Shooting Times & Country

Country Diary

he river never settles at Glenfeshie. It lurches and boils over upon itself, raking a channel that is sometimes 200 yards wide. When I saw it last week, most of the river was bare and open shingle. At any one point, there might have been five or six individual streams of water in the river’s bottom, and some of the more peripheral channels

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

More from Shooting Times & Country

Shooting Times & Country2 min read
Game Cookery
Soup. So underrated and misunderstood, and often maligned by chefs. In recent years, meaty soups seem to have almost vanished from restaurant menus up and down these isles as ‘soup of the day’ has become a bit old-fashioned. Instead, time-starved che
Shooting Times & Country3 min read
Royal Rook Rifle
NEW SERIES: In this new Shooting Times series, historian Donald Dallas tells us about the remarkable guns he’s encountered of late By the spring of 1900, King Umberto of Italy was eagerly looking forward to his new acquisition, a best double-barrel .
Shooting Times & Country3 min read
Country Diary
When I moved away from home, some of my friends were worried that I might struggle to make new connections in a new area, and I always responded with blind confidence that I would make new friends through hunting. But, having moved in spring, after t

Related Books & Audiobooks