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Husband is insistent on joining trail hunt tomorrow

379 replies

FairViewRosie25 · 22/12/2025 22:30

Not happy. I know they trail hunt but they still take dogs and have their fair share of the sabs.

OP posts:
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11
BundleBoogie · 29/12/2025 09:22

GoodQueenWenceslaus · 28/12/2025 23:58

These stupid "what about" questions are so feeble. The issue is actually enjoying and making a sport out of the process of watching an animal get hunted down and going through the process of being killed. It has nothing to do with being satisfied that a necessary job has been done in killing pests. It's not as if anyone is there encouraging the pest controller to get dressed up, go through a long drawn-out process of hunting, terrorising and chasing the rat and then cheering them on whilst they tear the rat apart, is it?

But animals aren’t hunted in a legal trail hunt so that clearly isn’t the main motivation. You are just making assumptions about people’s motivations.

FuzzyFelt85 · 29/12/2025 09:27

BundleBoogie · 29/12/2025 09:22

But animals aren’t hunted in a legal trail hunt so that clearly isn’t the main motivation. You are just making assumptions about people’s motivations.

”legal” trail hunts still use hounds specifically designed to chase and kill foxes. Here is a recent example of a trail hunt:

https://www.league.org.uk/news-and-resources/news/brazen-hunt-threw-fox-to-hounds-to-be-ripped-apart/

hundreds of examples like this in the public domain from trail hunts.

A lot of the time this will happen and the hunt will say “oh no! this was a complete accident, it had nothing to do with us and our dogs that were specifically trained for this purpose…”

“Brazen” hunt throws fox to hounds to be ripped apart

A hunt has been slammed by national wildlife charity the League Against Cruel Sports for its “brazen” cruelty in digging up a fox and throwing it to the hounds in the Lake District.

https://www.league.org.uk/news-and-resources/news/brazen-hunt-threw-fox-to-hounds-to-be-ripped-apart/

BundleBoogie · 29/12/2025 09:28

StandingSideBySide · 29/12/2025 01:36

Ah
Interesting to see that figure mentioned again out of only 143 monitored hunts when there are actually 12,000 to 15,000 hunts a year.

So that’s 3000 to 3200 foxes killed every year in these so called no kill trail hunts. That’s an absolute minimum as it’s logical that hunts are more cautious when being monitored

Lets not forget the road accidents caused
deer and badger kills and the the fox cub killing by the hunt before the official season even starts

Why are you making up wild guesstimates? Are you suggesting the League Against Cruel Sports are wrong?

FuzzyFelt85 · 29/12/2025 09:29

BundleBoogie · 29/12/2025 09:16

Well put.

I think the anti hunt people are also making all sorts of unfounded and nasty assumptions about people doing it and ‘revelling in’ or ‘enjoying’ the kill.

This is clearly not the main driver of participating in a hunt for the majority as the popularity of legal trail hunts shows. It is mostly about people in rural areas getting together for a good run of the horses with friends and some fresh air. They are utilising the existing structures of the hunting industry which has existed for years to do this.

Now farmers and landowners have to use alternative methods to cull foxes (and other animals with few natural predators like deer) so for all the worrying of the anti hunt people, I imagine that the same number of foxes get killed anyway, just by different means.

Why take the hounds that are specifically trained to track / hunt / tear apart foxes then? Why not just meet up with friends for some fresh air with the horses, as you say?

MrsSkylerWhite · 29/12/2025 09:29

BundleBoogie · 28/12/2025 23:50

Sheep tend to have their throats ripped out by pet dogs or been driven over cliffs to their deaths - it happens frequently here.

I didn’t suggest you gave a dog but are you equally upset about the vast number of farm animals killed through incompetence or ignorance from dog owners as well as the 61confirmed foxes killed by hunts?

Absolutely. I believe if a dog is rampaging through their animals, the farmer has every right to shoot them?

