On the "Glorious 12th"
The Glorious Twelfth is a term used usually to refer to 12 August, the start of the shooting season for Red Grouse (Lagopus lagopus scotica), and to a lesser extent the Ptarmigan (Lagopus muta) in Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
This is one of the busiest days in the shooting season, with large amounts of game being shot. The date itself is traditional, the current legislation enshrining it is the Game Act 1831 (and in Northern Ireland, the Wildlife (Northern Ireland) Order 1985). Not all game (as defined by the Game Act 1831) have the same start to their open seasons - most begin on 1 September, with 1 October for Woodcock and Pheasant .
Red Grouse
Since British law says that the start of the season cannot fall on a Sunday, it is sometimes postponed to 13 August, as in 2001 and 2007. Because grouse are not and never have been reared to any extent for shooting, their numbers fluctuate naturally from year to year. In recent years, the Glorious Twelfth has also been hit by hunt saboteurs, the 2001 foot and mouth crisis (which further postponed the date in affected areas) and the effect of sheep tick, heather beetle, the gut parasite Trichostrongylus tenuis and severe flooding and bad weather. In some seasons where certain moors are hit by low numbers of grouse, shooting may not occur at all or be over by September.
As you travel around the countryside in the north of England and into Scotland, you will find small circular stone walls built out on the moors in rows of eight or nine in a row. These are shooting butts where the guns hide while the beaters with their dogs try and drive the grouse over the butts to the guns.
We call these grouse butts in the north. Some gamekeepers lay turfs flat on top of the stone butts as coping’s to about 15 inches deep. The turf is used is to protect the heart of the butts, but most of all it's so the shooters sitting in the butts can lay their guns on top without getting them damaged, or scratched from the stone.
There was no sign of guns on this August 12th or 13th near Rosedale but I enjoyed shooting this scene.
On the "Glorious 12th"
The Glorious Twelfth is a term used usually to refer to 12 August, the start of the shooting season for Red Grouse (Lagopus lagopus scotica), and to a lesser extent the Ptarmigan (Lagopus muta) in Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
This is one of the busiest days in the shooting season, with large amounts of game being shot. The date itself is traditional, the current legislation enshrining it is the Game Act 1831 (and in Northern Ireland, the Wildlife (Northern Ireland) Order 1985). Not all game (as defined by the Game Act 1831) have the same start to their open seasons - most begin on 1 September, with 1 October for Woodcock and Pheasant .
Red Grouse
Since British law says that the start of the season cannot fall on a Sunday, it is sometimes postponed to 13 August, as in 2001 and 2007. Because grouse are not and never have been reared to any extent for shooting, their numbers fluctuate naturally from year to year. In recent years, the Glorious Twelfth has also been hit by hunt saboteurs, the 2001 foot and mouth crisis (which further postponed the date in affected areas) and the effect of sheep tick, heather beetle, the gut parasite Trichostrongylus tenuis and severe flooding and bad weather. In some seasons where certain moors are hit by low numbers of grouse, shooting may not occur at all or be over by September.
As you travel around the countryside in the north of England and into Scotland, you will find small circular stone walls built out on the moors in rows of eight or nine in a row. These are shooting butts where the guns hide while the beaters with their dogs try and drive the grouse over the butts to the guns.
We call these grouse butts in the north. Some gamekeepers lay turfs flat on top of the stone butts as coping’s to about 15 inches deep. The turf is used is to protect the heart of the butts, but most of all it's so the shooters sitting in the butts can lay their guns on top without getting them damaged, or scratched from the stone.
There was no sign of guns on this August 12th or 13th near Rosedale but I enjoyed shooting this scene.