Shooting Times & Country

An everlasting call

I have never shot a grouse on 12 August. Admittedly, I haven’t shot a grouse on any other day of the year either. The Glorious Twelfth has become short-hand, in the British psyche, for the start of something, a beginning, but the same does not apply to 1 September.

For a small, ruddy-faced band of masochists, however, the first day of the ninth month is an occasion of the utmost import.

Suffolk, the most far-flung eastern bulge of Englishness, first glimpses the sunrise over our islands. When it does so, on this most auspicious of days, the creeks, gutters and inlets along the county’s foreshore hide a band of muddy brothers and sisters. All of them stare upwards into this light with awe, wonder and near-religious fervour. For

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

More from Shooting Times & Country

Shooting Times & Country3 min read
Gamekeeper
Alan Edwards is conservation manager at Bywell, a Purdey Gold Award estate in Northumberland A gentle plop at the end of a straight line on an almost perfect cast. Surely this time a fish would show some interest in my offering? Sadly not. Wondering
Shooting Times & Country1 min read
Fallow Deer Seen Romping Through Plymouth Hospital
Two fallow bucks were seen in Derriford Hospital, Plymouth, in the early hours of Monday, 24 July. A Plymouth deer expert said the animals, believed to have weighed about 100kg (15st 10lb) each, could have posed a safety risk. A hospital spokesperson
Shooting Times & Country4 min read
An Otter In The Valley
I had pulled a tendon in my left leg. On referring to hunting diaries of the past few years, I find this to be an annual event occurring at the same time each year. It must be because of the hiatus between the beagling and the otterhunting seasons an

Related Books & Audiobooks