decreased, as the inclosure of waste lands and a high system of cultivation advanced. The only county in which it now exists is Devon, where the extensive moors still occasionally afford a run with a wild stag. Though, as a rural sport, it is entitled to a notice here ; from its very partial existence, a brief allusion to its details will be sufficient for all ordinary purposes. The stag-hound, once so renowned, is no longer bred for, or used in, this description of chase. In the Royal Kennel, the most extensive, as well as perfect stag- B 2 THE CHASE : STAG-HUNTING. hunting establishment in Great Britain, the hreed con- sists of careful crossings of the purest fox-hound blood in the kingdom. With the exception of a more rigid discipline, necessary in organizing an absolute obedience in the field, the treatment of the stag-hound and the fox-hound is the same. The method of capturing and treating the stags, intended for the use of the field during the season, is a novel feature, however, in the annals of the chase, but a most important item in the sport of stag-hunting. The system of taking them depends, of course, mainly, upon local circumstances ; that adopted in Windsor Forest is thus pursued. As soon as a herd of stags is met with, it is given chase to by a mounted party. From the season of the year, (August or September,) the deer, fat and unfit for strong or continued exertion, are soon blown and easily over- taken. The individual to be captured, once fixed upon, the slightest demonstration ensures his rejection by the herd ; he is abandoned and driven away. He now be- comes an easy prey. A burst of a mile or two forces him to take soil. There he is permitted to remain till the keepers with their lassos come up ; the noose is thrown around his antlers ; he is bound and consigned to a cart. Should he bolt from the water during the operation of lassoing, a rough kind of greyhound, trained for the purpose, is slipped at his haunches, who seizes and holds him till he is secured. The stag intended for the field is kept upon dry food, hay, beans and corn, his treatment being as artificial as the purpose for which he is meant. THE CHASE : STAG-HUNTING. 3- Outlying stags are occasionally drawn for. When un- harboured and imprimed, they will make head straight across the country ; and when closely pursued will return to the herd, put up another, and sink into his place, particularly when in the grease, by which means they save one another. To prevent the change, you should take the marks of your stag. The buck (the male fallow-deer) will do the same ; running, however, a smaller ring, the former being more venturous. They haunt, in November, in furze and thick shrubs ; in December, in high slopes ; January, in young wheats and rye ; February and March, in thick bushes ; April and May, in coppices and springs ; June and July, in out- woods and purlieus, near young corn. When you are in search for outliers, either stag or buck, go up wind early in the mornings, to find them at relief or feed, when you may watch them to cover. This done, go for a bloodhound ; take him upon the lyam, or cord ; try the ring walks, entries, goings out, &c. ; and where you find fresh view or slot, and furnishings in the rides and glades, make blemishes and plashes in the slope. These, in case your dog over- shoot, will enable you to draw counter and recover your beat. You will know when you are near the stag, by the dog's bearing hard upon the lyam, and beginning to lapise, or open, which you must prevent. When found, if he is for a hunt, have the hounds upon a side lay, near where you think he will pass. Rouse him up ; when imprimed, loose your hound, and give the signal for B 2 FOX-HUNTING. laying the pack upon his trail. As he tires, his coat becomes black. He will then lurk, skulk, and sink lying down with his legs doubled under his belly, and his nose to the ground, to prevent the scent flying. Hounds are then likely to overshoot him ; in that case the system for his recovery is the same as when fox- hounds are at fault, and will be found treated at large under that division of the chase. The ceremonials formerly used on the death of a stag are become obsolete in this country. Some of those practised ;on the Continent are singular enough. In Germany all who are present at the death are required to pull off their gloves, or redeem them by a fee to the huntsman ; the unfortunate Louis XVI. never failed to take off one of his gloves on such occasions. FOX-HUNTING. As far back as the reign of Richard the Second, the fox is found to have been an animal of chase ; but hounds ex- clusively kept for his pursuit have not existed more than a century and a half. During that period the whole sys- tem of fox-hunting has undergone a change, not alone as regards the chase itself, but even the time of day dedi- cated to it. As, however, an historical 'notice of that sport does not suit the purpose of this book, we at once proceed to offer the best practical hints for the manage- ment of fox-hounds in the field, and to suggest how best FOX-HUNTING. 5' science may operate in furtherance of the modern taste for that most popular of British rural sports. In drawing for your fox, the size and nature of the cover, and the state of the weather, must be principally your guides. With small patches of gorse, the only general rule to be observed is, to suit the strength thrown in to the space to be drawn . A large body of hounds, in a small cover, will chop more foxes than they will unkennel. In one of moderate extent, with calm weather, draw up wind, that he may not hear you too soon ; in a storm, cross upon the wind, lest you come upon him before he is aware that hounds are near him. The hour of trial for a huntsman is that with which the business of the day commences. When you throw your hounds in, cheer them as if your heart was in your voice. Let all you do be done with animation. Cheer them as they draw ; it gives life to yourself, to them, to your field; remember spirit is the very essence of fox-hunting. Never lend yourself to assist hounds in chopping a fox ; do not be deceived about the necessity for blood recollect stag-hounds do not want for dash, and they rarely taste it. Should a fox by accident be chopped, if the cover be small, do not let them eat him in it ; nothing is so likely to cause its being abandoned for the future. When your fox breaks, do not suffer him to be tally'd till well clear of the cover, as it may head him back into the mouths of the pack. Once fairly away, get the body of hounds upon him if you can ; but do not 6 FOX-HUNTING. go without some strength. Blow your horn, that the field, and your whips in particular, may know that he is gone. These should cheer and not rate to cry; hounds should be taught to regard the first tongue thrown as a sound to he flown to with pleasure not a signal to he obeyed by crack of whip. When they settle to the scent, keep well on their line, with your eye to the body, as the least likely to overrun it. Should they check, let your first cast make good the head ; to know where he did not go is next in import- ance to the knowledge of where he did. Bear in mind this is the most trying of all difficulties; the first check is the moment of greatest peril. Hounds rarely check upon a fox that is forward, unless from taint ; if he has turned, he has been headed, or has fixed upon a point which he has determined to make good. Do not now get among your hounds, nor suffer the whips to scatter them. Get them speedily back to the spot up to which you know they brought him ; and, once there, let them spread and use their natural sagacity. If you re- quire to cover a large space, make two divisions, cast- ing one yourself, your first whip doing the same with the other. Let it be ever present to you, that, while you are at fault, your fox s not ; and that, as the distance increases between you, the chances multiply fifty-fold in his favour. When hounds are to be stopped, the less threatening the better ; they should not be allowed to associate the ideas of fear and the field together. When hallooing to a scent, take care that you do not drown the POX-HUNTING. 7 note of a hound that has thrown tongue; trot quietly up to a cold scent, bringing hounds up on their mettle most likely will cause them to run on the expectation of it. If you have viewed your fox to ground, and it he such an earth as you can bolt him from while the pack is on fire, let them have him, unless some strong reasons in- duce you to spare his life. Hounds are little served by blood when they are cooled, and their courage is down ; a fox thrown among them after an hour or two spent in digging is only a fox sacrificed, and one more chance of a blank day. The change of the hunt is an accident impossible to guard against, and very difficult of detec- tion. Your staunchest houmis will generally keep to the first scent, and you must use your knowledge of your pack in such cases as your safest resource. It will serve you to bear in mind that the scent of a dog-fox is much stronger than that of a vixen. The head whipper-in must be completely under the command of the huntsman, always maintaining his halloo, stopping the hounds that divide or run from it, and getting immediately forward with them to the huntsman. His station, whilst drawing the c x overs, is always on the side opposite to the huntsman, keeping near enough to him however to hear arid obey his halloo. While the huntsman is riding to his head hounds, the whipper-in may be useful in various ways ; he may clap forward to any great earth that may by chance be open; he may sink the wind to halloo, or mob a fox when the scent fails ; he may keep him off 8 FOX-HUNTING. his foil, stop the tail hounds, and get them forward; and has it frequently in his power to assist the hounds. The most essential part of fox-hunting, the making and keeping the pack steady, depends entirely on the first whipper-in, as the huntsman should seldom rate, and never flog a hound. In turning his hounds, the whipper-in should per- form his office as quietly as possible : if he rate and crack^ his whip, they cannot be expected to draw : naturally they will throw up their heads, and leave so much ground untried. If they draw towards the huntsman, he should let them alone, merely riding be- hind them in his direction. Always let him hit the hound offending first, and rate him by name after : he need not spare the thong if the fault be one deserving punishment, but hit him always behind the shoulder, or as far from his head as possible. Rioting, a generous fault, is to be cured by vigorous and decisive measures ; for skirting, there is rarely any remedy except the halter. When difficulties occur, the less the speculative opinions of the field are listened to the better. Let a huntsman then watch narrowly his trustworthy hounds, and at the same time weigh the probable points that his fox would make : thence only can he hope for assistance, or coun- sel to be relied on. When there are various scents, and the hounds di- vide, so as to make it uncertain which is the hunted fox, let the whipper-in stop those hounds farthest down the wind, as they can hear the others, and will reach HARE-HUNTING. 9 them soonest ; it is useless to attempt stopping those up the wind. In heathy countries, in dry weather, foxes will run the roads ; and if gentlemen then ride close upon the hounds, they may drive them miles to no purpose without any scent, as high-mettled fox-hounds will seldom stop whilst horses are close at their heels. Sheep and hirds, by their running and chattering, often give indications of the point of the lost fox. These, however, and many such, are more points of practice than general rules for fox-hunting. The ordinary code of field instructions is comprised in the observations which we have here epitomised : they are the charts by which the huntsman may steer ; it must depend upon his own skill and care, to turn them to profitable ac- count. HARE-HUNTING. TIME, that changes all things, has not been idle with this division of the chase. Not only is the system of hunting different to that formerly pursued, but the kind of hound used for it is essentially altered. In- stead of the slow, deep-mouthed southern, the diminu- tive beagle, or harrier, a sort of composition between both, the dwindled fox-hound, is now generally em- ployed in hare-hunting. If we understand by the word harrier, the dog constituting a pack of hare- hounds, we shall find him not of any peculiar species, but a combination of various breeds suited to the 10 HARE-HUNTING. country for which they are intended. Hares now are never trailed to their forms. In drawing for them in the open, the huntsman will do well to remember that on their seats they have little or no scent, and that when started in cover they will frequently hunt the hounds for the purpose of making foil. If the scent be true, the cry will grow more faint ; if it be forward, it will increase ; this is the best guide when hounds are hunting out of sight, though it is, by no means, at all times to be relied upon. If you hear your hounds break cover, without being able to discover for what point they are making, it will assist you to know that a hare almost invariably faces the wind. Once on foot, you will find her make use of many artifices, such as running to a head, heading back, thereby foiling the ground ; then throwing two or three times, and making head again, which puts the dogs to a check, causing them to overshoot, and gives her an opportunity of throwing in again, and returning on the foil. In this case, make your casts counter till you come to her home, where you will find her. Some- times, when she is very hard run, she will take vault : sometimes, after several throws, she will lie down, take to the water, &c., and let the hounds overshoot. The more that good-seasoned hounds are left to themselves, the better they will hunt, the more sport they will afford, and the more surely kill : in general, they are too much hallooed. A hare should be patiently followed through all her doubles, for in this consists the fair HAKE-HUNTING. 11 sport of hare-hunting. Rememher that stillness and silence are indispensable. Should she be headed back, which often happens, either from the speed of the dogs, or from her constant aim to double, the pack will gene- rally overrun the scent : it is therefore proper to keep a considerable distance behind the dogs, that, left to their own efforts, they may perceive their loss, turn, and recover. The greatest difficulty with which the huntsman of harriers has to contend, is the chance of running heel; hounds are so fond of scent that they will hunt when any is to be found. An intimate know- ledge of the disposition of each hound in his pack, is his best refuge in such dangers. Let him sit quietly and watch them closely. His old hounds will take the hint when they see him pull up, and if he be silent, set diligently to inquire his reasons. If he then discover that they are not confident in carrying it forward, he may be certain that they have been running heel. No rule can now assist him, save that in lifting his hounds he hold his peace. When he speaks they naturally ex- pect he has something to communicate of moment, and up go their heads to catch it. Hares, when out of their knowledge, always run well : if they start down wind they seldom return, and then hounds may be hallooed, encouraged, and pushed. In the field, be careful not to ride over the dogs, speak to them in time ; and in roads and paths pull up and make way for them. On all occasions, when it is pos- sible, avoid riding on the line of your tail hounds : it 12 OTTER AND BADGER-HUNTING. is a practice on every account objectionable : they are constantly in jeopardy from it, and wbere scent has been overrun, it will probably be irretrievably ruined. Let the young huntsman ever bear this maxim in re- membrance, that care and patience are the surest sub- stitutes for the practice and experience of his elder brethren of the craft. OTTER-HUNTING, one of our earliest sports, and for- merly very popular, is now nearly obsolete. There are but very few packs kept in England for the purpose, and tjiey are quite private. That the pursuit of this most destructive animal, for its extirpation is of infinite importance to the lover of the angle, all who know the vast mischief done by it to our waters, are aware. In 1804 one was killed near Leominster, that weighed thirty-four pounds and a half. Its age was supposed to be eight years ; and it was calculated that during the latter four or five, it consumed annually a ton of fish. We shall return to the otter when we have to speak of the trapping of vermin. BADGER-HUNTING is still more rare, but as, occasion- ally, instances occur in which a knowledge of the animal's habits and resorts may be found useful, it will be as well briefly to allude to them. During the day he chiefly confines himself to his burrow, a strong earth, TRAINING HOUNDS. 