Fleeing from a baying pack
Shooting Times & Country|December 02, 2020
How does it feel to be the hunted, rather than the hunter? Richard Negus takes to his heels in front of bloodhounds to find out
Richard Negus
Fleeing from a baying pack

I have lost count of the times random and faceless animal rights devotees have, on social media, offered a challenge for me to “get shot at and see how I like it” or “imagine I was the one being chased by a pack of ‘dogs’ for miles across country”. To the annoyance of the keyboard warriors I can truthfully reply that I have already been “shot at” with lethal intent, or more precisely, “mortared over”.

Thankfully the IRA’s marksmanship was off and I live to testify that my experience is much like that of a missed pheasant — a big bang then it was over with so quickly that I had no idea it happened at all. I had, however, never been hunted, other than games of hide and seek with Mabel. Therefore it was with a glad and grateful heart that I accepted the invitation from James Chadwick, Joint Master of the Hamilton Bloodhounds, to find out what is like to become the quarry.

James is a remarkable young man. He hunts hounds and is his own kennel man. His partner Tegen acts as groom and whips-in. Theirs is a seven-days-a-week, 365 days a year role and they clearly love this life, this job and the 15 and a half couple of hounds in kennels. The hunt itself is similarly youthful, having only been formed in 2019. Hounds are kennelled at Easton, a picturesque village near Framlingham, the castellated town famed as the home of Suffolk’s greatest global export, Ed Sheeran. The thatched huntsman’s house and mellow red-brick buildings were formerly the home of the fine old pack the Easton Harriers.

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