Our dogs have developed a sixth sense; by some strange magic, perhaps known only to the elves, they seem to “know” when we have heard someone talking utter cobblers about shooting on the radio, television or online. Whether it is blood pressure, perhaps that elemental tingle of electrical frisson in the air or perhaps it is just the furniture flying, who knows the mysteries of the canine mind?
According to the British Newspaper Archive the number of mentions of grouse, pheasant or partridge shooting has, after a busy 100 years, dropped off: 1800–1849: 57,721 mentions; 1850–1899: 355,599 mentions; 1900–1949: 189,311 mentions; 1950–1999: 9,416 mentions and 2000 – : 1,799 mentions (at the time of writing).
These items were not just in the big titles, but also in regional newspapers; the…