Form a line across the wood and move forward together, making as much
noise as possible i.e. blow horns/whistles, clap and shout. Look out
for fox earth's/badger setts and un-block if necessary; Work away from
the meet and send foxes in a direction the hunt will not want to go towards
i.e. towards a residential area.
2) Pulling hounds away from a draw
When the hounds are sent into a wood, gorse patch etc., to sniff around
and find a fox, sabs usually try to call them back out using both horn
and voice calls. Clearly, if we can succeed in calling the hounds out,
we will hamper the hunts attempts to find a fox. To begin with you should
only attempt to call the pack out from the end of the wood they were
entered into, or from along the side. This is to avoid calling them over
to where a fox might be, or heading it back into the drawing hounds.
If calling from alongside, wait until hounds are as near to your side
of the wood as possible; until they have drawn level with; or slightly
past you. Call them out with the calls the huntsman uses to pull hounds
out of a blank wood i.e. long winding notes ('blowing out'), and the
'come come come' voice calls.
Each hound in the pack has it's own name, and has been taught to respond
to this in much the same way as a domestic dog - listen out for the huntsman
calling them away by name because when used in conjunction with the right
horn and voice calls, this can be extremely effective.
Once you take the pack away from the huntsman they are your responsibility.
At all times you must endeavour to keep them under control and avoid
bringing them into danger. If in doubt of your ability to control them,
do not attempt to take them away completely.
3) Stopping hounds on a scent
If the hounds do flush out a fox or pick up a scent they will start to
bay and yelp in a loud chorus. This noise plus the probable excitement
among hunt members should alert sabs. They should try and get ahead of
the hounds or to one side or amongst them. Both horn and voice calls
should be used plus imitation whip-cracks. The horn should be slow and
long - single notes or long mournful calls. Voice calls should be gruff,
harsh and aggressive as if chastising the hounds i.e. 'ware riot', 'leave
it', 'get on back to him' etc. This should be interspersed with whip-cracking
or clapping.
Research
Effective sabotage of a particular
hunt can be considerably increased if you are able to research it beforehand.
Indeed, as many hunts become increasingly secretive it may be possible
to sabotage them only after you have studied them in some depth.
Bailey's
Hunting Directory contains details of a hunt's history, its country,
the days on which
it hunts, on masters and
staff, and the telephone number of the kennels. Most large libraries
will have a copy of the current edition.
Meet Cards are extremely useful, but can be very hard to obtain. They are distributed to all subscribers before the season starts. The hunt follows a similar list each season, so even old Meet Cards can be useful for predicting meets, although a great deal depends on fox distribution and farming interests.
Hunting Reports are available in such magazines as Horse and Hound, Hounds, Country Sport, occasionally Country Life, and in some local newspapers. These can tell you meets that the hunt uses, the approximate time in the hunting season when they are likely to use them, the route the hunt will take from a meet, which coverts are likely to have foxes, the route foxes might run from a covert, and the names of supporters who host lawn meets.
Hound Show Reports are published in the hunting press over the summer and early autumn months.They often contain the names of hounds, and of puppy walkers, and are frequently accompanied by photographs of hunt staff and supporters.
Newspapers local to the hunt's area will sometimes advertise meets. Even hunts that don't advertise in this way may have done so in the past and newspaper articles on the hunt, or members of the hunt, can also provide useful information. Try libraries and newspaper offices for copies of old issues.
Hit Reports are the saboteur's equivalent of Hunting Reports, and can be just as useful. Every time you attend a hunt make a record of the meet (with a map grid reference) and the time at which they actually started, the size of the hunt, any police presence, the wind direction, which coverts the hunt drew and the order in which they drew them (with grid references), and the time at which they packed up. Always send a copy of any hit report to the HSA.
Telephone Directories can provide the exact addresses of supporters, when hunting reports supply only their name. Who's Who, which can be found in reference libraries, can also be used. Photographs of staff and supporters, which can be taken whilst attending a hunt, or found in hunting magazines, can prove useful, especially if a sab is assaulted. To find the exact location of the hunt kennels you may have to scour OS maps of the hunt country, or follow the hound van after a day's hunting.
Yellow Pages contain the telephone numbers of hunt kennels, as well as the addresses of local farmers who a hunting report might reveal to be hunt supporters or even the hosts of meets.
Country Sports Fairs can provide all sorts of information, especially if you feel confident enough to chat to local supporters. They are also often a good opportunity to take photographs.
Hunt Histories can sometimes bring to light useful information. Small, local libraries are often better than main city libraries in this respect, and County Record Offices can sometimes be helpful.
Once you have lists of meets for a few different years, even if they are incomplete, try to look for patterns from one year to the next. A hunt may go to a particular meet on the first Wednesday of a given month for instance, or may always use the same Christmas Eve or Boxing Day meet. Often meets will be either weekday meets or Saturday meets. If, from research, you have a good idea where a hunt will meet on a given day, it will be possible to find them simply by driving to the most likely meets.
info@nwhsa.org.uk
Tel: 07960 038230
NWHSA
PO Box 239
Manchester
M14 7XB