Reports from the Archives: January 4th 2014

North Cotswold HuntVideo

It was a wet, cold day in January and we had added the North Cotswold to our list of hunts to sab just a week earlier. We easily found them that morning as they have quite a small country. Sabs first saw hounds in full cry running across a field from a covert and stopped them on a nearby road. Huntsman Nigel Peel took them on to Bourton Downs and a lone sab saw a fox run from the hill down the field with the huntsman putting the hounds on the line, holloas and whistles heard. This sab then managed to stop the hounds on the line again, unfortunately unable to film at the time. Three other sabs, inland, watched the next scene unfold from a different perspective, one of the new sabs (who joined us after the cull ended a month earlier in Gloucestershire) managing to get in with the hounds and rate them off the scent of the quarry.

For a couple of hours we lost the hunt, hearing them or seeing signs of them inland here and there, but being unable to locate and get to them. However, we found them again near to Guitinghill Plantation, having heard them speaking and circling around on the road to intercept. Hounds streamed down a tree-line in full cry and a fox crossed the road in front of sabs, looking wet and tired. We only managed to hold the hounds up for a few seconds as they were so close behind him and they easily picked up on his scent again, especially as the usual whipper-in (on foot at this time) jumped into the field and encouraged them on (despite sabs stating the obvious to him that the hounds were on a fox – a good thing to do evidentially and in an attempt to deter hunts from continuing to give chase).

Two sabs ran into the field as the fox entered a wide bunch of bushes and brambles separating two fields. With the majority of the pack having run through and continuing to chase what we later believed to be a different fox whose scent was picked up in the brambles and only a few hounds still within the brambles, the sabs made the decision to run though the area as well instead of having to go back to the road to enter the next field. Normally you would not want to enter an area like a covert due to the risk of ‘heading’ (scaring) a fox back towards the hounds, but decisions about how high the risk is in a given situation have to be made quickly. As one sab made her way through, a fox ran past her and disappeared back into more brambles. She was able to cover his scent with citronella and the rest of the hounds left shortly after having given up on the chase… Trying to catch up with the rest of the pack, they were almost hit by a car on the road.

Julian Barnfield and Richard Sumner were present on the day (Julian seen grinning at the sabs who had run into the field). These two were the fall-out guys for the Heythrop Hunt when they were convicted of illegal hunting and they left the hunt, apparently to go to the North Cotswold.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-oxfordshire-20758022

Holloas and whistles were heard by the B4077 and sabs split to cover the hunt from inland and from the road. More holloas were heard and the pack remained in full cry almost constantly for around an hour, sabs giving chase as best they could. The Heythrop Hunt had been in the area only half an hour earlier, so any foxes who had escaped one hunt now had another to worry about. Luckily it was not long before it got dark and the hunt packed up. We are unable to say if they killed during the day as we were not with all of the hounds all of the time (or, indeed, the terriermen), but felt we’d done what we could where and when we could. Hounds were rated off scents or held up by the use of citronella, sabs holloaing and rating.

All in all, not too bad a day!

3C

Campaign Profile

From the Hereford Heckler
April 6th 2015

http://herefordheckler.co.uk/campaign-profile-three-counties-hunt-saboteurs/

Three Counties Hunt Saboteurs work across Herefordshire, Gloucestershire and Worcestershire using non-violent direct action to stop hunting. It is widely acknowledged that the Hunting Act 2004 is not being enforced and saboteurs and monitors up and down the country are out every week, several times a week helping the hunted escape and gathering evidence.

Their tactics are very simply to stop hounds hunting the fox or hare, either by foiling the scent of the hunted animal using citronella or ‘rating’ the hounds: getting between fox or hare and the pack and telling them off using a deep voice and cracking homemade whips (hounds are trained to stop if someone cracks a whip). ‘Sabs’ also do this if the hounds are running into danger; one sab recently stopped a pack as they ran towards the M50.

For the last few years Three Counties Hunt Saboteurs have been embroiled with others in the fight against the badger cull in the Gloucestershire zone. Among other work this has included sett surveying and checking, being out every night during both active culls, speaking to the media and coordinating work across a large part of the zone.

For two years running the government have failed abysmally to reach their cull targets in Gloucestershire directly because of the efforts of numerous anti-cull groups and individuals. They are now resurveying and checking familiar territories and finding lots of badger activity and new setts.

Despite the heavy workload that came with the badger cull, the group also managed to sabotage some fox cub hunts at the same time.

When the cull ended in late October it was back to sabbing the fox hunts exclusively and they managed about 80 days in the field against hunts this season, concentrating most on the Cotswold Vale farmers’ hunt, and the Ledbury and Ross Harriers hunts, all of whom have a considerable amount of country in the cull zone.

During their sabbing work they have seen lots of blocked badger setts, dig outs, hounds all over main roads, a couple of kills and met landowners sick of being disturbed by the hunt. The group confront terriermen if they are trying to dig out or bolt the hunted fox and they have stopped them from doing this a few times this season. Badger setts are often targeted by them. They have been on the receiving end of violent attacks from hunters and their supporters but the abuse is mostly just verbal, as well as having their vehicles blocked. Most hunt followers ignore them, however, and some are quite happy to pass the time of day.

“We are there to do a job and we are having a massive impact in the area. As the hunting season ends, preparation for stopping the cull begins,” said a group spokesperson.

Our First Post!

So, Three Counties Sabs have got themselves a new webpage. Hopefully it will mean that those of you not on facebook will have the opportunity to comment on our recent activities and it will also act as a platform for us to put up pages of information about how hunts work, what tactics we use in response and what foxes may do in such situations as well as a blog to show updates from us.

We’ll see how it goes and it will take some time to build it up, but if you could share the message about this page as well as our facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/3CHuntSabs that would be fantastic. Any suggestions as to what kind of information our supporters would like to see on the page will be great too, so feel free to leave us a comment or send us a message – our email address is threecountiessabs@live.co.uk

Thanks for reading and we hope to be able to create a really good site!

3C