13 * with numerous ramifications. At night he goes abroad in search of his prey. That is the time to hag all his entrance holes, and, leaving persons to watch them, to commence your chase with a few staunch and resolute bull-terriers. Pasture ground, on which cattle have fed, is a likely place to find a badger, hunting under the dung for grubs : the borders of preserves, too, are fre- quently his haunts, as he is very partial to game. Moss heaped up in cover, or cow-dung newly disturbed, are sure signs that he is not far off. Once put up, he will run directly home, where your bags will secure him. Fires lighted at his earths will keep him out, if it be your object to have a run rather than to make sure of the quarry. TRAINING HOUNDS. FEEDING-TIME is generally chosen for teaching young hounds to answer to their names, and for enforcing other habits of obedience. The hounds should be called singly, and by name, to their meals. Those called should immediately approach you, and be taught, when touched with the handle of your whip or switch, to follow you close. A roll-call should be made of all the hounds in and about the kennel, several times in a week. Severe discipline should be kept up among them, but no periodical or general whippings be resorted to, which are at once barbarous and useless. The huntsman, or feeder, should sleep within hearing of the kennel, lest 14 TRAINING HOUNDS. his hounds should become disorderly and riotous in the night. Dogs sometimes take a particular antipathy against one, which they will fall on in a body : when symptoms of this kind appear, he should be removed. Bitches should be withdrawn on the first symptoms of their heat, and young unentered dogs separated from the pack. Hounds should be well kept between the sea- sons, and prevented from growing fat by exercise : a good swim in a river once a week, with a long run after it, will be found very beneficial. Young hounds should be branded on the side with the initials of their owner's name, to prevent loss or dispute. Their ears should be rounded at six months old in cool weather, that they may not bleed too profusely ; but this operation should not be performed whilst they are under the in- fluence of distemper. Spaying is seldom done effectually ; a very skilful person should be employed ; for if the bitch be not cut clean, she will be troubled with her periodical heats, although barren. A young bitch may be spayed about a fortnight after her first conception, but probably the safest time is whilst she suckles. When spayed bitches do well, they are amongst the best of their species, being firm-fleshed and good runners, and extremely serviceable in a pack which hunts late in the season. In breeding, never put an old dog and bitch together ; and never breed from either that are unhealthy. It is the judicious cross that makes the complete pack : if TRAINING HOUNDS. 15 you find a cross succeed, always pursue it : if a favourite dog skirts a little, put him to a thorough line-hunting bitch, and such a cross may succeed. Be cautious of breeding in and in. Young hounds are usually put out to walk, or keep, till old enough to he admitted into the kennel; when they return from this their first school, become reconciled to the in-door discipline of the kennel, and will readily answer to their names, it is time to couple them, in order to take them abroad to complete their education. Couple dog and bitch together as far as practicable. Young ones which are troublesome or awkward, may at first be coupled with old hounds: they must not be coupled carelessly or loosely, or the young dog may slip his collar, and, being frightened, stray away. Collars with the owner's name should be put on such as it is feared may strav. A few couples at a time should be taken out at first, and taught to follow the huntsman on foot : they must next be taught to follow the horse ; then to run in company, without skirting or skulking; to be strictly obedient to the voice of the huntsman; to beware of hunting improper objects ; to be staunch to the scent they are defigned to be entered on ; and then they should run one or two trail scents, as trials. It will be now proper to lead the fox-hounds amongst those animals which they should neither touch nor notice ; the most im- portant of which are sheep and deer. A few dogs may be uncoupled among the deer or sheep ; attendants, being ready with their whips, should walk up and 16 TRAINING HOUNDS. down, caressing those dogs which are quiet, and chiding those which notice the sheep ; threatening them with the smack of the whip, and calling out perpetually, " 'Ware sheep!" not failing to flog those severely which are inattentive ; this must be repeated in the most strict and severe manner, as often as it may be necessary. The fox-hound must next be taught not to run at the hare ; and this lesson must be given in the field, as with the sheep. Young fox-hounds must be first stooped to a vermin or strong scent, such as the martin cat, badger, or fox : and when once well blooded, they will retain an attach- ment to the scent, a fondness which must, however, be strengthened by discipline. To make a trail scent, a cat may be killed and spread open, and dragged over the land intended for the run : some prefer a bunch of red herrings. Two or three couple of the steadiest and best nosed line-hunting hounds should always be present at the training of young hounds, as the example of the former is of great service in perfecting the young dogs. The old hounds should take this in turn. The young pack may now be entered in that part of the country which it is intended they should hunt in the season, and be blooded to their proper game. For fox-hounds, cubs must be found in the covers, or bag foxes provided. They should be inured early to the strongest and thick- est covers, where the martin cat may be found, whose scent is attractive to hounds; only a few couples of puppies at a time should join the pack. COUKSING. COURSING. THIS sport comes properly under two heads ; some persons keeping greyhounds wholly for the purpose of public racing for prizes, others using them merely as instruments of private amusement. In both cases, how- ever, the rules for breeding, rearing, and training, are essentially the same. There is a popular fallacy exist- ing in many districts where coursing is only followed as a private pastime, that greyhounds for mountains and rough wild downs should not be too highly bred. There is a passage in Beckford that applies directly to such impressions : " I have often heard, as an excuse for hounds not hunting a cold scent, that they were too high-bred. I confess I know not what that means ; but this I know, that hounds are frequently too ill-bred to be of any service." The fine thorough-bred greyhound, known to all coursers, is no new species, (though, until the hare became the quarry in coursing, the wiry-haired race was used as alone fit to pull down the mountain and forest deer,) as, in its silky coat and blood-like shape, it is found in most of the pictures of Charles the F^rst. No doubt it has since undergone many changes for the better, moie especially in the crosses to which it was subjected by the skill and industry of the late Lords Orford and Rivers. All that the moderate courser of the present day 18 COURSING. has to attend to is, how he manages the best hlood that he can now procure at little trouble and moderate out- lay: of course the brief treatment of the subject in a work of this nature, is not intended for such as keep large studs for public running. The earlier in the year you breed, the better ; late puppies rarely turn out well. When you put a favourite sort to the dog, it will be a serviceable precaution to have another bitch warded at the same time, which will enable you to rear all your litter without injury to the dam. The advantage from this system is, that you will have trial of all your produce ; when you destroy any, you may destroy the best. This was Lord Orford's system : he never got rid of a puppy till he had expe- rience of his quality. When the whelps are removed, it will serve the mother to give her some gentle medicine ; three purging balls, one every other morning, will be found to set her right sooner than if nature were left to herself. For rearing greyhound puppies, the same general rules apply as with all others, except that being more deHcate they require a greater share of care and attention. Their bitterest foe is distemper, so long con- sidered as beyond all hope from human aid or skill. Modern improvement seems to have, at last, found a remedy for that formidable disease : in the Appendix a recipe is given, as infallible, upon an authority there is every reason to respect. The maxim that " the good that is in a horse goes in at the mouth," is equally applicable to stock of all de- COURSING. 19 scriptions. Above all, let it be ever present with those who rear greyhounds that if neglected in their youth, no after process avails them aught. Their food should be substantial, such as oatmeal and broth, very thick, oatmeal cakes made thick and soaked in tepid milk, and flesh hung up so that they may have to use exertion to reach it ; the pulling at it giving liberty to the neck and strength to the jaws. Never confine them long. Con- stant exercise is as necessary to the development of their powers as judicious feeding. Let them accompany you as much as possible in your rides and walks in the former, as they grow in strength and age, increasing the speed when an opportunity is afforded of doing so, with- out injury to their action, the certain consequence of fast work on roads or other hard surfaces. A greyhound, to be symmetrical, should be shark-jawed, prick-eared, with a long neck, thin withers, deep shoulders, broad hooped back, broad loins, flat sides well let down, deep gaskins, straight legs, short from the hock to the pastern joint, thin feet, pointed, a very long fine stern, and large floating veins. It will improve greyhounds' looks, and save their health, to dress them daily with a moderately hard brush, using a little oil. c 2 20 PART THE SECOND: SHOOTING. USE OF THE GUN. THE first object, in acquiring the use of the gun, is to get the better of any trepidation or apprehension at the moment of discharge ; till this is done, no accuracy of aim can be hoped for. In order to this, the learner should first shoot at a dead mark, and then proceed to sparrows, which in their covey and flight most resemble partridges, and are for this reason to be preferred to swallows ; besides which, they are a mischievous bird, while the latter are highly useful in the destruction of insects, and they are too difficult an aim for a young beginner. In presenting the piece, place the left hand near the guard, almost on a level with the right ; but a long or point-heavy piece must be held with the left hand farther extended. In taking aim, it is best to keep both eyes open. In firing, the point of the gun, or sight in a right line from the mark upon the breech, should be levelled point-blank with the object; and then the finger must instantaneously pull the trigger, as on this quickness of the hand the whole art of shooting depends. On all occasions look your danger full in the face, and steadily at your mark. Partridge shooting is generally the first sport attempted by the USE OF THE GUN. 21 young gunner, for which purpose one or two dogs and an experienced friend are quite sufficient company. Be circumspect and deliberate ; the dogs standing and the birds having been sprung, in a moment calculate the proper distance at which to fire, and then cock and shoulder the piece. Always aim at one particular bird, not firing at random at the whole covey, or " into the brown of them;" and, till well accustomed to shooting, always aim at the object point blank. A bird may be permitted to advance from fifteen to thirty yards from its springing, before the gun is cocked, and the shot may be made from thirty-five to fifty paces distant. Experience will soon direct the sportsman to fire full a hand's breadth before the bird, at a distance of forty yards, and from that to a foot or upwards, should he have a long shot. In shooting, flying or running, let the object get a fair distance before you take the gun up : then throw it upon the object at full sight, and pull instantly. The finger being a day's march behind, is the principal cause of missing, as that gives liberty or time for flinching. Never carry your gun with the object, nor shoot before it, as it cannot get out in the compass of a point-blank shot, and it may turn, in which case your shot will pass it. If you are fond of snap-shooting, which is requisite in cock and rabbit shooting, mind never to hold full upon the object at short distances. If a side shot, take its head; if going from you, take its wing. Never shoot full at coveys ; called " flanking them," &c. 22 FLINT AND DETONATING GUNS. When you miss, and seem confident that your sight was good, depend upon the fault heing in the finger not pbeying the eye ; therefore be not intimidated, but en- deavour to pull quick the instant you see the gun cover the object : you cannot be too sharp ; stretch your eyes wide open, and look hard. If you feel disposed to flinch, take a sandwich and a glass of brandy; after which, stand as still as possible at least five minutes, and then proceed. There are many directions in which your objects fly and run, but none can get out in the compass of a point-blank shot. Pheasants and woodcocks (being in cover) will obstruct your sight, by flying right before a tree, holding their heads back, to keep the direction ; in which case you must immediately step aside. FLINT AND DETONATING GUNS. THE principle of ignition by percussion cap and detonat- ing has now become so general as to have entirely super- seded the old plan of discharging sporting guns by means of flint and steel. A few of the old school still insist that there is nothing like flint ; that the gun so supplied shoots stronger than the detonator, while Young Eng- land would scorn being seen in the field so appointed. The truth is, in point of igniting the charge there is very little difference between the time consumed by the two principles. If this be so, the superior convenience of the detonator can admit of no question. Let your flint TO CLEAN DETONATING GUNS. 23 ' lock still decorate the sides of pistols and blunderbusses, for domestic purposes, but circumvent your game with copper caps. As the construction of the detonator differs materially from that of the flint gun, the following sug- gestions will not be out of place. TO CLEAN DETONATING GUNS. 1. Commence the process by clearing from the sur- face of the gun any impurities that may be on it. 2. Clean perfectly with a wet rag, as soon after use as possible, every part of the breech and lock on which the detonating powder acts, and the pegs with wet tow : should you only do this as a temporary cleansing, rub the wet places dry, and give them a coating of oil ; in- deed, a wash of oil all over the piece will be no bad precaution. 3. To take the barrels from the stock, place the handle of a turnscrew against your breast, and pressing the stock against the barrels, slide your fore-finger to the end of the screw. This will act as a prop, and steady your lift on the bolt's head : during this process, let the locks be at half-cock. 4. Having released your barrels, put them into a pail of water, and oil carefully your stock and ramrod. 5. Fill both barrels with cold water, and rinse them till it runs out without being stained ; then place them near the fire, with the muzzles downward, and let them 24 TO CLEAN DETONATING GUNS. drain perfectly. Then put clear water into the pail to the depth of six or seven inches, and having prepared your cleaning rod, work it up and down till the water is driven through the pivot holes quite clean : repeat this system with hot water and a clean washer. 6. This done, dry the outside of the barrels, and again set them up to drain. In a few minutes dry the inside also, by means of a rod tufted with flannel : you must change the latter frequently. You may ascertain whether your work be perfectly done by placing the peg-hole opposite the flame of a candle ; if it be clear, out goes the light. 7. Finish with a strong brass brush till you remove the lead ; after brushing it lustily up and down for a few minutes, turn the muzzles downwards, strike them against a piece of soft wood, and the lead will drop out. Do not force the brush too near the breech. This chapter on the detonating gun cannot be more appropriately wound up than with the following direc- tions, published several years ago in a pamphlet written by that eminent artist, Purdey. " Load with the cocks down, which prevents the pow- der from being forced out of the pegs that receive the copper caps. When ramming down the shot, observe the distance the end of the brass worm is from the muz- zle of the barrel, to prevent overcharging. Always ram down hard. " Prime the last thing : otherwise, in ramming down TO CLEAN DETONATING GUNS. 25- the wadding, the powder will be driven into the caps, and become so firmly compressed as to destroy their effect. " Should the caps be put on by mistake, prior to loading, force them off with a turnscrew, and replace them with new ones. " Never put the cocks down upon the caps when the gun is loaded, as it compresses and spoils the detonating powder, and is very dangerous, the cocks being liable to be lifted up by catching hold of any substance, and their falling will explode the gun. If left at half-cock, this cannot possibly happen. " Keep the copper caps dry ; if exposed to the fire for a few minutes, when required for use in damp wea- ther, they will never fail. Take care that no oil or grease gets to them. " The caps made with the purified detonating powder should always be used in preference to those which are made with fulminating mercury, and called ' anti-corro- sive.' This powder is dangerous, as it inflames with very slight pressure, and detonates with such extreme violence, as frequently to burst the shields of the cocks, and split the pegs. It also- wears them out in one quarter the time the other does, and is likewise very foul, and will not keep : it injures, moreover, the inside of the barrels and breeches. " For cleaning the detonating lock as at present con- structed, the following implements will be required, as also for taking it to pieces previous to the process : A 26 BEATING FOE GAME. spring cramp, several small turnscrews, two or three hard tooth-brushes, and a penknife or scraper. " In taking the lock to pieces, first let down the cock, and having provided means for keeping the various screws, &c., distinct from each other, remove the main spring, with the aid of the cramp. Next take off the bridle; then press the scear against the scear spring, and with the other hand push the cock back as far as it will go. Let the scear spring then go back, and the scear pivot will come out easily, which will permit the scears being removed. Unscrew the scear spring screw, and lift out the spring. BEATING FOR GAME. You will know if there is game in your beat by scratchings, buskings, racks, and paths in the fields and covers; creeps and muses at the sides and in the hedges ; crotes and droppings about them ; chalkings and markings of woodcocks in the rides round ponds, &c., in covers ; mutings of snipes in marshes, meadows, fens, spring-heads, &c. Grouse frequent the hang of the hills, by the bogs. When they discover you, the cock challenges, when they all run or take wing, and will go a mile in a straight direction and then drop. Pheasants are found in young