Shooting Times & Country – 07 August 2019

(vip2019) #1

D. ROGERS


20 • SHOOTING TIMES & COUNTRY MAGAZINE

I


mpenetrable dawn mist hung

heavy in the coastal lanes.

The world slept in a murky

dreamland. The headlights

from my pickup struggled to cut

through the spectral vapours; steam

rose from the estuary, smothering

the fl oodplains in a blanket of dense

cloud. The earth exhaled, preparing

for another stifl ing summer’s day.

I wound my way through the back

roads to remote Freelands Farm,

stomping ground of my gamekeeper

friend Liam Fearis. Over the weekend

he’d texted using eight of my favourite

words: “Are you available for a bit of

shooting?” Like the Pontiff and his

denomination, Liam already knew

the answer. Especially when he added

that by his reckoning 1,000 pigeons

had hit his landlord’s rapeseed fi eld

before harvest and he knew exactly

the spot to get under them.

A night of lamping — the last

sweep to prepare for the arrival of

my poults — seemed a good excuse

to push through into dawn. I could

then start the crop protection at fi rst

light. Two foxes had been despatched

before mist stopped play, allowing

half an hour for strong coff ee and

toast. Now Liam and I rolled down

fi elds of golden stubble and out to the

very edges of cultivatable land to fi nd

a spinney that the pigeons had been

using as a staging post on their way

to massacre the crops.

Wild partridges


We were delayed by errant pheasants

intent on escape from their release

pen and we took 20 minutes to walk

them back in as the gloom cleared.

Liam runs a fi ne little driven shoot,

the Old Church in Brightlingsea,

and prides himself on his explosive

partridges, many of which are wild

greys. As a gamekeeper, game dealer,

plasterer and father, he’s a busy man

and I was sorry he couldn’t join me

in the hide.

“Don’t want to show you up,

mate,” he off ered by way of a brutally

accurate excuse. He’s a far better shot

Constructing the hide
on the golden stubble

Fast, exciting


Pigeon shooting


A fi eld of stubble waits in the misty dawn and


the woodies come into the decoys, making a


busy morning for Simon Garnham

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