Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 9.djvu/19

 FALCONRY 9 hawks when they begin to prey for themselves. When a hawk is so caught, she is said to be &quot;taken up&quot; from hack. &amp;gt;She will not require a rufter hood, but a good deal of the management described for the passage falcon will be necessary. She must be carefully tamed and broken to the hood in the same manner, and so taught to know the lure ; but, as might be expected, very much less difficulty will be experienced. As soon as the eyas knows the lure sufficiently well to come to it sharp and straight from a dis tance, she must be taught to &quot; wait on.&quot; This is effected by letting the hawk loose in an open place, such as a down. It will be found that she will circle round the falconer looking for the lure she has been accustomed to sue, perhaps mount a little in the air, and advantage must be taken of a favourable moment when the hawk is at a little height, her head being turned in towards the falconer, to let go a pigeon which she can easily catch. When the hawk has taken two or three pigeons in this way, and mounts immediately in expectation, in short, begins to wait on, she should see no more pigeons, but be tried at game as soon as possible. Young peregrines should bo flown at grouse first in preference to partridges, not only because the season commences earlier, but because, grouse being the heavier birds, they are not so much tempted to &quot;carry&quot; as with partridges. The training of the great northern falcons, as well as that of merlins and hobbies, is conducted much on the above principles, but the jerfalcons will seldom wait on well, and merlins will not do it at all. The training of short-winged hawks is a simpler pro cess. They must, like falcons, be provided with jesses, swivel, leash, and bell. In these hawks a bell is some times fastened to the tail. Sparrow-hawks can, however, scarcely carry a bell big enough to be of any service. The hood is seldom used for short-winged hawks, never in the field. They must be made as tame as possible by carriage on the fist and the society of man, and taught to come to the fist freely when required at first to jump to it in a room, and then out of doors. When the goshawk comes freely and without hesitation from short distances, she ought to be called from long distances from the hand of an as sistant, but not oftener than twice in each meal, until she will come at least 1000 yards, on each occasion being well rewarded with some food she likes very much, as a fresh- killed bird, warm. When she does this freely, and endures the presence of strangers, dogs, &c., a few bagged rabbits should be given to her, and she will be ready to take the field. Some accustom the goshawk to the use of the lure, for the purpose of taking her if she will not come to the fist in the field when she has taken stand in a tree after being baulked of her quarry, but it ought not to be necessary to use it. Falcons or long-winged hawks are either &quot; flown out of the hood,&quot; i.e., unhooded and slipped when the quarry is in sight, or they are made to &quot; wait on &quot; till game is flushed. Herons and rooks are always taken by the former method. Passage hawks are generally employed for flying at these birds, though we have known some good eyases quite equal to the work. For heron-hawking a well-stocked heronry is in the first place necessary. Next an open country which can be ridden over over which herons are in the constant habit of passing to and from their her onry on their fishing excursions, or making their &quot; pas sage.&quot; A heron found at his feeding place at a brook or pond affords no sport whatever. If there be little water any peregrine falcon that will go straight at him will seize him soon after he rises. It is sometimes advisable to fly a young falcon at a heron so found, but it should not be repeated. If there be much water the heron will neither show sport nor be captured. It is quite a different affair when he is sighted winging his way at a height in the air over an open tract of country free from water. Though he has no chance whatever of competing with a falcon in straight forward flight, the heron has large concave wings, a very light body proportionately, and air-cells in his bones, and can rise with astonishing rapidity, more perpendicularly, or, in other words, in smaller rings, than the falcon can, with very little effort. As soon as he sees the approach of the falcon, which he usually does almost directly she is cast off, he makes play for the upper regions. Then the falcon commences to climb too to get above him, but in a very different style. She makes very large circles or rings, travelling at a high rate of speed, due to her strength and weight and power of flying, till she rises above the heron. Then she makes her attack by stooping with great force at the quarry, sometimes falling so far below it as the blow is evaded that she cannot spring up to the proper pitch for the next stoop, and has to make another ring to regain her lost command over the heron, which is ever rising, and so on, the &quot; field &quot; meanwhile galloping down wind in the direction the flight is taking till she seizes the heron aloft, &quot; binds &quot; to him, and both come down together. Absurd stories have been told and pictures drawn of the heron re ceiving the falcon on its beak in the air. It is, however, ! well known to all practical falconers that the heron has no I power or inclination to fight with a falcon in the air ; so When on the ground, however, should the falcon be de ficient in skill or strength, or have been mutilated by the coping of her beak and talons, as was sometimes formerly ! done in Holland with a view to saving the heron s life, the ! though it is very rare for a falcon to be injured. It is never safe to fly the goshawk at a heron of any description. Short-winged hawks do not immediately kill their quarry as falcons do, nor do they seem to know where the life lies, and seldom shift their hold once taken even to defend themselves; and they are therefore easilystabbed by a heron. Rooks are flown in the same manner as herons, but the flight is generally inferior. Although rooks fly very well, they seek shelter in trees as soon as possible. For game-hawking eyases are generally used, though ! undoubtedly passage or wild-caught hawks are to be pre- j ferred. The best game hawks we have seen have been i passage hawks, but there are difficulties attending the j use of them. It may perhaps be fairly said that it is easy to make all passage hawks &quot; wait on &quot; in grand I style, but until they have got over a season or two I they are very liable to be lost. Among the advan- tages attending the use of eyases are the following: they are easier to obtain and to train and keep ; they also moult far better and quicker than passage hawks, while if lost in the field, they will often go home by themselves, or remain about the spot where they were liberated. Experi ence, and, we must add, some good fortune also, are requisite to make eyases good for waiting on for game. Slight mis takes on the part of the falconer, false points from dogs, or bad luck in serving, will cause a young hawk to acquire bad habits, such as sitting down on the ground, taking stand in a tree, raking out wide, skimming the ground, or lazily flying about at no height. A good game hawk in proper flying order goes up at once to a good pitch in the air the higher she flies the better and follows her master from field to field, always ready for a stoop when the quarry is sprung. Hawks that have been successfully broken and judiciously worked become wonderfully clever, and soon learn to regulate their flight by the movements of their master. Eyases were not held in esteem by the old fal coners, and it is evident from their writings that these hawks have been very much better understood and mari- IX. 2
 * long as he is flying he seeks safety solely from his wings.
 * heron may use his dagger-like bill with dangerous effect,