This season was the culminating season of that cycle, and we ought to have had better bags, but wet weather makes the birds wild and skittish. I had expected 1200 brace on Dalnawillan, and 800 on Rumsdale, as a minimum; the birds were there to do it.
Season 1888.
All things come to an end, and the seventeen years lease was drawing to a close.
This would be my last season, and I shot at Dalnawillan with two of my sons and a friend.
My family did not go down.
Unfortunately I was very lame with rheumatism in one leg, and could only get about a few hours every other day, puddling over the near beats and working the dogs myself, with a boy to lead a spare dog, and a gillie to carry the birds.
The other party were out every day, weather permitting, two guns to the party, and taking turn and turn about.
Disease was now again getting due. We had some indication the previous season, and this season we had them all over the moor—barren birds, small broods, a bad bird now and again; in fact, a repetition identical with the commencement of the attack of 1881, and about the same result as to bag, which, however, gave a fair amount of shooting.
On moors south and east there was little or no shooting; but Strathmore on the north was much better.