FuzzyFelt85 · 29/12/2025 09:31

MrsSkylerWhite · 29/12/2025 09:29

Absolutely. I believe if a dog is rampaging through their animals, the farmer has every right to shoot them?

Here are the correct League of Cruel Aports figures (from only 12 months of trail
hunting!):

Nearly 1,400 incidents, comprising 526 reports of suspected illegal hunting and 870 reports of hunt havoc, were recorded in the League’s end of hunting season report covering November 2023 to March 2024.

The number of actual convictions doesn’t equate, see also – rape cases

FuzzyFelt85 · 29/12/2025 09:39

MrsSkylerWhite · 29/12/2025 09:29

Absolutely. I believe if a dog is rampaging through their animals, the farmer has every right to shoot them?

Two wrongs don’t make a right.

Dogs (pets) rampaging around livestock and killing it is not right. This does not mean that trail hunting resulting in the death of foxes is right. Both can be wrong. These desperate barrel-scraping comparisons (someone earlier tried to argue that killing foxes is fine because sometimes people hire rentokil for rats??!!!) prove nothing.

Bundleflower · 29/12/2025 09:42

Tattiana · 28/12/2025 22:25

To be fair no one needs to be hunting for food in the UK 🫤

What’s that supposed to mean? You do realise that meat you purchase at the supermarket is from animals, don’t you? Just because you’ve managed to separate yourself from reality doesn’t mean others are wrong because they don’t. I much prefer food we have hunted - it’s much more ethical and much less stress for an animal than being carted around in a lorry to a slaughterhouse etc.

Ally886 · 29/12/2025 09:47

FuzzyFelt85 · 29/12/2025 08:57

Yes they are. Trail hunts routinely end in the savage killing of foxes, and not by accident. You know this perfectly well.

As someone that does this every winter, I have had no fox related incidents. The reason being trail hunting and most certainly clean boot hunting uses different dog breeds who would do well to catch a fox, let alone harm it.

BundleBoogie · 29/12/2025 09:47

FuzzyFelt85 · 29/12/2025 09:27

”legal” trail hunts still use hounds specifically designed to chase and kill foxes. Here is a recent example of a trail hunt:

https://www.league.org.uk/news-and-resources/news/brazen-hunt-threw-fox-to-hounds-to-be-ripped-apart/

hundreds of examples like this in the public domain from trail hunts.

A lot of the time this will happen and the hunt will say “oh no! this was a complete accident, it had nothing to do with us and our dogs that were specifically trained for this purpose…”

Legal trail hunts train their dogs to follow a trail.

I’m going to start a campaign to ban people buying dogs originally bred to hunt or kill and walking all dogs on farmland, are you in?

FuzzyFelt85 · 29/12/2025 09:57

BundleBoogie · 29/12/2025 09:47

Legal trail hunts train their dogs to follow a trail.

I’m going to start a campaign to ban people buying dogs originally bred to hunt or kill and walking all dogs on farmland, are you in?

Send me a link when you’ve started your imaginary campaign and I’ll have a look!

FuzzyFelt85 · 29/12/2025 09:58

Ally886 · 29/12/2025 09:47

As someone that does this every winter, I have had no fox related incidents. The reason being trail hunting and most certainly clean boot hunting uses different dog breeds who would do well to catch a fox, let alone harm it.

Could you explain the different breeds ?

were the hounds used in this trail hunt - that I posted earlier and nobody has acknowledged – not ones that kill foxes ?

www.league.org.uk/news-and-resources/news/brazen-hunt-threw-fox-to-hounds-to-be-ripped-apart/

Overalls · 29/12/2025 10:01

Bundleflower · 29/12/2025 09:42

What’s that supposed to mean? You do realise that meat you purchase at the supermarket is from animals, don’t you? Just because you’ve managed to separate yourself from reality doesn’t mean others are wrong because they don’t. I much prefer food we have hunted - it’s much more ethical and much less stress for an animal than being carted around in a lorry to a slaughterhouse etc.

This is not true.