rough covers, the first fortnight ; after which, being disturbed, they go to the high slopes, where, the leaves being on, they save them- selves for a while, and beat you. Early in mornings, BEATING FOB GAME. 27" and late in afternoons, you will find them reading : then, if your spaniels are good, not hanging on the haunt, babbling, and plodding, but quick in taking the "road," and knowing the toe from the heel, you will be able to get shots at them before they reach the high slope. Partridges you will find in turnips, stubbles, rough grounds, shady places, clovers, grass, and particularly in fresh broken-up woodlands, where there are plenty of ants' eggs : these are famous breeding grounds. In the pairing season, which is called their wooing time, (the proper season for training young dogs,) you will find them chiefly in fallows and turnips that are left until April : it is then time to leave off, as they are at nest or nesting. In the season, when they become wild, use babbling spaniels round the fences near turnips, which will cause them to run and lose each other : they will then lie close, and enable you to pick them up singly. You will often see a whole covey take wing, and fly straight ahead two or three fields. Many sportsmen will pursue and beat very close for them, which is gene- rally in vain, as they often take a circuitous route, and return scudding under the hedges ; therefore, if you are inclined to find them, return, and beat the grounds from whence you drove them first. Much fagging might be saved gentlemen, by the keeper's going forward and beating the bare grounds with a racing terrier, that has plenty of tongue. This mode will bring the birds into less compass. Hares you will find in the standing corn, which they 28 DEER,- SHOOTING. will follow, as long as there is any ; from whence you should drive them with beagles, waiting for them at the gates, &c. After the corn is cut, they go to the turnips and stubbles, where you will generally find them about a hundred yards from the sides, some in the fences, c. In wet weather they lie on the hills, and in dry weather in the valleys. In their breeding time they like damp grounds, as it cools them. Quails you will find in the stubbles; rails in the stand- ing barleys, clovers, &c. ; and woodcocks by the sides of the rides, walls, rotten banks, and ponds, in cover : where, when you are beating for them, boys should be placed on trees, to mark : if you wish not to disturb the game, have some to brush, or close-mouthed dogs, which they do not much mind. DEER-SHOOTING. DEER-STALKING, as a wild sport, is, among us, so much confined to the remote districts of Scotland, and, even there, so dependent upon circumstances wholly local, that it is not considered necessary to enter into its details in this epitomised volume. In shooting park deer, (an operation generally delegated to the gamekeeper,) he should be careful to ascertain their ages, and whether they be in high condition or not : particularly if the does be wet or dry. He should never shoot end-ways. A buck should be shot through the head ; a doe through the shoulder, as a bloody shoulder is held in high esti- DEER-SHOOTING. 29" mation. Immediately after they have fallen, run up and cut the throat. Be as expeditious as possible in lacing, casing, drawing the shoulders, paunching, &c., as the fat will pull off with the skin, and the buck, in hot weather, will turn green. Some break deer up hot, others the next morning : the latter is best. They are generally ridden to the gun, though lying in wait for them in a tree, or close copse near their walks, will answer the purpose in most cases. As these observa- tions apply to the duties of the gamekeeper, the follow- ing hints will also be of service to him. To know a wet doe from a dry one, observe her coat : if she is dry you will see little twists of hair sticking up, which are called quills : she will set her head and sin- gle up high, and appear more round and straight. The wet doe looks heavy, stalks along slowly, hanging her head and single low. These are the most prominent marks, and can scarce be mistaken. Should you want to take them to removes, or bucks to stall-feed, if the stall or lodge is not constructed properly for that pur- pose, build a pen where they are usually fed, near a tree, with hurdles double height. Have a gate that will fall to and fasten quickly. Feed them till they come in freely ; then place yourself in the tree, with a cord tied to the gate, by which means you can take them. They are sometimes taken with a toil, or net, into wm'ch they are driven with a reel made with long feathers, and a cord a hundred yards long ; and sometimes a dog is seud to drive them in. Where trees stand convenientlv 30 PHEASANT-SHOOTING. across their main walks, tie two lines, one above the other, the height they run ; drive them in with a dog. When deer are forced, their horns lie straight with the neck, which will, when in, entangle them. If they are to be stalled, tie their legs, and saw their horns off just below the antlers ; blind them with sacking, and then take them to stall. The best food for them is cut clover-hay and oil-cakes, ground and* mixed. Common feed in the park is hay, beans, chestnuts, and drum-headed cabbages. When taken with the greens, (which you may know by their leaving the herd, and lying in wet grounds, when their teeth are generally loose,) give them dirty potatoes, grown in loamy clay, and clover hay. If they will not feed, cram them with barley-meal pellets; and they must be housed. There should be vaults, made by the sides of hills, in parks, for deer to lodge in when the weather is very wet ; and feeding stalls in different parts. Vert, (which is all kinds of green wood in a forest,) with the beech-mast, makes the venison much finer flavoured than park feed ; though this may be much improved, by carrying them plenty of browse- wood. Stock may be three head per acre, if properly fed. PHEASANT-SHOOTING. PHEASANTS lie upon corn and stubbles, as long as any food is to be found, and in the neighbouring coverts or hedi-rows, where they may be seen morning and even- BREEDING PHEASANTS. 31 ' ing at feeding time. They resort much to the sea-shore, when within a moderate distance, being fond of salt, and frequent marsh land, if there is proper cover for them. Such situations are peculiarly fitted for preserves, if there is a supply of wood within a moderate distance. Alder, willow, and other aquatics, in springy or marshy soils, is a good harbour for them. In winter they roost in the middle branches of the oak. Their food, in this season is hawthorn berries, insects, and reptiles, or they will even feed on carrion. The dogs for shooting phea- sants in woods should be the purest bred and strongest formed spaniels, such as are not afraid of the thickest *and most thorny covers. In extensive woodlands the team of spaniels cannot be too numerous or too full of tongue. Pheasants and red-legged partridges, which are two or three years old, will run till they cray fairly be said to be coursed or hunted by the dogmas if aware of the gun should they dare to spring. As an important kem in this sport, a few practi^H rules for breeding pheasants cannot find HBfTFer place than subjoined to those for their destruction. BREEDING PHEASANTS. LET your pheasantry be well constriteted with perches, hiding-places made with reeds tied round stakes put up along the centre, and boxes round the sides. Your stock may be five or six hens to one cock ; they will drop their eggs in various places : they must be gathered BREEDING PHEASANTS. every day, and put into wheat, small ends downwards, till you have got a sufficient quantity for a clutch or set- ting, which may he from seventeen to nineteen. If you want to send them any distance, they must he packed in wool. The silk hens are the hest for incubation, the heat of the common hens heing apt to shell-bake the birds in the eggs. When it so happens, put them into water rather more than lukewarm, which will relieve them ; you will know when it takes place by the eggs moving. When hatched, their first feed should be the eggs of ants, fresh curds, and bread, with a small portion of chickweed, groundsel, or lettuce, cut fine : all these mixed carefully. It will be some days before they will eat grain ; till then give them but very little water. Be sure to cover the train of your frame before the dew falls, and not to uncover it till it is quite off in the morn- ing ; such humidity being very hurtful. Remove your frame every other morning, first sweeping the dew off the grass where you intend to set it : here should be plenty of Dutch clover. Feed often, always beginning at daybreak. When they will eat grain freely, the other food may be gradually left off. After a month, you may let them have constant water, and plenty of cabbages. If the weather proves cold, give them white peas, or small tick beans, w Let them always have plenty of sand laid in small heaps ; this will rid them of vermin, and keep *^pTri;tTfc^p!>*^pyjpiBd^ KA. scale on the end of the tongue : this being removed, apply garlic and tar mixed to the wound. Next follow the snickups, PARTRIDGE-SHOOTING. 33 which is a sore upon the rump ; break it, and nip the virus out, and apply fresh butter. They must now be separated, each put into a box by itself; for if they are left together, they will pick the sores and draw each other's entrails out. There must be something soft over their heads in the boxes, or by jumping they will hurt themselves : coarse sacking is proper. After they are well, it is better to turn them into the cover you intend them for, where should be hiding-places made for them, with stakes driven down lined with reeds or straw. Wheat sheaves are best, tied at the top and the tails spread open ; upon which they will hop, and pick the wheat out. These should be near their lodges, and well stored with different kinds of grain, plenty of buck- wheat, white peas, and tick beans. Let plenty of white clover be sown in the pasture grounds which they fre- quent. When you go to feed them, always use a whistle, which they will come to freely. The same process will do for partridges, only you should have the Bantam or Spanish hens for sitting. PARTRIDGE-SHOOTING. NEVER follow coveys which will not lie, birl rise on a slight alarm, and fly straight forward to a considerable distance ; but patiently wait their return, as they will generally, by a circular flight, return to the place from whence they were at first flushed. Some drive the fences and coverts with noisy spaniels. Leave no part D 34 GROUSE-SHOOTING. of the ground untried, as when coveys are separated and the birds frightened, and driven about, they may lie in places not at all suspected, and sometimes so close, as almost to be trodden upon. When game i$ scarce, the sportsman must make ex- tensive circles, and observe great silence and circumspec- tion : some keep spaniels detached, sending them for- ward with a keeper, to hunt all the turnips and other likely haunts. In throwing off young dogs, it may be necessary to give them the wind, which they will afterwards in- stinctively keep. Shooting-dogs should, as much as possible, be brought to attend to signals by the hand ; and though under good command they may be allowed a pretty extensive range, yet all should be kept as much as possible within sight, and young ones ever within hearing. The wounded partridge may be instantly killed by a slight knock on the back of the head against the gun- stock. % GROUSE-SHOOTING. THE Scotch and Welsh mountains are the principal places for grouse-shooting. Bed grouse are plentiful in the moor-lands of Derbyshire, Lancashire, Cumberland, and Yorkshire. They do not now come further than Staffordshire. A hardy J^id deep-flewed setter is far preferable to the pointer for grouse-shooting. Half a dny GROUSE-SHOOTING. 35 Grouse is quite long enough for the stoutest dog to be employed in this labour, at the end of which he should be re- lieved. In this way a brace or two of dogs may be fully employed, being kept in relay. The shooter shouj wear the lightest possible dress, over a flannel shirt anl drawers, having his legs and feet well defended, can only be killed, at least in any numbers,, in weather, and from about eight o'clock till you are weary. When the season grouse will only lie from ten or eleve large shot and the largest piece . necessary. If two or more shooters should make an extensive circle to another remaining behind to drive run hundreds of yards forwadj is to aim to kill the old COO away in order to divert you pack will lie still till you may attt the head with your gun. To find ginning of the season, take a| muni as you can hunt steadily togefiiej* found and marked down, take up at dog. When grouse are wild, a perfoi among them will sometimes cause them to' very close. The bullet must be perfoi holes intersecting each other in the centre. of the ball in the air frightens, the birds. Care mi taken to give sufficient eleva%>n to the ball danger. WOODCOCK-SHOOTING. WOODCOCK-SHOOTING. WOODCOCKS are generally to be found, in the greatest abundance, within a few miles of the sea-coast : though they traverse the whole country, their haunts are near springs and coverts, and where the upper staple of the soil is productive of worms. Their creeps, in the early part of the season, are in hedge-rows and clumps of trees, upon soft heather, among the cover, or on the margin of ponds, and in springy bottoms ; afterwards in young wood, and in the skirts of woods. The only dogs for cock-shooting are setters, or good questing spaniels ; and good noses are indispensably necessary, if the birds are not plenty. The cock is not easily flushed, but conceals itself under the stubs, or any cover ; it is often very sluggish. It will often, when marked, be found to have run considerably wide, a circumstance which must be allowed for. Woodcocks rise heavily, with a flapping of the wings, and in their flight skim leisurely along the ground, pre- senting a fair mark ; when, if missed, they seldom fly far. But when flushed among tall trees, they rise with great velocity, and louder flapping of the wings ; when they have risen so high as to be clear of the trees, they take their usual horizontal flight. This is the only difficult part of cock-shooting ; much use and quickness being requisite to catch an aim through the branches of the trees. Markers are very useful in woodcock-shooting, SNIPE- SHOOTING. 37 who may also beat the covers with poles ; and when the cocks have heen flushed, by these or the dogs, they will land in some ditch, fence, or bank, at no great distance. Woodcocks inhabit the woods during the greater part of the winter season, but are invisible in severe and con- tinued frosts, excepting the few which find cover near springs that never freeze. Woodcocks, when wounded, may be instantly killed by pricking them behind the pinion joint just under the wing : an act of charity no benevolent sportsman will delay. SNIPE-SHOOTING. SNIPES are distinguished as the common, the jack, and the great snipe : snipe-shooting is commonly per- formed without a dog, or with a well-seasoned pointer. In the winter season, snipes frequent low and moist ground, and shelter in rushy bottoms. In summer, they are found in hilly or moorland districts. When disturbed and flushed in breeding time, the cock snipe practises various mano3uvres. He ascends to a vast height very rapidly, making a bleating noise. After poising himself awhile on his wings, he falls with equal rapidity, whistling and making a drumming noise, either by the flapping of his wings or with his voice. Snipe-shooting affords the greatest trial of the marks- man's skill. In their walks, you may sometimes flush them nearly under your feet: then remain perfectly 38 WILD-FOWL SHOOTING. quiet till they have done twisting in their flight, as they may perhaps give you an opportunity of firing while describing the semicircle; but if you present in haste, you cannot bring the gun up to a proper aim. If they rise at a moderate distance, down with them before they begin their evolutions; when they cross, fire well forward. Snipes lie best in windy weather, and when flushed present a good mark by hanging against the wind. Endeavour to get to windward of them, and to catch a cross shot; thus you will not be so much embarrassed by their zigzag flight. Snipes are to be found in bottoms not frozen. First, go silently down wind, and beat up the wilder ones; then send ais old pointer up wind, to find those which lie close. WILD-FOWL SHOOTING. THE birds most commonly sought are the duck and mallard, dun-birds, easterling, widgeon, and teal, with the coot, which (though held in no estimation, from its being so very plentiful) is, however, when stuffed and dressed like ducks, very little, if at all, inferior to them. Wild-fowl shooting is sometimes practised by night, during the utmost severity of the winter. Shots, even in the day-time, may be obtained by concealment and careful watching; but, in general, flight-time, or soon after twilight, is the season for this sport, which may be pursued from that time as long as the shooter can WILD-FOWL SHOOTING. 