Tuesday, June 27, 2017

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[music] welcome to fieldsports britain. coming up, something of the night about thisprogramme. could he be shooting’s first knight? wetalk to olympic double trap gold medallist pete wilson we've got hunting youtube, kit special, calendarand news stump. but first george digweed is on poult patrolon a electric powered polaris. tonight we are hitting the stealth mode button- george has taken delivery of a new electric powered polaris utv and it will mean the foxeswon't know what's gliding towards them - let

alone what's hit em. it is silent. the only noise you make is whatyou are running on. obviously it is a little bit noisier tonight because we are runningon rape stubble. but i am sure that when you get on to wheat stubble and grass and thendrilled corn later in the autumn, it is going to prove unbelievable. the dream team tonight is steve on lamp andgeorge behind the wheel and the rifle. the foxes on this bit of ground in sussex needscontrolling to protect poults - this year is like a year i have never knownbefore with foxes. since the 1st july i have actually got 78 now, locally and there hashardly been any corn been cut. we normally

average between 100 and 130 a year on allof the shoots that i control and i cannot see it being under 200 this year. george is forever the competitor and was disappointedto have dropped a shot recenlty - in other words "missed a fox" a few nights ago. i missed my first fox on monday night andi dropped 67 on a bounce up to then. then after i missed the first fox on monday night,i then shot 11. so that is where we have got to 78. i think it bears out the fact thatone you can get closer to the foxes and two you have got a perfect shot every time. once in position he fires up his faithfullpolystyrene and glass fox call combo and starts

shattering the silence. he keeps it up forabout 2 minutes and our first charlie of the night appears - george directs steve to liftthe light from below on to our fox and down he goes - we don't retrieve it immediatelybut slightly alter position... and a few minutes later out of an adjacent wood pops out foxnumber two. for this time of year george opts for a bigger bullet for his foxing. i actually at this time of the year go toa .243. i started shooting a .243 this year because i just feel with this rape stubble...you look at these big stalks and the little debris that is around it. you get some shardsof rape like that it has only got to touch that and it breaks up. i just feel that aheavier bullet, my preferred choice of rifle

is a .223 and i have shot 100’s of foxeswith a .223 and had a lot of success, but i was losing one or two in rape stubble andi just felt the bullet was breaking up or touching something before it got there andconsequently where it was touching something before it had just got there it was breakingup and giving me a miss. but the .243 has been really doing the job. we cross over a few fields to another vantagepoint - a few squeaks and a older vixen stops for too long and shes's on the ground. with three in the back in half an hour it'slooking promising - the next customer is out of sight but there's no time to retrieve itquite yet. we spot another set of eyes has

been spotted on the hill above us. othersmight have given up earlier but george is a patient man and uses a mouth call to givethe fox something to think about and to keep those eyes flashing in our direction. quaterof an hour of cat and mouse and he takes the 280 yard shot. ooh that was a beauty. long way off. before we grab that one george feels thereis still another to be had here.. again a young cub reacts to the call and starts makingit's way through the stubble...... fox number six. sometimes at this time of year they squeakright up to you and other times they are just

a bit wary. but we have got a lovely nightfor it. it is a dead still night. a fox will always on a windy night will always try tocome up wind to you to get your scent. they will always go down wind. a fox will callto you quite often when he is coming and is a little bit wary. this time of year you getone or two cubs who are uneducated and they are easier to clear up. fox number five is also a young one if you ever actually ever look around here,around the fox. you will see that hence we were waiting for 15 minutes because the rapeis actually short enough here that the fox became visible and if you actually look outfurther you can see where the taller rape

is. hence the reason i couldn’t get thebullet through it there, but in this patch here where the header was a bit lower, i wasable to see it clearer on the bank and was able to kill it. the polaris is coping doing incredibly well- we're charging around the farm in one wheel drive and the vibration free shooting positionhas meant foxes are dropping at every opportunity. when we lie our eight foxes out - and thereare all shapes and sizes. as you can see here you have got a cub therethat is half grown, you have got a cub here which is three quarters grown and you havegot a cub there that is a quarter grown. so you know there are cubs there from all differingages, which can only lead me to think that

they have probably had two litters, whichis probably one of the reasons that we are shooting so many foxes. i certainly wouldn’twant to see the last fox gone that is for sure. george is happy that he hasn't dropped a shotand we've added 8 to his tally - he's really impressed with the polaris and he's actuallyworking alongside the company to make sure this piece of kit becomes a must have forany gamekeeper or pest controller. now george touched on the notion that theremay be other factors keeping the fox population high. well a little while ago we outed thework of an outfit called the fox project which was releasing foxes next to a chicken run.if you are watching this on youtube you might

