Vous consultez actuellement le France version du site.
Voulez-vous passer à votre site local ?
4 TEMPS DE LECTURE MIN

A BIT EXTRA

When it comes to high end game shooting and fly fishing, we have never had so much choice. The length and breadth of Britain is heaving with clued-up estates offering us the world. Competition seems rife. That’s why Gleneagles has pushed the envelope to create a next-level hospitality experience that’s coining a brand new blueprint for days in the field

Photographer SARAH FARNSWORTH

For those wanting the ritziest days, with all the bells and whistles, there are a surprisingly large number of estates across Britain now selling top drawer game shooting and fly fishing. The market is extremely crowded and we’ve never had it so good. Everyone seems to have upped the ante. However, Perthshire hotel Gleneagles has gone a step further than most. The five-star resort has elevated every single touchpoint of a Gun and Rod’s journey, from that first tentative enquiry about availability to the private helicopter airport transfer back home. The result? A masterclass in shooting and fishing breaks. Here, visitors can expect all the pomp and ceremony that makes British fieldsports unique, executed to a refined and elegant level.

Lisez l'article complet et bien d'autres dans ce numéro de Fieldsports Journal
Options d'achat ci-dessous
Si le problème vous appartient, Connexion pour lire l'article complet maintenant.
Numéro unique numérique Volume V Issue V
 
€15,99 / issue
Ce numéro et d'autres anciens numéros ne sont pas inclus dans une nouvelle version de l'article abonnement. Les abonnements comprennent le dernier numéro régulier et les nouveaux numéros publiés pendant votre abonnement. Fieldsports Journal
Abonnement numérique annuel €57,99 facturé annuellement
Sauvez
40%
€9,67 / issue
Abonnement numérique de 6 mois €28,99 facturé deux fois par an
Sauvez
40%
€9,66 / issue

Cet article est tiré de...


View Issues
Fieldsports Journal
Volume V Issue V
VOIR EN MAGASIN

Autres articles dans ce numéro


EDITORIAL
THE DUKE OF NORTHUMBERLAND
FOREWORD FROM THE GUEST EDITOR
FISHING
HARDY MARKS 150-YEAR MILESTONE
Fly fishing brand Hardy celebrated its sesquicentennial anniversary in June by opening a brand new flagship store and museum in Alnwick, Northumberland.
Restoring riparian woodland
Humans sweat and dogs pant, but salmon are not able to regulate their body temperature. The Atlantic Salmon Trust’s chairman, Robbie Douglas Miller OBE, explains how the Riverwoods initiative is seeking to plant native trees along riverbanks to create shade and mitigate climate change
MEDITERRANEAN CARIBBEAN
The Algarvian sand flats offer Brits an affordable short haul solution to those needing a saltwater fly fishing fix
SEARCHING FOR SCOTTISH COASTAL sea trout
There is something extremely relaxing and satisfying about
SHOOTING FOR SALMON
In support of raising vital funds for wild salmon conservation, the Atlantic Salmon Trust (AST) hosted its inaugural charity clay shoot and auction on 10 June at the Royal Berkshire Shooting School.
GENERAL INTEREST
INDELIBLE memories
A well-known and tireless conservationist, The Duke of Northumberland is patron of numerous wildlife charities. Formerly president of Salmon & Trout Conservation and current vice president of the GWCT, he has won several notable awards including the Purdey Award in recognition of his groundbreaking work to halt the decline in grey partridge numbers. His younger brother James Percy met him at home at Alnwick Castle to find out more
RAG-AND-BONE WOMAN
Our multi-faceted front cover artist Silvy Weatherall describes herself as a painter, sculptor, pattern maker, wordsmith and singer. Based in Scotland, she tells us how her passion for fieldsports and hatred of waste are interlinked.
COME ONE , COME ALL
The Duke of Northumberland’s lifelong friend Sir Nicholas Soames is a staunch supporter of fieldsports. Here, the grandson of Winston Churchill and former Conservative Party MP, tells us about shooting grouse with David Cameron, waking up at 3am on the morning of a shoot and a fox named Hym
The game cook
For 26 years Gillian Millar has worked as full-time cook for the Duke and Duchess of Northumberland, looking after shooting and fishing parties as well as daily meals. Based at Burncastle with her cocker spaniel Alfie, she is self-taught having watched her mother in the kitchen.
TASTING NOTES
My father wasn’t mad keen on good wine,
THE LAST WORD
The Duke of Northumberland has chosen this painting by Landseer as his all-time favourite piece of sporting art.
CONSERVATION
NATURE WILL ALWAYS FIND A WAY
Knight Frank’s Thomas van Straubenzee says there’s a growing trend for downscaling bag expectations
AHEAD OF THE CURVE
A former Purdey Awards winner, the Duke of Norfolk is a vociferous conservationist and wants us all to pull together to help reverse nature’s decline. Here, he tell us about the incredible work he has undertaken on his grouse moor in the Yorkshire Dales and grey partridge manor in Sussex
SHOOTING
PLANTATION QUAIL
The Duke of Northumberland’s son-in-law, Floridabased Remy W. Trafelet, is an avid wild quail shooter. Here, he explains how an American plantation is not dissimilar to a grouse moor or grey partridge estate
Byrecleugh
Our roving reporter Sandy Swinton accompanies the Birkbeck family on their grouse day at Floors Castle
Bucking the trend
Last year Lady Katie Percy spent a month in the Niassa Special Reserve in Mozambique where she met an extraordinary man named Derek Littleton who has dedicated his life to helping the area’s wildlife thrive once again. The secret of his success? Hunting.
Chat
X
Support Pocketmags