39" hold out against the cold and fatigue. Warm clothing and double woollen stockings must be provided; and waterproof boots are indispensable ; a fur or skin cap should be worn, as the wild-fowl are always alarmed at the sight of a hat. The gun must be of as great length and weight of metal as the gunner can manage. He who would shoot wild-fowl only a few hours after flight- time, must acquire the faculty of shooting by the ear, and this he will soon obtain by practice. He must direct his aim by the noise of their wings. The dog proper for the shore is the roughest and most hardy spaniel, whose business is to bring the fowl when shot ; and who, on his return home, should be accommodated with a warm and dry lodging. A stake forked at top, sometimes called a bumper, should be provided : this is to be driven into the earth as a support from which to fire the long and heavy duck-gun : but it is much more pleasant, on shore, to fire with a barrel not exceeding four feet, and of considerable substance and bore, which a strong arm may easily manage ; this, with Bristol pa- tent shot, or better still, the patent wire cartridge, will kill at a distance of about from a hundred to a hundred and twenty yards. The beginning of a thaw, or a frost with snow and sleet, are the most favourable times for this diversion. The shooter must fix on some place of concealment, and shift his standing as occasion may require. When a flat or punt is employed, he may pass along the creeks which divide the marshes, and by silence and 40 DOTTEREL-SHOOTING. caution get within reach of the fowl in their feeding places. If the game is plentiful, several dogs should be employed, and a supply of guns provided ready loaded, hesides a great gun, which may be fixed on a stancheon in the punt : great care must be taken not to overload the boat. In shooting wild-fowl, it is neces- sary to fire well before the birds, taking an aim two or three feet above them, being guided by practice and existing circumstances. Tubs are sometimes sunk in the earth by fowlers, or recesses dug in the sides of hills, from which to fire ; but the best plan is for the proprietors of grounds frequented by wild-fowl, to run up a few sheds, where a swivel or two may be employed to advantage. DOTTEREL-SHOOTING. THE stories that have been propagated of this game being taken by the shooter stretching out an arm, or holding out a leg, which induces the birds to make a corresponding motion with their wings or legs, are founded only in fable. Naturally these birds are very shy, and fly off on any approach to them: but the sportsmen who are the most successful with them, spring the whole trip or covey purposely, once or twice, and then ride round them, which makes them all huddle together into a small compass. When thus induced to run together, the whole may be fired at, and ten or DOGS USED IN SHOOTING. 41 twelve are often killed at a shot : firing at a single bird would be considered as a mere waste of powder. Epicures consider the dotterel as amongst the greatest dainties. DOGS USED IN SHOOTING. BREEDING, SELECTION, TRAINING, TREATMENT. As dogs are the greatest acquisition to a sportsman, particular caution should be observed in breeding them. If in and in^ they are liable to be stupid ; if different kinds are crossed, such as setters and pointers, cross upon cross, &c., they are generally very ugly ; therefore keep your breed unstained, severally by themselves. It is certain that dogs, or any other animals, are more fleet when bred from a young mother than from an old one. Let your bitches, all the time they are in whelp, see and enjoy game, as it will create a zest for it in the young ones. Keep all your puppies till they can run, and then you will see some come boldly up to you, and others skulk behind their dam, or to any obscure place : the bold ones are to be your choice. When the puppies are on the dams, give the bitches plenty of broth and boiled milk, which will the better enable them to bring the litters to maturity. When they are two months old, rub a small portion of tar upon their noses once a week; and about once a fortnight give them a small ball of sulphur and honey, mixed with flour. 42 DOGS USED IN SHOOTING. Iii rearing, you may give them a few lessons. Begin with a piece of bullock's liver boiled, too large for them to gorge ; throw it, and let them fetch it. If they will not take it freely, throw it at their mouths, which will make them fond of it. Let them enjoy it ; and when they begin to break it, rub a small ball with it, and let them fetch that, or a cross. Have them on cords, about twenty yards long, and when they will not come to the call or whistle, draw them slowly to you. When they come, reward them with a bit of the liver. When they bring it freely, teach them to crouch to it, crying " Down charge!" drawing their fore- feet forward with yours, and bearing them down by the ear. Then teach them to hold up, chucking them under the chops till they rise and fall to the word. Great kindness must be shown at this tender age, as severity will damp their courage, and ruin them : never look morosely on them, nor show a greater partiality to one than another, as they are excellent physiognomists. When they begin to understand, and are strong enough to enter the field, let them chase larks, race and play ; but if they will not run out, take a horse and ride a few miles every day with them, which will give them foot and courage. Then give them another trial, and if they run out well, let them chase, &c., till you find they will bear to be brought to by degrees : call and whistle, and reward them when they come ; keep them at heel a little while, then set them off; let them keep out, and endeavour to make them quarter, by walking across, and pointing DOGS USED IN SHOOTING. 43 with your hand. When they do it freely, teach them to crouch to the holding up of the hand, and to rise to the words " Hold up ! " after which, when they come upon the haunt, and are likely to puzzle the hirds up, by crying " Hold up !" they will throw their noses up, and find the hirds out by their flying scent. When you see they have got the wind, by crying " To-ho ! " they will stop: walk up, keep them to their point. a little while, then flush the birds. If they chase do not chastise them, but take a piece of liver upon a cord, and drag it in a zigzag direction. When the dogs are beating, fire a pistol, and make them crouch to it, by crying " Down charge." After reloading, cry " Hold up ! " bring them up wind to the drag, lay them on the road, make them point it, and draw steadily till they find it, then reward them with a bit of it. Practise this for some time, then procure a live bird, tie a string to its leg forty yards long, make a hole in the ground, put the bird into it, and cover it with a tile. Stake the end of the string and let the dogs find the bird. When they are pointing it, draw the tile ; and when the bird takes wing, fire your pistol, make the dogs crouch down to it, then cry " Hold up ! hey! lost!" and let them find it. Be up with them, and cry " Dead! dead!" to prevent their killing it then give them a reward, which, at the word " dead,*' makes them drop the game from their mouths. This will prevent their breaking their game. Next procure a rabbit, fasten a cord round its neck, and proceed as 44 DOGS USED IN SHOOTING. before. When they point it, fasten their cords to pre- vent their chasing, as the rabbit, when it gets to the end of the cord, will bolt about in different directions. In teaching your dogs to back, cry " To-ho !" and point to the dog that is standing. If they do not take it that way, take a dog by the ear, direct his head to the dog that is pointing, and with your other hand stretch his stern out, in which pointing attitude make him remain for some time : this mode will soon bring him to it. If a dog^&ash in, always go up and stake his cord, letting him have a sharp check collar on. When they break fieid, or hang on the haunt, hide your- self; and when they return, by missing you, they will feel alarmed at being lost, which will make them fearful of breaking away again. You must not let them hunt for you long, lest they take fright, when they will throw their heads up, cling their tails in close between their gaskins, and set off full run ; at which time calling is of no use, therefore you will be very liable to lose them. When a dog takes to watching and following, change his companion ;, put him with a slower dog. Throw them off right and left, making them cross each other inde- pendently. If he continues to follow and watch, hunt him single-handed till he finds his own game freely, by which means he will get the zest, and become more anxious and independent. If a dog blinks, you must encourage him as much as you can. Take him on a cord, and lead him up ; give him a reward often. If he blinks the gun, rub the reward on it, and let him smell DOGS USED IN SHOOTING. it, with a bird tied to the butt. If he runs home, appoint somebody to give him a good flogging on his arrival, and put him to bed without his supper. Next morning take him out hungry ; carry plenty of liver or cold meat in your pocket to give him when he behaves well. This will bring him to, if repeated. Never let any one feed your tender-tempered dogs but yourself. If a dog comes to heel, and remain there, pass your whip smartly behind you, as if undesignedly, at the same time whistling, and crying, " Hey ! off!" &c. Every one accustomed to the breaking of young dogs and colts, will have observed that they will for a time take their lessons readily, with great docility and appa- rent steadiness; and when you begin to think they may be depended on, they will on a sudden become captious, weary of their trouble and restraint, turn sullen, pretend to have forgotten all they had learned, and put in practice all kinds of rebellious tricks, in order to liberate themselves. They will refuse to fol- low, or when thrown off, will idle and skulk or hunt listlessly, turning their heads as if watching an oppor- tunity to escape, and may at last perhaps run entirely off. This must be remedied by a continued use of the collar and line, with a strict treatment ; but do not use too much severity, so that in the end the labour may be rendered both familiar and pleasant. After this contest for the mastership, you may depend upon their general good behaviour. Too long training without a gun is dangerous, as they are liable to lose the zest. Never 46 SELECTION. suffer dogs to go self-hunting, as they will contract ill habits : you may teach them twenty new tricks before you can break them of one old one, their memories being so very retentive. When you go among a number of them treat them impartially ; rub all their ears and crops, and pet them equally alike ; for if a dog finds himself neglected or unnoticed, you will see him turn melancholy, and go to his bed. SELECTION. IN choosing a pointer or setter, let his muzzle be open, flew-jawed, rather short : let him have full hazel eyes, called hare's eyes, his poll rising to a point, his ears long and falling down between the neck and jaw bone, which is called being well hung. The neck and head should be set on straight, so that when he points, his nose turns up rather above the horizontal line. Let his shoulders be deep, and well let down ; his elbows well in. He should have straight and large legs ; small feet, a little pointed, standing true, and the balls small and open : narrow withers, back a little hooped, broad loins, deep in the fillets and gaskins, short from the hock to the pastern-joint, flat sides, fine floating veins, straight croup, stern set on high and straight, being very fine ; if a setter, with a deep feather. Ill-bred dogs you may know by their being fox-muz- zled, small-eyed, bat-eared, fan-eared, short- necked, having the head set on like a pickaxe, broad withers, SELECTION. 47 round shoulders, elbows out; small legs, feet out, called cat-footed ; thick balls, round barrel, round croup ; clumsy stern, set on low; sickle-hams, &c. The best cross is a handsome high-mettled fox-hound for a sire, and an over-stanch pointer-bitch for a dam ; then you will have plenty of foot and courage, and no false point. When you have chosen a dog agreeable to the description already given, take him into the fields and see if he be a gallant beater, ranging high, running within himself, not over-reaching nor clambering, his nose up and turned to the wind, endeavouring to catch the flying scent ; making his casts, twists, and offers gallantly; not hanging on the haunt, nor puzzling for the ground scent. He must quarter his ground regu- larly, and independent of his partner ; not missing the corners of the fields. He must neither skulk, skirt, break field, follow, watch, blink, hug, labour, nor point at sight, nor be hard-nosed, or near-scented ; but wind his game at long distances, keep his points fast, back the same without jealousy, crouch to dog, bird, and gun, to the signal of the hand, and the words " To-ho !" without being captious or capricious. The latter means his standing, when you call, and neglecting to come. If you see him chap his point, it is an excellent symptom ; if he mouthe and hug his game, it discovers the real zest. If a dog has not been well trained when he comes upon the haunt, you will see him flourish, twist, dash, jump, run at shot, &c., which are the effects of high courage, and are to be remedied by practice. 48 SELECTION. Spaniels should be flew-jawed, well hung, open-muz- zled, rather long in the neck, with great liberty in the back ; very short thick legs, a little bandy and well feathered down and through the balls; thick coat and skin, good temper, high courage, and be good stickers ; which you may know by trying them in cold rainy weather, when, if they will rough well, not coming to heel, nor sitting on the roots of trees, licking and pick- ing themselves, making beds, &c., you may depend upon their being right in the breed. Next observe, if they quest and road their game steadily, knowing the toe from the heel, opening as the scent strengthens ; not jumping, dashing, or flourishing over the road, by which means they lose their hit, beat counter, and hang bab- bling on the haunt; when, if another dog own at a distance, they are apt to stand at bay, instead of pack- ing. The principal thing to be observed in managing them, is to keep them from running outside, making them hunt at hand, and down to charge ; prevent their following, by throwing them off right and left ; babbling and standing at bay, by running up, and flogging or driving them off; prevent their chasing hares and rab- bits, by the words " Ware Flix ! * Never chastise a dog after he has committed a fault, but as nearly in the act as possible. When you punish, have him upon a training cord ; do not loose him till he has become reconciled ; if you do, he will very likely skulk; therefore coil your cord upon your hand, and keep him at heel some time, then give him liberty upon SELECTION. 49 the cord by degrees. If you discover any symptoms of skulking, stake the cord, and leave him behind a field or two ; then return, and if he seems cheerful, give him a reward. Let him off upon the cord, and when he beats freely, you may venture to remove it altogether. If a dog is callous to the whip, with a slip cord hold him up with your hand till he is alarmed. You may use the whip at the same time. Some dogs are so very tender in their tempers, that they will not bear any punishment from the hand : these you must let punish themselves, by check collars and cross-puzzles. Not knowing from whence the punish- ment comes, they are not offended with you. These are for pointers and setters : for spaniels use loaded collars, &c. For hare and rabbit-shooting use the short-legged wire-haired beagles ; they are flew-jawed, heavy hung, and deep mouthed : if well managed they will never leave trail, till their game is either dead, or run to ground. When you want to call away, endeavour to cross the trail and take them up, as rating will cause them to change and leave trail when a hare breaks cover ; which they should not do, but run the ring, and bring her back. Always take them to and from cover in couples, to prevent their breaking away. 50 TRAINING. TRAINING. TO BREAK THE SPANIEL. A MATERIAL duty of shooting-dogs or spaniels is to seek and bring in the dead or wounded game. To prevent their breaking feather, or mangling the birds, pains must be taken, and they may with care be made sufficiently tender-mouthed. They should be so well disciplined as for only one at a time to obey the order to fetch game. Pointers may be taught to perform this office as well as spaniels. Dogs may be brought into the field at from eight to nine months old, previous to which they should be taught to follow and hunt such game as they can find, which will be all sorts of wild birds ; and their first lesson should be to come in when called, which, well impressed on their memories, will be useful ever after. They should next be taught not to pursue sheep, do- mestic poultry, or other improper objects ; and the sooner these lessons, with that of fetching and carrying, are taught to the puppy, the better. TO BREAK THE POINTER. THE success of this depends much on the true breeding of the dog, but still more on the unwearied patience of the breaker, as that single virtue is worth all the so-called secrets of professed breakers put together. TRAINING. 