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Overwhelmed
I think it's time that the followers are charged with joint enterprise on this. You can't go cubbing without knowing you are hunting foxes, it bears no similarity to a trail hunt!
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I think it's time that the followers are charged with joint enterprise on this. You can't go cubing without knowing you are hunting foxes, it bears no similarity to a trail hunt!
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I was genuinely ignorant to this fact and believed we would be following a trail. Having only been bloodhounding previously and it being called 'autumn hunting' rather than cubbing, I imagined it would be formatted like a trail hunt. I realise now how gullible I was!
Avon Vale used to do that and their members even posted photos of them lined up by the corm field. They didn't even make an effort to pretend to be trail huntingGood grief. You checked they were hunting trails and they openly took you cubbing? What a shame you couldn't have got some video of that.
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I've been "autumn hunting " once too, stupidly thinking it wouldn't involve any killing. Silly me. I was so naive.I was genuinely ignorant to this fact and believed we would be following a trail. Having only been bloodhounding previously and it being called 'autumn hunting' rather than cubbing, I imagined it would be formatted like a trail hunt. I realise now how gullible I was!
One of my previous stressful days with my local hunt was watching the hunt staff go down the hedgerow that adjoins my paddocks with the field next door (which they are allowed on) bashing the hedge with their hunting crops. It drove the horses mad and I'd managed to get 3 out of 4 stabled but they were literally climbing the walls.I go out regularly with our local bloodhounding pack and it's great fun. I love that they are fully open, have nothing to hide and I get to enjoy the beautiful countryside at speed over a pre-determined line. My fun is also not hurting anything! I went Autumn hunting once last year with my local foxhound pack, on the understanding that they were following a trail legally. I was bemused when we all gathered around a large covert and everyone started banging their sticks against their saddles to make a lot of noise. I didn't see anything, however a hound trotted past me with blood all over it's mouth. It left me with a very uncomfortable feeling and I will be sticking to bloodhounds in future.
I have never heard of a fox getting in the way of our local drag or that there has ever been the slightest trouble in this regard, they are way to fast and furious plus the fact there are so many foot followers and quads watching the hedge hopping it would be extremely unlikely a fox would be any where near.…and if a fox appears in front of the hounds, do they all wave and suggest a pint in the pub later?![]()
…and if a fox appears in front of the hounds, do they all wave and suggest a pint in the pub later?![]()
Re drag here they only seem to take 3/4 couple out (that’s what stood out to me, I wondered where all the hounds were) and I imagine they don’t even need that many.
first para absolutelyI'm fairly rural (would have said very rural a few years back but house building has gone through the roof round here). A lot of the anti hunt sentiment isn't coming from newcomers to the area but locals - some riders, some not - who a fed up of the inconvenience to their lives. The trashing of our few bridleways, the piles of dog poo and the lack of warning that they're in the area affects walkers and dog owners too. Is that sanitising equestrianism? I don't think so - I think it's just an expression of how fed up residents are with a small group of people not acting with common courtesy on public shared spaces.
I don't think "education" has got worse in recent years - there have always been people not keeping horses well - but social media and the speed at which information can be shared (good / bad / indifferent) means it's all out there for public consumption. The shortage of land in certain areas may make horse ownership the preserve of the elite but I'm struggling to see how that relates to comments on CF's dressage test or frustration with the behaviour of local hunts.
first para absolutely
as for horse keeping I have been surrounded by the hunt for the last 50 years and some of the standards of horse care and riding on hunting days have been very very poor. Horse care seems to be very low down on the list.
We also have a lot of "newcomers" obviously on their first or 2nd horses as owners. Those horses may be a bit "mollycoddled" but the standard of their care is often way above some of the hunt supporters.
Exactly what it sounds ....Dare I ask, what's cubbing?
It’s a turkey shoot, but in this case it makes easy for the new entry of young hounds to kill young foxes in the autumn. It’s to teach the hounds their job by giving them easy kills.Dare I ask, what's cubbing?
Based upon recent experience I can agree with this. I was recently visited by an old friend and her husband, who was very proud to tell me that he was hunting in the UK, and had been awarded his hunt buttons. I borrowed a friend's cob to take him riding here. I think it is enough to say that after about 20 metres of canter I had to pretend that my horse felt lame and insist that we walked home.
I'd agree! I often wonder exactly how they manage not to kill themselves!Hunting has never been about good riding, that's for sure! Especially the men I'm afraid to say.
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I'd agree! I often wonder exactly how they manage not to kill themselves!
Read post #29 - the types are detailed on thereI've not read all these but quite surprised at the ones i have read and reaslised there's more to all this than i thought!
I thought drag hunting was with blood hounds and following a laid scent.
Fox hunting is with fox hounds, 'supposed' to be following a trail.
What else is there?
My daughter was hunting obsessed as a teenager and I did go once with her. I'm not a huge blood sports fan but it was fantastic riding. A huge thrill galloping with so many other horses, probably the best riding experience I've had in all honesty, I was however uncomfortable with the hunting aspect (post ban)
Thank you!Read post #29 - the types are detailed on there![]()
Missed out harriers though …Read post #29 - the types are detailed on there![]()
Round here the expectation seems to be that it’s not a good day without someone ending up in hospital with a dramatic injury, after jumping something wildly inappropriate. Cattle grids, metal gates off concrete and hedges with a separate barbed wire fence behind them spring to mind. The former hunt chairman used to buy exceptionally nice and expensive horse and told me that he only expected to get two seasons out of themHunting has never been about good riding, that's for sure! Especially the men I'm afraid to say.
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Round here the expectation seems to be that it’s not a good day without someone ending up in hospital with a dramatic injury, after jumping something wildly inappropriate. Cattle grids, metal gates off concrete and hedges with a separate barbed wire fence behind them spring to mind. The former hunt chairman used to buy exceptionally nice and expensive horse and told me that he only expected to get two seasons out of them![]()
What are you suggesting, that drag packs hunt fox if they come across them? I can only speak for 3 packs and the answer is definitely no. Yes the hounds pick up fox scent occasionally, though IMO only when casting for the beginning of the trail after a check. They make a very different, more excited, noise when that happens and they are very swiftly called off by the huntsman and set on the laid scent, which is much stronger. Once in full flow on that scent, they would be very unlikely to notice a fox scent, which would be much weaker.
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