Notitia Venatica - A Treatise on Fox-Hunting to which is Added a Compendious Kennel Stud Book
By R. T. Vyner
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Notitia Venatica - A Treatise on Fox-Hunting to which is Added a Compendious Kennel Stud Book - R. T. Vyner
NOTITIA VENATICA:
A TREATISE
ON
FOX-HUNTING.
TO WHICH IS ADDED
A COMPENDIOUS
KENNEL STUD BOOK.
BY
R. T. VYNER, ESQ.
SOME TIME MASTER OF THE NORTH WARWICKSHIRE AND THE HOLDERNESS HOUNDS
Nec tibi cura canum fuerit postrema.
—GEORG. III.
SECOND EDITION.
Copyright © 2013 Read Books Ltd.
This book is copyright and may not be reproduced or copied in any way without the express permission of the publisher in writing
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
A Brief Introduction to Fox Hunting
In the fourteenth century and for at least two or three centuries later, foxes were but vermin, and were treated as such. Nets and greyhounds were used to capture and kill them and although early records show that our Kings were involved, we hear nothing of their having personally participated in the sport of foxhunting. They seem to have sent their huntsmen with nets and greyhounds all over the country to kill foxes for the value of the pelt as well as to relieve country folk of a thievish neighbour.
Sir T. Cockaine wrote in his treatise of 1591 of the great woodlands that once covered England which had now, for the greater part disappeared. It would seem that even in these times, foxes were becoming scarcer. Another chronicler of those times states, ‘of foxes we have some, but no great store and these are rather preserved by gentlemen to hunt and have pastime withall at their own pleasure than otherwise suffered to live.’ By the seventeenth century foxhunting was well established, and Blome (1686), who gives us a good account of hunting the fox ‘above ground’ claimed that ‘of late years the knowledge of this is arrived to far greater perfection, being now become a very healthful recreation to such as delight therin.’ Clearly, fox hunting was a very popular and well-respected pastime.
‘Foxhunting’, wrote Beckford in 1787, ‘is now become the amusement of gentlemen: nor need any gentleman be ashamed of it.’ Opinions have changed substantially since these times however, and the sport was banned in the United Kingdom in 2004. Despite this, more than two hundred packs of foxhounds are still thriving in the UK and are recruiting newcomers to the mounted field in ever increasing numbers. Most claim to just follow scent trails as opposed to actual foxes. A reasonable estimate that some two hundred and fifty thousand people in the British Isles hunt regularly with this figure swollen to over a million by those who hunt and follow intermittently during the season.
The sport of fox hunting today is probably far faster and more exciting than it used to be. In the ‘golden days’ of foxhunting between 1815 and 1880 most hunts consisted of the local squires and their friends, with a few farmers, doctors, parsons and professional men. Today the packs are much better organised and the field will consist of those who hunt in order to ride and those who really care to partake of the science of hunting and hound work. Unlike shooting and fishing which financially benefit large numbers of riparian owners and landowners through the lease or syndication of sporting rights, foxhunting does not pay rentals for the right to hunt over privately owned land and estates. This takes place through the goodwill of landowners who see the hunt as beneficial to the countryside by helping reduce the numbers of foxes and also for the benefits bestowed on the community by the very active social life revolving around most aspects of the hunt. The Hunt Ball, skittle and quiz evenings, open days and barn dances, all play their part in bringing both town and country together as well as raising funds to assist with the day to day running expenses incurred by a modern pack of hounds.
The publishers wish to make clear that in no way do they condone fox hunting proper. This book has been reprinted solely for its historical value and content, including practical information on horses and hounds, breeding and rearing, that is still relevant today.
DEDICATION.
TO JOHN MUSTERS, ESQ.
MY DEAR SIR,
IN these degenerate days, when the so-called improvements in our social system, and in the state and appearance of the country, have well nigh put a stop to our sports and pleasures in the field, it may seem ill-timed to bring forward a work on a subject which appears to be fast declining in general estimation.—I am aware that it is so, but being a devoted admirer of all connected with field sports, I have endeavoured to rescue the science from oblivion, by giving in the following pages my experience in the chase, hoping that my labours may contribute to the pleasure and instruction of those true English hearts, who still love that noblest of British pastimes, Fox-hunting. I cast then my book upon the waters,
in hope, "believing that its vein is good unwilling however to send it forth to the world without an introduction, I feel proud of the permission to commend it to the care of so distinguished a pilot as yourself.
