O, Page 90. - Highland Game
While game was in such abundance as to form part of the
subsistence of the people, at a time when many had the means of
destruction ready, and much liberty was given, it appears remarkable,
that, now, when preserved with such jealous care, it is, in many places,
become so scarce, as only to furnish a short pastime to a comparatively
few privileged individuals; a fact which might lead to a belief, that too
great care defeats its own object, and ensures the evil against which it
seeks to guard. It is certain, that in moors which annually afford an
apparently inexhaustible supply, and where good marksmen have been known
to shoot more than one hundred birds in a forenoon, the game seems to
increase instead of diminishing by this periodical destruction, persevered
in, as it has been, for weeks, each successive season; whereas, in other
moors strictly preserved, the birds are fewer in number, and becoming very
scarce; at the same time, that I have been assured by men well acquainted
with the state of these grounds in past times, that game was as abundant
as on those which now furnish the greatest numbers. The mountains of
Breadalbane, Athole, Badenoch, and other districts, furnish marked
instances of this scarcity of game when protected, and of abundance where
the greatest annual destruction prevails. For the singular fact that the
periodical killing of game does not diminish the annual increase, various
reasons are assigned. It is said, that when the old birds are left, they
chase away in spring all the young brood of the preceding season, and that
these take shelter on grounds where the old birds had been killed. It is
also said, that in preserved moors, poachers are more frequent, bold, and
destructive, in the expectation, as few frequent them, that they will not
be discovered. A third assigned cause, and, in appearance, the most
destructive of game, is, that the farmers and shepherds who occupy these
moors, irritated by severe restrictions, tormented by threats of
punishment, and insulted by the arrogance of insolent game-keepers,
instead of being encouraged to preserve the game, and, instead of being
allowed to derive from it either benefit or amusement, make a practice, in
many cases, of feeding their dogs with the eggs, and when these escape
their notice, accustom them to search for and destroy the young brood
before they are fledged. Whether any or all of these causes affect the
decrease of game, there appears little doubt, that judging from the
character of the Highlanders, a kind and liberal indulgence to tenants in
a moderate use of the gun on their own grounds, with strict injunction to
their shepherds to be careful of the nests and of the young, and not to
burn the heather in improper seasons, or in those places most frequented
by the game, (although burning the heath in moderation is advisable, as
the young sprouts furnish their principal food), and along with this
indulgence, the offer of small premiums to the shepherds for each covey of
eight or more birds they can produce in their pasture, would make it their
interest to preserve the game ; no person could escape notice; and thus,
they would form a better protection against poachers, than prosecutions,
fines, and imprisonment.