Shooting Times & Country

Sharpshooter

you really want to get to know your shoot, you have to walk the ground. Not every day, but at least once a season. Admittedly, driving around in a motor vehicle is the norm; in an age of lone working, it is the only feasible way to do your rounds while carrying heavy bags of feed and other materials. I don’t know

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Shooting Times & Country

Shooting Times & Country1 min read
Shooting Times & Country
Fieldsports Press, Macnab House, 14 Belford Road, Edinburgh, EH4 3BL For editorial and picture enquiries: shootingtimes@futurenet.com Editor Patrick Galbraith Deputy editor Ollie Harvey Commissioning and news editor Steve Faragher Head of design M
Shooting Times & Country3 min read
Gamekeeper
Alan Edwards is conservation manager at Bywell, a Purdey Gold Award estate in Northumberland A gentle plop at the end of a straight line on an almost perfect cast. Surely this time a fish would show some interest in my offering? Sadly not. Wondering
Shooting Times & Country5 min read
The Field Guide To British Deer BDS 60th Anniversary Edition
Deer are generally quiet animals. Alarmed deer generally choose to depart unobtrusively but may issue a vocal warning to others of a potentially dangerous intruder in their vicinity. An observer who has been detected by an unseen deer may at least be

Related Books & Audiobooks