Notes From a Birder and Writer
Saturday, 12 April 2025
GUILTY GUILTY GUILTY — ANOTHER CONVICTION AGAINS A HUNTSMAN ON A SAB
𝗛𝗲𝗿𝗲𝗳𝗼𝗿𝗱𝘀𝗵𝗶𝗿𝗲 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗖𝗹𝗶𝗳𝘁𝗼𝗻 𝗛𝘂𝗻𝘁 𝗺𝗮𝘀𝘁𝗲𝗿 𝗰𝗮𝘂𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻𝗲𝗱 𝗳𝗼𝗿 𝗿𝗶𝗱𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗵𝗼𝗿𝘀𝗲 𝗮𝘁 𝘀𝗮𝗯
Senior Herefordshire and Clifton Hunt master, Rob Parsons, has admitted riding a horse at a sab at the hunt's opening meet in November 2024. This wasn't the first time Parsons has ridden his horse at a sab but this incident was captured on both handheld and body worn cameras, providing irrefutable evidence.
The offence was Section 4 Public Order, and having admitted the offence, a conditional caution was imposed. Parsons will attend a three hour victim awareness course at a cost of £60 paid by him.
Since the incident sabs have heard him joke to other hunt followers "I tries to be as violent as possible." With this attitude, we are not convinced a three hour victim awareness course will deter him from future violence but for now justice has been served.
Sabs risk violence every time they stand up against illegal hunting. A strengthened Hunting Act that puts an end to hunting with dogs once and for all can't come soon enough.
Friday, 11 April 2025
FROM PROTECT THE WILD — A LITANY OF FOXHOUND CRUELTY
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Resurfaced Footage Shows Bedale Foxhounds Beaten and Abused
Protect The Wild has obtained more unseen footage from the Wildlife Guardian, further exposing the systemic abuse of hounds used by hunts.
CHARLOTTE SMITH
APR 10
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Protect The Wild has obtained more unseen footage from the Wildlife Guardian, further exposing the systemic abuse of hounds used by hunts. In 2016, Bedale Hunt staff were recorded repeatedly beating hounds with what appears to be a large stick, seemingly without reason. This footage is being released now, as the UK Government reaffirms discussions around a full hunting ban.
Supporters of hunting often argue that a ban would cause suffering for the hounds, failing to acknowledge that foxhounds are already subjected to cruelty. Many are shot in the head when deemed no longer suitable for hunting, and as our own research shows, their welfare is continuously put at risk during hunt meets.
This newly surfaced footage sheds light on the grim reality foxhounds are put through. It is no surprise that saboteurs and monitors frequently observe foxhounds cowering, tensing up, and shrinking away from hunt staff. The Bedale Hunt footage reveals why: hounds are not treated with the care and kindness claimed by hunts and their supporters. Instead, they are controlled through fear and the constant threat of punishment.
The first clip shows a distressing scene involving a hound displaying signs of lameness. The hound appears unable to fully bear weight on their back left leg, moving with a slight hop and stiff gait, as the hunt employee attempts to gather them. The hound retreats to a corner before stopping. In these moments the body language displayed by the hound—tail tucked under their abdomen, and a hunched posture—suggests pain and/or fear. The hunt employee then approaches aggressively, wielding what appears to be a stick. The hound remains still, likely too scared to move. The hunt employee then unnecessarily raises the stick and strikes them four times, forcing the scared hound to move in the cruellest way possible.
Unfortunately, this was not an isolated incident. Additional footage reveals that similar acts of violence toward hounds occurred multiple times over the course of the investigation, proving that this type of foxhound abuse is not an anomaly but deeply embedded in the day-to-day life of hounds used by hunts.
In thier entirety the footage raises alarming questions about the training methods used on foxhounds. Canine behaviour research overwhelmingly supports positive reinforcement as the most effective and humane training approach for dogs. Yet, in this footage hunt staff make no attempt to use such techniques, exposing the hunts fundamental ignorance of canine psychology. Instead, they immediately resort to violence, inflicting pain and fear on the hounds. This constitutes a clear breach of the Animal Welfare Act, which prohibits unnecessary suffering.
Such cruelty would be unacceptable in any other context. If a member of the public were seen beating a dog with a stick in their garden, in the park or on the street, it would result in outrage and an RSPCA investigation—as it should. But when hunts commit the same acts little, if anything, is done to hold them accountable, likely due to the secrecy and smokescreen that surround hunts.
Tragically, like the overwhelming number of hunt hounds, it is possible the beaten Bedale hounds went on to meet the same cruel fate: being shot in the head when no longer required for hunting.
