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BCLondon
member


Reged: 05/06/2008
Posts: 1
Shooting in scotland without a shooting day
      #3255 - 06/06/2008 08:37

All

Having lived in Botswana with my grandfather for many years, and learning to shoot with him, I have come back to the UK to live, and I am very interested in doing some shooting in scotland.

What are the laws in scotland, with regards to rough shooting, and what permission do you need to do rough shooting in lets say the highlands etc. I have done some research and they say you need land owners permission, is all the land taken by land owners ?

Do you need to go with a group ? or arrange a company to take you ?

Sorry for the beginners question, I am sure it has been asked before.


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Alastair_BalmainModerator
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Reged: 18/08/2006
Posts: 93
Re: Shooting in scotland without a shooting day [Re: BCLondon]
      #3280 - 11/06/2008 11:56

Hi BCLondon,

The answer to your question essentially is that you will certainly need the permission of whoever owns the shooting rights, usually the landowner. Otherwise you'd be poaching! Unless you have good friends with lots of land in Scotland, you will have to pay for the privilege.

The term "rough shooting" only really describes the style of the shooting, in that it is conducted by a handful of shooters with a couple of dogs. In all likelihood they will do their own beating, tapping up hedges and other cover in the hope of flushing the occasional pheasant, rabbit, woodcock etc. As I'm sure you know, it differs from a formal driven day where a team of beaters flush a specific quarry (pheasant, partridge etc) over a line of guns.

Unlike in other countries, such as Sweden, there are no public hunting grounds in any of the UK and all land has shooting rights which apply to it. You will need to find whoever it is who has the shooting rights to gain their permission to shoot. Basically that means going through a sporting agent or direct to an estate and as I said earlier, you will have to pay for the privilege. Typically for a day's walked up rough shooting on a lowground estate you could expect to pay from £100 to £300/400 per day per gun depending on where it is, how much you shoot and how much input the estate gives (such as lunch etc). The classified pages of Shooting Times are an excellent place to start looking as walked-up days, especially early and late in the season are frequently offered. Equally searching under "walked up shooting scotland" in google will show you how many people offer packages and describe more closely a typical day.

I hope that makes sense, if you want any more info, let me know.

Alastair.

--------------------
Alastair Balmain, Deputy editor, Shooting Times


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