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PRE-MEET TACTICS

A lot can be done to sabotage a fox hunt before it starts to hunt, by ensuring that there are unlikely to be foxes in the area, by covering the scent of those foxes that remain, and even by leaving false trails. Pre-meet tactics require that you know where the hunt are going to meet, as they all take quite some time. Often it is a good idea to arrive at the area to be hunted early to familiarise yourself with the land around the meet, with special reference to roads and footpaths. Check the wind direction and try to ascertain the scenting conditions.

 

Pre-Beating

If you know from experience which coverts the hunt is likely to draw. beating a covert hefore the hunt arrive can have the effect of clearing it of foxes. Beating should be done no earlier than bout half an hour before the hunt are likely to draw a covert, as foxes will return fairly quickly. To carry out beating form a line at the up wind end of the covert and walk through thc wood using whistles horns and hunting calls in an imitation of the hunt. The line should beat right to the end of the covert. as foxes are often loath to leave. Care should be taken to keep the beating line straight. The area to he shunted hould he beaten systematically in this fashion covert after covert away from the meet. If only a small number of sabs are available rook scarers could be used to flush the wood . If timed to go off up until the time of the hunt they will ensure that flushed animals will not return. You must make sure that the rookies are set well above head height in ever green trees (to avoid fire risk) and away from footpaths and bridleways. It must be stressed that pre-beating call be very difficult due to communcation prohlems in the dark and over rough terrain. Also there is the danger that foxes driven from a covert will wait in hedgerows and field horders where they will actually be easier for the hunt to put up.

 

Spraying

Coverts ean be sprayed with a scent duller (see tactics article in HOWL 55) before the hunt arrive.to confuse hounds. Spraying should be conducted at hound head height with particular emphasis on gateways and bridleways. This will negate any scent in the area though any foxes may well remain. In woods too large to spray completely or when just a few sabs are available it may well be worth spraying a section or two. particularly at the down wind end so that hounds that do pick up a scent elsewhere in the covert will be likely to lose it as the fox is forced out of the wood and through the sprayed area.

 

False Trails

With false trails the intention is to simulate the scent trail left by a fox. making the huntsman and hounds believe they have found a scent. They are ideal when you find it hard to get onto the land once the hunt has started or when there are large numbers of thugs or police intent on preventing you from sabotaging the hunt in other ways.

The best results are obtained using a dried blood solution. For those not keen on dried blood. fox bedding can be used if you know of a sanctuary that has a fox. The bedding must be fresh. so you will need to collect it early on the morning of the sab.

For blood. use an absorbent cloth. and carry the container to re-soak the rag occationally. For bedding or a road casualty use a netting bag tied to a string. Having decided which coverts the hunt is likely to draw, assess thc wind direction and try to work out how a fox would run from each one. If thcrc's time lay scvcral trails through thc wood so that thc drawing pack can't miss them. Start at one end of the covert and walk with thc wind through the wood. continuing the trails into thc opcn. If time is short you could simply lay a trail around the perimeter of a covcrt, in thc hope that the hounds will switch to this from a genuine sccnt. You'll only necd two or three people to lay the trail. with one dragging thc cloth or bag. and the others walking ahead to check that thc way ahcad is save, that it doesn't lcad into danger for the hounds, and that it doesn't lead to any fox carths.

Rcmcmber that roads and dry ground will not hold the scent, and if it looks like raining, only lay thc trails insidc coverts. as they are likely to be washcd awaly in the open. Obviously false trails are going to be less eftectivc in poor scenting conditions. Trails will be most effective when laid shortly before the hunt arrives. Thc longer the trails, the more time will be consumled by thc hunt on a false run, but a trail that can take thirty minutes to lay might be covered by hounds in just a few minutes, so 'jink' when you can. and lay circular trails wherever possible.

During the hunt. you may bc able to cncourage hounds onto your trails with voice and horn calls. If you don't know the meet in advance, you could try laying some last minute trails when you have found the hunt, though usually there is not enough time for this.

 

Other Pre-Meet Tactics

Whilst carrying out any of the above tactics, keep an eye open for blocked earths. If thcse are in soft soil don't unblock the earth, as this could create an opportunity for a dig out. If you unblock such an earth and a fox goes to ground, the terriermen are more likely to block any exits and dig out the tox. If the soil is very hard, frozen, particularly full of roots or stones, or the earth is a large warren, it can usually be safely unblockcd, thereby affording a hunted fox another refuge, with little chance of it being dug out. Gatcs can be secured with wire, or even padlocks and chains. This will delay the hunt and perhaps even force them to hunt in less favourable country. Finally, if hunting conditions have been bad for a day or two before a meet, it is sometimes worth ringing any local newspapers that advertise the hunt, and tell them that the hunt has been cancelled. This can have the effect of losing the hunt some supporters and create confusion

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From the archives...

Another Bloody Boxing Day?

HSA news release 24th December 2002

Another Bloody Boxing Day?

Children should not be encouraged to Kill at Christmas

The Hunt Saboteurs Association (HSA) has branded as “sickening indoctrination” a Countryside Alliance (CA) initiative called 'Take a Young Person Shooting this Christmas'. A mailing intercepted by the HSA encouraged CA members to “Give shooting lessons as a Christmas present, hold a young person's drive, ask your local keeper to take a young person out with him”.

HSA spokesperson Nathan Brown said “This is supposed to be the season of goodwill, not the time to hunt and kill. Yet children will be dragged along on a pony to partake in fox hunting, encouraged to shoot birds or hunt other wildlife with little awareness of the consequences of their actions.”

The HSA also fears that their members may be subjected to attacks on Boxing Day after violent pro-hunt protestors clashed with police outside Parliament on 16 December. HSA members have already suffered numerous attacks this season, including one recent incident in Surrey when a prominent anti-hunt protestor’s house was paid a visit by hunt supporters and her daughter’s rabbits were killed. The HSA spokesperson commented: “Actions like this prove that people who hunt have no regard for animal welfare as they claim but are motivated by a desire to inflict cruelty.” Speaking of the trouble on 16 December he said “They have revealed their true colours. These people have no regard for the law and we would not be surprised if they attacked people protesting on Boxing Day. We will not bow to intimidation and will continue to use non-violent direct action to save the hunted animals’ lives”

Some hunt saboteurs will be joining traditional banner demonstrations with other anti-hunt organisations before using hunting horns to distract the hounds from their quarry, but many more will have spent the morning unblocking badger setts and fox earths or covering the animal scents that the hunts will follow. Without this kind of intervention up to 30 hounds will catch the hunted animal and rip it apart.

As well as the traditional Boxing Day meets, hunts hold specific ‘Children’s Meets’ in the winter holiday period with the aim of introducing young people to a sanitised version of hunting where they are shielded from the kill at the end of the hunt.

Beagling - the forgotten form of hunting enjoyed by rosy-cheeked public schoolboys, tight-faced old ladies and retired colonels in which brown hares are chased around fields by 30+ yapping beagles will be having their 'big' day on January 1st. Generally overlooked by politicians who lump it in with hare coursing, and so secret that only 2 or 3 of the 80 packs in the country ever advertise their meets, it is where many future huntsmen start to learn their bloody business. The hare is always referred to as female (just as the fox is always male), and sometimes by other names (e.g. 'Cunny' - work it out for yourself) it is sometimes hard to believe that this is 21st Century Britain!