On Exmoor deer are still killed by the hunt. They select an animal and then pursue it, often for hours. They use dogs in relay teams so that the dogs don't tire and can keep up a hunt until the terrified and exhausted deer is unable to run any more. Groups of horses, shouting, horns being blown and hounds in persuit. For hours.

Then, when the deer has been in torment, for hours, a horn is sounded and the deer is shot.

I saw this happen this year at Tarr Steps. It was horrific. You could see the terror in the stags eyes and it could barely stand through exhaustion. It happened feet from a public footpath where dog walkers and people with prams witnessed the kill. It is no way for an animal to die.

This is not better than the slaughterhouse.

1dayatatime · 29/12/2025 10:05

FuzzyFelt85 · 29/12/2025 08:57

Do people eat fox ?! News to me!

I don't understand your point. People kill lots of animals that they don't eat such as mice or rats. It's called pest control.

Are you disagreeing with foxes being labelled as pests or is the means of pest control, if so what method would you accept to use for foxes?

SpruceWilloow · 29/12/2025 10:11

PluckyChancer · 28/12/2025 22:48

Rules??? 😡

They do not follow any bloody rules!

They allow their out of control dogs to roam on other people’s land and viciously kill their pet animals because they’re completely hyped up.

Last time, we were lucky that DH and our dogs managed to see them off without them getting seriously hurt.

Any of their dogs that wander off course get left to fend for themselves and they don’t give a fuck about animal welfare.

Local hunt here is like this. Hounds lost everywhere, appear to be following a trail but are clearly looking for foxes to chase. Rules say not to disturb foxes, I have met the disturbed fox on my land. They managed to chase and kill a fox through a local tourist attraction, but are still out “trail hunting”.

Overalls · 29/12/2025 10:13

1dayatatime · 29/12/2025 10:05

I don't understand your point. People kill lots of animals that they don't eat such as mice or rats. It's called pest control.

Are you disagreeing with foxes being labelled as pests or is the means of pest control, if so what method would you accept to use for foxes?

The point they are making is in relation to the post to which they were replying - which was about food, not pests.

FuzzyFelt85 · 29/12/2025 10:17

1dayatatime · 29/12/2025 10:05

I don't understand your point. People kill lots of animals that they don't eat such as mice or rats. It's called pest control.

Are you disagreeing with foxes being labelled as pests or is the means of pest control, if so what method would you accept to use for foxes?

I was responding to the poster that said that hunting is okay because they fill their freezer. This is a thread about trail hunting that ends up in foxes being killed. I think you understand my point perfectly well.

1dayatatime · 29/12/2025 10:24

@Overallsand @FuzzyFelt85

So would you agree or disagree that foxes may need pest control and if so what method would you find acceptable?

DoIdriveaVauxhallZafira · 29/12/2025 10:27

BundleBoogie · 29/12/2025 08:29

So like many others, you are happy to demonise a whole group and destroy livelihoods, businesses and thousands of animals for the actions if a few.

Will you also be supporting a campaign to ban people walking their dogs on farmland to save the 24,000+ (I’ve clarified the figures from earlier) farm animals per year killed by pet dogs? Or should we not penalise all dog owners for the negligence and ignorance of a ‘few’?

I have answered this question about 3 times already.

A total ban on walking dogs on all farmland (presumably land owned by farms as opposed to being actively farmed) sounds deeply impractical and impossible to police but I would certainly support more robust legislation to protect farm animals from rogue dogs and people ignorant of the country code.

The arguments put forward by hunt supporters on this thread are largely so illogical that one has to wonder how serious such people are.

GoodQueenWenceslaus · 29/12/2025 10:31

IWantToSneeze · 29/12/2025 00:14

Oh, you're going to have to read up on deer. There is an infestation.

No problem, there is a system in place for humane culling of deer. It doesn't justify hunting them with dogs for fun.

custodyconfusion · 29/12/2025 10:33

Patridgeinanoaktree · 28/12/2025 22:15

We take our children trail hunting and absolutely love being part of the hunt community. There is nothing like the sound of the bugle and seeing the horses and hounds out, especially on boxing day.