51 The pointer puppy being accustomed to follow, and to observe the word with tolerable obedience while abroad, may be taken to some convenient and quiet place, in his check collar, and there pegged down to a string about twenty yards long. The breaker must take with him his whip and some eatable of which the puppy is fond, as it is by reward and punishment that the animal must be taught ; but the former must be chiefly con- fined to the caresses and kindness of the master. He is now to be taught to comprehend and obey the phrases, on his understanding of which all practice depends : as, " Take heed !" " Down !" to stop or crouch down, " Down charge !" " Back !" " Come here !" " Dead !" " Hey on !" " Go seek !" or " Hold up !" when he is nosing the ground too close in the field, like the spaniel or hound. " 'Ware !" should be applied to every object against which the dog is cautioned ; as " 'Ware hare ! " "'Ware horse !" "'Ware bird!" and to these must be added other necessary phrases. They must not, how- ever, be too numerous, and all the lessons should be ex- tremely plain and distinct, suitable to the animal's com- prehension. Most of these lessons may be given with the dog thus in hand, the remainder must be reserved for the field'. Stripes are necessary, in the first instance, to direct him as to the positions or motions required. These being understood, the breaker has only to stand and give the word distinctly, in a caressing tone, for every separate act. Encouragement, and sometimes reward, should follow punctual performance; whilst rating or E2 52 TRAINING. punishment should warn the pupil of the consequences of disobedience. He should at first be threatened by the mere crack of the whip, and if its real use become necessary, it must at first be inflicted very sparingly. If the dog become torpid and sulky from affright, which will often happen, or appear determinedly obstinate, instead of severe whipping and harsh treatment, the best method is to stay proceedings awhile. The dog being compelled to crouch down, the breaker should stand over him, whip in hand, looking stead- fastly, with his eyes fixed on those of his pupil, and showing a determination to be obeyed, which he will well understand. This may be continued for ten or fifteen minutes, when the dog should be approached with kindness, and a new attempt made to enforce obedience. During training, the pointer puppy must be inured to the report of the gun and the smell of powder. The sweet and peculiar smell of game should also be rendered familiar to him ; while, by using him to dead game, he may be made tender-mouthed to the birds he afterwards picks up or carries. His drillings should be continued once a day during two or three weeks, but should never be too long at one time, as this only serves to fatigue and discourage the puppy. In the interim he should have daily pleasing excursions in the field, and the example of stanch old dogs should be frequently exhibited. The young dog must be taught to obey the whistle as well as the voice. Two or three, in check, may be pegged down one PBESERVATION OF GAME. 61 pigeons being on the wing. In the fields you may hear the drag-net brush over the stubbles, and the hares cry when taken by gate-nets or wires. When you think a particular field (where one or two large coveys jug) will be drawn, put three or four old sickles into long han- dles, and stick them upon the tops of the stetches, edges reversed ; these, if they carry the tail of the net, will divide it, but they must be very sharp. Unsuspected plashes, made in the rides and glades in covers, will catch the prints of the poachers' feet, by which you will often be enabled to make them out. Sometimes, when they look very fresh, you may, by walking counter, come upon them. The best outside covering for a keeper to go out with at night, is an ass-skin dressed, with holes for the arms and loops in front. In this, with an invulnerable cap, covered with the same, he may lie down anywhere, without being suspected. To find wires in cover, observe upon which side the haunt for feeding lies ; on that side crosswise they are planted : get in some five or six rods, and about the same distance into young slop from the wall, and where you have found one by the break or moss, you may per- haps follow the rest. If there should be no break, get two wires in a line, take an object on the other side of the cover, to which walk, looking sharp right and left, and you will be sure to find them, particularly if there are hares in them, as they will be so much easier seen. Hay-nets, and other cumbersome apparatus for the 62 PRESERVATION OP GAME. destruction of hares, have, with the largest parties of poachers, given way to the simple provision of one or at most two purse-nets, of very fine materials. The chief trouble is in stopping and reducing the creeps, which in the more advanced parts of the seasons, is much abbreviated by the expedient of a large slice of turnip dropped near each, equally efficacious also on the principle of a scarecrow. Pheasants are also taken in creeps, near their feeding places by a single wire, and on the same principle as hares, before described. Partridges, after their roosting places have been ascer- tained, are captured simply by means of a horse-hair noose, fixed to a small stake in the ground. Several of these are laid in the traverses, about a yard asunder ; on being entangled, the birds strive incessantly to come at each other, thus keeping the noose to its utmost stretch, till they become quite exhausted and incapable of fur- ther struggling. Deer are taken by putting a wisp of hay at the root of a tree, between two stubs ; and fixing a hoisting halter before it. When he pulls the hay it will take him. Or hang two apples upon the body of a tree, high enough to make him reach up ; and a sharp hook being driven in just under them, it will catch him under the jaws on his slipping down. The poacher then lies in ambush, from whence he runs and cuts the deer's throat. They take fawns, by paring their feet when first dropt ; this will keep them at lodge, where they PRESERVATION OF FISH. 63 will grow fat, and be easily taken by two people sur- rounding them with a net ; or by means of a dog, with which many are coursed and taken in moonlight nights a . PRESERVATION OF FISH. FISH are taken in various ways ; by a drag and flews, during the night. Instead of plunging, poachers lash bricks to a cord, and draw them to and from each other, across the river or pond. To prevent this, put some old sickles, scythes, or swords, into large lumps of wood, and drop them in zig-zag directions along the river or pond ; likewise stumps, with nails driven down into the bottom. To find luggers, trimmers, sunk baits, eel-pots, eel-lines, starkers, &c., walk on the sides of the waters, with a pole and a strong cord, having a drag or creeper on it : this, properly used, will find them ; it must be thrown in different directions, late in the evenings. Pord-netters are a class of poachers not generally known. What is called the pord-net consists of two staves shod with iron, to which is fastened a net. In quick running stony waters it is used with great effect. The poachers wade a shallow stream, drive the trout to their holds, and placing the staves so as to bring the net round a stone or hold of any kind, they are said to pord, * Like St. Augustin's Confessions, these aphorisms seem of very questionable service. Peter Pindar's ostler never tried the effect of greasing the teeth of his customer's horses, till put up to the stra- tagem by his ghostly adviser. EDITOR. 64 PRESERVATION OF FISH. or poke the points underneath, till they are forced to come out and strike into the net. Carp are driven into their hordes, under the sides, where, with a semicircular net, they are taken, hy puddling them till they fly into it. Some have been taken (after first being collected into one place, by feeding with new grains and blood), by intoxicating them with crummy bread squeezed on a stone, impregnated with coculus indicus, and oil of asp. They will come up, and you may take them with a landing- net, but a casting-net is much better. In June, carp and tench are very busy " roding," when you may feed them into the shallow waters, and take them with a casting-net, and stock your stews for the year. Always let the net lie till the fish rise, as carp strike into the mud, if there is any, but cannot remain there long, as it makes them sick. When you drag a pond, have two drags, one about three yards behind the other, as the fish will strike the mud, and let the lead-line slip over them, when, thinking they are safe, they precipitate themselves into the other net. For tench, you may let flews stand with a brass candlestick on each side, a yard distant, on a float : they will fly from one to another. To keep trout alive, whilst carrying them a long dis- tance, mix one ounce of white sugar-candy, a piece of saltpetre the size of a walnut, and a table-spoonful of flour together ; this is sufficient for a pailful of water, which must be hard spring water : this proportion, often repeated, will keep them alive. Carp and tench will travel in clean whole wheat-straw many miles, if laid in layers, as the straw retains the air for them to suck. DECOYS FOR DUCKS. 65 DECOYS FOR DUCKS. THE contrivances called decoys are generally confined to the fenny countries. They are large ponds, dug in the fens, with four or five creeks, running from them to a great length, and each growing gradually narrower till it comes to a point. The hanks are well planted with willows, sallows, osiers, and similar kinds of underwood. Into these ponds the fowls are enticed hy ducks bred up tame for the purpose ; (for the decoy-ducks, heing fed constantly at certain places, become at length so familiar as to feed out of the hand ;) and, as they are not con- fined, they fly abroad and return at pleasure. During the proper season of the year they take frequent flights, and sometimes, after being gone several weeks, return home with numerous flocks of fowl. As soon as the decoy-man perceives the flocks settled in the pond, he goes down secretly to the angles of it, under cover of hedges made with reeds, and then throws a quantity of corn into such shallow places as the decoy ducks are accustomed to, to which they immediately resort, fol- lowed by the strangers. Thus they are every day enter- tained without any disturbance, the bait being some- times thrown into one place and sometimes into another, till they are insensibly led into the narrow canals of the pond, where the trees on each side hang over-head like an arbour, though at a considerable height from the water. Here the boughs are conducted with such art, F 64 PRESERVATION OF FISH. prod, or poke the points underneath, till they are forced to come out and strike into the net. Carp are driven into their hordes, under the sides, where, with a semicircular net, they are taken, by puddling them till they fly into it. Some have been taken (after first being collected into one place, by feeding with new grains and blood), by intoxicating them with crummy bread squeezed on a stone, impregnated with coculus indicus, and oil of asp. They will come up, and you may take them with a landing- net, but a casting-net is much better. In June, carp and tench are very busy " roding," when you may feed them into the shallow waters, and take them with a casting-net, and stock your stews for the year. Always let the net lie till the fish rise, as carp strike into the mud, if there is any, but cannot remain there long, as it makes them sick. When you drag a pond, have two drags, one about three yards behind the other, as the fish will strike the mud, and let the lead-line slip over them, when, thinking they are safe, they precipitate themselves into the other net. For tench, you may let flews stand with a brass candlestick on each side, a yard distant, on a float : they will fly from one to another. To keep trout alive, whilst carrying them a long dis- tance, mix one ounce of white sugar-candy, a piece of saltpetre the size of a walnut, and a table-spoonful of flour together ; this is sufficient for a pailful of water, which must be hard spring water : this proportion, often repeated, will keep them alive. Carp and tench will travel in clean whole wheat-straw many miles, if laid in layers, as the straw retains the air for them to suck. DECOYS FOB DUCKS. 65 DECOYS FOR DUCKS. THE contrivances called decoys are generally confined to the fenny countries. They are large ponds, dug in the fens, with four or five creeks, running from them to a great length, and each growing gradually narrower till it comes to a point. The banks are well planted with willows, sallows, osiers, and similar kinds of underwood. Into these ponds the fowls are enticed by ducks bred up tame for the purpose ; (for the decoy-ducks, being fed constantly at certain places, become at length so familiar as to feed out of the hand ;) and, as they are not con- fined, they fly abroad and return at pleasure. During the proper season of the year they take frequent flights, and sometimes, after being gone several weeks, return home with numerous flocks of fowl. As soon as the decoy-man perceives the flocks settled in the pond, he goes down secretly to the angles of it, under cover of hedges made with reeds, and then throws a quantity of corn into such shallow places as the decoy ducks are accustomed to, to which they immediately resort, fol- lowed by the strangers. Thus they are every day enter- tained without any disturbance, the bait being some- times thrown into one place and sometimes into another, till they are insensibly led into the narrow canals of the pond, where the trees on each side hang over-head like an arbour, though at a considerable height from the water. Here the boughs are conducted with such art, F 68 PIGEONS. when they have young ones, will feed them well, which a cropper, in consequence of the largeness of his crop, seldom will. Carriers breed but slowly, having rarely more than three or four pair a-year ; they are constant lovers, and very seldom tread any but their own mate, and are therefore hard to match when separated. On the contrary, a powter may be taken from his own mate, and he will match to another in a day or two, so that bastard-bred pigeons are most serviceable for those who breed them to supply the table. Great care must be taken to make convenient places to breed in ; each pair of pigeons must have two nests ; those with baskets in them are best ; for before one pair can go out of the nest, or feed themselves, the old ones will lay and be sitting ; I have often, indeed, seen a second pair hatched before the first could feed them- selves, and the old ones feed both pairs. Be sure, when you take the young ones, to clean the nest, or put in a clean basket, for cleanliness is of great service to pigeons. Never let them want food, for if you do, they cannot be provided with soft meat in their crop when the young are hatched, without which, they will certainly die ; or if you feed the old ones by hand, they will go and feed their young immediately with what they get, which, being too strong for their powers of digestion, kills them. The best way is to let them have food always by them in a box, with a hopper in it. PIGEONS. 69 Breed young ones for stock in the spring ; those bred in the winter, being generally cramped, never prove good breeders. The reason I recommend baskets to breed in is, tame pigeons seldom build their nests, the want of which a basket supplies. Be sure to take care that no vermin come among them. Of those bred in pigeon-houses, the grey pigeon, in- clining to ash-colour and black, is the best ; the female generally shows her fruitfulness by the redness of her eyes and feet, and by a ring of gold colour round her neck. There are two seasons in the year in which you may stock your pigeon-house. The first is in May; as these first pigeons, having strengthened themselves during the winter, are in a condition soon to yield profit to the buyer. The second is in August ; for at that time there are a great number of young pigeons that have been well fed with the corn which their dams have plentifully supplied them with, from the harvest. You must take care to furnish your pigeon-house according to the size of it : if you put but few in, a long time will elapse before you will have young pigeons for use, for you must take none out of it before it is well stocked. Be sure to feed in hard weather ; and in benting time, which is when the corn is in the ear. Keep out the vermin, and you will never want stock. Give loam, mixed well with salt and cummin- 70 PIGEONS. seed, made up in lumps and dried; which materially assist them in breeding. Never let them want fresh water. The best food is tares : the mornings and evenings are proper times to give them their food, but never at noon, for fear of breaking their rest, which they usually take at that hour : roost is very necessary with the food they eat, to make them thrive. Pigeons will live eight years, but they are only pro- lific for the first four, afterwards they are worth nothing : when once past that age, they deprive you of the profit you might reap by others that are younger. If you wish to furnish your table with young ones in the winter, you must not wait for them till they can fly, but take them when they are grown rather strong, and pluck the largest quills out of their wings, which will confine them to their nests ; or tie their feet, by which means they will be fat in a very short time. DESCRIPTION OF THE VARIOUS SORTS OF PIGEONS. I. Runts, the largest kind of pigeons, called by the Italians tronfo^ may be divided into greater or smaller : those which are commonly called the Spanish runts are much esteemed, being the largest sort of pigeon, but they are sluggish, and more slow of flight than the smaller sort of runts; while the smaller are not only better breeders, but quicker of flight, which makes PIGEONS. 71 - them much fancied. The colours of their feathers are uncertain. II. The next which make the largest figure, but are not in reality the largest birds, are the croppers ; so called because, by attracting the air, they usually blow up their crops to an extraordinary size, so as to be some- times as large as their bodies. This sort is valued in proportion to the facility with which it can swell up its crop. Their bodies are about the size of the smaller runt, but more slender; their feathers are also of various colours. III. The shakers are of two sorts, viz. the broad- tailed, and the narrow-tailed : these are so called, be- cause they are almost constantly wagging their heads and necks up and down. The broad-tailed are dis- tinguished by the tail feathers, about twenty-six in number ; the narrow-tailed have not so many. These, when they walk, carry their tail-feathers and crest spread like a turkey-cock ; they have likewise a diversity of feathers. IV. The jacobins, or cappers, so called on account of certain feathers which turn up about the back part of the head. Some of this sort are rough-footed : they are short billed ; the iris of the eye is of a pearl colour, and the head is commonly white. V. The turbit, which some suppose to be a corrup- tion of the word cortbeck, or kortbek, as they are called by the Dutch, which seems to be derived from the French, court-bee, and signifies a short bill, for which 72 PIGEONS. this pigeon is remarkable ; the head is flat, and the feathers on the breast spread both ways. The turbits are about the same size as the jacobins. VI. The carriers are pigeons so called from the use which is sometime made of them in carrying letters to and fro a . Certain it is that they are very nimble mes- sengers, for some authors affirm it has been found by experience, that one of these pigeons will fly three miles in a minute, or from St. Alban's to London in seven minutes : this, it is said, has been tried. We have an account of the passing and repassing with advices between Hirtius and Brutus, at the siege of Modena, who had, by laying grain for them in some high situations, used their pigeons to fly from place to place for their food, having before kept them hungry, and in the dark. A coachman, who drove one of the Colchester coaches, frequently brought one down with him, and turned it off in the town of Colchester, whence it would fly back to London in a very short time. These pigeons are about the size of common pigeons, and of a dark blue or blackish colour, which is one way of distinguishing them from other sorts : they are also remarkable for having their eyes compassed about with a broad circle of naked spongy skin, and the upper chap of their beak covered more than half from the head with * The expression is a faulty one. Weight would be fatal to its flight ; the carrier-pigeon is not capable of transporting that which is generally understood by the term "letter." EDITOR. PIGEONS. 