In additional footage, some Bedale Hunt hounds can be seen being dragged by a lead. Their muzzles are then tightly bound with what appears to be rope before they are taken off camera. Shortly after the hounds are seen, what could be gunshots are heard. Disturbingly, if this was the case, one hound appears to have been shot twice, two minutes apart raising the sickening possibility that they did not die instantly, therefore would have suffered immensely. These practices have sparked serious concerns among veterinary professionals regarding the inhumane methods used to kill these large dogs.
The treatment of foxhounds in the hunting world is a disgrace that must not be ignored by “a nation of dog lovers”. We believe hounds deserve the same ethical considerations as any other dog. The hunting community’s continued secret abuse of foxhounds highlights a fundamental failing in animal welfare laws and enforcement in the UK.
It is time to bring this systemic cruelty to light for the forgotten foxhounds, which is why we continue to research their welfare. A full ban on hunting is required to not just protect wildlife from the cruelty of hunts but the foxhounds too.
Support Wildlife Guardian!
Wildlife Guardian investigates and reports on wildlife cruelty committed in the name of sport, and aims to bring hunts to justice. They’re a brilliant team of highly skilled individuals and we’re proud to work alongside them to shine a light on those intent on killing wildlife for kicks.
Donate to Wildlife Guardian
Want to help Protect the Wild fund more investigations?
Let me be brutally honest — the first few months of this year have been the toughest we've ever faced at Protect the Wild. Financially, it's been a real struggle. As an organisation that runs entirely on small donations, we've always pushed ourselves to grow and make an impact, but right now we're having to make hard choices. Our Equipment Fund, which usually supports sabs, monitors, and wildlife defenders, is currently being used solely to fund vital undercover investigations — and that means we can’t support those on the ground in the same way we want to.
That’s why we’re launching Project Investigation, a fundraising drive to raise £2,500 a month so we can run investigations without compromising our frontline support. We’re asking 500 people to donate just £5 a month — enough to fund consistent, fearless, high-impact work that exposes cruelty and forces change. You’ve seen what our covert work can do: our Beaufort and VWH Hunt investigations shattered the trail hunting myth, our badger cull footage aired on the BBC and challenged government policy, and our exposés on raptor persecution are helping take down the shooting industry. We want to do even more — but only if we have the resources to keep going. Please, if you believe in what we do, be one of the 500 and help fuel this fight.
We’re currently on 214 donors! 42% of the way there! :)
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FROM THE HUNT SABS REPORTING A CONVICTION FOR ANIMAL CRUELTY
FROM HEREFORDSHIRE HUNT SABS AND INTRODUCING THE NEWS FROM NORWICHS
Sam Staniland, who began his hunting career as whipper in at the Ludlow, where his mother Ann, was secretary to the Ludlow for twenty years was sentenced at Norwich Magistrates Court today. The judge described 'sadistic cruelty' committed against dogs in his care and wildlife. No doubt in our minds, he deserved a custodial sentence and a lifelong ban on keeping animals. At least his career in hunt service is over.
Seen in the photo leaving court with his father, Frank Staniland.
FROM NORFOLK & SUFFOLK HUNT SABS
Today we were at Norwich Magistrates Court to hear District Judge Matthew Bone sentence Sam Staniland, ex Huntsman for the Essex & Suffolk Hunt for three counts of animal cruelty offences.
Staniland pleaded guilty in February no doubt in an effort to prevent the evidence obtained by police from entering the public arena. However, the prosecution gave a detailed summary that described the catalogue of videos, photos and messages taken from his phone.
Judge Bone described these acts as “sadistic” and “depraved” before sentencing him to the following;
26 weeks imprisonment suspended for 18 months.
Disqualified from keeping dogs for 5 years.
150 hours community service.
£1200 contribution to the RSPCA costs
£180 victim surcharge.
We understand that that the disqualification order was also suspended for a short time to allow Staniland time to rehome their family dog.
We will write a further report on the additional details in the coming days.
Our congratulations go to Suffolk Action For Wildlife who made this possible.
Please consider supporting us with a small donation in order that we can keep putting sabs in the field to put these sadistic criminals in the dock. Here’s our link - https://buy.stripe.com/14k9Bc5EhaXz9nq8wz
Thank you! 🖤
Wednesday, 9 April 2025
FROM PROTECT THE WILD — THE SECRET MONITOR — ITS A BLOODY READ
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The Secret Monitor: The war on wildlife on a North Yorkshire shooting esate
"I began monitoring the local pheasant shoot around a decade ago...the endless, year-round killing of native wildife drove me to do this."
