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Will Clarkson

photographer

January 24, 2014

Game Chapter 5: Stalking; ecological necessity?

by Will Clarkson in documentary photography, blood sport, conservation, photojournalism, outdoors, wildlife, photography


Stalking arrives with the start of autumn, and coincides with the red deer rutting season. Since our ancestors killed the last British wolves in the 18th century (the lynx and other large predators in the middle ages and before), the deer have had no natural predator other than humans. The deer population in Scotland is 350,000 (very approximately - funds are dircted to more pressing deer management matters, such as road safety). Without some form of predation, deer numbers will steadily climb until they have damaged the ecosystem so much that their numbers will start to decline through overgrazing. It is necessary to control deer numbers, not only for our own interests and for the interests of the health of the ecosystems that we treasure, but also the deer themselves - overpopulation in deer numbers will mean overgrazing and a subsequent crash in numbers. Population control is all in the interests of preserving the cherished Scottish biodiversity. 

The long walk ahead. On a good day, it is possible to see golden eagles, white-tailed eagles, ptarmigan, red grouse and ravens. We were lucky to see all of these on this day.

There is a thought that the unusual summer was to blame for the lack of stags on the hill - it certainly goes against the grain, as Mark claims, “there are more red deer in Scotland than there have ever been”. Graeme Taylor from the SNH isn’t so sure, and thinks that the numbers are declining very slightly, but not so much as to be alarmed (he is eager to point out that without a costly proper count, we will never know the precise numbers. SNH actually do localised surveys in important areas, such as those where there are a lot of road accidents caused by deer, where a spike in numbers might require removal or a cull).

The stalking industry performs multiple roles; first it is a cull to create a manageable number and a balance, secondly there is demand for venison, and thirdly it is an excellent channel of money into rural areas, creating jobs and wealth. 

With an increase in numbers of untrained amateur stalkers on the hill, there has been an increasing emphasis on competence in deer management - the desire to ensure people are trained whilst using powerful rifle on the hills is evident. Employed stalkers and gamekeepers generally have a good reputation - they also are willing to take up a high number of qualifications or courses. The British Deer Society have recommended that DSC (deer stalking certificate) level 1 is sufficient, although higher levels are encouraged. The Scottish Parliament has the ability within legislation to make these qualifications compulsory, but this is not seen to be required at this stage. 

There is a sense of ‘fairness’ that appeals to those that stalk, that the stag could legitimately get away, but also there is the fact of shooting for food, not merely for shooting’s sake and for sport. That isn’t to say that the ‘snob’ element of shooting is not there – stalking is also considered the sport of privilege, as once again access can be prohibitively expensive, however it is performing a commendable role for Scotland.

The gralloch - gutting the deer is done on the hill to preserve the quality of the meat for longer and to make the load lighter. Eagles and ravens are often seen. Whenever a shot is fired on the hill with Mark, is is extremely common for a golden eagle to make a very low flyby to see what has happened. 

I set out with Mark and three guests for what turned out to be a very long day on the hill – the previous two days were unsuccessful due to poor weather conditions, so he was keen to try for two stags to catch up with his quota. 

The worst nightmare for a stalker is for the Deer Commission (now Scottish Natural Heritage, SNH, the body that deals with wildlife management and licensing) to get involved in his estate. There are emergency laws in place enabling them to interfere if they think the population is out of control and likely to damage the local area or cause accidents on the road.  There would be little care as to quality of deer, so the carefully managed local population might get heavily and indiscriminately culled. In fairness, there is a protocol followed here with heavy emphasis on cooperation with the relevant estate first, and it rarely comes to this. If the estate cannot comply for whatever reason, then SNH has the power to send in their own stalkers, or employ someone to do the job. It is not guaranteed - but this lack of control is something to be feared on your own turf. 