That you may long continue in the successful pursuit of that most noble enjoyment in which you have obtained such celebrity; and that you and all true lovers of fox-hunting may derive pleasure in the perusal of these few hints upon the subject, is the sincere wish of,
My dear sir,
Yours faithfully,
ROBT. THOS. VYNER.
London,
April 25th, 1841.
PREFACE.
THE biographer of Paley tells us, that the subject of an author’s first production usually discovers the natural bias of his genius.
That such is undoubtedly the case with regard to the following pages, I think no one will for one moment hesitate to admit; and although the humbleness of the theme may not claim entire exemption from the ordeal of a critique, and at the same time, however weakly the subject may have been handled, the author has this earth of consolation to fly to, the consciousness of having done his best to amuse, hoping also, that this short treatise may not be found totally devoid of practical information to the rising generation of masters of hounds, to whom Notitia Venatica,
is more particularly addressed.
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I.
Introductory Remarks.—The Love of Fox-hunting on the Decline.—Manner of Hunting in Germany.—Fox-hounds in France.—Hunt Committees, Anecdote of Mr. Nicholl.—Extraordinary Number of Foxes Destroyed in France during some Seasons.—King James I., his Love of Hunting. Different Breeds of Hounds.—The Beaufort Justice.—The Vine Hounds.—Reasons for Hounds not having the Powers of Scenting.—Mr. Osbaldeston’s Hounds.—The Duke of Cleveland’s Hounds.—Breeding.—Spaying Bitches.—Showing Young Hounds for a Prize.—Right of Country.—Hunt Clubs.—The Sinnington Hunt.—The York Union Hunt Club.—Anecdote of Mr. Curtis eating a Fox.—Anecdote of Mr. Musters and his hounds.—Old Frenzy.—Mr. Bethel’s Hounds.
CHAPTER II.
Mr. White’s Opinion of Trees.—Plan for Erecting a Kennel.—Wm. Smith’s Opinion of Letting Hounds Lie out in the Courts.—Shutting up Hounds by Themselves.—Remarks on Kennel Lameness.—Rats in Kennels.—A Doe kept in Mr. Warde’s Kennel.—Col. Cook’s Opinion.—Lameness in the Albrighton Hounds.—Sir T. Boughey’s Hounds.—Mr. Foljambe’s Opinion on Lameness.—Lord Kintore’s Hounds.—Bees in the Duke of Nassau’s Kennel.—Dick Knight and the Kennels at Brigstock.—The Holderness Kennels at Bishop Burton.—On Washing Hounds.—Jack Wood’s Opinion.—White-washing Kennels, and Airing them with Flues.—Damp produces the Yellows and Distemper.—The Pytchley Kennels at Brixworth
CHAPTER III.
Different Kinds of Food for Hounds.—Notice of the Gentleman’s Recreation.
—Old Oatmeal the Best.—Sir Harry Goodricke’s Establishment at Thrussington.—Meal mixed with Sand.—Mr. Cross’s Opinion about Flesh and Feeding.—Vegetables a Useful Ingredient in Summer.—Mr. Warde’s Opinion on Feeding.—Feeding a Pack to go together.
—The Duke of Cleveland’s Reason for giving up Hunting.—Mr. Osbaldeston’s Hounds and Will. Gardner.—Their Stoutness.—How to feed to Go the Pace
and Kill Foxes.—Early Feeding the Best.—Mr. Warde and his Stopping Balls.
—Will. Neverd and his Quicksilver Balls.
—Delicate Feeders.
CHAPTER IV.
Comparison between the Old Farrier and Modern Vet.—Blaine’s Canine Pathology.—Distemper.—Vaccination Fails as a Remedy.—Barm Salutary.—The Distemper first brought from France.—Major Bragrave’s System.—Yellows or Jaundice.—Worms.—Dressing, and Mange.—Wounds and Bites.—Weak Eyes.—Bite of a Viper.—Swelled Toes.—Canker.—Fistula.—Swelled Neck and Sore Throat.—Fractures.—Physic.—Sulphur and Salts.—Shoulder Lameness.—Recipe for Rheumatism.—Implements, &c.—Canine Madness.—The Warwickshire Hounds Afflicted.—Mr. H. Combe’s, Mr. Hall’s, Wm. Smith’s Remedy.—The Knife and Caustic the Only Cure.