CHARLIE MOORES
APR 9
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Damaging stories from inside hunting and shooting have been circulating for years. Both industries present a public face that aims to convince politicians and the public alike that everything they do is lawful or ‘sustainable’. The truth is very different, and much of what takes place is out sight. Supporters, clients and even the police seem happy to 'turn a blind eye’- but not everyone is looking the other way.
There is always someone watching, always someone listening. The Secret Monitor.
When shooting lobbyists promote their horrible industry, an industry that involves killing literally millions of birds and trapping and killing countless native predators in snares and traps, they use terms like ‘tradition’ and ‘respect for the quarry’, and they persuade politicians that shooting is somehow ‘sustainable’…
The Secret Monitor begs to differ. The North York Moors National Park should be a haven for wildlife, but as the Secret Monitor, who is reporting in this post from North Yorkshire - the county repeatedly named as having the most confirmed cases of raptor persecution in England - all is not as it seems…
*NOTE THE IMAGES BELOW are graphic and may be upsetting to many, but they are the reality of the war on wildlife being waged on many shooting estates.*
The North York Moors
The beautiful landscape close to my home in the North York Moors National Park appears idyllic, especially if you love nature and walking. However, all is not as it seems.
From my midteens, I developed a healthy love of birds, long walks, and the countryside. In the 1970s and 1980s I accepted that bird shooting happened in the countryside, and I don’t remember having any real issues with it.
But shooting was relatively uncommon back then, with far fewer shoots and smaller numbers of pheasants on the ground compared to now.
When you are passionately interested in the natural world, you become more aware of and concerned with the harmful practices you see over time. For me, habitat loss, species declines, pollution, and the intensification of farming, are all worrying changes. The huge growth in driven pheasant shooting where I live is too. The impact it is having on all our native species is alarming.
As many as 50 million pheasants and other non-native birds are released into the wild countryside in early summer. The exact number is not known but it could be more. It’s mind-blowing to think that the total biomass (or combined weight) of these released birds is more than all our wild birds put together.
Gamekeepers provide supplementary feed to released birds but this only forms part of their diet. Pheasants will also feed on snakes, lizards, amphibians, invertebrates and native wild plants.
Gamekeepers are not like the rest of us
In my experience, gamekeepers have a very different attitude to wildlife to my own. They face huge pressure to produce ‘big bags’ on shoot days and as a result their actions risk total destruction of many of our native species. Strong words, but true.
Since moving to my current home, I have become involved with some environmental groups and organisations, for whom I conduct bird surveys and record sightings of other wild animals. When I am out carefully observing wildlife, I feel privileged to be part of their environment. However, gamekeepers are people who want to control wildlife, rather than fit in alongside it.
The whole area where I live has intensive shooting estates, with large numbers of pheasants released for shooting each year. Fox hunts (including the Sinnington, Derwent, Hurworth, Middleton and the Ampleforth Beagles) sample the delights of killing wildlife in a ‘national park’ during the hunting season, sometimes damaging badger setts and rampaging through woods and copses.
In the first year I moved to the area, I had to involve the police when I discovered badger setts attacked on hunt days and by shooting estates.
Then I began monitoring the local pheasant shoot around a decade ago, which covers around 10 square miles of land within walking distance from my home. It was the endless, year-round killing of native wildlife that drove me to do this.
Dumped pheasansts found on North Yorks shooting estate. Image Secret Monitor.
Involving police, authorities and local people has been difficult, not least because catching the estates committing an offence is always hard. Also, most people I speak to say, ‘Living in the countryside, I don’t have a problem with it’.
How has what I see become so normalised?
A war on wildlife
What I am about to list are just a few examples of the incidents and needless killing of wildlife that I have personally observed over the years. Some have involved the police, while others have involved different authorities. But most of what I am about to describe are just unreportable incidents and are classified as non-crimes.
I need to leave public footpaths a lot of the time to observe the area fully, which often leads to gamekeepers challenging me. My relationship with the gamekeepers on the estate – past and present – is one of mistrust and grudging tolerance. I suppose you could say it’s a ‘keep your friends close and your enemies closer’ type of relationship.
I visit the estate most weeks and often multiple times a week. I have discovered carcasses of foxes, roe deer, hares, rabbits, crows, squirrels, pheasants, and even a badger. In fact, I find a fresh carcass on at least half my visits. Based on what I have witnessed, I suspect more protected species are killed, but they will dispose of them more carefully.
Dumped corpses of foxes and deer found on North Yorks shooting estate. Images Secret Monitor.
