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Coursing

Coursing is a hunting technique involving dogs, primarily sighthounds, pursuing game by sight rather than scent. Historically practiced by various social classes, it evolved into a formalized competition in Britain, particularly for hares, under specific rules. Modern legal restrictions in places like the UK and Scotland limit the use of dogs for hunting mammals, while in other regions, such as Australia, coursing is still employed for hunting feral animals.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
62 views2 pages

Coursing

Coursing is a hunting technique involving dogs, primarily sighthounds, pursuing game by sight rather than scent. Historically practiced by various social classes, it evolved into a formalized competition in Britain, particularly for hares, under specific rules. Modern legal restrictions in places like the UK and Scotland limit the use of dogs for hunting mammals, while in other regions, such as Australia, coursing is still employed for hunting feral animals.
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Coursing

Coursing by humans is the pursuit of game or other animals


by dogs—chiefly greyhounds and other sighthounds—
catching their prey by speed, running by sight, but not by
scent. Coursing was a common hunting technique, practised
by the nobility, the landed and wealthy, as well as by
commoners with sighthounds and lurchers. In its oldest
recorded form in the Western world, as described by Arrian—
it was a sport practised by all levels of society, and it
remained the case until Carolingian period forest law
appropriated hunting grounds, or commons, for the king, the The Hunter, oil on canvas, Alfred
nobility, and other landowners. It then became a formalised Kowalski
competition, specifically on hare in Britain, practised under
rules, the Laws of the Leash'.[1]

As a zoological term, it refers to predation by running down prey over long distances, as opposed to
stalking, in which a stealthy approach is followed by a short burst of sprinting. Humans also employ
coursing as a means of hunting, but the term is normally reserved for predation by non-human
predators.[2][3]

Sport and hunting


Animals coursed in hunting and sport include hares, foxes, deer of all sorts, antelope, gazelle, jackals,
wolves. Jackrabbits and coyotes are the most common animals coursed in the United States. Competitive
coursing in Ireland, the UK (until prohibition in 2004), Portugal and Spain has two dogs running against
each other. In the United States, generally speaking, three dogs are run together.

The Protection of Wild Mammals (Scotland) Act and the Hunting Act 2004 (in England and Wales) made
it illegal to hunt any type of mammal with dogs with the exception of rabbits and rats. Dogs are still
permitted to chase (flush) game into the path of a waiting gun, as long as no more than two dogs are used.

In Australia, dogs may be used to hunt feral animals such as foxes, deer, goats, rabbits, and pigs.[4]

See also
Hare coursing
Greyhound racing
Lure coursing
Cheetah and Caracal – two feline species also historically used in similar hunting practices
Courser (disambiguation)

References
1. Johnson, Thomas Burgeland (2023) [1848]. The sportsman's cyclopaedia : comprising a
complete elucidation of the science and practice of hunting, shooting, coursing, racing,
fishing, hawking, cockfighting, and other sports and pastimes of Great Britain, interspersed
with entertaining and illustrative anecdotes [LeatherBound] (https://books.google.com/book
s?id=rL4UAAAAYAAJ&dq=%22Laws+of+the+Leash%22&pg=PA193). p. 193.
2. Montgomery, Robert A., et al. The hunting modes of human predation and potential
nonconsumptive effects on animal populations (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/articl
e/abs/pii/S000632072100450X). Biological Conservation 265, 2022: 109398
3. MacNulty, D.R., et al. A proposed ethogram of large-carnivore 395 predatory behavior,
exemplified by the wolf (https://academic.oup.com/jmammal/article/88/3/595/1065104?login
=false). Journal of Mammalogy, 88(3) 2007, pp.595-605
4. "Boardogs Deerhounds" (http://www.boardogs.com/Boardogs_Deerhounds1.htm). Retrieved
23 July 2016.

Further reading
Blanning, Charles. The Greyhound and the Hare: A History of the Breed and the Sport. The
National Coursing Club, 2018.
Blanning, Charles. Twenty Two Waterloo Cups 1981-2005. Charles Blanning, Fullerton
Press in association with the National Coursing Club, 2022.
Cox, Harding Edward de Fonblanque. Coursing and falconry 1899 [1] (https://archive.org/de
tails/coursingandfalc00richgoog)
Copold, Steve. Hounds Hares & Other Creatures: The Complete Book of Coursing
1977/1996
Dansey, William. Arrian On Coursing: the Cynegeticus London: J. Bohn, 1831 [2] (https://arc
hive.org/details/arrianoncoursing00arri)
Macpherson, H. A. The hare 1896 [3] (https://archive.org/details/haremacp00macp)
Phillips A.A. & Willcock M.M. Xenophon & Arrian On Hunting with hounds 1999
Grant-Rennick. Coursing, The Pursuit of Game with Gazehounds 1976 [4] (https://web.archi
ve.org/web/20110927132538/http://www.dogsincanada.com/book-learning-coursing-the-pur
suit-of-game-with-gazehounds)
M. H. Salmon ("Dutch"). Gazehounds & Coursing: The History, Art, and Sport of Hunting
with Sighthounds, Rev. and expanded 2nd ed. Silver City, N.M.: High-Lonesome Books,
1999. ISBN 0-944383-49-1.
Stable, Owen QC, & Stuttard, R.M. A Review of Coursing British Field Sports Society,
London 1971
Turbervile (Gascoigne), George. The Noble Art of Venerie or Hunting 1576. See page 246
"A short observation ... concerning coursing" [5] (https://archive.org/details/turbervilesbooke
00turb)
Walsh, Edward G. Longdogs by Day 1990

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