73 a double crust of the like naked fungous substance. The bill or beak is moderately long, and black. These birds, though they are carried many miles from the place where they are bred or brought up, or have themselves hatched or bred up any young ones, will im- mediately return home as soon as they are let fly. When persons wish to use them for carriers, they should order them after the following manner: Two friends should agree to keep them, one at London and the other at Windsor, or at any other places. He who lives at Windsor must take two or three cocks or hens which were bred at his friend's, at London : and the other, two or three that were bred at Windsor. When the person in London has occasion to send any advice to his friend at Windsor, he must roll up a little piece of paper, and tie it gently with a small piece of string about the pigeon's neck. But here you ought to remember, that the pigeons you design to send with letters, must be kept much in the dark, and without meat for eight or ten hours pre- vious to their being turned out ; and then they will rise and turn round till they have found their way, and con- tinue their flight till they reach home. With two or three of these pigeons on each side, a correspondence might be carried on in a very expeditious manner. VII. The Barbary pigeon, or barb, is another sort, whose bill is, like that of the turbit, short and thick, having a broad and naked circle, of a spongy white sub- 74 PIGEONS. stance, round the eye, like that of the carrier. The iris of the eye is white, if the feathers of the pinions incline to a darker colour ; but red, when the feathers are white, as in other birds. VIII. Smiters are pigeons supposed to be the same that the Dutch call draayer. This sort shake their wings as they fly, and rise generally in a circular man- ner : the males, for the most part, rising higher than the females, and frequently falling and flapping them with their wings, making a noise which may be heard a great way off", caused by an evolution often the means of breaking or shattering their quill feathers. These very much resemble the tumbler pigeon : the difference being chiefly this, that the tumbler is some- what smaller, and in its flight will tumble itself back- ward over its head : the diversity of colours in the feathers is of no consequence. IX. The helmet pigeon is distinguished from the others, because it has the head, the quill-feathers, and the tail-feathers, always of one colour, either black, white, red, blue, or yellow; while the other feathers of the body are of a different colour. X. The light-horseman. This is supposed to be a cross strain, between a cock cropper and a hen of the carrier breed, because they seem to partake of both, as appears from the excrescence of flesh upon their bills, and the swelling of their crops. These are not inclined to leave the place of their birth, or the house that they have been used to. PIGEONS. 75 XL The bastard-bill pigeons are something larger than the Barbary pigeon : they have short bills, and are generally said to have red eyes, though probably eyes of that colour belong only to such as have white feathers. XII. There is a pigeon called the turner, said to have a tuft of feathers hanging backwards on the head, which, an author asserts, parts like a horse's mane. XIII. There is also a pigeon of a smaller sort, called the finikin, but in other respects like the former. XIV. There is another pigeon called the spot, sup- posed to take its name from a spot on the forehead, just above the bill ; the feathers of its tail are always of the same colour with the spots, while all the other feathers are white. XV. The mahomet, or mawmet pigeon, supposed to be brought from Turkey, is singular for its large black eyes ; but the other parts are like those of the Barbary pigeon. The manner of distinguishing the males and females among pigeons, is chiefly by the voice and cooing ; the females have a small weak voice, and the males a loud and deep one : they are also distinguished by their size. The food which is generally given to pigeons is tares, but if spurry seeds were mixed with them, or buckwheat, those grains would forward their breeding ; however, with only tares they may be expected to breed eight or nine times a year, and then they seldom hatch above one at a time ; but if they be in full vigour, they will breed a pair at one sitting. In the feeding of pigeons that have no young ones, 76 VARIOUS WAYS OF TAKING PHEASANTS. it is advisable not to let them have more food at one time than they can eat, because they are apt to toss it about and lose a great deal of it. They must not be without water, being of themselves dry birds, and subject to contract dirt and fleas. The dove-cote should be carefully cleaned once a week, if not more frequently. PART THE FOURTH. VARIOUS WAYS OF TAKING PHEASANTS. PHEASANTS are taken with nets, in crowing-time, which is about the end of February, and in March, before they begin to breed. It is done either generally or parti- cularly; the first is, when the whole eye, viz., the old cock and hen, with all their young ones, or pouts, as they flock or run together in thick woods or coppices, are taken ; or particularly, when none are taken but the old, and such of the young as are of an age fit for coupling ; so that you cannot have any assurance with your nets to strike at more than one or two at a time ; for pheasants are of a melancholy or sullen disposition, and when once they have coupled, do not associate in flocks, like other birds. In order to take pheasants with ease, you must be acquainted with their haunts and usual breeding-places, which are in young, thick, and well grown coppices, free from the annoyance of cattle or pathways; for being of a very timid nature, they do not abide or VARIOUS WAYS OF TAKING PHEASANTS. 77 breed in open or plain fields, nor under the covert of corn fields, or low shrubby bushes. Having found their haunts, next you are to find their eye or brood ; and here you are to observe, that phea- sants come out of the woods and coverts three times a day, to feed in fresh pastures, green wheat or other grain, about sunrise, at noon, and a little before sunset. The course to be followed is, to go to that side of the wood where you suppose they make their sallies, and watch the places where they come out ; or to search their haunts ; for you may see the young pouts in that season flbck and run together after the hen, like chickens. Again, if you go to their haunts early in the morning or late in the evening, you will hear the old cock and hen call their young ones, and the young ones answer them, and accordingly direct your path as near as you can to the place where they are, then lie down as close as pos- sible, that you may not be discerned ; observe how they lodge together, the better to know how to pitch your nets with advantage, at once of wind, weather, and place ; and take care that all be done as silently as pos- sible, otherwise they will betake themselves to their legs, and not to their wings, unless forced to it by a close pursuit. But the most certain way to find them is, to have an artificial pheasant-call, wherein a person should be very expert in the imitation of their notes, and the time when, and to what purpose they use them ; their calls are much the same as those used by hens in clucking their chickens. 78 VARIOUS WAYS OF TAKING PHEASANTS. The chief period for using the call is in the morning early, or about sunset, at which time they seek their food, and then the note must he to call them to feed ; but though these are the best occasions, yet it may be used at other times, only altering the notes for calling them together. Having the perfect use of the call, the knowledge of their haunts, and the time to take them, choose some private place in which you may not be discovered, and then call at first very softly, lest any should be lodged very near you, and be frightened at your loud note ; but if nothing replies, then raise your note higher and higher till it be extended to the utmost compass, and if any be within hearing, they will answer in as loud a note as yours, provided it be tuneable, or else all will be spoiled. As soon as the pheasant answers, if it be at a good distance, creep nearer and nearer, still calling, but not so loudly : as you advance nearer, so will the pheasant to you, so that you will come in sight of it, either on the ground or at perch, always imitating it in the true note. Then cease calling, and spread your net between the pheasant and yourself, in the most convenient place you can find, making one end fast to the ground, and holding the other in your hand by a long line, so that when any thing strains it, you may pull the net close together. This done, call again, and as soon as you perceive the pheasant come under your net, rise up and show yourself, upon which, being frightened, she will spring, and so become entangled in it. VARIOUS WAYS OP TAKING PHEASANTS. 79 ^n case many pheasants answer the call, and from several parts of the wood, keep your first station, and as you hear them make towards you, get your nets ready. Spread them conveniently about you, viz. one pair on one side and another on the other, lying close, without any noise, only that of your call, till you have allured them under your nets, and then stand up to frighten them as before directed, that they may be entangled. Another way to take pheasants, which is considered better than the former, is, to be provided with a live cock, (tied down to your net,) who, by his crowing, will draw others in. You must lie concealed in some bush or secret place, and when you see any pheasant come to your net, then draw your line, and the net will fall on it and take it. To take pheasants by snares. When you have found their passage out of the wood to their usual places of feeding, there plant a little stake, with a couple of snares of horse-hair, one to lie flat on the ground foV their feet, and the other about the height of their head, to take them by the neck ; and in case there should be more passes than one, do the like to every one of them. Then take a circle, and when you are in a direct line with the pheasants and the snare that you have fitted, make a gentle noise to frighten them. They are also taken by wires in the creeps and rides in covers, and in wheat, where they are bred at harvest time, and near their perching trees in cover. 80 RESORTS OF PARTRIDGES. If, by their dunging and scraping, you perceive that they frequent any place, you may then make use of such hedgerows as are directed to take fowl with lines and birdlime ; only plant your running lines from them, of a convenient height, and still place one to lie flat to entangle their legs. RESORTS OF PARTRIDGES. PARTRIDGES, being naturally cowardly, fearful, simple birds, are easily deceived or beguiled with any device whatever, by train-bait, engine, call, stale, or other enticements. The places they delight in most are corn-fields, espe- cially while the corn grows, for under that cover they shelter themselves and breed. Neither are those places unfrequented by them when the corn is cut down, in consequence of the grain they find, especially wheat stubbles, the height of which they delight in, as it serves to shelter them. When the wheat-stubble is much trod- den, they betake themselves to the barley-stubble, pro- vided it be fresh and untrodden ; and they will hide both themselves and coveys in the furrows, amongst the clods, brambles, and long grass. After the winter season is come, and the stubble- fields are ploughed up, then they resort to the upland meadows, and lodge in the dead grass, or under hedges, amongst mole-hills, or under the roots of trees. Some- RESORTS OF PARTRIDGES. 81 times they resort to coppices and underwoods, especially if any corn fields are near, or where broom, brakes, fern, &c., grow. In harvest time, when every field is full of men and cattle, in the day-time you will find them in the fallow fields which are next adjoining to the corn-fields, where they lie lurking till evening, and then they feed among the sheaves of corn ; as also early in the morning. When you know their haunts, according to the situation of the country and season of the year, your next care must be to find them there, which is done several ways. Some do it by the eye only ; and this can never be taught. By long experience alone, is the art learned of distinguishing the colour of the birds from that of the earth, but every facility for the study is afforded. They are so lazy and so unwilling to take wing, that you may almost set your foot upon them before they will stir, provided you do not stand and gaze on them, but continue in motion, otherwise they will spring up and be gone. Another way to discover them, is by going to their haunts very early in the morning, or at the close of the evening, which is called the jucking-time, and there listening for the calling of the cock partridge, which is very loud and earnest ; after some few calls the hen will answer. By these means they meet together, which you may know by their chattering one with another : upon hearing which take your range about them, draw- G 82 VARIOUS WAYS OF TAKING PARTRIDGES. ing nearer and nearer to the place you heard them juck in ; then cast your eye towards the furrows of the land, and there you will soon find where the covey lies. The best, surest, and easiest way for finding par- tridges, is by the call, having first learned their true and natural notes, knowing how to tune every note to its proper key, and applying them to their due times and seasons. Being perfect herein, either mornings or evenings, (all other times being improper,) go to their haunts, and having concealed yourself in some secret place where you may see and not be seen, listen awhile if you can hear the birds call ; if you do, answer them again in the same notes; and as they change or double their notes, so must you in like manner: thus continue till they draw nearer and nearer to you. Having them in your view, lay yourself on your back and lie without motion, by which means you may count their whole number. VARIOUS WAYS OF TAKING PARTRIDGES. AMONG the many stratagems resorted to for taking partridges, a singular method has been adopted by some poachers, viz., to provide a setting-dog, upon the head of which they fix a lantern, for the purpose of his ranging the field in the night : on his stopping, the poachers know where the partridges lie, and draw the TAKING PARTRIDGES WITH BIRDLIME. 83 net up to him accordingly. The gamekeepers of the Earl of Carlisle, being on their nightly perambulations, were not a little astonished and alarmed, at seeing a light traversing a field in a very singular manner ; they prepared their guns accordingly, and in a short time the light made a sudden stop, when three or four men, whom they had not descried, making their appearance, they were secured in the act of drawing a large net up to the light, upon the head of the setter, as before men- tioned. The nets for taking of partridges must be every way like pheasant nets, both for length and breadth, except that the meshes must be smaller, being made of the same thread, and dyed of the same colour. TAKING PARTRIDGES WITH BIRDLIME. GET the best and largest wheat-straws you can and cut them off between knot and knot, and lime them with the strongest lime. Then go to the haunts of par- tridges, and call ; if you are answered, prick your limed straws at some distance from you, in many cross-rows and ranks : cross the lands and furrows, taking in two or three lands at least ; then lie close and call again, not ceasing till you have drawn them towards you, so that they be intercepted by the way by your limed straws. These they no sooner touch than they will be ensnared ; and as they run together like a brood of G 2 84 TO TAKE WOODCOCKS BY DRAW-NETS, ETC. chickens, they will so besmear and daub each other, that very few will escape. This way of taking partridges is only to be used in stubble fields, from August till Christmas : but if you wish to take them in woods, pastures, or meadows, then you must lime rods, as mentioned for pheasants, and stick them in the ground after the same manner. TO TAKE WOODCOCKS BY DRAW-NETS, ETC. WOODCOCKS seldom, if ever, fly in the day-time, unless forced to it by man or beast, and then they retire into thick woods, where there are void spaces, covered on all sides, in which they remain the whole day, searching for earth-worms under the leaves, &c. When night comes, they go out of the woods in quest of water, where they may drink and wash their bills, which they have fouled by thrusting into the earth ; and having passed the night in meadows, as soon as the day begins to appear, they take their flight to the woods. In their flight they use shady places, and coast it along a great way in search of the tallest woods, that thev may be the more concealed, and be more under cover from the wind. They always fly low, till they find some glade to go across, nor dare to fly among trees, because, like hares, they cannot see well before them, for which reason they are easily taken with nets spread along the forest, or in the glades. Draw-nets are very pro- TO TAKE WOODCOCKS BY DRAW-NETS, ETC. 85 fitable in such countries as are very woody, for you sometimes may take a dozen of woodcocks in them. Suppose then that your range of wood be about three hundred paces long, more or less. In some place towards the middle, cut a walk through it, so that there may be a space of twelve yards between the tree A and the tree B, as above ; it must be well cleared, and without trees, bushes, underwood or stones, and twelve yards square ; then prune or cut off all the front boughs of the two