CHAPTER V.
Commencement of the Hunting Season.—Young Hounds brought into the Kennel.—Rounding Puppies at their Quarters.—The First and Second Draft.—Extensive Breeders of Hounds.—Jackall Hunting in India.—Anecdote of Hounds Running a Pony, also Running Crows and a Donkey.—Trailed Scents.—Crane’s Trial of Young Hounds.—An Irish Challenge.—Joys of Cub-hunting.—Early Reminiscences.—My First Brush.—The Warwickshire Hounds.—Duke of Beaufort’s Nectar.—Anecdote of the Steadiness of the Warwickshire Hounds.—Entering Puppies to Hare in the Spring.—Wm. Shaw’s Opinion.—Old Will. Carter.—Mr. Meynell’s System.—Physic and Dressing.—The Floors should be Strawed during the Last Operation.—Exercise.—Turneddown Foxes Bad.—Late Seasons and Harvest in the North.—A Dog Run and Killed by Lord Middleton’s Hounds.—Anecdote of a Fox in a Chimney. Mr. Stubbs.—Extraordinary Run in Cub-hunting
CHAPTER VI.
Covers.—Making the most of a rough Country.—Gorse Covers in Northamptonshire.—Artificial Covers.—Sowing, Cutting and Burning.—Fagot or Dead Covers.—Destruction of Rabbits by Fire.—Mr. Meynell’s Hounds, and Jack Raven.—Dividing the two Packs from the First.—Mr. Hall’s Hounds.—Drawing Hounds according to Size and Pace.—On Whipper’s-in.—The old School and the New.—The Modern Huntsman.—Turned down Foxes.—A Frenchman’s Ideas of what a Huntsman should have been two hundred years ago.—Gentlemen Huntsmen.—On Handling a Pack of Hounds.—Lifting, Bad.—Blood essential.—Will. Todd’s Opinion of a Fine Morning.—Disappointment in Killing Foxes.—Shaw beat by Candle-light.—The Fox and many Friends.—Curious Misfortune with a Badger.—Accidents Happening to Hounds in Chace.—Mr. Hodgson’s Hounds at Speeton Cliffs.—On Horsing the Men.—Anecdote of Mr. Whitworth and Jack Wood.—Mr. Tilbury’s System of Letting Hunters.—Hunting a Country Impartially.—The Farmers near Kenilworth, or the "lex tally honis."—Anecdote of Mr. Corbett.—Frost and Physicing Hounds.—Hunting in the Snow.—A Run in Berkshire with Mr. Warde’s Hounds.—The Pytchley Hounds Hunting in a Deep Snow.—J. Walker and the Fife.—Remarks on Scent. Holderness a Wet Country.—Old Tom Carter and Lord Middleton.—Causes of Scent Failing.—Wild Garlic.—Curious Account of Wildgeese on the Yorkshire Wolds.—Travelling Hounds in Caravan.—Feeding on the Road when Returning from a Long Day.—Spring Hunting.—The Pytchley Woodlands.—Marten Cats occasionally found with Hounds.—Foxes not so Destructive as generally Represented.—Contents of a Fox’s Kennel.—Trick of a Bagman Discovered.—Account of a Good Run with His Grace of Rutland’s Hounds in 1805.—Hunting late prejudicial to Sport.—Conclusion.
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
It was a deep Woodland where we found
Parson Curtis’s Dinner Party
Mr. Musters hunted by his hounds
A Kennel day, or three hours on the flags
My first Brush
The fox and many friends
Mr. Hodgson’s hounds at Speeton Cliffs
Hounds and Marten Cat
The Wrong Sort and the Right
The Fox and Mouse
The Finish
NOTITIA VENATICA.
CHAPTER I.
"Hear and attend! while I the means reveal
T’enjoy these pleasures."
CHASE.
