The kind of shoot you’d want to say you’d been to before everybody else knew about it.
In all my years at Shooting Gazette it has always been a great pleasure to meet young people who are charting their own course, be they a fledgling sporting agent, apprentice gunsmith or gamekeeper – each and every one respectful of the past but also brimming with new ideas. All have had that mixture of ambition and fearlessness which comes with youth, the fire in their hearts fuelled by a desire to show passive detractors, those who might refer to them as “young man” or “young lady”, that they really are the future of our sport and therefore command a certain degree of respect for taking the baton in an increasingly uncertain world.
I had a lot of respect for James Herrick even before we met on a decidedly crisp Saturday morning in Leicestershire last November. The way he had written to Shooting Gazette to present both himself and The Folly gave more than a hint he was confident his shoot would be the kind readers such as yourself would want to visit. There were no platitudes in his pitch. Here was a 20-something with heaps of measured confidence keen to share his shoot with a wider audience, and in only his second full season there, too.
Denne historien er fra October 2017-utgaven av Shooting Gazette.
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Denne historien er fra October 2017-utgaven av Shooting Gazette.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
ONE TO ANOTHER
What are the ingredients for a stella season in the field and how should we approach comparing different seasons with each other?
Of tweeds and texts
Like it or not, mobile phones are part and parcel of everyday life. How do you use yours when out in the field, if at all?
The life and times of a retired moorkeeper
The remarkable story of one man's passion for gamekeeping and fieldsports.
Masters of our own destiny
While resistance to moving on from lead shot is deep rooted, game shooting can make great strides in securing its future if it changes now
The year past, THE YEAR TO COME
Shooting Gazette asked a host of leading figures in the game shooting community for their reflections on the highs and lows of 2019, what they are looking forward to about 2020 and also the one issue they are concerned about in the year ahead.
Davenport House Estate SHROPSHIRE
A shoot running on new lines uses its time-served assets to bring traditional shooting to a modern audience.
A WEIGHT ON YOUR MIND
Keeping ourselves in tip-top condition needn't be seen as nannying because we all know that when we see it elsewhere in our daily lives
Range Rover Evoque
Every bit the proper Range Rover, as Ben Samuelson explains.
The Keeper's View
Headkeeper David Whitby ponders the impact a ban on lead shot would have on shooting.
What December Means To Me…
When Shooting Gazette’s venerable list of writers and photographers aren’t producing thought-provoking copy and truly outstanding images, they are out in the field at every opportunity. December is a month just like any other, but with temperatures low and spirits high as Christmas approaches, we thought we’d share with you what our people get up to at this time of year.