Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I THE MAN HIMSELF: HIS HOUSE AND TOOLS
- CHAPTER II HIS FAMILY AND CASTE
- CHAPTER III IN THE FIELDS
- CHAPTER IV HIS DOMINIONS: THE WOODS, MEADOWS, AND WATER
- CHAPTER V SOME OF HIS SUBJECTS: DOGS, RABBITS, ‘MICE, AND SUCH SMALL DEER’
- CHAPTER VI HIS ENEMIES: BIRDS AND BEASTS OF PREY—TRESPASSERS
- CHAPTER VII PROFESSIONAL POACHERS; THE ART OF WIRING GAME
- CHAPTER VIII THE FIELD DETECTIVE: FISH POACHING
- CHAPTER IX GUERILLA WARFARE; GUN ACCIDENTS; BLACK SHEEP
CHAPTER III - IN THE FIELDS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I THE MAN HIMSELF: HIS HOUSE AND TOOLS
- CHAPTER II HIS FAMILY AND CASTE
- CHAPTER III IN THE FIELDS
- CHAPTER IV HIS DOMINIONS: THE WOODS, MEADOWS, AND WATER
- CHAPTER V SOME OF HIS SUBJECTS: DOGS, RABBITS, ‘MICE, AND SUCH SMALL DEER’
- CHAPTER VI HIS ENEMIES: BIRDS AND BEASTS OF PREY—TRESPASSERS
- CHAPTER VII PROFESSIONAL POACHERS; THE ART OF WIRING GAME
- CHAPTER VIII THE FIELD DETECTIVE: FISH POACHING
- CHAPTER IX GUERILLA WARFARE; GUN ACCIDENTS; BLACK SHEEP
Summary
Much other work besides preventing poaching falls upon the keeper, such as arranging for the battue, stopping fox ‘earths’ when the hounds are coming, feeding the young birds and often the old stock in severe weather, and even some labour of an agricultural character.
A successful battue requires no little finesse and patience exercised beforehand; weeks are spent in preparing for the amusement of a few hours. The pheasants are sometimes accustomed to leave the wood in a certain direction chosen as specially favourable for the sport—some copses at a little distance are used as feeding places, so that the birds naturally work that way. Much care is necessary to keep a good head of game together, not too much scattered about on the day fixed upon. The difficulty is to prevent them from wandering off in the early morning; and men are stationed like sentinels at the usual points of egress to drive them back. The beaters are usually men who have previously been employed in the woods and possess local knowledge of the ground, and are instructed in their duties long before: nothing must be left to the spur of the moment. Something of the skill of the general is wanted to organise a great battue: an instinctive insight into the best places to plant the guns, while the whole body of sportsmen, beaters, keepers with ammunition, should move in concert.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Gamekeeper at HomeSketches of Natural History and Rural Life, pp. 45 - 67Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1878