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  2. Hunting weapon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunting_weapon

    Shotguns were originally designed to fire multiple small projectiles in a single shot. This method is still used mainly for hunting small game, and, occasionally, for hunting deer with buckshot, but modern shotguns can also be used for bigger game (deer, bear, etc.) when loaded with slugs. Hunting shotguns are shoulder-fired weapons, and are ...

  3. Deer hunting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deer_hunting

    A Neolithic painting of deer hunting from Spain A Roman mosaic depicting the goddess Diana deer hunting. Deer hunting is hunting deer for meat and sport, and, formerly, for producing buckskin hides, an activity which dates back tens of thousands of years. Venison, the name for deer meat, is a nutritious and natural food source of animal protein ...

  4. Hunting and shooting in the United Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunting_and_shooting_in...

    Bolt action rifles are used for deer stalking. This may take on moors, or in woodland. Deer hunted in the UK are red deer, roe deer, fallow deer, sika deer, muntjac, water deer, and hybrids of these deers. [13] Only certain 'quarry' species of wildfowl may legally be shot in the UK, and are protected under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981.

  5. Rocket net - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rocket_net

    Rocket nets and cannon nets are types of animal traps used to trap many live animals, usually birds, but they also have been used to catch large animals such as various species of deer. Rocket nets, cannon nets, and other net launching devices are built upon similar principles have been used since the 1950s (Dill and Thornsberry 1950, Hawkins ...

  6. Remington Spartan 310 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remington_Spartan_310

    The Spartan 310 has a walnut stock and fore-end, the shooter can select automatic ejectors or extractors, and a ventilated barrel rib. It uses screw-in SPR choke tubes.By default, the bottom barrel fires first, but the shooter can select the top barrel to fire first by pushing the trigger blade forward when the gun is loaded and closed. [4]

  7. Deer hay wind - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deer_hay_wind

    Red Deer stags and hinds. Deer hay winds, folds and elricks were sites where by means of traps wild deer were killed or caught. Evidence that during Saxon times deer hunting was taking place in this fashion survives in a tract written by a 10th-century monk called Ælfric who wrote "I weave myself nets and set them in a suitable place and urge on my dogs so that they chase the wild animals ...

  8. Deer stalking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deer_stalking

    Scottish deer stalker glassing the surroundings with a telescope. Deer stalking, or simply stalking, is a British term for the stealthy pursuit of deer on foot to hunt for venison, leisure, trophy, or to control their numbers [1] as part of wildlife management, just as with rabbiting and boar hunting.

  9. Trapping pit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trapping_pit

    Pit for hunting wolves, near Hohenwart, Bavaria, Germany. Trapping pits are deep pits dug into the ground, or built from stone, in order to trap animals. European rock drawings and cave paintings reveal that bear, moose and wolf were hunted since the Stone Age using trapping pits.