Throughout my time with Mark, I got the impression that there is a defence of personal power over the land, that there is a fragile balance being maintained partially by Mark and by others, and he is keen to protect and control that. There is no quick replacement of a well-managed estate; it takes patience and a great deal of skill and knowledge. Any desire for a faster response from the land and you start to damage the prospects for other species.

After a great deal of ‘spying’ from the glen floor, Mark has chosen a direction to head. Like a lot of Scotland, the hills near the West coast are hard climbing, and we are heading up the steepest and largest of the glen. Mark can set a gruelling pace, earning him the nickname ‘Robostalker’. Get him to tell a story or two though, and he has plenty of good ones, and you can slow him down. As we near the top of the hill, there’s a keen sense of involvement as we are told every plan as it is made, and altered. Satisfyingly he tells us about any mistakes he has made, only serving to add to the skill we are witnessing (these mistakes are extremely rare in fairness to Mark; they are the exception that proves the rule that he is an expert in his work). The first stalk was relatively short, straight through marshy ground on our hands and knees, at 2pm. The second, shot at 6:20pm, took much longer but similar, and we are totally worn out, but he is happy with a haul of two stags. With four people in tow this is no mean feat on a hill with swirling and unpredictable wind, and little to no topographical cover (save streams and boggy ground). 

The genitalia are an essential part. They are sold to the game dealer, who shops them to China to be sold as medicine.

A long, steep descent later we arrive back at the lodge, two stags in tow, they are taken to the game larder, where they will be prepared for the game dealer. The legs are removed below the joint and the genitalia are removed (a valuable part of the carcass at £2 a kilo - the Chinese demand is such that they will source their red deer medicine from even as far away as Scotland). A good healthy saddle of venison, the next most valuable part, will cost about £2.80 a kilo, but might drop to £2 for hinds later in the winter. These are the prices paid by the game dealer to the estate; the prices of selling on to buyers (especially as regards the Chinese) were not disclosed. 

Blooding, the daubing of the face in the stag's blood, is something of a relic of a tradition for people shooting their first stag. 

We returned to the lodge completely exhausted at 8:30pm, after a 12-hour day on the hill, looking forward to a rest and a bath. 

For Mark it isn’t as simple. News comes that a fox has visited the pens the previous evening, so he has a quick dinner, and sets off into another long night.

 

The next and final post from this project, Afterword: Changing times, will be posted on Saturday 9th February, at 10.30am. To buy a copy of the book for £25, contact me. 

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TAGS: scottish highlands, red deer, outdoors, gralloch, hunting, landscape, stag, stalking, gamekeeper, gutting, shooting


January 24, 2014

Game Chapter 4: Night-Shifts

by Will Clarkson in documentary photography, blood sport, conservation, photojournalism, outdoors, wildlife, photography


At just about all stages of the year, save the stalking, Thorn, Mark’s new dog, is at his heel. 

Training dogs is a dark art to most, and Mark’s ability to train his is important - badly trained, and Thorn will become a substantial waste of his time. Worse still, it means his work is much more difficult. Consequently Thorn is the only of his dogs allowed in the house, as constant contact is required. The other dogs (a labrador for retrieving, three terriers for foxholes and a sheep dog for gathering; another freelance activity), are kept outside in kennels. At all times he is is developing under my very eyes. At six months old, I watched him carefully walk two pheasant poults back towards a tiny hole in the fence and back into the pen - an amazing feat for a puppy that only really wants to chase them. What is more amazing is that this is one of his many disciplines. 

As Mark is versatile, so already is Thorn. He is a retriever, a pointer, and a second set of senses at the foxes. Mark can cover double the ground overnight if he leaves Thorn sitting watching a blind spot. The relationship is starting to border on instinctive, and Mark will soon be able to discern what Thorn’s body language is telling him; fox, roe, pine marten or even badger. This is the level of understanding reached by his previous dog, a lurcher, and makes his success rate with the foxes considerably higher, saving him a great deal of sleep. 