Large holes are dug into the ground on the estate to put some of the carcasses into, which are slowly filled with dead pheasants and their eggs. I have discovered hedgehogs trapped in these holes. Without my intervention, I fear they would be killed if found due to their liking for eating eggs. These ‘stink pits’ also attract flies and scavengers. It got so bad one year that I contacted environmental health and, after a bit of persuasion, I managed to get the pit filled in.
Dumped pheasant eggs in pit on North Yorks shooting estate. A hedgehog was found trapped here and rescued. Image Secret Monitor.
Meanwhile, shot foxes and deer are dumped in a small copse on a monthly basis. There are so many dead or injured pheasants around that it’s not surprising foxes are attracted to the area as they search for an easy meal. Unfortunately, this puts them in the crosshairs of the estate management. The largest pile of dead foxes I have photographed there is seven. Shooting estates are waging war on foxes.
Many badger setts are present on the estate. While foxes don’t have much in the way of legal protection, badgers and their setts do. Over the past 10 years, though, most of them have suffered some form of attack. Every time I hear a gun go off after dark, I fear a badger has been shot. I once found a dead badger at the entrance to a sett on the estate. The body was badly decomposed but I managed to get the police to collect it, and an examination by a vet confirmed it had been shot. No further action was taken due to the lack of evidence as to who had fired the fatal shot.
Badly decomposed badger found on North Yorks shooting estate. Image Secret Monitor.
A month after this event, I also witnessed the gamekeepers shooting at three buzzards above woodland on the estate. All birds of prey are protected by law. I contacted North Yorkshire police and managed to get them to speak to the two gamekeepers but unfortunately not under caution. The gamekeepers claimed they were scaring the buzzards away from pheasants going to roost. No further action was taken. In fact, they wanted the police to take action against me for trespass!
One summer, three cage traps baited with dead pheasants were placed on a badger sett at a time when cubs are about. Again, I managed to get North Yorkshire police to attend and the gamekeeper was asked to remove them. He claimed he was catching foxes who were using the sett. No further action was taken.
A struggle to get police interested
By the way, I keep using the phrase ‘I managed to get police to attend’ because it can be a struggle sometimes even to obtain a crime number.
More recently, an artificial fox earth was attacked following the new gamekeeper replacing the two old ones. It was filled in at both entrances and a large hole was dug over it and filled back in. This is a classic indication that the digging out of an animal took place. Flies were all over the dugout area, suggesting that animal blood and remains were present.
I had monitored this earth for years and had proof it was constantly occupied by badgers, including badger hairs in the entrances, fresh bedding taken in and out, latrines, and badger print marks. After I noticed the attack on the earth, I obtained a crime number and the scene was visited by the police. They refused to take me with them and concluded it wasn’t a badger sett. I pointed to the photographic evidence I sent them, making special note of the freshly dug out hole. The officer said it was overspill from a plough, but when I pointed out that the field adjacent to the earth hadn’t been ploughed, he went a little quiet. No further action was taken over this incident. However, I persuaded the police to speak to the gamekeeper. Unfortunately, once again, this was not under caution.
Most of these larsen traps are set illegally as they are baited with meat (the law says that operators must NOT use meat baits, including carrion, in any trap – unless strictly necessary - to minimise catching non-target species). Larsen traps are meant to catch corvids, but are baited with meat to attract birds of prey (which can never legally be targetted). Eggs should be used unless the gamekeeper can show all other non-lethal methods have failed. Also, the entrances to the fenn trap covers are not reduced in size, which allows non-target species to enter.
Corvid in baited cage trap found on North Yorks shooting estate. Image Secret Monitor.
Rabbit caught in illegally used spring trap. Image Secret Monitor.
At this point I should say that if I released a crow from one of the Larsen traps on the estate and the keeper said he saw me, I would be interviewed by the police under caution (typically for criminal damage). Another sad truth. Needless to say, I stay within the law in this respect.
The list goes on, with larsen traps, snares, and fenn traps all over the estate. One snare I photographed was made of barbed wire! How can this be explained away by shooting as a ‘restraint device’?
Snare made of barbed wire found on North Yorks shooting estate. Image Secret Monitor.
I won’t give up
I have turned to our local parish council for help more recently. Armed with my long history of evidence, I’m hoping that we can persuade the land owner who leases the shoot not to renew the lease. Instead, using the parish council’s biodiversity plan, we want him to rewild parts of the estate. It won’t be easy to get this done, not least because some members of the parish council actively hunt and the landowner is a shooter himself.