like to see that film which is appearing inthe trees behind me. now another cub that was released into thewild, too young. it is david on the fieldsports channel news stump. this is fieldsports britain news. the outlook for grouseshooting this seasonremains gloomy. a new video from basc shows just how poor. moorland gamekeeper robin varleyand basc scotland's colin shedden discuss prospects for the season. click on it to seethe whole film. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v9dhifbt09c meanwhile a major study by the game & wildlifeconservation trust has shown that grouse moors

with gamekeepers in place creates a wildlifesanctuary. upland wading birds such as lapwing, golden plover and curlew, do well on managedareas. whereas elsewhere they continue to decline or have disappeared. the gwct’snine-year upland predation study shows that the breeding success of these birds is threetimes better than foxes and crows are controlled. even a recent rspb report has highlightedthe value of legal predator control in protecting moorland waders. a viewer has pointed us to the british soapopera hollyoaks where the producers appear to have gone mad, showing a disregard forbasic gun safety in a sequence about airgun shooting. among horrors, the actors shootblind folded, point the airguns at each other

and stick them in each others back. broadcasterchannel4 claims the directors of hollyoaks 'researched the use of air weapons beforebroadcasting'. yeah yeah. former basc south-west director jamie stewartis the new director of the scottish countryside alliance. originally from argyll, jamie hasworked for the countryside alliance for a year as a specialist shooting consultant.he is managing director of westcountry wildlife services - a wildlife consultancy and trainingenterprise. click here if you would like to see an episodeof fieldsports britain when we went wildfowling with jamie, alongside james green and jeffreyolstead. as the american election campaigns startsto hot up, mitt romney has named his running

mate. the new republican vice presidentialcandidate is paul ryan. as these pictures show he is a keen bowhunter and shooter, bothof whitetail deer and wild turkeys. sticking with deer and hitting one can causeterrible trauma, especially when you are a biker. however, this guy is completely unfazed.click on the video to see the whole film. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r-bm2so60ps and finally, it is our third birthday... welaunched on the glorious 12th in 2009 and thanks to support at home and all over theworld our films are watched 650,000 times a month. it is also a good time to say thankyou to the likes of roy, andy, mark, dom and george and to the 100’s of people we featuredin our programme allowing us to share their

pigeon hides, high seats, shadow their stalksand take up room on their quad bikes. and finally there is all the forward thinkingcompanies who realise that video and youtube is the future and not the work of the devil. you are now up to date with fieldsports britainnews. stalking the stories. fishing for facts. stay with us now for the map that mattersand calendar uk. welcome to calendar for those seasonal remindersand dates for the diary. moon is waning crescent with a new moon onfriday. complete darkness for the first time in a month means it's going to be a greattime to get out after pests and vermin at night.

on a more formal front, grouse numbers aredisappointing except in the north east and the eastern part of the borders, and the roebuckrut is over throughout most of britain. fishing is one of the bright spots. both seaand game angling continues well in ireland, scotland and much of england. downpours ofrain this week are expected to gee up activity in freshwaters. west wales is seeing rivers above normal levelsfor the time of year with some good colour. there have been some good catches of sewinon the lower to middle teifi where current conditions are ideal. however, rain has beenlimiting night fishing. and salmon seem to be going through some of the best known localbeats, probably due to the high levels of

water. best fish so far is a 27 1/2 lb salmon onthe wye caught by a landowner on his own beat at glan yr afon near builth wells. now do you fancy your own stretch of the welshversion of the river test? trawsgoed estates limited is letting some 1.5 miles of fishingon the river teifi, near ystrad meurig, ceredigion. visit trawsgoed-estate.co.uk now, shooters, would you like to meet worldchampion and fieldsports channel regular abbey burton? she is holding an open day this sunday,18th august, at wellington in somerset. bring the family and try out clay shooting, archeryand air rifle shooting. there will be food,

too. visit abbeyburtonclayshooting.co.uk formore details. that is calendar for this week. if you havea date for the diary and want to let the fieldsports community hear about it drop james a linejames@fieldsportschannel.tv now from david at zero to an olympic hero,it is the golden boy of british shooting peter wilson wins double trap olympic gold medal.we talk to him in the run up to the olympics about the disciplines and the sports injurywhich set him on the road to team gb glory. peter wilson is now the name, face and futureambassador for shooting sports. 12 years after richard faulds took on the world pete hasstepped up to the mark and delivered gold. but it could have been so very different - asa youngster the mad keen sportsman only had

eyes for cricket and squash - shooting wasan occasional bit of fun, but then he dislocated his left shoulder damaging the nerves andit was his therapy which gave him a taste for shotguns. i had shot before, but never in a seriouscapacity. this was back in 2004/2005 if not back to 2000. i don’t even know, that isterrible isn’t it. it was so long ago that i don’t even know when i dislocated my shoulder.it was a long time ago. i had just gone to school. i went to millfield for a number ofreasons, sport was definitely on the horizon and i was loving it. so that put a scupperto everything. i ended up shooting as a means to get back into rehabilitation. the physioswere very keen that i held the weight in my

