<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</SPAN></span></p>
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<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_ch2.jpg" alt="Three Antlered Deer" /></div>
<h2 class="nobreak" id="II">II<br/> STALKING IN ITS MOST ENJOYABLE<br/> FORM</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">By</span> far the most enjoyable form of stalking is to
be one’s own stalker, but this can only be done
satisfactorily in a forest with which one is
thoroughly familiar. It is astonishing what tricks
the wind will play in certain corries, and as a
result what mistakes even a good stalker will
make in a forest which is new to him. Moreover,
any one stalking by himself, unless he has
experience, may easily make another kind of
mistake. He may think that he has missed a
stag when he has in fact killed him. Any one
who has had experience in shooting deer knows
that a stag when shot through the heart will<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7"></SPAN>[7]</span>
sometimes gallop for forty or fifty yards or even
further and then fall down dead.</p>
<p><SPAN name="TOPS" id="TOPS"></SPAN></p>
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<ANTIMG class="w100 p2" src="images/i_006_fp.jpg" alt="" />
<div class="caption"><p class="pfs80">“SEE! FROM THE TOPS THE MIST IS STEALING.”</p>
<p class="pfs80">By <span class="smcap">Finlay Mackinnon</span>.</p>
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<p>Some years ago, preparatory to a few days’
stalking in a deer forest in Inverness-shire, I
arrived one evening at the Lodge; and later on
about half-past ten there returned from the hill
a guest in a state of great dejection who had never
stalked until he went out in this forest a few days
before. I felt very sorry for him, for he had been
keen to secure a good head and said that he
had had a splendid chance of a fine stag standing
broadside at about eighty yards and had missed
him. This was his last chance as he was leaving
early next morning. Two days later I was out
on the same beat when the stalker suddenly
grasped me by the arm and said, “There is a
stag lying down there to the left of that hill below
us. Are you seeing his horns above the ridge?”
We went cautiously down in the direction of the
stag, but had not gone far before we discovered
that the stag was dead. “That,” said the
stalker, “must be the stag Mr. X. shot at two
days ago.” We examined the stag and found that
he had been shot apparently through the heart
from the knoll from which X. had taken his shot;
it was obviously the same stag. The stalker then<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8"></SPAN>[8]</span>
told me that X. wished to stalk the last hundred
yards alone and had asked him to stay behind,
that X. had the shot and came back saying that
he had missed the stag. Neither the stalker nor
X. had thought it worth while to look for the
stag. In the case of X., who was a novice at
stalking, I was not surprised, but I was amazed
that the stalker had not done so, although he was
young and not very experienced. So X. secured
a good head after all, and no doubt both he and
the stalker learnt a lesson which neither is likely
to forget, but at the cost to X. of much unnecessary
misery and humiliation and incidentally to
his host of much good venison.</p>
<p>It is sometimes difficult to be sure what is the
result of one’s shot, and it is a great assistance
to have the opinion of an experienced stalker
whether he has his glass on the beast at the
moment the shot is fired or not.</p>
<p>I was coming back one evening after a delightful
day’s stalking in Glen Carron, when the
stalker Macdonell said, “One moment, sir, there
is a stag down there just gone out of sight. If
you can shoot off your knee downhill you will
have a chance directly.” I sat down and waited,
and in a few minutes the stag appeared. I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9"></SPAN>[9]</span>
believed I was steady and on him in the right
place. Directly I fired he galloped off. “I’m
thinking you’d better shoot again,” said Macdonell.
“What’s the use,” I replied, thinking I
had shot the stag through the heart. However,
as I spoke, I did shoot again out of respect to
Macdonell, whom I knew to be a very experienced
stalker, and the stag rolled over like a rabbit
which has been shot in the right place. “Now
we will see,” I said, “where the two bullets went.”
“I’m thinking,” said Macdonell, “you missed
him the first time.” “You may be right,” I
replied, “but I don’t think so; one thing I know,
and that is that if I did and had known it, I should
probably have missed him with my second shot
also.” On examining the stag we could only
find one bullet mark, and on skinning him we
found that one bullet only had struck him, and
that was through the heart. Macdonell no doubt
thinks to this day that I missed the stag with my
first shot, and killed him with my second when he
was galloping; but I still have my doubts. The
moral is that though one sometimes hears the
unmistakable thud of the bullet striking the
stag, there are other occasions when it is difficult
to be certain as to what has happened, and therefore<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10"></SPAN>[10]</span>
it is always wise to satisfy one’s self in the
matter as far as possible. Still more is this
essential when stalking alone. In stalking alone,
there is this advantage, that one can always
secure the best position in which to shoot, whereas
if one is accompanied by a stalker, he sometimes
takes that position himself and it is not easy to
get him to move on, or, as is more often the case,
there is no time for him to do so.</p>
<p>Charles J. Murray of Loch Carron, to
whose kindness I am indebted for many delightful
days’ stalking, is particularly devoted to this form
of sport. A few seasons ago I was obliged to
come south before the end of the stalking season,
and received from him a letter which describes,
far better than I can, the pleasure of being out
alone on the hill.</p>
<p>“You are missing the West Coast,” he wrote,
“at its (<em>weather</em>) best! for we have a spell of
gloriously fine weather when the stag can hear a
footstep half a mile off, and the wind is so gentle
that it cannot make up its mind which way to go,
but strays gently to and fro and round in little
circles, stimulating evil words among the stalkers.</p>
<p>“Yesterday I was out alone and worked up
to a Pasha and his Harem—the ladies between<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11"></SPAN>[11]</span>
him and me—he just out of shot on a hillock
behind them—approach from the front impossible,
but just a chance—almost a certainty with a fair
breeze—from a rock to one side, <em>if</em> he should
come down to his ladies before they got a puff.
I risked it and got a comfy corner in the sun and
waited to see which would win—the affectionate
impulses of the stag or the more wavering evolutions
of the scarcely perceptible puffs of wind,
the old lady sixty yards away looking serenely at
the top of my head. Needless to say that after
two hours, just when the stag stretched one fore
foot and began to hum a love ditty, I felt a well-known
cool feeling at the back of my neck, and
the party adjourned the meeting. Luckily I am
not bloodthirsty, but enjoy being among deer,
and on these occasions driving snow and rain, or
sunshine and a dry tussock to curl up on, make
all the difference.”</p>
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