Thursday 1 December 2022

GOOD WORK BY THE HUNT SABS

 THIS IS VERY SERIOUS READING AND WITH CREDIT TO THE HUNT SABOTEURS. THERE HAS BEEN SO M UCH KILLING IN OUR COUNTRYSIDE AND THE SABS HAVE DONE MUCH TO REDUCE IT.


 This is the latest from the Hunt Sabs

It’s been two years since the hunting world was rocked when the Hunt Saboteurs Association publicised the now infamous leaked Hunting Office webinars, in which key figures in the hunting world were seen discussing ‘trail laying’ as a smokescreen for fox hunting, dealing with sabs and the police, and a host of other topics they would prefer to have kept secret.

It didn’t take long for the story to hit the mainstream media, with hunting’s post-ban facade slipping and the public seeing the deception of ‘trail hunting for what it really is.

The fallout was huge. Major landowners that had previously allowed ‘trail hunts’ on their land suspended this activity. Within the hunting community, many blamed an out-of-touch leadership at the Hunting Office for damaging hunting and ruining things for those who enjoy it.

In October 2021, Mark Hankinson – director of the Hunting Office and star of the leaked videos – was hauled before court and found guilty of intentionally encouraging or assisting others to commit an offence under the Hunting Act 2004. Although the conviction was eventually overturned, the damage to hunting was done. One of the most obvious measures of this damage is the number of hunts that have merged, ‘gone legal,’ or have simply ceased to exist since the webinars.

Loss of huntable country is a major contributing factor. Whether it’s changing land use, creeping urbanisation, or landowners no longer wanting wildlife criminals on their land, hunts are being hit hard – and right across the countryAnd when big landowners, such as the National Trust, Forestry England, or Natural Resources Wales stop allowing hunts on their land, as they have since the webinars were released, this can be a big problem!


The New Forest Hounds, a long established and well supported fox hunt whose country was almost entirely in the New Forest (most of which is managed by Forestry England), this year became a bloodhound pack – hunting a human runner.

The Banwen Miners Hunt have taken a similar decision, after losing Natural Resources Wales land, with other Welsh packs – the Ystrad Taf Fechan Hunt and the Tanatside Hunt – both disbanding.

The Tetcott Hunt in Devon have also disbanded, while the North Ledbury, North Herefordshire and Clifton-on-Teme Hunts have amalgamated to become the Herefordshire & Clifton Hunt. Another notorious hunt – the Crawley & Horsham – have all but disbanded after decades of being sabbed

And it isn’t just fox hunts. A number of hunts who traditionally hunt hares have also gone the same way.

The North Norfolk Harriers have folded, the Easton Harriers in Suffolk have become the Hamilton Bloodhounds hunting a human runner and, on the opposite side of England, the Ross Harriers in Herefordshire have opted to hunt a drag.

In 2020 the Palmer Marlborough Beagles (formed from a merger of two hunts in 2007) amalgamated with the Clinkard Meon Valley Beagles (another hunt born from a merger), essentially rolling four hare hunts into one!

This summer, the Blean Beagles in Kent, who have come under major pressure from hunt sabs over the years, have merged with the Brighton, Storrington, Surrey & North Sussex Beagles – forming a huge country that encompasses much of the southeast!


The Albany & West Lodge Basset Hounds in eastern England threw in the towel completely in 2021, as did Scotland’s Barony Bassets and Norfolk’s Eastern Counties Mink Hounds.

On top of that, the Cheshire Beagles WANT to close down, but the higher-ups in the hare hunting world won’t let them, with the outsiders attempting a hostile takeover to keep the pack going.


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