The Ullswater Foxhounds 1863-1913 The First 50 Years

Nonfiction, Sports, Outdoors, Hunting, History
Cover of the book The Ullswater Foxhounds 1863-1913 The First 50 Years by Ron Black, Gone2Ground Books
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Author: Ron Black ISBN: 9781301379750
Publisher: Gone2Ground Books Publication: October 18, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Ron Black
ISBN: 9781301379750
Publisher: Gone2Ground Books
Publication: October 18, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

This is the first of two books and 'The Ullswater Foxhounds 1913-1963 The Next 50 Years' will be published soon.
Ron Black is a native Lakelander with roots going back to 1700, the 4th generation to follow hounds, with ancestors who stood on the cold tops at dawn, moved the heavy Lakeland stone to free trapped terriers and also ‘carried the horn’ on occasions.
Recently he was told that 95% of Lakeland was unexplored in an archaeological sense. With the abolition of fox hunting in the UK in 2005 there was a slight chance that places and structures associated with fox hunting would in the fullness of time join them, lost in time and memory.
It was with this in mind that Ron began to compile material for his website, Lakeland Hunting Memories, and Facebook page. It is NOT intended for it to glorify or be used as propaganda for or against hunting, but simply to record associations with a ‘sport’ traditional to Lakeland for over 300 years.
Hunting will not come back in the foreseeable future, perhaps not at all, but for three hundred years hunting and the church were the central thread to many communities. This and his other books, along with the website, are a part of the story.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

This is the first of two books and 'The Ullswater Foxhounds 1913-1963 The Next 50 Years' will be published soon.
Ron Black is a native Lakelander with roots going back to 1700, the 4th generation to follow hounds, with ancestors who stood on the cold tops at dawn, moved the heavy Lakeland stone to free trapped terriers and also ‘carried the horn’ on occasions.
Recently he was told that 95% of Lakeland was unexplored in an archaeological sense. With the abolition of fox hunting in the UK in 2005 there was a slight chance that places and structures associated with fox hunting would in the fullness of time join them, lost in time and memory.
It was with this in mind that Ron began to compile material for his website, Lakeland Hunting Memories, and Facebook page. It is NOT intended for it to glorify or be used as propaganda for or against hunting, but simply to record associations with a ‘sport’ traditional to Lakeland for over 300 years.
Hunting will not come back in the foreseeable future, perhaps not at all, but for three hundred years hunting and the church were the central thread to many communities. This and his other books, along with the website, are a part of the story.

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