trees, A and B, to make way for the net to hang and play without being entangled. The next thing is, to provide two strong logs of wood, which open or cleave at the biggest ends, as marked C and D ; tie the middle parts fast to some boughs of the tree, as the letters E and F direct, and let the tops hang over, as G and H represent ; the next may be a 86 TO TAKE WOODCOCKS BY DRAW-NETS, ETC. little distance from the trees. You should always have in readiness a good store of pulleys or buckles, made of box, brass, or the like, which should be about the size of a man's finger, according to the form designed by the second figure, and fasten one at each end of the perches or logs, G and H. Having tied your pulleys marked 3 to the two branches, with a cord of the thickness of the little finger, then tie another knot in it, about the distance of a hand's breadth from the knot marked 4, and so let the two ends of the cord 5 and 6 hang down about a foot long each, that you may fasten them to the pulleys, which are at the end of the perches or logs, as represented by the letters I and L, close to the notches of the perches G and H. These notches serve to hinder the pulleys from descending lower than the place where you would have them remain. Then insert into each pulley a small packthread, and let the end of each reach to the foot of the trees, that by the help of them you may draw up two stronger cords into the same pulleys where you hang the net, without being always forced to climb up into the tree : these latter you may let remain, provided you live among honest neighbours. The last thing to be provided is a spot where you may lie concealed, and wait for the coming of the wood- cocks; it matters not on which side, provided it be forty or fifty feet from the middle of the net, as at the place marked R. About half a dozen boughs of the height of a man interwoven may serve for a stand. You may sit upon a little haulm or fern, and at three TO TAKE WOODCOCKS BY DRAW-NETS, ETC. 87 or four feet distance from thence towards the net, force a strong stake into the ground, at the place marked Q ; whereon fasten the lines of the net when it is drawn up. It is not necessary to make use of two pulleys ; one only is enough on a side, as at N, and the other at I. Tie a long pole at one of its ends, and let the other be fastened to a tree a little ahove C, by a cord, which will give the pole liberty to be raised up or lowered, as you would raise up or lower the net ; the sportsman should have one cord to hold, and place him- self on the side of the tree B, where he may not be discerned. When a woodcock is taken, the net must be let down as readily as possible, for he may by struggling make his escape. The net must be immediately set up again, for it may happen that the other woodcocks will come in and be taken ; which you may miss, if tedious at your work. It often happens, that a man perceives a great thoroughfare of birds between some coppice or timber- woods, over a piece of ground, where he want? the conveniency of a good tree, to oppose some other, which possibly stands according to his mind; but whether he wants one or two, if he finds the place likely, let him take one or two trees fit for the purpose, and plant them deep in the ground, that they may stand all weathers. If you would take woodcocks by nets in high woods, by driving them into them, your net must be 88 TO TAKE WOODCOCKS BY DRAW-NETS, ETC. like the rabbit-hays, but not so strong, and about forty yards long, and you should have two or three. Being provided with nets, and having the assistance of five or six persons to go into the wood with you, (which should be seven or eight years' growth, the older the better,) go into some part about the middle, if it be not too large, and pitch your nets along as you do for rabbits, but one joining to the other slopewise hanging over towards where you design to drive the cocks. Your nets being thus fixed, let your company go to the end of the wood, at about ten rods asunder, and having sticks in their hands, make a noise, also using their voices as if they were driving cattle along, and go forward till you come to the place where the nets are set, and you will not fail to catch those in that part of the wood : when such part of the wood is thus driven, turn your net slopewise on the other side, and going to the other end, observe the same directions : you may, by these means, take them at any time of the day. Such as may wish to take woodcocks in a wood, by gins, springes, and nooses, need not lose any time, after they have set them, but go at four in the after- noon, and the effect will be much the same : they must be provided with several dozens of these snares, more or less, according to the places in the wood where the woodcocks are. These nooses are made of good long horse-hair, twisted together, with a running buckle at one end, and a knot at the other, which is passed through the TO TAKE WOODCOCKS BY DRAW-NETS, ETC. 89 middle of a stick cleft with the point of a knife ; then open it, and put in the end of the horse-hair noose, make knots to keep it tight, and also to hinder it from passing through the cleft : this stick is about the thick- ness of the little finger and about a foot long, being sharp-pointed at one end, the better to fix it in the ground. Having bundled them up, go into a coppice, such as has most leaves, in order to find if any wood- cocks are there ; this may be perceived by the leaves on the ground, which will be ranged both on one side and the other by the woodcocks, in searching for worms under them, and by their droppings, which are of a dark grey colour. When you find there are woodcocks there, take a round of about forty or fifty paces, which is represented by the following directions : The most proper places for this purpose are amongst bushes and small coppices, and the manner thus. Sup- pose the branches marked ABODE were so many stumps ; make a small hedgerow, of half a foot high, of broom, furze, brambles, &c., from one stump to an- other, leaving a gap in the middle for the woodcocks to 90 TO TAKE WOODCOCKS BY DRAW-NETS, ETC. pass, as at F G H I ; so that the woodcock, walking in the wood in search of food, and finding this hedgerow, will follow it till he comes to the gap; for he will never fly, and therefore you should fix the string there, opened in a round form, and laid upon the flat ground, supported only by some leaves. The form of the ex- tended snares are represented in the foregoing plate. If in walking in the woods you should find nooses, and the like, that are set five or six inches above the ground, such as are denoted by the letters F and G, it is a sign partridges frequent that place, and that persons come to take them. There are those who make little hedgerows of different lengths, and in different num- bers, as they think fit, according to the game they sup- pose the place may afford. It has been observed, that woodcocks in the night- time frequent springs and similar places, because they do not freeze ; and those persons who make it their business to catch them, will not forget in the morning to walk along the sides of rivulets, springs, marshes, and ditches, that are under the covert of woods, in order to find out whether any woodcocks had been there the night before ; for they will not fail to return thither if they have been once there before, and therefore snares should be laid for them, as represented above. Suppose the oblong square, denoted by the letter H, should be a ditch full of water, frequented by wood- cocks, and that its bank should be that side represented by the figures 2, 3, 4. TO TAKE WOODCOCKS BY DRAW-NETS, ETC. 91 Stop all other places, by which they can come at the bank of the ditch, from 2 X as far as A Z, with broom and the like things, and on the fairest bank make a small hedge, 2, Y, P, 3, M, N, about five or six inches high, and about half a foot distant from the water ; but in this hedge leave gaps at the distance of about five or six feet from each other, more or less, according to the extent of the place. These passes are denominated by the letters P, 3, M, N, where the snares or springes are laid. Those who follow this sport, fix at the edge of the gap, five inches high, and not so thick as a man's little finger, and within half a foot of the other side of the pass, a small bow., two or three fingers high, which forms, as it were, a round gate or door facing the stick A. Then have a small wooden flat crochet, seven or eight inches long, with a notch in it, near the end R, which put into the stick A, and the other end pass under the 92 TO TAKE WOODCOCKS BY DBAW-NETS, ETC. bow; also take a switch of hazel, or some other wood, that being folded will grow straight of itself; this rod, a finger thick, and about three feet long, fix in the small hedge ; tie to the end V a packthread, half a foot long, to the end of which fasten a horsehair snare or springe, with a small stick cut at both ends, and made like a wedge to cleave wood with. The reject must be folded and pass the letter P underneath the bow, and the same must also be done by the end of the small stick ; fasten it under the edge S of the bow, and raising the bird-trap or snare, fix the other end of the stick in the notch R, by which means the machine will be kept tight, then extend the snare P into a round, or over the trap ; but it must be so pliant, that as soon as the wood- cock passes through* and sets his foot upon the trap, the reject will immediately unbend, and catch him by the leg. Others fasten a small circle to the trap, that the wood- cock may have more room for his feet, and so make the reject of use to catch him ; for it may happen, that, as he crosses the gap, he does not pass over it. - This second device, with the circle, is represented by the letter K. 93 TO TAKE WOODCOCKS WITH BIRDLIME, ETC. WOODCOCKS and snipes are difficult to discover, on account of their lying close, and not resorting much to- gether, especially in the day-time. The custom of woodcocks is usually to lie on hanks hy hedges and ditches exposed to the sun ; and you may take notice, that on a day after a moonshiny night, they will suffer you to come nearer to them, and find them, better than after a dark night. Snipes naturally lie by the sides of rivers, when all plashes are frozen, and always with their heads up or down the stream, and not across it. In order to find them, a person must be expert in the knowledge of their colours. In order to take woodcocks, &c., with birdlime, provide yourself with sixty or seventy twigs, which daub with birdlime neatly and smoothly ; and having found their haunts, which you may discover by their droppings, generally in low plashy places, and such as have plenty of weeds, arid are not frozen in frosty weather ; there set your twigs, more or less, as you think fit, at about a yard distance one from the other, placing them so as to stand sloping, in various ways; and if you design to see sport, you must be concealed. If there be any other open places near to that in which you have set your twigs, beat them up, or else set twigs there too. PART THE FIFTH. METHODS FOE TAKING SMALL BIRDS. THERE are various ways of taking birds, one of which is in the night, with a low-bell, hand-net, and light ; a sport used in plain and campaign countries; also in stubble fields, especially those of wheat, from the middle of October to the end of March ; and that after the following manner : About nine o'clock at night, when the air is mild, and the moon does not shine, take your low-bell, (of a deep and hollow sound, and of a size that a man may carry it conveniently with one hand,) which tolls in the manner of a sheep while it feeds. You must also have a box, much like a large lantern, about a foot and a half square, big enough for two or three great lights to be set in it. Let the box be lined with tin, one side open, to cast forth the light : fix this box to your breast, an d* the light will be cast a great distance before you, very broad, whereby you may see any thing that is on the ground within the compass of the light, and consequently the birds that roost on the ground. Then, for taking them, have two men with you, one on each side, but a little behind, that they may not be within the reflection of the light that the lantern or box casts forth ; each of them must be provided with a hand- METHODS FOR TAKING SMALL BIRDS. 95 net of about three or four feet square, fixed to a long stick, to carry in their hands ; and when either of them sees a bird on his side, he must lay his net over it, and so take it up, making as little noise as possible. They must not be over hasty in their operations, but let him that carries the light and low-bell be the foremost, for fear of raising others, which their coming into the limits of the light may occasion; for all is dark, except where the light casts its reflection. It is to be observed, that the sound of the low-bell causes the birds to lie close, and not dare to stir, while your nets are passed over them, the light is so terrible to them ; but you must be quite silent, lest you raise them. If you wish to practise this sport by yourself, carry the low-bell in one hand, as before directed, and in the other a hand-net, about two feet broad and three feet long, with a handle to it, to lay upon them as you spy them. This way is sometimes preferred to the former. But, instead of fixing the light to the breast, as before stated, some tie the low-bell to the girdle, by a string which hangs to the knees, when their motion causes the bell to strike; they then carry the light in the hand, extending the arm before them ; in which case, however, the lantern or box should not be so large as that which is fixed to the breast. Another way of taking small birds, is by bat-fowling ; this being likeAvise a night exercise. By this means you may take all sorts of birds both great and small, not 96 METHODS FOR TAKING SMALL BIRDS. merely such as roost on the ground, but on shrubs, bushes, hawthorn trees, and the like places. The depth of winter is the best season for this sport ; and the darker the night, and colder the weather, so much the better. As to the manner of bat-fowling, it may be practised with nets or without : if without, suppose your company be twelve, let one-third part carry poles, to which little bundles of dry hay or straw, dipped in pitch, rosin, or the like (so that it will blaze), must be bound at top : another third part of the company must attend at the fires with long poles, rough and bushy at the upper end, to knock down the birds that fly about the lights : an- other third part must have poles to beat the bushes and other places, to cause the birds to fly about the lights; which they will do as if amazed, not departing from them, so that they may be knocked down. It will be proper for one of the company to carry a candle or lantern, that in case the lights be extinguished, they may be kindled at pleasure ; and be sure to observe the most profound silence, especially till the lights are kindled. Another way with nets is performed thus : Let two or three go with lanterns and candles lighted, extended in. one of their hands, such as before described when using the low-bell ; and in the other hand small nets, like a racket, but less, fixed at the end of a long pole, to beat down the birds as they sit at roost ; which, sur- prised with the great blazing light, will not stir until METHOD FOR TAKING SMALL BIRDS. they arc knocked down. A cross-bow, for this kind of sport, is very useful, to shoot them as they sit. Some take great and small fowl by night, with a long trammel-net, which is much like the net used for the low-bell, both for shape, size, and mesh. This net is to be spread upon the ground, and the nether or further end being plumbed with small plummets of lead, should lie close on the ground ; and, at the two foremost ends -only, being borne up by men, let it trail along the ground ; not suffering the enf whiej^ is borne up, to come near the earth by at least a yajP^> At each end of the net must be carried great blazing lights, as before described ; and some men should be stationed by the lights, with long poles, to raise up, the birds as they go, and as they rise und^f the nets to take them. There are various ways of taking small birds, when the ground is covered with snow; as the following, for instance : Fix upon a place in your yard or garden, H 98 METHOD FOR TAKING SMALL BIRDS. from which you may see the hirds, about twenty or thirty paces from a window or door, where they cannot see you, that they may not he frightened; clear this place of the snow, to the breadth of six or seven feet, and of the same length, so as to form a square, as repre- sented in the preceding plate. Within the lines 0, P, Q, R, place a wooden table, or door, in the middle, as at A, to which you must have fastened before, at the sides B, C, D, E, some small pieces of pipe-staves, about six inches long and one broad; but previous to nailing them on, make a hole exceeding the thickness of the nail, that it may turn loosely upon it. You are to place under the four ends which are not nailed, four pieces of tile or slate, to hinder them from penetrating into the ground, as you may see at F and G, in such a manner that the table may not be fixed, but with the least movement fall down. Make a small notch, or little stay, in the end of the table, at the place H, in order to put into it the end of the staff marked I, which should be seven inches long and one broad ; the other end should rest upon a piece of tile or slate, so that the door, or table, thereon, would be ready to fall towards the house, were it not sustained by the piece of wood, which is bored towards the middle, in order to put in and fasten the end of a small cord, the other end of which is conveyed to the window or door, M, N, designed for this purpose. This done, put some straw upon the table to cover it, METHOD FOR TAKING SMALL BIRDS. 