Mark, as he will admit himself, is an obsessive character. This is the guy who was given a Playstation game for Christmas, and out of politeness he had a go, but failed a level after a while. He got so furious “that a bundle of wire and plastic” can beat him, that he spent the next three days, with little to no sleep, completing the entire game. Three years later and his son, Bob, still hasn’t even come close. The ultimate challenge for him, though, is the fox. The cliché ‘cunning as a fox’ doesn’t match the respect he has for their ability to evade humans, and sometimes elaborate schemes, surprising in their necessity, are set up to shoot them. His longest stakeout waiting for a fox to arrive was “probably 50 hours”, the longest time awake following a fox “...about 76 hours straight, is the longest I’ve ever done awake and I don’t fancy doing that again”.

Mark's back room is full of past projects

Unlike most of us, who tend to sleep on nature’s circadian rhythms, Mark’s sleep patterns are ruled by fatigue. When he is tired, he sleeps. When he is awake, he works. If there is no estate work, farming work or fox work, he is to be found in his taxidermy shed. Doing work. It might be taxidermy, or it might be the creation of a new special hide (the latest being a fake sheep, so he can travel around a field without his target noticing).

This work ethic seems through choice rather than necessity, even though I question the ease with which he can pay for a family on freelance keeping wages alone. Ultimately, and just about all keepers will agree with this, the job is a vocational lifestyle choice. This is a passion. I haven’t yet seen, aside from in a Zoology professor’s office, a larger collection of wildlife and wildlife photography books specifically on the subject of Scotland. Purely for the purposes of taxidermy, he will sit staring at any animal for as long as the animal will allow him. He spent 30 minutes on a stalk once, staring at a red deer hind through a telescope, just to see how her nostrils flared when she was relaxed. Apparently the clients behind were totally silent the whole time, assuming that Mark was spying something important for the stalk, only to be told they were moving elsewhere after that long wait. 

He is not shy of exploiting his reputation of being well versed in some quite unique knowledge, and practical jokes on the stalk are one of his favourite games. This year he has been taking chocolates rolled into small balls onto the hill. Every now and again he will stop, pretend to pick up some deer droppings, eat them, and say, “hmm, we are about an hour behind them, we are close now”, then move on. Eventually he persuades the ever-keen client to try some for himself. The best thing about it is there is always the initial surprise that “hey, deer poo tastes just like quality street!”. 

The constant is taxidermy, and Mark often has something on the go for clients. Seeing as this is something entirely on his own time, it takes a back seat, and this is how I find him in his shed in the small hours, sewing up a pheasant. I left him at 2.45am (to accusations of "southern fairy" as I walk out), and go to bed. When I get up at 7.30am, I find him back in the house, passed out on the sofa. He got very little sleep, as he spent the entire night preening the bird while it dried. Encouraged by Jade, his daughter, I snuck a photo. On waking after two hours’ sleep, the pheasant needed a little more preening work, then after a cup of tea, he headed out to the pheasant pens. 

It is taxidermy that defines Mark, the diligence and attention to detail accompanied by artistic flair, practical problem-solving and an obsession with the nature that surrounds him. His note to me sums it up better than I ever could:

“I do taxidermy now because it helps pay my wages and it also gives me the perfect excuse to do what I want to do! I started taxidermy as a way to get closer to and a better understanding of wildlife, drawing and painting gives you an understanding of colours and textures but only by taking them apart and rebuilding them do you get a true understanding of why they are the way they are. Once I’d started I kept trying to improve the mounts and the only way to improve is to study them in their natural habitat and the more you study them the more you want to improve your mounts (vicious circle). Taxidermy teaches you to really look at the live animal and not just look at it like everybody else does…”

Mark after an all-night pheasant preening session. 

The next part, Chapter 5: Stalking: Ecological Necessity?, will be posted on here at 10.30am on Saturday 2nd February. To buy a copy of the book for £25, contact me. 

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TAGS: fox, taxidermy, pheasant, dog training, pointer, sleeping, dog, skin


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