On a late September afternoon last year, I drove south across Cumbria to visit a retired gamekeeper. I had wanted to speak to Lindsay Waddell for some time about the fraught battle to save Britain’s disappearing birds.
Waddell started as a gamekeeper when he was 16. He was brought up by his uncle who was a farmer rather than a keeper, but he remembers him as a man who had terrific respect for the natural world. “ There was a generation of gamekeepers like that, men who were great naturalists,” he told me.
During the time Lindsay was a keeper, his profession transformed. Shooting used to be a pastime that depended on harvesting a small but sustainable surplus of wild game, such as grey partridges and hares. But over Lindsay’s career, it became big business. In the uplands, medication was used to sustain artificially high numbers of grouse, and in the lowlands, more and more reared game birds were released to sate ever-growing demand. In the early Eighties, it was reckoned that 10 million pheasants were shot in England during the season. Five million of those were reared and released, and five million were wild. Forty years on, it’s estimated that we shoot some 70 million pheasants each year, of which only a very small percentage will have bred naturally. “There were people in the Nineties who were just upping the ante all the time,” Lindsay told me, as we watched oystercatchers wheeling through the rain beyond the window, “it was man’s greed that took over.”
This summer, there has been a steady drip of news stories about gamekeepers losing their jobs because of avian flu on the Continent. Agricultural intensification means it’s almost impossible, in many parts of the UK, for wild hen pheasants to find quiet, insect-rich corners where they can raise a brood, and intensively rearing game birds in the UK is banned. Consequently, in normal years, shoots import some 20 million pheasants and 15 million partridges from France. The weather there is better suited to rearing game. We’ve destroyed vast swathes of habitat in under 100 years, but no matter: importing birds allows us to keep shooting while pretending everything’s fine.
Or it did anyway, until the spring of this year, when Defra announced a temporary ban on the import of game birds from parts of France where bird flu was running rife. Almost 13% of shoots have said that they aren’t going to operate at all this season and the National Gamekeepers Organisation believes that 111 keepers have been let go. Every time the papers cover the story, Shooting Times, gets tagged in jubilant posts on social media. The Twitter consensus is damning: shooting is awful and keepers deserve every bit of misery they get.
There can be little doubt that the sport has become bloated, and it’s generally recognised that releasing excessive numbers of hungry birds denudes the land of invertebrates and flora. But it’s absurd to suggest that gamekeepers are the architects of shooting’s explosion. When Lindsay was a boy, many more keepers were employed, and far fewer birds were shot.
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SubscribeOld-style keepers, such as my father, kept the balance. Predators were controlled, never eliminated. Now look at the countryside in general. Magpies, crows, rats etc proliferate and songbirds decline. Revive wild game shooting, tax the profiteers, and muzzle the RSPB.
Meanwhile the ignorant doom mongers like the RSPB and Moorland Monitors and criminals like Luke Steele continue to get reams of favourable coverage.
The father of all conservation as we know it stems from ‘Ducks Unlimited’ a group of wealthy Eastern American businessmen who were duck hunters as the decline was on on waterfowl populations due to habatat loss, and some to market hunters. They bought and set asside millions of acres in Canada where waterfowl bred, they got the Federal Government to crate Migratory Bird harvest and conservation laws, and a great deal more. They saved the ducks, and in the process wild life in general.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ducks_Unlimited
A gloomy example of global capitalism at its worst.
Their craft and knowledge will leave the profession with them…
The damage caused to wildlife and the natural habitat by pheasant and grouse shooting is widespread. When walking in Cairngorm a couple of years ago, we came on a stinking pit around six feet across filled with dead mountain hares. These beautiful creatures had been shot or trapped by gamekeepers. The ostensible reason is that the hares transmit tick-borne diseases to grouse. The suspected real reason is that hares are a major food source for raptors. Because the killing of raptors is closely monitored, gamekeepers get at raptors indirectly by targeting hares. The open pit attracts foxes which can then be shot.
And what purpose is served by this slaughter and despoliation? It allows a bunch of pompous, overpaid hooray Henrys to stand on the hillside blasting birds out of the sky. We’ve outlawed fox-hunting which causes far less suffering and environmental damage. It’s about time we did the same for the shooting of game birds.
Absolutely. The article’s headline, and goal, ‘a defense of shooting’, is a bone-headed thing to attempt, if he actually cares about conservation. Galbraith seems to be ignorant of the abysmal effects of releasing around 50 million pheasants (a massive artificial injection of biomass) into the countryside each year. Which causes a staggering amount of ecological disruption, as they eat insects, small animals (eg lizards), and so upset ecological habitats wherever they’re released en masse. And neither in this article can I find any consideration of gamekeepers’ illegal persecution of our native raptors, which often involves poisoning red kites, goshawks, sparrowhawks, buzzards etc. Which the RSPB is having to tackle, when it could be using those resources elsewhere. The article seems to romanticise shooting while failing to discuss in any detail the conservation implications.
It’s hard to disagree that the big issue is the owner of the shooting rights in regard land management and attitude to wildlife. Closely followed by the people who will pay for a guaranteed shoot.
Meanwhile the people sit in valleys waiting for the flood sirens to howl before going under water yet again.
The let day” bag based” financial incentive for landowners is a curse in itself: Gloucestershire is a good example, where previously lightly shot farmland is now awash with reared birds: likewise certain parts of Wales and Devon, not natural game habitats, taking advantage of artificial ” high bird” let days, as livestock farming there becomes ever more financially difficult. Of course, successive Tory governments run by suburbanites have done nothing to really help post Brexit farming.
Getting rid of September and adding February to the Pheasant and Partridge calendar would be a start…..
Unfortunately Shooting has taken over from Golf as the ideal ‘marketing’ sport for God knows how many Levantine looking spivs and their ilk.
I like your idea of adjusting the calendar, something both Caesar and Augustus would have approved of.
Latest curse is the over breeding of newly re introduced raptors, beautiful and lovely as they are, but who have upset the ‘ balance of nature”.
Sadly the introduction of pesticides has done much greater damage, reducing much of this once “ green and pleasant land “ to a veritable chemical desert.
The mass immigration of 70 million pheasants per annum (a bird native to the foothills of the Himalayas) also hasn’t helped much, it must be said.
No doubt the insatiable greed of the spivs has to be assuaged somehow, even if they very rarely even eat the birds!