99 with some corn underneath, and a little about it. As soon as the birds see the earth free from snow, and covered with straw, they will fly thither ; and when they have eaten up the corn about the table, they will also proceed to feed upon that under it. You must from time to time peep through some hole in the door, or leave it a little open, and when you find the birds have got under the machine, pull the cord M, which .will pluck out the stick I, and the table will fall upon them, which you must presently seize, and set your machine as before. If the table is not heavy enough of itself to fall readily, lay something upon it to increase its weight, provided it be not the means of frightening the birds. Small birds may be taken in the night-time with nets and sieves : they retire in the winter time into cop- pices, hedges, and bushes, to shelter themselves from the severe cold and winds, which incommode them. The net made use of for this purpose is that which the French call carralet, as under : Take two poles, let them be straight and light, of the length of ten or twelve feet, that the net may be H 2 100 METHOD FOR TAKING SMALL BIRDS. lifted up high enough to enable you to take the birds : tie the net to these poles, beginning with the two cor- ners at the two small ends ; tie the other two corners as far as you can towards the two thick ends of the poles ; fasten packthreads all along at both the sides, or two or three places, to each. There must be three persons employed, one to carry the net, another the light, and a third a long pole. As soon in the night as you have got to the place whither you think the birds are retired, having found a bush, or kind of thicket, the net must be unfolded, and pitched the height of the bush. It must be so arranged, that it be placed between the wind and the birds ; for it is the nature of all birds to roost with their breasts against the wind. The person with the lighted torch must stand behind the middle of the net, and the third must beat the bushes on the other side of the hedge, and drive the birds towards the light. In great timber woods, under which holly-bushes grow, birds usually roost ; and there good store of game is to be met with. By this way twenty or thirty dozen birds have been taken in one night. This sport is always better when the weather is cold and dark. TO TAKE BIRDS WITH BIRDLIME. 101 TO TAKE BIRDS WITH BIRDLIME. PITCH, early in the morning, upon a place in a piece of ground remote from tall trees ; and hedge, or stick in the ground, three or four branches of coppice-wood, represented in the cut as A, B, T, five or six feet high ; and so intermingle the tops of them, that they may keep close and firm like a hedge. Take two or three houghs of blackthorn, as C, D, let them be thick and close, and place them on the top of the coppice branches, where you must make them stick fast ; provide yourself with four or five dozen of small lime-twigs, nine or ten inches long, and as slender as can be got ; smear them over with birdlime, within two inches of the thick end, which must be cleft with a knife ; place them there and upon the hedge, and let them be kept up by placing the cleft end slightly on the point of the thorns. The 102 TO TAKE BIRDS WITH BIRDLIME. middle should be borne up a little with some higher thorn, so that the twigs may stand sloping, but without touching one another ; ranging all in such a manner, that a bird cannot light upon the hedge without being entangled. You should always have a bird of the sort you design to catch, and bring it up in a small cage that is light and portable. These cages must be placed upon small forked sticks, as F, G, ten inches from the ground, stuck on one side of the artificial hedge or bush, at two yards' distance : after which retire thirty paces towards S, where you are to stick two or three leaved branches in the ground, which may serve for a lodge or stand ta hide yourself. When you have taken three or four birds of any sort, you must make use of a device represented by the second figure. Take a small stick, I, H, two feet long, and fix it upright in the ground, at the distance of about four yards from the tree ; fasten a small pack- thread to the end I, which must be on a small forked stick, L, M, two feet high, and fix it in the ground eight yards distant from the other I, H ; let the end of it be conveyed to your stand, then tie the birds you have taken by the legs to that packthread between the stick I, H, and the forked one L, M : the letters N, 0, P, Q, R, represent them to you : the thread made use of for this purpose must be two feet long, and so slack that the birds may stand upon the ground. This done, retire to your stand; and when you see some TO TAKE BIRDS WITH BIRDLIME. 103 birds fly, pull your packthread S, and those that are tied will take wing, by which means you may take a great many; for those that hover in the air, perceiving the others fly, will imagine they feed there, and coming down, so light upon the lime-twigs ; from which you may take them. As soon as the small birds have done with their nests, which will be about the end of July, you may take them -in great numbers, when they go to drink, along rivulets, and about springs, ditches, and pools, in the fields and woods. Suppose the place marked with the letter A, in the above plate, should be the middle of a ditch, or pool full of water, where birds come to drink. Make choice of a bank wljere the sun comes but little, as at B ; remove every thing that may obstruct their coming easily at the water ; take several small lime-twigs, a foot long, and smear them over, to within two inches of the thickest end, which must be sharp-pointed, in order to fix them in a row along the bank B, in such a manner that they 104 TO TAKE BIRDS WITH BIRDLIME. may all lie within two fingers' breadth of the ground : they must not touch one another. When you have inclosed this bank, cut some small boughs or herbs, and place them all round the water at the sides marked C, L, Y, where the birds may drink, and this will oblige them to throw themselves where the lime-twigs are, which they cannot discern. Leave no place uncovered round the water where the birds may drink, but that at B ; then retire to your stand to conceal yourself, but so that you may see all your lime-twigs, and when any thing is caught, hasten to take it away, and replace the lime- sticks where there is occasion. But as the birds which come to drink examine the place where they are to alight for it, they do not drop at once, but rest upon some small trees, if there are any, or on the summits of copse, and after they have been there some time, move to some lower branches, and a little after alight on the ground; in this case, you must have three or four great boughs, like those represented at the side Y, which you are to pitch in the ground at the best place of access to the ditch, about two yards distant from the water. Take off the branches from the middle nearly to the top, and let the disbranched part slope towards the water, make notches therein, at three fingers' dis- tance from each other, in order to put in several small lime-twigs, as you see by the plate. You must lay them within two fingers' breadth of the branch, and so dis- pose them in respect to one another, that no bird which comes to alight thereon can escape being entangled ; it FOB TAKING SMALL BIRDS WITH LIME-TWIGS. 105* is certain, if you take six dozen of birds, as well on the boughs as on the ground, you will catch two-thirds on the branches at Y. The time for this sport is from two in the morning till half an hour before sunset, but the best is from about ten to eleven, and from two to three ; and lastly, an hour and half before sunset, when the birds approach to the watering place in flocks, because the hour presses them to retire, and go to roost. The best season for this diversion is when the weather is hot : you must not follow it when it rains, nor even when the morning dew falls, because the birds then satisfy themselves with the water they find on the leaves of trees : neither will it be to any purpose to pursue the sport when the water, after great rains, lies in places on the ground ; it must first dry up, or else you will lose your labour. FOR TAKING SMALL BIRDS, THAT FREQUENT HEDGES AND BUSHES, WITH LIME-TWIGS. THE great lime bush is best for this use, which you must make after this manner : cut down the main branch or bough of any bushy tree, whose branch and twigs are long, thick, smooth, and straight, without either pricks or knots ; the willow or birch is the best. When you have trimmed it from all superfluity, making the twigs 106 FOR TAKING SMALL BIRDS WITH LIME-TWIGS. neat and clean, then take the best birdlime, well mixed and wrought together with goose-grease, which being warmed, lime every twig therewith within four fingers of the bottom. The body from whence the branches have their rise must be untouched with lime. Be sure you do not daub your twigs too much, for that will give distaste to the birds : yet let none want its proportion, or have any part left bare which ought to be touched : for as too much will deter them from coming, so too little will not hold them when they are there. Having so done, place your bush in some quick- set or dead hedge near towns' ends, back yards, old houses, or the like ; for these are the resort of small birds in the spring time. In the summer and harvest, place your bush in groves, clumps of whitethorn trees, quickset hedges near corn fields, fruit trees, flax and hemp lands; and in the winter about houses, hovels, barns, stacks, or those places where ricks of corn stand, or chaff is scattered. As near as you can to any of these haunts plant your limed bush, and place yourself at a convenient distance, unexposed, imitating with your mouth several notes of birds, which you must learn by frequent practice, walk- ing the fields for that purpose very often, observing the variety of several birds' sounds, especially such as they call one another by. Some have been so expert herein, that they could imitate the notes of twenty different birds at least, by FOR TAKING SMALL BIRDS WITH LIME-TWIGS. 107 which they have caught ten birds to another person's one that was ignorant. If you cannot attain it by your industry, you must procure a bird-call, of which there are several sorts, easy to be made ; some of wood, some of horn, some of cane, and the like. Having learnt first how to use this call, you must sit and call the birds to you, and as any of them light on your bush, do not attempt to take them till you see them sufficiently entangled; neither is it requisite to run for every single bird, but let them alone till more come, for the fluttering is as good as a lure to entice others. This plan you may use from sunrise till ten o'clock in the morning, and from one till almost sunset. You may take these small birds with limed twigs only, without the bush, in this manner : Take two or three hundred small twigs, about the thickness of rushes, and about three inches long, and go with them into a field where hemp cocks are : upon the tops of about ten of the cocks, which are nearest together, stick the twigs, and then go and beat about that field or the next, where you have seen any birds ; and commonly in such fields there are infinite numbers of linnets and green-birds, which are great lovers of hemp-seed : these birds flying in such vast flocks, a number may be caught at one fall of them upon the cocks. There is another way of taking birds with limed 108 OF TAKING SMALL BIRDS WITH BIRDLIME. twigs, by placing near them a lure or two made of live bats. In order to render your lure more conspicuous, place it on something elevated, that it may be visible to the birds thereabout ; it will no sooner be perceived, than every bird will be attracted to the spot, and having no other convenient lighting-place but where the lime-twigs are, you may take a great number of them. But the owl is a far better lure than the bat, being larger, and therefore the more easily to be perceived ; besides, he is never seen without being followed and persecuted by all the birds that are near. If you have not a living bat or owl, a stuffed one will answer the same purpose : there are some who have used an owl cut in wood, and naturally painted, with good success. ANOTHER METHOD OF TAKING SMALL BIRDS WITH BIRDLIME. IN cold weather, that is, in frost or snow, all sorts of small birds gather together in flocks, as larks, chaffinches, yellowhammers, buntings, sparrows, &c. All these, except the lark, perch on trees or bushes, as well as feed on the ground. If they resort about your house, or adjacent fields, then use birdlime, that is well prepared and not too old, in the following manner : Put the birdlime into an earthen dish, adding to it OF TAKING SMALL BIRDS WITH BIRDLIME. 109 some fresh lard or capon's grease, putting one ounce of either to a quarter of a pound of hirdlime. Then set it over the fire, and let it be gently melted, taking care not to let it boil, as that would destroy its strength. It being thus prepared, and having furnished yourself with a quantity of ears of wheat, cut the straw about a foot long, exclusive of the ears, and lime them for about six inches, from the bottom of the ears to the middle of the straw; the lime being warmed so as to run the thinner upon the straw, and be the more imperceptible, and less liable to be suspected by the birds. Then go into the fields, carrying with you a bag of chaff and threshed ears, which you must spread on the ground for the space of about twenty yards in width, (this will be best in snowy weather,) then stick up the limed straws, with the ears leaning, so that the ends touch the ground, then retire from the place, and beat the grounds round about. By these means you disturb the birds in their other haunts, and cause them to fly to the place where the chaff and corn have been scattered, and the limed straws set up, when they will peck at the ears of corn, and finding that they stick upon them, they will instantly fly away : the limed straws, lying under their wings, will cause them to fall ; and not being able to disengage themselves, they may be taken with ease. You must not, however, take them up when you see only five or six entangled, for that may prevent you from taking as many dozens at a time. If they are larks that fall where your limed straws 110 TO TAKE WHEAT-EARS, LARKS, AND QUAILS. are, do not go near them till they rise of themselves and fly in great flocks ; by this method some have caught five or six dozens at a time. Some of these straws may be laid nearer home, for taking sparrows, chaffinches, yellowhammers, &c., which resort near to houses, and frequent barn-doors ; where they may be easily taken by the foregoing method. Having performed this in the morning, take away all the limed ears, that the birds may feed boldly, without being disturbed or frightened ; in the afternoon, bait the same place with fresh chaff and ears of corn, and let them remain there till the next morning; then having stuck up fresh limed straws, commence your amusement. TO TAKE WHEAT-EARS, LARKS, AND QUAILS. WHEAT-EARS are taken under ground, as follows : Dig two pits of earth, in the form of the letter V ; put two single hair nooses into a stick, split in the centre, with two ends left whole ; lay it across the centre, with the bottom of the nooses within an inch of the bottom ; then lay the earth over them, leaving the two ends open about six inches long, into which they will go freely ; when they come to the centre, the light appearing from the other side induces them to proceed, and in turning the corner they are taken. BABBITS. Ill LARKS are taken by springes or long cords laid across each other, at any length you please. Stake them at the ends, open the nooses at least two inches in diameter, and place them equal on each side of the twine ; then sprinkle a little chaff in a ridge over them, quite thin. Place yourself in a ditch, ready to take them out. QUAILS are taken by a call, by which you will find where they are ; then get the wind of them ; lay your net, which should be eight yards by eight in size, and two inches and'a half meshes, on the stubble ; silk is best. Lie behind the net, and imitate their note. If the cock answers, mimic the hen ; and if she answers, mimic the cock, and they will come quite close. When under the net, crawl up to it, and tread the edges down, and take them out. In their wooing time, which is from March to July, as with partridges, they are easily taken ; but it is better to wait for the bevy till the latter end of August. PART THE SIXTH. RABBITS. THERE are two sorts of rabbits, viz. the wild and the tame : those that are wild are bred in warrens, are smaller and more red, have active bodies, are shy and watchful, and their flesh is more delicious from the liberty they enjoy, and the superior nature of their food; they are more lively than the tame ones. The tame 112 BABBITS. are sometimes made use of to supply warrens; and there, in process of time, they become more active and wild. The males being given to cruelty, kill all the young ones they can come at ; therefore the females, after they have kennelled, hide them, and close up the holes in such a manner, that the buck may not find them : they increase wonderfully, bringing forth every month ; there- fore, when kept tame in huts, they must be watched, and, as soon as they have kennelled, must be put to the buck, for they will otherwise mourn, and hardly bring up their young. In the choice of tame rabbits, you need not look to their shape, but to their colour : the bucks must be the largest and finest you can get : and that skin is esteemed the best that has the most equal mixture of black and white hair together: but the black should rather shadow the white : a black skin with a few silver hairs, being far preferable to a white skin with a few black ones. As to the profit of tame rabbits, every one that is killed in season, that is, from Martinmas till after Candlemas, is worth five others, as being much better and larger: and the skin will fetch more money. Again, the increase is more : the tame ones, at one kennelling, bringing forth more than the wild ones ; besides, they are always ready at hand for the dish, winter and summer, without the charge of nets, ferrets, &c., and their skins paying their keeper's expense, with interest. One doe will produce eight litters in a year. The BABBITS. 113 average of five at a litter is forty, which, at Is. 6 * JAM i n 1489 JB' * v i^ ?Uc ' fMRC^lJ^ ^ UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY FORM NO. DD6 BERKELEY, CA 94720 s 10248 M313O19 U.C. BERKELEY LIBRARIES CODb?7157b