I am glad to be able to give here some actual records of the performances of game-hawks, which have been most kindly given me by Mr. St. Quintin, whose skill in this department of falconry, as in many others, is second to none.
| 1881 | |||||
| September 24 | September 30 | ||||
| Partridges | Pheasant | Partridges | Rook | ||
| Belfry | 2 | ... | Aide-de-camp | 1 | ... |
| Butcherboy | 2 | ... | Belfry | 1 | ... |
| Parachute | 3 | 1 | Butcherboy | 2 | ... |
| Vanquisher | 1 | ... | Heroine | ... | 1 |
| Mosstrooper | 1 | ... | Parachute | 3 | ... |
| Vanquisher | 2 | ... | |||
| Mosstrooper | 1 | ... | |||
| — | — | — | — | ||
| 9 | 1 | 10 | 1 | ||
| 1882 | ||||||
| August 16 | August 19 | August 25 | ||||
| Grouse | Hare | Grouse | Grouse | |||
| Parachute | 1 | 1 | Parachute | 5 | Parachute | 4 |
| Angela | 2 | ... | Angela | 2 | Angela | 1 |
| Creole | 3 | ... | Aide-de-camp | 1 | Aide-de-camp | 3 |
| Aide-de-camp | 1 | ... | Amesbury | 2 | Amesbury | 2 |
| Amesbury | 2 | ... | Vesta | 2 | Vesta | 2 |
| Vesta | 1 | ... | Virginia | 1 | ||
| — | — | — | — | |||
| 10 | 1 | 12 | 13 | |||
In the season of 1882 Mr. St. Quintin and Colonel Brooksbank, on a moor which they took in Sutherland, took with the hawks 200 grouse, besides three blue hares, killed by the eyess Parachute, and one wild duck. After returning to England, Parachute killed no less than seventy-six partridges, besides five pheasants.
On the same moor, in 1884, the same gentlemen killed in one day (August 18) five grouse, four black-game (greyhens and young blackcock), and a hoodie crow; and on another day (August 20) eleven grouse.
Lark-Hawking
The merlin, the lady’s hawk, has always been the hawk par excellence for larks. Hobbies, no doubt, have taken them in the old days, though they were used more often for “daring” them by waiting on above, which so terrified the larks that they could be picked up by hand. They take them now constantly in the wild state. But when reclaimed, they have for many years past proved complete failures in the hands of our modern amateurs. The late Lord Lilford made several attempts to get work out of them, but with hardly any success. Mr. George Symonds obtained a large number when he was in Italy, but out of the whole lot could only get one to fly wild quarry. The writer has twice attempted to train a male hobby for larks, and on the second occasion enjoyed the advantage of valuable assistance and advice from Colonel Sanford, who was at the same time training a brother of the same bird. Great pains were taken with both of these hawks, which were in perfect plumage and condition, and had been well hacked by no less able a falconer than Mr. Newall. They were well broken to the lure, and thought nothing of waiting on for a quarter of an hour or more at a vast height. Yet it was found impossible to induce either of them to make any serious attempts at a flight. I started mine on one occasion at least twenty times at various small birds, sometimes putting them up underneath the hawk as he was waiting on, and at other times throwing him from the fist at them. These were skylarks, woodlarks, pipits, and other small frequenters of the turnip-fields. When they were put up under the hobby, he seldom took the smallest notice. When thrown off at one, he would generally make a show of pursuing, but give up before he had gone fifty yards. One lark put in in front of him to a small heap of hurdles. But instead of being “surcharged with fear,” and allowing himself to be picked up, he seemed to have as much contempt for his pursuer as the latter deserved, and went up briskly again before there was any chance of even trying to pick him up.