INTRODUCTORY REMARKS.—THE LOVE OF FOX-HUNTING ON THE DECLINE.—MANNER OF HUNTING IN GERMANY.—FOXHOUNDS IN FRANCE.—HUNT COMMITTEES, ANECDOTE OF MR. NICHOLL.—EXTRAORDINARY NUMBER OF FOXES DESTROYED IN FRANCE DURING SOME SEASONS.—KING JAMES I., HIS LOVE OF HUNTING.—DIFFERENT BREEDS OF HOUNDS.—THE BEAUFORT JUSTICE.—THE VINE HOUNDS.—REASONS FOR HOUNDS NOT HAVING THE POWERS OF SCENTING.—MR. OSBALDESTON’S HOUNDS—THE DUKE OF CLEVELAND’S HOUNDS.—BREEDING—SPAYING BITCHES.—SHEWING YOUNG HOUNDS FOR A PRIZE—RIGHT OF COUNTRY.—HUNT CLUBS.—THE SINNINGTON HUNT.—THE YORK UNION HUNT CLUB.—ANECDOTE OF MR. CURTIS EATING A FOX.—ANECDOTE OF MR. MUSTERS AND HIS HOUNDS.—OLD FRENZY MR. BETHEL’S HOUNDS.
AMONGST the many pleasures which men are in the habit of cultivating, there are none more pleasing, or which more ennoble the mind than those which are connected with Natural History, as they daily afford us new objects for admiration; flowers, plants, animals, &c., all discover the workmanship and surprising omnipotence of the great Creator of all things, and nothing bespeaks the presence of Divine Providence more than the animals which the Almighty has destined for the use of man, whether we consider those ordained for our daily food, or contemplate the surpassing beauty and mechanism of those which he has created to assist man in his labours, and contribute to those innocent amusements, which were without doubt kindly given to him, to lighten the burden of his toils, which he is doomed to undergo in this life.
In a word then we may say, that nature is the most learned and complete of all books proper to cultivate our reason, since she comprehends at once the object of every science, and never confines her instructions to any particular language, people, or pursuit.
Who, I ask, is the most likely to enjoy and be benefited by such reflections? the man whose early life has passed away pent up in cities, and whose mind and taste have been weakened and vitiated by every kind of refined luxury and excitement; or his whose early days have tranquilly rolled on, soothed as it were by the various rural pursuits and acquirements which have so preeminently distinguished Englishmen upon all occasions of competition?
The accomplishments of the country and the town, or even of this country or any other, will, I affirm, bear not the slighest comparison. The greatest success may be commanded at the card table, the billiard room, or the dice box, by a French valet, a waiter, or a groom;—in the more aristocratic recreations of hunting, shooting, and fishing, the English gentleman alone stands unrivalled. But as of all these delightful amusements, Fox-hunting will be the only topic affording matter for the following pages, I will at once introduce my readers to the subject, humbly assuring them that they will not meet with a long and elaborate account of the natural history of dogs used in the chase, nor a tedious and philosophical treatise on the different properties of medicines used in the kennel, but merely the straight-forward and plain course pursued in a hunting establishment, with the most approved methods of breeding and rearing the fox-hound, and preparing that noble animal for the chase. No wild theories will be introduced, but such information, as has been gleaned by the writer during his hunting career, will be humbly offered for their perusal.
A subject so extensive and worthy of investigation I could have wished to be taken in hand by some person better qualified than myself; for my own part I have had little experience in authorship; but having been in the habit of keeping a pack of fox-hounds, I have enjoyed many favourable opportunies of making myself fully acquainted with a knowledge of the various branches of the science gained by such an occupation, and I have neglected no opportunity of deriving what information I could, from those incidents which circumstances have thrown in my way; fully compensated should I be if one single instance should occur, of either amusement or information being derived from a perusal of this my undertaking. Mr. Beckford has designated the pursuit of hunting by the title of an art; and although I have classed it amongst the sciences, I hope the critic will excuse my enthusiasm, as Mr. Locke in his celebrated essay, in speaking of the operations of the mind, compares its searching after truth, to hunting and hawking, the pursuit of which, he says, constitutes the chief pleasure. That excellent divine Dr. Paley was a sportsman, and although his practice was confined to the gentle craft
of fishing, he always spoke of sportsmen with respect; he felt the inward delight which emanated from the enjoyment of the contemplation of nature and her various pursuits; but while he acknowledged the pleasure he derived from such recreations, he was at a loss to express or even to discover, why he was thus amused, and declared he never yet met with any sportsman who could tell him in what the sport consisted, who could resolve it into its principle, and state that principle.
