PEOPLE hunt for all kinds of reasons, but how many go out with the sole purpose of focusing on the hounds? How many are there in the general hunting community for whom horses, fences, socialising and all the extraneous aspects of the sport are merely white noise?
Amateur whippers-in are a breed apart, enjoying as much involvement as they can with the hounds without actually hunting them. They relish the opportunity to take an active part in the day, accepting that it takes a level of commitment above the norm.
Many of them are appalled by the thought of hunting in the field – far too noisy, you can’t hear or see what’s going on – and happily confess that they would stop hunting altogether if that was all that was available to them.
“I would have been quite wealthy if I hadn’t hunted,” laughs John Cranage, who has been amateur whipper-in at the Sinnington for 30 seasons, whipping-in to a total of seven huntsmen. Unlike many, John has done the job professionally, when he was first whipper-in at the Cambridgeshire for two seasons as a young man.
“Having worked as a professional, I see my position as a serious job,” he reflects. “And I try to achieve that standard.”
What is it that makes him turn out twice a week, every week all through the winter?
“I go to help produce a day’s sport, the enjoyment of watching the hounds, the puppies progressing. The older ones that can still hold the line when the others are struggling. You’re going to see that when you whip-in and that doesn’t change now that we are trail-hunting.”
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der May 28, 2020-Ausgabe von Horse & Hound.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der May 28, 2020-Ausgabe von Horse & Hound.
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