In summary, worse case practices are happening here and I often feel helpless, unable to get local support and help from the authorities. Nonetheless, I will continue to gather evidence and hopefully through the parish council our rewilding plan may gain some support from local people too.
What I have witnessed over the years is too damaging to just give up fighting for a better future for all wildlife. It has been seen from projects where shooting has ceased that wildlife returns. A wild creature belongs to nobody, it is wild. Continued killing of predators and scavengers has created an imbalance in the ecosystems vital for all species. I want to see a time when all our countyside activities exist without controlling wildlife through trapping, snaring and habitat destruction.
We have listed numerous pubs and hotels around the North York Moors National Park that support shooting and welcome shooters. Search bloodbusiness.info
Want to help Protect the Wild fund more investigations?
Let me be brutally honest — the first few months of this year have been the toughest we've ever faced at Protect the Wild. Financially, it's been a real struggle. As an organisation that runs entirely on small donations, we've always pushed ourselves to grow and make an impact, but right now we're having to make hard choices. Our Equipment Fund, which usually supports sabs, monitors, and wildlife defenders, is currently being used solely to fund vital undercover investigations — and that means we can’t support those on the ground in the same way we want to.
That’s why we’re launching Project Investigation, a fundraising drive to raise £2,500 a month so we can run investigations without compromising our frontline support. We’re asking 500 people to donate just £5 a month — enough to fund consistent, fearless, high-impact work that exposes cruelty and forces change. You’ve seen what our covert work can do: our Beaufort and VWH Hunt investigations shattered the trail hunting myth, our badger cull footage aired on the BBC and challenged government policy, and our exposés on raptor persecution are helping take down the shooting industry. What we’re working on now could change everything — but only if we have the resources to keep going. Please, if you believe in what we do, be one of the 500 and help fuel this fight.
We’re currently on 176 donors! 35% of the way there! :)
Join Project Investigation
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FROM THE HUNT SABOTEURS ASSOCIATION HIGHLIGHTING THE CRUELTY OF STAG HUNTING
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Hi,
Stag Hunting: The Shame Of The West Country
The West Country is a popular holiday destination, known for its rolling hills and charming villages. But for some visitors the idyllic scenery can be shattered by an unexpected and brutal spectacle: a stag hunt.
What begins as a peaceful countryside scene can quickly turn into a nightmare, with hundreds of 4x4 vehicles appearing, quad bikes and motor bikes tearing across the land, and hounds and riders on horseback giving chase to a single terrified deer. This cruel tradition continues to this day, and we need your help to end it.
All of this lot to chase one scared animal
What is Stag Hunting?
Stag hunters aim to chase a herd of deer, gradually isolating a single stag (or deer, depending on the season) to be hunted. The entire herd can be pursued for over an hour before being broken into smaller groups, until the stag is finally forced away from the protection of his family. Once singled out, he is relentlessly pursued across miles of difficult terrain, while supporters on quad bikes, motorbikes, and in cars track his movements, relaying his position to the hunt and blocking any chance of escape.
Quad bikes harass the stag, sometimes even driving into him to slow him down, allowing the hunt to catch up. Both quad bikes and motorbikes are also commonly used to block stags from reaching the safety of land where hunting is banned. The chase can last from a couple of hours to several hours; hunts have been reported to last as long as seven hours.
Stag-hunting quad rider churns up the land.
The terrified and exhausted stag is chased using a relay of two hounds, which are continually replaced with fresh hounds, until he reaches the point of collapse. Throughout the chase, he may lie down multiple times, unable to continue in the heat of the day. In a final desperate attempt to find safety, he may try to hide and cool down, often in a river or stream.
The terrified stag tries to hide from the gunman. Image Bath Hunt Sabs
This horrific footage shows a terrified stag being shot while attempting to escape the hunt, as sabs tried to save him.
The hunt's gunman will dismount and shoot the exhausted stag, carving up his lifeless body, handing out body parts as gruesome trophies to the hunters.
Hinds are often pregnant and accompanied by young calves when hunted. As with stag hunting, the goal is to separate her from the herd. Once isolated, she is relentlessly pursued until exhaustion forces her to collapse. Her calves are unable to keep up and may eventually be left behind. In hind hunting, it is more common for the vulnerable hind to be attacked by the hounds before being shot by the hunt's gunman.
Who does it?
Hunt staff
Stag hunts are structured in much the same way as a fox hunt; with hunt masters, huntsman and whippers–in. However, stag hunts include one or two members of the hunt riding with shotguns and the ‘harbourer’, whose job it is to select a suitable stag to be hunted.
Mounted field
The mounted field followers can number somewhere in the region of 80 to 100 riders or more.