We also shoot game and our children have grown up with partridge, pheasant hanging in our outbuildings. Our friends bring us venison.

We also have a small holding and know how to care for animals well. The children collected eggs and mucked out from 2 years old. We only buy high welfare meats. We have rescue cats roaming our land & ex battery hens. We love animals.

It's not a good person/ evil person debate.

Edited

You shoot animals, how can you say you love animals in the same post?!

Overalls · 29/12/2025 10:34

1dayatatime · 29/12/2025 10:24

@Overallsand @FuzzyFelt85

So would you agree or disagree that foxes may need pest control and if so what method would you find acceptable?

Why are you pursuing a point about pest control with two posters who weren't talking about pest control?

One poster responding to a post about eating what you catch and the other poster (me) who pointed that out to you?

Having seen a live fox caught in a snare and a stag killed by a hunt I would say neither are humane pest control methods. Deer and fox numbers both need managing but not by those methods. Deer stalking by ethical professionals is probably more humane.

A method that doesn't involve drinking rituals, dressing up, partying, the blowing of horns, chasing animals for hours, blocking roads, trespass and horses and dogs straying on roads would be a start.

GoodQueenWenceslaus · 29/12/2025 10:39

Patridgeinanoaktree · 29/12/2025 07:12

We don't follow fox hunting, we follow trail hunting.

It's nothing to do with being posh, it's a big part of the farming / countryside community. However, I suspect a lot of people are against trail hunting because it's seen as a "posh" event & it's ok to dislike Barbour wearing countryside folk, in a way that it's not acceptable to say you dislike tracksuit wearing people on estates?

Your logic falls down when you take into account that no-one has any objection to hunting cross-country runners. And that is not simply because it doesn't involve killing animals, it also means hunts don't trespass on people's land. You won't find anyone objecting to this, no matter how upper-class the participants are, provided that the hunts are still run legally and there is no suggestion of leading hounds to where they will find foxes or other wild animals.

See also polo. Very much an upper class sport - when do you see anti polo demonstrations?

Bundleflower · 29/12/2025 10:46

Overalls · 29/12/2025 10:01

This is not true.

On Exmoor deer are still killed by the hunt. They select an animal and then pursue it, often for hours. They use dogs in relay teams so that the dogs don't tire and can keep up a hunt until the terrified and exhausted deer is unable to run any more. Groups of horses, shouting, horns being blown and hounds in persuit. For hours.

Then, when the deer has been in torment, for hours, a horn is sounded and the deer is shot.

I saw this happen this year at Tarr Steps. It was horrific. You could see the terror in the stags eyes and it could barely stand through exhaustion. It happened feet from a public footpath where dog walkers and people with prams witnessed the kill. It is no way for an animal to die.

This is not better than the slaughterhouse.

That doesn’t sound entirely ethical. However stalking a deer would be. Of course there will always be circumstances in which hunting for food isn’t done ethically but overall I believe it’s much much more humane than factory farming systems.

BundleBoogie · 29/12/2025 10:46

DoIdriveaVauxhallZafira · 29/12/2025 10:27

I have answered this question about 3 times already.

A total ban on walking dogs on all farmland (presumably land owned by farms as opposed to being actively farmed) sounds deeply impractical and impossible to police but I would certainly support more robust legislation to protect farm animals from rogue dogs and people ignorant of the country code.

The arguments put forward by hunt supporters on this thread are largely so illogical that one has to wonder how serious such people are.

It’s not illogical to point out the extreme reaction from some people about the unlawful killing of some foxes vs a very muted reaction to the unlawful (and avoidable) killing of vast numbers of farm animals by pet dogs.

Many on this thread are very confused about what legal trail hunting is and have made up a total mischaracterisation and are happy to demonise a whole group of people based on assumptions and prejudice.

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