Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 9.djvu/20

 10 FALCONRY aged in the nineteenth century than in the Middle Ages. It is probable that the old falconers procured their passage and wild-caught hawks with such facility, having at the same time more scope for their use in days when quarry was more abundant and there was more waste land than we have now, that they did not find it necessary to trouble themselves about eyases. &quot;We here quote a few lines from one of the best of the old writers, which may be taken as giving a fair account of the estimation in which eyases I were generally held, and from which it is evident that the j old falconers did not understand flying hawks at hack. Simon Latham, writing in 1633, says of eyases: They will be verie easily brought to familiaritie with the man, not iu the house only, but also abroad, hooded or imhooded ; nay, many of them will be more gentle and quiet when unhopded than when hooded, for if a man doe but stirre or spcake in their hearing, they will erie and bate as though they did desire to see the man. Likewise some of them being unhooded, when they see the man will cowre and crie, shewing thereby their exceeding fondness and fawning love towards him. . . . .... These kind of hawks be all (for the most part) taken out of the nest while verie young, even in the downe, from whence they are put into a close house, whereas they be alwaies fed and familiarly brought up by the man, tintill they bee able to flie, when as the summer approaching verie suddenly they are continued and trained up in the same, the weather being alwaies warm and temperate ; thus they are still inured to familiaritie with the man, not knowing from whence besides to fetch their relief or sustenance. &quot;When the summer is ended they bee commonly put up into a house again, or else kept in some warm place, for they cannot endure the cold wind to blow upon them But leaving to speak of these kind of scratching hawks that I never did love should come too neere my fingers, and to return unto the faire conditioned haggard faulcon The author here describes with accuracy the condition of unhackecl eyases, which no modern falconer would trouble himself to keep. Many of our falconers in this century have had eyases which have killed grouse, ducks, and other quarry in a style almost equalling that of passage hawks. Hooks also have been most suc cessfully flown, and some herons on passage have been taken by eyases. No sport is to be had at game without hawks that wait on well. Moors, downs, open country where the hedges are low and weak, are best suited to game hawking. Pointers or setters may be used to find game, or the hawk may be let go on coming to the ground where game is known to lie, and suffered, if an experienced one, to &quot; wait on &quot; till game is flushed. However, the best plan with most hawks, young ones especially, is to use a dog, and to let the hawk go when the dog points, and to flush the birds as soon as the hawk is at her pitch. It is not by any means necessary that the hawk should be near the birds when they rise, provided she is at a good height, and that she is Avatching ; she will come at once with a rush out of the air at great speed, and either cut one down with the stoop, or the bird will save itself by putting in, when every exertion must be made, especially if the hawk be young and inexperienced, to &quot; serve &quot; her as soon as possible by driving out the bird again while she waits over head. If this be successfully done she is nearly certain to kill it at the second flight. Perhaps falcons are best for grouse and tiercels for partridges. Magpies afford much sport. Only tiercels should be used for hunting magpies. A field is necessary at the very least 4 or 5 runners to beat the magpie out, and per haps the presence of a horseman is an advantage. Of course in open flight a magpie would be almost immediately caught by a tiercel peregrine, and there would be no sport, but the magpie makes up for his want of power of wing by his cunning and shiftiness ; and he is, moreover, never to be found except where he has shelter under his lee for security from a passing peregrine. Once in a hedge or tree he is perfectly safe from ths wild falcon, but the case is otherwise when the falconer approaches with his trained tiercel, perhaps a cast of tiercels, waiting on in the air, with some active runners in his field. Then driven from hedge to hedge, from one kind of shelter to another, stooped at every instant when he shows himself ever so little away from cover by the watchful tiercels overhead, his egg-stealing days are brought to an end by a fatal stroke sometimes not before the field are pretty well exhausted with running and shouting. The magpie always manoeuvres towards some thick wood, from which it is the aim of the field to cut him off. At first hawks must be flown in easy country, but when they understand their work well they will kill magpies in every enclosed country, with a smart active field a magpie may even be pushed through a small wood. Magpie hawking affords excellent exercise, not only for those who run to serve the hawks, but for the hawks also ; they get a great deal of flying, and learn to hunt in com pany with men, any number of people may be present. Blackbirds may be hunted with tiercels in the same way. AVoodcocks afford capital sport where the county is toler ably open. It will generally be found that after a hawk has made one stoop at a woodcock, the cock will at first try to escape by taking the air, and will show a very fine flight. When beaten iu the air it will try to get back to covert again, but when once a hawk has outflown a woodcock, he is pretty sure to kill it. Hawks seem to pursue wood cocks with great keenness ; something in the flight of the cock tempts them to exertion. The laziest and most useless hawks hawks that will scarcely follow a slow pigeon will do their best at woodcock, and will very soon, if the sport is continued, be improved in their style of flying. Snipes may be killed by first-class tiercels in favourable localities. Wild ducks and teal are only to be flown at when they can be found in small pools or brooks at a distance from much water, where the fowl can be su ddenly flushed by men or dogs while the falcon is flying at her pitch overhead. For ducks, falcons should be used ; tiercels will kill teal well. The merlin is used for flying at larks, and there does not seem to be any other use to which this pretty little falcon may fairly be pub. It is very active, but far from being, as some authors have stated, the swiftest of all hawks. Its flight is greatly inferior in speed and power to that of the peregrine. Perhaps its diminutive size, causing it to be soon lost to view, and a limited acquaintance with the flight of the wild peregrine falcon, have led to the mistake. The hobby is far swifter than the merlin, but cannot be said to be efficient in the field ; it may be trained to wait on beautifully, and will sometimes take larks ; it is very much given to the fault of &quot; carrying.&quot; The three great northern falcons are not easy to procure in proper condition for training. They are very difficult to break to the hood and to manage in the field. They arc flown, like the peregrine, at herons and rooks, and in former days were used for kites and hares. Their style of flight is magnificent; they are considerably swifter than the pere grine, and are most deadly &quot;footers.&quot; They seem, however, to lack somewhat of the spirit and dash of the peregrine. For the short-winged hawks an open country is not re quired; indeed they may be flown in a wood. Goshawks are flown at hares, rabbits, pheasants, partridges, and wild fowl. Only very strong females are able to take hares ; rab bits are easy quarry for any female goshawk, and a little too strong for the male. A good female goshawk may kill from 10 to 15 rabbits in a day, or more. For pheasants the male is to be preferred, certainly for partridges ; either sex will take ducks and teal, but the falconer must get close to them before they are flushed, or the goshawk will stand a poor chance of killing, llabbit hawking may be practised by ferreting, and flying the hawk as the rabbits bolt, but care must be taken or the hawk will kill the ferret. Where rabbits sit out on grass or in turnip fields, a goshawk may