left hand. so shooting was a good sport todo. every wednesday we were going out with the school and shooting. so the physios werevery keen i carried on, so i carried on. when i came back to everything else i was prettyrubbish. so i decided to carry on with shooting and i was really enjoying it by then and ileft school as national champion and was just really enjoying my shooting. pete dabbled with all the olympic disciplinesbut soon realised that in order to get to the highest level you need drive support andamibition, but most importantly you need to love the sport because it is going to takeoveryour life. i had a go at ski. i shot english ski whichis a slower form of olympic ski for a long

time, just for fun, but nothing serious. ienjoyed shooting olympic ski, but didn’t really love it. and i believe that with theolympic disciplines you have to love it. you have to want to get up in the morning andtrain and shoot. now i am shooting up to 40,000 if not 60,000 cartridges a year double trapalone. shooting most days. so you have to really want to shoot and with olympic skii just didn’t have that kind of desire and so i went down the trap route and had a tinklewith abbey’s olympic trap. didn’t really enjoy it enough, but when i found double trapi just loved it. it was just a lot of fun and i just found myself wanting to shoot.wanting to go back to the range and train. a chance meeting with ian coley at the receptionat bisley kept pete heading in the right direction

- he was suddenly training with the likesof faulds walton and scott ,,,and he was hooked.... now many shooters can hit clays, but whatmakes the difference is being able to keep your nerve at the top level. it is about being able to control the nerves,because everyone is going to be very nervous on that olympic day and everyone accepts that,accepting that you are going to be very nervous. and it is that one big day. and then justlearning to control it and i think that is through practice and as much practice as possible.but nothing can prepare you for that one day. 18 of the 24 competitiors in the double trapat london 2012 were shooting a perazzi. this is an example of pete's extraordinary bitof kit - if you'd like to find out more about

the gun that brought home gold visit..www.ruag.co.uk now a word from our sponsors. it's kit special introducing the pulsar digisight n750 digitalnitevision. the much anticipated updated version of the popular digisight n550. this digisightoffers increased performance, digital pushbutton zoom built in infra red laser and an organicled high resolution display giving stunning performance and long range viewing up to 600min good conditions. here is that zoom in use on a stuffed deer we found. scottcountry.co.ukâ£1,299. and scottcountry will throw in a free pulsar eps3 battery pack worth â£84.95. that is it. feast your eyes, fish into yourpockets. if the website asks you the primo

code is fieldsports. thanks for watching.this is kit special. now the grouse season is underway in the ukand we are going to bring you lots about that next week. for this week, let’s look athow they shoot the african version of grouse - we're walking up francolin. blaser safaris lodge in namibia is a sliceof first-world luxury in a fourth-world landscape. after a hard morning's hunting big game, whatbetter way to relax than to ping a few clay pigeons and walk up some of the local gamebird,the francolin. the clays here are designed to behave like african game birds - and theyare launched off steep cliffs in a challenging layout.

we were discussing additional things we couldstart on our blaser safari lodge and we decided that clay pigeon shooting would definitelyfit into the environment here. we then obviously got the machines in. we got a gentleman frompromatic from england in. and we decided on these two copies which you can see in thebackground. we decided to try and blend them into the surrounding areas and this is whatwe came up with. darren as a fairly regular shooter, how doesthis measure up? well, it is pretty spectacular as you cansee not something you would expect to see everyday so yes, fantastic. pretty tall birds aren’t they?

pretty tall birds? it doesn’t mean they are 6 foot swedishgirls. it is set up as a sporting set up which isabsolutely fantastic. as you can see the different positions on the stand so you get to shootthe birds from below, from above. so it is a perfect set up. and you have a variety of targets here. thereis definitely a francolin in there. there is definitely a francolin, there isdefinitely an......grouse. and the high bird we don’t have a name for yet, but i am surewe will find one. we all give it a go. some with more successthan others.

lucky second shot. lucky my arse. the ribbing is not helping me shoot straight.their schoolboy behaviour forces me to say rude words after yet another miss. it must be the heat. now of course, we'renot here for fun. perish the thought. darren works for blaser and he has flown to namibiain order to talk about blaser's super-technical shotgun, the f3. what a tough job he has. i bet you are going to tell me it is the idealshotgun for francolin. absolutely.

