Product Details
The Poacher's Handbook

The Poacher's Handbook
By Ian Niall

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #10974 in Books
  • Published on: 2003-03
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 141 pages

Customer Reviews

A gem for those interested in the country5
This book was originally written in the early fifties and it is interesting to note that although the social setting has changed, the ways and means of poaching remain.

Ian Niall takes us into the world of the poacher through the experiences of his many friends such as Little Hugh, Butcher Murphy and Black Bill.

In this book, Ian Niall explains the techniques used to catch fur, feather and fish. He prefers humane hunting and takes great pains to deplore any cruel practices which cause unnecessary suffering.

He starts with hares and rabbits and discusses the methods of ferreting, netting and shooting. The middle section covers the capture of partridge, pheasant and grouse whilst the final part is concerned with trout and salmon.

The chapters flow logically from one to the other and underline the constant battle of wits between the old poachers and the keepers and game wardens.

This is the sort of book that has you reaching for your game cookbook.

If only5
I have never heard a bad word spoken about this book-it has for years provided the inspiration for boys of all types, and a source of happy reminiscence for old men. Ian Niall writes so vividly becuase he writes about reality-he is a countryman. For me it was the inspiration of a lifetime, and gave clarity in a world of clouded vision. His tale charts, in parallel, the change of a society, and surely there is no more poignant moment in British literature than the closing page, and the harsh reality hits home, that these are times and lives and loves long gone and not for us to enjoy, merely to marvel at the memories of an old man and wish that we too might have shared.

A lovely book of the traditional English landscape.5
I bought the original version of this book at theBath and West Show in '52 or '53, and spent my two summer days at the Show oblivious to all except the country between the book's covers. Mr. Niall is a fine writer with the better end of his memory firmly rooted in traditional England. As a result of the book I read him for years in the great Country Life Magazine, which I am delighted to see is still going strong. Memories and traditions in the book reach back well into the last century, and anyone with a feeling for English and indeed pastoral tradition should buy it. It is not pretty-pretty water-colour, but the real rural life by which country people lived until the urban way of life became obligatory for most. As an aspirant poacher at the time, and a countryman at heart always, I valued and appreciated the lore and sounds and smells of the country, which the book conveys.

Unfortunately I lent my copy to a famous friend, who kindly let another friend see it, so it was never returned. I cannot blame them. Had anyone lent me it, I would have been most loth to give it back. I have been looking for a replacement over the years without success. So when I have bought my new copy, I will treasure it and not repeat my previous mistake. Buy it yourself and see what England was until recently. And do not lend it if you want to see it again. END