by Bob
THE LAST
ENGLISH
POACHERS
First published in Great Britain by Simon & Schuster UK Ltd, 2015
A CBS COMPANY
Copyright © 2015 by Bob and Brian Tovey
This book is copyright under the Berne convention.
No reproduction without permission.
All rights reserved.
The right of Bob and Brian Tovey to be identified as the authors of this work has been asserted in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988.
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Hardback: 978-1-47113-567-5
Ebook ISBN: 978-1-47113-569-9
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To Robert Seward Tovey, who was a proper countryman, and Beatrice Frances Tovey, who died too young.
Also Francis George Neal, who died on HMS Monmouth at the naval battle of Coronel on 1 November 1914, and Jane Ellen Neal, who was a lovely woman.
Contents
1. Bob – The Deer Hunt
2. Bob – The Early Years
3. Bob – The Navy
4. Bob – The Poacher
5. Brian – The Panther
6. Brian – The Early Years
7. Bob – The Enemy
8. Bob – Hare Coursing
9. Brian – The Law
10. Bob – Lamping and Other Stories
11. Bob – Long-Netting
12. Brian – Poacher vs Landowner
13. Brian – Prison
14. Brian – Poaching Tricks
15. Bob – Eccentric Characters
16. Brian – Greyhounds
17. Bob – Drag Coursing
18. Brian – Country Activities
19. Brian – Into the Wild
20. Brian – The Last English Poachers
A Poacher’s Glossary
Cora’s Game Recipes
Afterword
1
Bob – The Deer Hunt
A light March drizzle is sticking to the windscreen of the Austin A35 as we drive in the rare hours, without headlights, up to the high brick wall that marks the boundary of the Berkeley Estate. We park the car in the narrow lane, under cover of some trees, and camouflage it with undergrowth that we’ve used before on many occasions. Then we scale the wall, with me legging Brian up first and him fixing a rope round the overhanging branch of an oak tree. Even though he’s no more than seven years old, the boy knows what it’s all about. He’s been coming out with me since he was four and he’s as good a watcher as any man I’ve known.
I picks this spot whenever we comes out here from our village because it’s easy to get over the wall. I pull myself up by the rope now and drop down the other side, into the estate. I catch Brian when he jumps from the top and set him down, before we move off, after making sure the rope ain’t visible from either side of the wall. The ghost of a moon is shining through the thin cloud as me and the boy makes our way across the fields to the edge of the woodland. It’s as quiet as a graveyard, with the scurrying of the night animals and the odd hoot of a tawny owl the only sounds. And it’s times like this I loves the most, an hour before daylight, with my son on my heels and the feel of the land under my feet and the fresh breeze blowing agin’ my face.
It’s darker once we gets inside the tree line and we need to take cover and wait for first light to break over the hills to the east. I has a flask of strong sweet tea and I gives the boy a drink from the plastic cup first and then I takes myself a slug – just to keep out the chill that’s trying to creep in through our clothes and make us shiver and shake. I’m carrying a .22 rifle and we waits for the sickly pale rays of sunlight to come shafting through the leaves.
Brian drinks the tea and grins back at me because I’m the man he looks up to most in the world. I gives him this – this freedom from all the other stuff – and it sometimes feels like we’re part of each other. Every son is part of his father, but few of ’em feels it like Brian does.
I’m wearing my long army coat and boots and Brian has a thick corduroy jacket and trousers and a woolly hat on his head. The colours of our clothes being brown and green to blend in with the woodland vegetation and keep us from getting spotted by some keen-eyed keeper with a pair of binoculars.
The light creeps up like a ghostly spectre in the distance to the east. And once we can see with some clarity, we starts off on our hunt for a suitable deer. The estate’s a big place, maybe ten thousand acres altogether, with five or six hundred acres of parkland alongside farmland and fisheries and small hilly woods dotted about over six or seven miles, where the deer take refuge.
We keep low to the ground when we has to break from the cover of the trees to get from one thicket to another. Them gamekeepers ain’t beyond giving poachers a good kicking and taking our guns away from us. And I hope they don’t come upon us all sudden like, because I’ll want to fight ’em and probably get beaten and I hates to see them kick the boy away when he tries to help me. But we’ve been here before and know the escape routes well enough to make a run for it, as long as we’re alert and don’t let ’em get too close to us.
We can see the outline of the old Norman castle silhouetted agin’ the skyline to the north of us. It’s a dark and demonic-looking place, where they murdered King Edward II by sticking a red-hot poker up his arse so there’d be no sign of any wound on his body. And every September, on the equinox, he can be heard screaming. I know that because I hears him sometimes, even though we lives a fair distance away – his voice comes floating and finds its way into our house and I tells it to go leave me and mine alone. And it does.
And Dickie Pearce, the last court jester in England, died there after falling from the minstrels’ gallery, and Queen Matilda came and killed all the deer in revenge for Roger de Berkeley not supporting her in the war they called ‘the anarchy’. So it’s a foreboding place with a blood-flecked pedigree, and it growls at us now as we cross its land in search of its game.
