Shooting Gazette

DAYS DOG

In his A History of English Country Sports (Robert Hale, 1994) Michael Billett mentions that: “In the early days of shooting… the partridge was the main quarry rather than the pheasant” and the “hunting of the partridge was considered more genteel” by the majority of landowners.

As to how it was most commonly carried out, you only have to look at examples of works by sporting artists such as John Nost Sartorius, Henry Thomas Alken and John Frederick Herring — which typically feature gentlemen of the time standing in stubble fields while shooting over pointers and setters.

The increasing trend towards arable farming — particularly in East Anglia, famous then as it is now for our native grey partridge — and the resultant acres of corn and root crops, provided an ideal environment for this little sporting bird. With readily available subject matter quite literally on his doorstep, it

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Shooting Gazette

Shooting Gazette4 min read
At Your service
Buying a day’s shooting can be nerve-racking for a number of reasons, not least the costs involved and there being no guarantees that the party will enjoy their time on the chosen shoot, assuming that the day takes place. Sporting agents are the peop
Shooting Gazette2 min read
Gundog Q&A
Q I am thinking of taking my young labrador out during the forthcoming season as I think he is ready. What is your advice about the right time to take a dog on a shoot for the first time? A That depends on a number of things. The worst scenario, of c
Shooting Gazette9 min read
St Clair’s HAMPSHIRE
The thing about nature is that it never stands still. Left to its own devices, it constantly evolves, if at a stately pace, and the men and women who hold it in temporary trust for future generations can only stand and stare. However, there isn’t one

Related