*
It is no less extraordinary than true, that although the votaries of the chaste Diana are much increased in numbers, as each hunting season returns with the cloudy sky
of November, still hunting is most truly considered to be on the decline. The noble science is not cultivated as in the days of a Meynel, a Corbet, or a Warde, and although some wealthy and staunch supporters of the good old cause
are still left in the persons of a Moreton, a Scott, a Berkeley, and a Somerset, the rising representatives of our great aristocracy, have, I fear, far different allurements to the field than the cultivation of that noblest of amusements. It has been very often and justly remarked, that a man cannot hunt from a bad motive; and with this opinion I most firmly agree; and whether it be the desire to enjoy the most exhilarating of exercises, the innate fondness of coffee-housing,
the harmless recreation of exhibiting oneself in a new scarlet coat and leather breeches, or the real amor venandi
in the true sense of the word, which bring so large a congregation of neighbours together, as may be witnessed by the side of a fox cover on a hunting morning, it matters but little, so long as it tends to the increase of good and cordial feelings in a neighbourhood, and offers so strong an inducement to gentlemen of fortune to reside on their property in the country. One of the greatest advantages held out in advertisements for letting a house, is its vicinity to any celebrated hunt, or its being situated in the centre of various packs of hounds; without which many houses in a retired part of the country would never find tenants. The average number of sportsmen who are seen at a favourite fixture
in one of our crack hunting countries, is about an hundred and fifty;* at a woodland in one of the provincials,
it is about thirty or forty; and although in the motley crowd numbers of men of rank and fortune may be found to give two or three hundred guineas for a horse (an extra fifty being demanded if qualified for a steeple chase or hunters’ sweepstakes), yet it would be next to an impossibility to discover one single person who could be prevailed on to take the management of a pack of fox-hounds, or to contribute more than the price of a cover hack towards the support of them. The present system of living two-thirds of the year in London, or in a foreign land; that most insinuating and undermining vice of gaming; and the meretricious luxuries of the Continent, have far greater charms to the young man of fortune, than the quiet and peaceful retreat of an old family mansion-house in the country. The love for the chase vanishes at the approach of the swallow; and no more is thought of the hound, or the horse, until, by the rains of autumn, the ground is rendered sufficiently saturated for hard riding, an accomplishment which is now considered the only requisite knowledge in hunting for the modern sportsman. These causes, together with the high pitch to which political feeling is now carried in England, render it next to an impossibility for any one person to have sufficient influence to prevail upon his pheasant-feeding neighbours to allow the foxes to be preserved.
A committee* is the order of the day; the new mode of doing things by subscription is introduced, the niggardly system of retrenchment† and curtailing is resorted to; jealousies amongst the subscribers ensue, the subscriptions fall off, the foxes are destroyed, and the establishment is generally broken up after a few seasons; the master of the pack retiring in disgust, having only half achieved what he so fondly hoped for, the possessing a pack of hounds bred under his own eye, and by his own judgment. The consequence is, that with such prospects in view, few can be found to take so thankless a labour in hand; where neither profit nor honour are to be gained, who would be prevailed upon to waste his time and money in conducting a scheme which will inevitably lead to disappointment and disgust? Few men of the present day have either the spirit or inclination to retain their hounds after a few seasons; and when this generation has passed away, in vain will such men as the Duke of Cleveland, Mr. Ralph Lambton, or Mr. J. Villebois, be sought for amongst the sportsmen of future ages.
In the earliest accounts of history, the amusement of hunting; has been recorded as formino; one of the chief employments of man; and even at the present day, there is no country where the chase is not a favourite pursuit. To England alone we must look for that most manly of recreations, the chase of the fox; the manner in which that gallant animal is destroyed on the Continent is by the gun,* or digging him, with a small dog resembling our crooked-legged terriers, in Germany called Dacks Hunden (corrupted into Taxles), or badger-dogs, and although both in that part of the Continent, and in France, many packs