There’s about two hundred red and fallow deer on the estate and we start to see ’em as the early spring sun climbs to a low slant in the milky sky. We wants a big stag, not a hind or an albino, or a fawn. I want to joint it up and keep what we need for ourselves, then sell some and give what’s left to the poorer people of our village. I does this all the time and gives away a lot of what we hunts because there’s too much for me and Brian and my daughter June and there’s just the three of us now, since their mother left when they was younger. Though Cora says she’ll be moving in soon to take care of us all. Very soon, I hope.
And then I sees him – a big proud fella with maybe twelve or fifteen points to his antlers. I signal the boy to be still and quiet because I has to get close to him to make a clean kill and, if I spook the herd, he’ll run with them. The deer is alert, even at this time of morning, but they’re used to humans on this estate. They�
�re semi-tame and not as flighty as truly wild deer that you’d get on the high hills of Scotland so, as long as we keeps downwind of ’em with the low light behind us and in their eyes, we’ll be alright. We move silently, stealthily, like we was animals ourselves and this was our natural habitat – which, in a way, it is.
The .22 bolt action has a decent range for about a hundred yards; after that the bullet can fall away at a rapid rate and not hit the target, but I wants to get closer than that, to make sure I drops the animal with one shot. We might get away with the one round not being heard by the keepers, but not two or three. I make my silent signals and Brian knows I want to get as close as possible to make the kill – maybe as close as thirty yards. The boy’s job is to keep watch while I do my job and shoot the quarry, which is what I call whatever it is I’m hunting. So he turns away from me and keeps his eyes peeled and I can concentrate without worrying about someone creeping up behind me. The gamekeepers will have shotguns and they won’t think twice about using them. If they pepper one of us, they can always claim it was in self-defence because we pointed the rifle at them. And who’s going take the word of a poacher and his seven-year-old son agin’ that lot?
The big stag’s getting frisky now – he senses something, maybe the adrenaline that’s filling the air, or the spectres of the poachers that’s been hung here over the years, drifting past us in the half-light – and I’ll have to take the shot soon. I don’t have telescopic sight on the rifle, but I got a good and well-practised eye. A deer is a big animal, but the vital areas for clean kills are small. I always aim for the heart or lungs rather than the head. I’ve known idiots in the woods to hit an animal in the mouth instead of the brain and shatter its jaw and it runs off and starves to death because it can’t feed no more. Clobheads like that needs beating with the butts of their own guns.
Brian’s waiting for the sound of the shot. He don’t know when it’ll come because he’s turned away from me. I know he’ll be saying to hisself ‘any second now’ and ‘be prepared’, but it always makes him start, no matter how ready he is. Always.
I gets into a good position to take the shot and I know the boy’s watching out behind me to see if any sneaking keeper sticks his big ugly head up when I pulls the trigger. I takes the aim and can almost see the anticipation in the animal’s eye as I squeeze off the round. The bullet flies through the air and strikes the stag in the heart, a split second before it hears the sound of the shot. The animal drops to the ground and the rest of the herd takes off across the open part of the estate towards another copse of trees and scrub. We wait, to see if there’s any shouting in the distance, because the gamekeepers are like lumbering bulls and, even if we can’t see ’em, we can hear ’em coming a mile off.
There’s no sound, so we move forward until we comes to the stag. Its eyes are wild with panic and it’s making low, baying sounds of distress. So I takes out my hunting knife and slices its throat and lets it bleed out, because venison can go off quicker than some other meat if you don’t get the blood out straight away. The smell will soon attract fox and stoat and reclusive badger and birds of prey, and they’ll circle and hover round us to see if we’ll leave anything for them when we move off. When the predators and carcass pillagers come, they’ll make a lot of fuss and I know they’ll attract the keepers if we ain’t quick.
Brian’s still watching while I tend to my work. He knows what I’m doing – it’s bloody and brutal to some, but it’s the way of things with us. After bleeding the beast, I open the carcass and gralloch it, which means dragging out the guts, and I leaves the pluck in the undergrowth for the scavengers. A stag’s heavy enough to drag over a distance, without pulling the insides along too.
Me and the boy then gets hold of the antlers and starts to drag him back to the wall. It’s a long way and we need to stick to the woodland and heavy undergrowth, rather than risk being seen in hazy daylight across the open fields. Brian’s only young and not strong enough yet to pull his full weight, so most of the work’s down to me. He’s trying to help me as best he can, but the beast is heavy and it’s hard going through the rough woodland. He’s sweating, even though the early morning’s cool, and he takes off his woolly hat and stuffs it into his pocket.