Hunt followers/supporters
There can be hundreds of car supporters, plus participating quad bikes and motorbikes. They play a vital role by relaying the position of the hunted deer, making noise to scare them and using their vehicles to turn them away from safety.
The Packs
There are three stag hunting packs in the UK who hunt Red deer, all based in the south-west. These are the Devon & Somerset Staghounds and the Quantock Staghounds, both based in Somerset, and the Tiverton Staghounds in Devon. All three are members of the Masters of Deerhounds Association (MDHA).
There are two Buckhound packs that hunt Roe deer: the Cheldon Buckhounds (who violently attacked and hospitalised sabs in 2016) and the Exe Valley Buckhounds, both based in Devon. In the 1990s, Buckhound packs were expelled from the MDHA following a series of highly publicised heinous acts. One of the most horrific incidents involved a Cheldon Buckhounds hunter slashing the throat of a fleeing deer, who had become trapped on a wire fence. He then sat on the struggling deer for 15 minutes as she slowly died, an act captured on video by a hunt monitor.
When do they do it?
Red Deer
Hunting of red deer happens in three phases, based on their sex and age, between early August to the end of April. Mature stags are hunted from early August until the end of October, the hinds (female deer) are then hunted from November until 31st March, while young ‘Spring’ stags are hunted from the beginning of March until the end of April. However juvenile stags can also be hunted, as this video from Mendip Hunt Sabs shows.
Terrified and exhausted. Spring stags escape from the Devon & Somerset Staghounds. Image © North Dorset Hunt Sabs
Roe Deer
Roe deer are hunted by Buckhound packs from the beginning of September through to the end of April/May.
But isn’t hunting deer with hounds banned?
Yes, the Hunting Act (2004) prohibits the hunting of certain species of wild mammals, including deer, being deliberately hunted with hounds. However the stag hunts are using an exemption in the weak Hunting Act which they claim provides them with a loophole:
Observation and study of a wild mammal, using not more than two dogs and no dog below ground.
The ‘research and observation’ exemption of the Hunting Act 2004 can only legally be used if the following vague conditions are fulfilled:
1. Purpose: the hunting is undertaken for the purpose of or in connection with the observation or study of the wild mammal.
2. Two Dogs: the hunting does not involve the use of more than two dogs.
3. Above Ground: the hunting does not involve the use of a dog below ground.
4. Land permission: the hunting takes place on land which belongs to the hunter or
which he has been given permission to use by the person to whom it belongs.
5. Dogs under control: each dog used in the hunt is kept under sufficiently close control to ensure that it does not injure the wild mammal.
Quantock Stag Hounds in a relay vehicle
With deer and stags being hunted in much the same way as before the ban, it’s clear that no genuine research or observation is taking place. The only difference between pre-ban hunting and now is the use of two hounds in a relay, the hunt replacing them with fresh hounds when they get tired to prolong the chase. Sabs have even caught hunts ignoring this restriction, witnessing additional hounds being hastily loaded into the relay vehicle when they arrived.
Quad bikes and motorbikes are also pursuing deer despite it being illegal to use a vehicle to chase deer.
The effects on deer
Deer experience intense fear and panic when chased by hounds, and the trauma of being separated from their herd only adds to their distress. As herd animals, deer depend on the safety and comfort of their group. When hunted over long distances and through unfamiliar terrain, they become disoriented and confused, which increases their stress. The practice of hunting deer with hounds has been widely criticised for the suffering it inflicts.
In a report commissioned by the National Trust in 1997, Professor Bateson concluded that:
“Hunted deer experience high levels of stress and exhibit significant physiological effects. He stated that (red) deer are ill suited to lengthy chases as they do not naturally range over large areas, they cannot sweat, and their muscles are dominated by a type of fibre called type IIB which is specialised for bursts of activity rather than endurance.”
Sabs keep the pressure on the Quantock Staghounds
How you can help!
Join our campaign to urge MPs to close the loopholes that enable illegal hunting with hounds. We want to eliminate all loopholes and exemptions in the existing Hunting Act that allow animals to be hunted and killed, and to strengthen enforcement and sentencing powers to create a real deterrent.
Get involved!
Find out how you can be part of our campaign to
Strengthen The Hunting Act
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FROM FRIENDS OF THE EARTH AN APPEAL TO SAVE HABITATS
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Dear John,
We just joined the RSPB, the Wildlife Trusts and many other nature organisations to warn the UK government that its proposed planning law could push species towards extinction and cause permanent loss of habitats [1].
