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Drag hunting

Equestrian hunting activity

Drag hunting

Summary

Equestrian hunting activity

Photo postcard published in 1916 by photographer E.C. Eddy, showing a draghound pack in Southern Pines, North Carolina

Drag hunting or draghunting is a form of equestrian sport where mounted riders hunt the trail of an artificially laid scent with hounds.

Description

Drag hunting is an equestrian sport where a field of mounted riders chase a pack of hounds who follow or 'hunt' a trail of an artificial non-animal based scent. The primary difference between fox hunting and drag hunting is the hounds are trained to chase a prepared scent trail laid by a person dragging a material soaked in aniseed or another strong-smelling substance and not an animal-based scent mimicking a fox hunt, as in trail hunting.

Sign warning of a drag hunt event planned to take place through an area of woodland later that day

A drag hunt course is set in a similar manner to a cross country course, following a predetermined route over jumps and obstacles. Because it is predetermined, the route can be tailored to suit the riding abilities of the field. The scent, or line, is usually laid 10 to 30 minutes prior to beginning of the drag hunt, and there are usually three to four lines, of approximately 2 mi each, laid for a day of drag hunting.

The drag hunting season usually starts in mid-October and continues through autumn and winter, finishing in the spring.

History

Drag hunting first became popular in the 19th century when Oxford and Cambridge universities both established packs of drag hounds.

The Pau Hunt, under the Mastership of Jasper Hall Livingston, documents a drag hunt on Saturday, November 26, 1847 between Pau, France and Gardères on the Route de Tarbes making a distance of 21 km (13 miles) in one hour.

Drag hunting soon became popular with the British Army, with the Household Cavalry establishing a pack in 1863 and the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst and the Royal Military Academy Woolwich both establishing packs in 1870. The motivation of the British Army's interest in the sport was it was seen to provide excellent preparation for beginners and those who were about to enter the cavalry divisions.

As it does not involve the hunting of live animals, drag hunting remained legal in Great Britain after the passing of the Protection of Wild Mammals (Scotland) Act 2002 and the Hunting Act 2004 (England and Wales).

References

References

  1. (18 July 1848). "Fox Hunting in the South of France".
  2. (27 November 2021). "Call to ban controversial trail hunting on North Northamptonshire Council land".
  3. Nicholas Goddard and John Martin, "Drag hunting", ''Encyclopedia of traditional British rural sports'', Tony Collins, John Martin and Wray Vamplew (eds), Routledge, Abingdon, 2005, {{ISBN. 0-415-35224-X.
  4. Emma Griffin, ''Blood sport: Hunting in Britain since 1066'', Yale University Press, New Haven, 2007, {{ISBN. 978-0-300-11628-1.
  5. [http://mdbassociation.co.uk/whats-drag-hunting/ Masters of Draghounds and Bloodhounds Association, "What’s Drag Hunting?", ''mdbassociation.co.uk''], retrieved 24 August 2017.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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