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The following is a list of foxhound packs in the United Kingdom, which are recognised by the Masters of Foxhounds Association. Fox hunting is prohibited in Great Britain by the Protection of Wild Mammals (Scotland) Act 2002 and the Hunting Act 2004 (England and Wales), but remains legal in Northern Ireland.
Master of foxhounds leads the field from Powderham Castle in Devon, England. Fox hunting is an activity involving the tracking, chase and, if caught, the killing of a fox, normally a red fox, by trained foxhounds or other scent hounds. A group of unarmed followers, led by a "master of foxhounds" (or "master of hounds"), follow the hounds on ...
Masters of foxhounds in Ireland (north and south) Pages in category "Masters of foxhounds in Ireland" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.
Masters of foxhounds were originally the owners of the packs of hounds used for fox hunting and the employers of hunt servants. Now they are more often the members of fox hunts with control of the hunt. The postnominal letters M. F. H. are still used. Women as well as men are called Masters of foxhounds.
Masters of Foxhounds Association, Essex and Suffolk Hunt Archived 2 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 1 October 2016. Essex and Suffolk Hunt website , retrieved 1 October 2016. This hunting -related article is a stub .
Lt. Col. Dennis J. Foster, A Guide to Being a Master of Foxhounds (MFHA, 2015) [8] Code of Hunting Practices (MFHA, 2015) [9] Mrs William G. Fendley III, A Guide to Establishing a Foxhunting Camp (MFHA, 2015) [10] Foxhound Kennel Notebook (5th edition, MFHA, 2015) MFHA Guidebook & Rules (MFHA, 2015) MFHA Territory Policy (2015)
"The Master of the Blankney". Published in Vanity Fair in 1906. The Blankney Hunt is an English foxhound pack , [ 2 ] based in the village of Blankney , Lincolnshire , with hunting country of around 20 miles (32 km) by 11 miles (18 km) within Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire .
The hunt traces its origins to a pack of foxhounds established in 1696 at Tooley Park, Leicestershire, by the youthful Thomas Boothby (1677–1752).Its present name comes from the village of Quorn, also known as Quorndon, where the hounds were kennelled between 1753 and 1904. [1]