We’ve called for essential changes to the new law. But we need your help too. If you don’t want the government to let big businesses harm nature, please join 30,000 others in calling for a rethink.
I'LL SIGN MY NAME
There’s more information about the threat posed by the Planning and Infrastructure Bill in my original email below.
Best wishes
Paul
Campaigner, Friends of the Earth
Dear John,
The UK government's Planning and Infrastructure Bill could lead to habitats being trashed and wildlife lost – while big developers profit.
The government has said wildlife protections are to blame for the “red tape” blocking development and growth. But this worn-out excuse is a distraction from the real issues.
We need your support to call out the threats to nature in this new bill. So, please sign your name today to stop nature loss being rubber-stamped across the country.
I'LL SIGN MY NAME
Of course, we need more affordable, sustainably built homes to address the housing crisis. But this bill could let developers get potentially harmful development green-lit just because they’ve paid into a so-called “nature restoration fund”. This is a false solution to fixing our under-resourced planning system.
So, join us in telling the government we mustn’t put nature at risk in the drive for economic growth. Please sign today to show the government you support sustainable green growth – not this rash and short-sighted bill.
I'LL SIGN MY NAME
Together we must demand better planning rules that improve our communities today without costing our natural world tomorrow.
Thanks for your help holding the government to account. And thank you for standing with us for nature.
Paul de Zylva
Campaigner, Friends of the Earth
PS Help spread the word by sharing this action with anyone who cares about protecting nature as much as you do. The more voices that sound the alarm, the bigger our impact will be.
NOTES:
[1] Read our joint letter.
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FULL NEWS ROUNDUP FROM HEREFORDSHIRE HUNT SABOTEURS
MARCH ROUND UP — FROM THE HEREFORDSHIRE HUNT SABOTEURS
🦊 March saw the hunting season coming to an end for many hunts across the country, and many groups faced violence and witnessed kills right up till the final meets. Groups also headed south to help local groups sabotage the stag hunts.
🦊Toby Fleming of Eastgate Farm, Marham estate, has now been formally charged with Common Assault after his unprovoked assault on a lone female Sab from Norfolk/Suffolk Hunt Saboteurs abs who was monitoring the West Norfolk Foxhounds meet there in January.
🦊The final meet of the season for the Grove & Rufford Hodsock Cottage Farm quickly descended into violence. Hunt master JH Taylor immediately assaulted one sab with his whip, then gloated on camera about it. Lurking thugs threw rocks and made threats against sab foot teams who determinedly followed hounds. Sheffield Hunt Saboteurs were able to stay on the scent though despite constant hunt intimidation, the windscreen of one vehicle being smashed in a drive-by bricking by masked up hunt supporters on a quad bike. Lincoln Hunt Saboteurs & Nottingham Hunt Saboteurs arrived later in the day and the team of sabs had the upper hand for the rest of the day. After hunting till sunset the huntsman headed back to the meet along a bridleway crossing the A60 near Langold. As the hunt blocked traffic in both directions, a trap was sprung as masked up hunt thugs attacked Lincoln and Notts vehicles with bricks and a fire extinguisher before making their escape at high speed through a residential area. Undeterred, sabs walked into the meet to check the hounds were boxed up and headed for home.
🦊Glasgow Hunt Sabs attended a meet of the Dumfriesshire & Stewartry (D&S) Hunt near the village of Thornhill, marking the first visit from sabs since the hunt’s formation in 2006. The hunt, which replaced the Dumfriesshire Hunt after it disbanded in 2001, has largely managed to avoid attention from sabs due to its secretive nature and a focus on other hunts. The hunt soon resorted to violence after being asked why a quad rider was riding illegally with no number plates, one passenger lashed out and punched a sab in the face. The altercation forced the hunt to reconsider their actions, and after just 90 minutes, they returned to the meet and packed up. A 64-year-old man has since been arrested and charged with assault following the attack.
🦊Senior Herefordshire and Clifton Hunt master, Rob Parsons, has admitted riding a horse at a member of Herefordshire Hunt Sabs at the hunt's opening meet in November 2024. The incident was captured on both handheld and body worn cameras and led to Parsons admitting the offence, under Section Section 4 Public Order Act, a conditional caution was imposed. Parsons will attend a three hour victim awareness course at a cost of £60 paid by him.