as you said i work for blaser. this was blaser’sfirst true shotgun. we have made for many years combined guns with shotguns, but thiswas blaser’s first true shotgun. and it wasn’t a matter of looking what was on themarket and how can we improve that. blaser really went back to the drawing board andcreated something completely new. the main features of the shotgun, my ceo bernard ......wouldsay it is the trigger, outstanding trigger characteristics. my personal preference onthe f3 is the balance of the gun. we have a bow balancer, here a preparation for additionalweights that can be put onto the barrels. also in the stock area in here is also a threadedrod with weights on it. so i can literally for every individual customer adjust the balanceand i see at so many events with other manufacturers,

people put lead in their barrels, they putlead in their stocks to try and get the balance correctly and this is a feature that we haveas a standard. so let's take it out for real and see whetherwe can walk up francolin. you see plenty of these birds when you are carrying a rifleand looking for big game. of course, the moment you pick up a shotgun, they melt away intothe long grass. the system here is to drive and spot, driveand spot. when you spot, you stop and try to walk up the birds. we find the first birds near a water hole.we see feathers but the bird flies on strongly. happily, you only have shout bang in a threateningmanner and they fall out of the sky. a hundred

yards into the bush and marc's sharp eyesspot the dead bird on the ground. i don’t know if you saw the blood, we followedthe blood trail of this francolin and after ..... you did not! and after 100 yards we found him dead. the second bird is trickier. it is well hiddenunder a tree. we try to surround it but, with only two shooters, and a three-dimensionallandscape, it finds the gap and plays it. when we spot the third bird, we employ thekind of stalking techniques you might use on a large antelope. darren gets up behindit and walks it round. marc is positioned

under the tree. and the plan works. the birdflies over marc, presenting him with a long shot, made more difficult by the clay cartridgeshe is using. again, a few hundred yards away, marc happens on the now dead francolin undera tree. our second francolin for the morning. it isturning out to be a bit more difficult than we had planned. anyway we have two for thepot. for more about the blaser f3, visit blaser.de.the website is in english and german. for more on blaser's safari lodge in namibia,go to www.blaser-safaris.com next, let’s go international. it is huntingyoutube. this is hunting youtube, which aims to showthe best hunting, shooting and fishing videos

that youtube has to offer. let's start with the foreign films. you willsee superb duckshooting in the mangrove marshes of chinadega, in the north-west of nicaraguaif you watch trek safari international duck & dove hunt by sparkyvideos99. clouds andclouds of birds. sparkyvideos99 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tm70ghse2l8 not that you need it in nicaragua, milouinfrom france shows how to improve and change the sound of a mallard decoy, both singlereed and double reed. milouin http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cftb4fekl8o and then we have the antonio banderas of airgunning.freemanshooting, who has produced a series

of films about magpies, crows and pigeons.this is air rifle hunting #8 magpies - one day with my gun. he is using a peculiar effectin his film which makes the magpie look like an oil painting. it is certainly no oil paintingafter he has shot it. freemanshooting http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vsldgpxuuqw on the fishing front, we come upon willlevimarshallon the river urr in south-west scotland, catching his second salmon of 2012. water is up andfly is a sunray. his channel of sporting vlogs is worth a look, including, as it does, gooseshootingtoo. willlevimarshall http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=raaeluljcvq let's briefly go foreign again, to the riverpo in italy. there have been a lot of big

catfish caught recently in the uk and abroad.we have featured big cat specialist dylandog1969 before. this film is a bit special. he iswith angler yuri grisendi as he pulls in a record catfish, called a siluro in italian,which also means torpedo. dylandog1969 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mnspmt9eeuk back in the uk, it's that pigeon shootingtime of year, so a pleasure to find si pittaway and his friend gary shooting the farmer'spublic enemy number one over stubble on verminhunterstv. verminhunterstv http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2e1u0cj6rls we have featured rob collins, the old hedgecreeper, on fieldsports channel in the past and here he is with his own youtube channelpassitonyoungsporttv. he is pigeon shooting

with young shots, including one josh, whoshoots a personal best - or pb as they call it in the olympics - of 24 birds. total forthe day is 133 birds. passitonyoungsporttv http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h-j2laydckm finally, we are not the only ones to filmthe king of shooting pbs, olympic double trap gold medallist peter wilson (that lad is sucha media slapper). clayshootingsuccess has a two-minute chat with him where pete doeshis version of lantern-jawed christian bale while interviewer phil coley does his impressionof slack-jawed sir david frost. makes you proud to be british. clayshootingsuccess http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ll_yftrd2_e

you can click on any of these films to watchthem. if you have a youtube film you would like us to pop in to the weekly top eight,send it in via youtube, or email me the link charlie@fieldsportschannel.tv well we are back next week and if you arewatching this on youtube and you would like to subscribe to all of our output click onone of the squares which are appearing here, here and here. if you just want to see theshow and not the rest of our stuff then you can go to our show page and subscribe thereit is at www.youtube.com/show/fieldsportsbritain or go to our website www.fieldsportschannel.tvscroll down to the bottom, you put your email address into our constant contact form andwe will constantly contact you about our show

which is out 7pm every wednesday. or clickto like us on facebook, or follow us on twitter in the same place. this has been fieldsportsbritain hearts of oak. end link

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