I’m telling him all the time how good a lad he is and how he’s always such fine company for me when it’s dark and cold at some cock-crow hour, with the wind sharp as a knife between our ribs, or when circling rooks is signalling rain, or the tawny owl calls for a starlit night and a morning fair. We’re dragging for half an hour and it’s taking too long and soon the keepers will be coming round with their 12-bores, maybe shooting vermin like crows and squirrels and being on the lookout for the likes of us to aim at too. So I props up the stag as best as I can agin’ a tree and gives the gun to Brian to carry. Then I gets underneath the animal and lifts him up across my shoulders. The beast’s a dead weight and heavier than myself and my muscles are aching from the dragging and my legs are tired, but I manage to keep going without stumbling and we finally reach the edge of the tree line where we came in. The wall’s in sight, a couple of hundred yards away, but it’s across open ground and we’ll have to move fast.
Just then I hear the low growl of voices approaching the edge of the wood. I drops the deer into some bushes and signals for Brian to follow me. We hide a couple of yards away in good cover and wait. If the keepers find the stag, they won’t find us with it, but we’ll still have to make a good getaway and all our hard work will be for nothing. They come close – two of them – and I could reach over and tap ’em on the shoulder if I wanted to. Luckily there ain’t no dog with them to sniff out the kill. They stop walking not more than a few feet away from us and decide to have a chinwag and smoke a cigarette. I signal to the boy not to make a sound. He’s holding his breath, still as a stalking fox, with my hand on his shoulder to steady him. We’re crouched down and it won’t be long before the pins and needles make our knees go giddy. We can hear the keepers talking.
‘Bit of a racket down in that gully.’
‘What you think? Poachers?’
‘Don’t know. Not much left by the time we got there.’
‘Could’ve been foxes, maybe killed a hare or a hedgehog.’
‘Yeah, I suppose. Nothing over this side.’
We keep crouching. Motionless as mice, with the foliage all around us and sweat from the exertion of carrying the carcass running into our eyes. We’re as close as Siamese twins, me and Brian, neither of us moving a muscle and barely letting the breath come out of our mouths. The keepers are standing on the edge of the tree line, cracking jokes and laughing, with their shotguns broken over their arms. They’re close enough to smell. If they find us now we’ll never get away. We’re too near them to run and Brian’s too young, so I’ll have to fight ’em and it’ll be bloody. I hope they bugger off soon, because I’m an impatient man and I might let loose at any second.
Brian’s holding on to my coat and the only thing that’s keeping us hidden is the knowing that he’ll get hurt if I has a go. The time passes slowly, minute by heavy minute. I feel my knee joints stiffening and I need to move, but can’t. The boy’s motionless beside me, hardly breathing. Smoke from their cigarettes drifts towards us and up my nose and I hope it don’t make Brian cough. Insects are crawling over us, spiders and beetles and little biting flies. I feel the boy move lightly agin’ my shoulder and I think maybe he might be about to flag. I turn my head slowly and see him smile up at me, even though I knows he’s in pain from the crouching position, just the same as myself.
At last the keepers move off. We wait until there’s no sound other than our slow breathing, then wait a bit longer, just to be sure. Brian tries to stand, but his legs buckle from the numbness. I rub his calves until the blood begins to flow again, then I puts my arm under his shoulder to support him until the feeling comes back into his wobbly limbs. We watch the keepers away in the distance and wait until they’re completely out of sight, then I lifts the stag onto my
shoulders again and stumble off at a jogging gait across the open parkland to the wall.
We’re moving fast over the ground, the boy running with the gun behind and me ahead of him with the deer. I wait for the shouts of ‘stop’ to come after us, but they don’t, and then we’re at the wall and almost away. I leg Brian up and tie the end of the rope round the deer’s antlers. Then I pull myself up onto the wall and loosen the rope knot and use the tree branch as a pulley, checking the lane to make sure nobody’s about. I swing myself down, using the force of the drop and my weight to pull the kill up level with the top of the wall. Brian pushes the dead animal until it swings, more and more, until it’s pitching out over the wall. I choose my moment and let go of the rope and the stag drops down on the outside.
Brian loops the rope off the branch and I help him down off the wall. We drag the camouflage off the car and I drive it over to the dead deer. But the stag’s too big to get in the boot. We can get the body in, but not the head and antlers. I consider cutting the head off, but it’ll take too long and, any minute now, some yawney from the estate might come along the lane.
There’s no other option: I has to drive along the back roads with the stag’s head sticking out of the boot and the antlers scraping along the ground. This is alright in the narrow byways, but I also has to drive for a short while along the A38, the old main Bristol to Gloucester road, to get back home. There’s no other choice and I’ve got to take the chance. It’s an odd sight, us two in the little old Austin motor and the stag looking out from the boot with its antlers sparking off the road. And I’m smiling at the faces in the windows of the cars that pass us – them all with their mouths open speechless to catch the flies and their jaws dropping and their eyes not believing what they’re seeing. The boy’s laughing too, at them giving us their frowning stares as they come close, as much as to say, ‘Look at them cheeky poachers’, and they’ll probably stop at the first telephone box to grass us up. But the luck’s with us and we don’t pass no police and we makes it home safely.