T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
439.1 | ??? | XCUSME::NEWSHAM | I'm the NRA | Mon Aug 14 1989 05:43 | 7 |
| Pray tell Ian, what is 6 1/2 brooding ? Does this meen you got
6 1/2 Grouse ? Just kidding...
Inquiring minds wanna know,
Red
|
439.2 | | XCUSME::NEWSHAM | I'm the NRA | Mon Aug 14 1989 05:45 | 6 |
| Correction, that what's a brace, not brooding..
Inquiring minds don't function too well at 04:45 in the U.S. of
A.
Red
|
439.3 | | LASHAM::PHILPOTT_I | Col. Philpott is back in action... | Mon Aug 14 1989 08:13 | 26 |
| rep
A brace is a pair (as in two). Traditionally the game bag is counted
in brace, so 6 1/2 brace is thirteen birds. Also counted in brace
are foxhounds (as in "the pack has 41 and a half brace of hounds...")
And of course a shotgun (traditional side by side) is sometimes
referred to as a "brace". And of course a matched pair of duelling
pistols in a case is a "cased brace of pistols"...
This sort of obsolete terminology is fun: I once was passing through
immigration control at Logan airport and had the following dialog
with the immigration officer...
IO: "uh, how long you stayin'?"
ME: "oh, about a fortnight."
IO: "How long's a fortnight buddy?"
ME: "Two sennight"
At which he actually looked like he was about to arrest me...
(fortnight: 14 nights. Sennight: 7 nights... easy, yes?)
/. Ian .\
|
439.4 | Sounds like fun | DECWET::HELSEL | Legitimate sporting purpose | Mon Aug 14 1989 13:14 | 10 |
| 13 birds?
Great!
What's the bag limit?
I'd have to hunt 4 or 5 states to legally shoot that many grouse in a
single day.
/brett
|
439.5 | Thanks | XCUSME::NEWSHAM | I'm the NRA | Mon Aug 14 1989 23:26 | 3 |
| Ian, thanks for the reply. I also like the deal with the forthnite..
Red
|
439.6 | | ODIHAM::PHILPOTT_I | Col. Philpott is back in action... | Thu Aug 17 1989 07:46 | 17 |
|
re bag limit: there isn't one. However I was lucky enough to get
an invite from the owner of the moor (he's my landlord, next door
neighbour, and rapidly becoming a good friend). Most people have
to *pay* a daily fee to shoot.
Bearing in mind its a driven shoot, so the beaters have to be paid,
and also that the gamekeeper and his assistants have to be paid
year round, perhaps it isn't surprising that it's expensive: paying
guests on a good moor may pay $500 a day (though you get overnight
accomodation in the shooting lodge and champagne picnic lunches
for that...) Still you can sell your kill to offset the costs...
(London buyers are paying about $25 each for them, though I didn't
get nearly that much from the local hotel, I did get enough to pay
for my fuel, and cartridges...)
/. Ian .\
|
439.7 | few birds = expensive shooting | LESNET::JUCH | | Mon Aug 28 1989 18:11 | 8 |
| Just got a quote from one of the more exclusive grouse estates.
Four out of six estates have cancelled their shooting this year
because of small numbers of birds.
The estate had one opening at 1200 pounds per day for the shooting
ALONE. They had an estimated bag of 100 brace. That's $1920.00
per day!!! No wonder it's a rich person's sport!
|