🦊Herefordshire Hunt Sabs joined up with Bristol Hunt Saboteurs & Severn Vale Hunt Saboteurs to target the closing meets of two Gloucestershire hare hunts. The first target was the Royal Agricultural College Beagles, the hunt of the Royal Agricultural University who continue to enable this Organised Crime Group, notably by hosting their end of season dinner at the university. The kennels are on land owned by, and all the hunt masters are students of, the university. The hunt soon headed back to the meet at William Vestey, 4th Baron Vestey’s Stowell Park estate. The three sab groups then headed over to the Dummer Beagles final meet of the season where over 120 supporters had gathered for Steve Duckmanton’s last day as huntsman after 40 years of hare killing. Once sabs arrived it wasn’t long before the support began heading for their vehicles and By 2pm it was all over, the hound van left for the kennels.
🦊Herefordshire Sabs headed down to join North Dorset Hunt Saboteurs at the Devon and Somerset Staghounds where after killing a stag the body was butchered in front of spectators and handed out trophies such organs, teeth, antlers and feet. The remains were then thrown to the dogs as a reward, to the fanfare of the horn call for a kill.
🦊North Dorset Hunt Sabs were joined by Mendip Hunt Sabs & Three Counties Hunt Saboteurs at a meet of the Quantock Stag Hounds at Dead Woman's Ditch. Two stags escaped but another was killed. The stag was exhausted, and after a final run from the quarry, he collapsed and was shot where he lay in a field near Smokeham Farm. Sabs at the kill site were subjected to serious aggression from hunt followers as they filmed the gruesome scene. One excuse the hunt like to proclaim for their awful behaviour is bTB testing, which is laughable given their biosecurity measures involve chasing an animal cross country for miles, dragging the corpse around, and trailing fresh blood all over a cow field.
🦊Back at the Devon and Somerset Staghounds North Dorset joined by Herefordshire sabs, Staffordshire Hunt Sabs & West Midlands Hunt Saboteurs ensured there were no kills despite a stag being chased across the hills in very warm conditions for a couple of hours
🦊Jacob Rees-Mogg hosted the Mendip Farmers Hunt meet at his West Harptree mansion. This gang of violent criminal thugs are relentless illegal fox hunters, which sabs from Mendip Hunt Sabs, Somerset Sabs and North Dorset Hunt Saboteurs witnessed throughout the meet. Sabs had to intervene to stop the hounds as they hunted the line of a fox that had run from White Hill. New Great Celebrity Bake Off judge Caroline Waldegrave OBE allowed the Mendip Farmers Hunt to relentlessly hunt a fox across her vast estate in Chewton Mendip.
🦊 Two Somerset hunts – the Weston & Banwell/West Somerset Vale Hunt (W&BWSV) and the Taunton Vale Harriers – have been forced to merge in a desperate attempt to survive. Members of the two hunts gathered at an Emergency General Meeting to decide on their future and vote on an amalgamation
🦊At the Stevenstone Hunt meet near Milton Damerel huntsman Anthony Hemmings alongside his girlfriend Lydia Peers launched an unprovoked attack on members of Devon County Hunt Sabs with Ben Vincent joining the attack halfway through. Devon County Hunt Saboteurs along with Plymouth & West Devon Hunt Sabs also witnessed a fox being killed at a joint meet of the Spooners & West Dartmoor Hunt / Mid Devon Hunt. After the hounds had finished tearing the poor animal to shreds, riders rushed in to attempt to hide the body, with one field rider jumping off their horse, and riding up over a nearby hill to dispose of it. Sabs were unable to get to the fox and help it without turning the fox back towards the hounds. But this is exactly what the terriermen chose to do and deliberately pushed the fox back into the jaws of the pack
🦊 West Midlands Hunt Sabs joined up with Three Counties Hunt Sabs for the Croome and West Warwickshire Hunts final meet in Throckmorton. After the hounds were put into a barn at Middle Buildings, owned by former hunt director Edward Righton, West Mids quickly launched their drone and once it was up realised that the hounds had already killed next to one of the farm buildings. The body was quickly taken away out of view behind another building.
🦊 Another kill witnessed at a West Mids / Three Counties joint sab last year at the Warwickshire Hunt ended up in court where Warwickshire Hunt member Ben Halsall was found guilty of hunting a wild mammal. The conviction was based on video footage and evidence of a member of Three Counties Hunt Sabs.
🦊 Salisbury Plain Hunt Sabs reported that no new licenses will be granted for hunting on MOD land for the foreseeable future, a massive relief for the wildlife on the Salisbury Plain.
❤ Finally, March marked the anniversary of the death of Hunt Saboteur, and activist, Anna Campbell.ve her life for the Rojava revolution. Fighting alongside the YPJ, a feminist all woman army established by the kurds in Northern Syria which helped defeat Isis in Kobane, Anna was killed in Afrin by Turkish forces using air strikes. Rest In Power
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