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The Gator Wrestlers
Oct 01, 2008
By: Allison Glock
In Florida, veteran gator men are trying to keep their jobs – and their fingers
Follow the Hounds
Oct 01, 2008
By: Barclay Rives
A foxhunting marathon across the rolling terrain of Virginia's Piedmont
A Hunter at Heart
Oct 01, 2008
By: Donovan Webster
Rolling Stones keyboardist Chuck Leavell makes his home on a magnificent hunting plantation outside of Macon, Georgia. And you’re invited to stop by for a visit
Nature Girl
Sep 30, 2008
By: Monte Burke
Why Jennie Turner Garlington wants more kids to grow up outside
Goodbye, Bo Diddley
Aug 12, 2008
By: Matt Hendrickson
The father of rock and roll was all about his Southern roots
Who Do You Love
Aug 12, 2008
By: Jimmy Buffett
A true story of music, magic, and a long night in the desert with Bo Diddley
The Pork Is in the Mail
Aug 12, 2008
By: Francine Maroukian
A cultural tour of the best mail-order food in the South
The Lost Confederados
Aug 12, 2008
By: Gary Hawkins
Why thousands of Southerners fled to Brazil after the Civil War, why they stayed, and why their descendants still remember
Best of the New South
Aug 12, 2008
50 people, places and things that make us proud
Miranda Lambert - The New Queen of Country
Aug 08, 2008
By: Marshall Chapman
Sweet Tea
Jul 02, 2008
By: Allison Glock
A Love Story
Water Women
Jun 23, 2008
By: Christian Harkness
A tribute to female clam farmers in Cedar Key, Florida
Sailing in Style
Jun 23, 2008
By: Caroline McCoy
Taking to the water for a few hours—or days—no longer means throwing a pair of oilskins in your duffel
Force of Nature
Jun 18, 2008
By: Chris Dixon
Beau Turner controls two million acres of forest and ranch land. Thankfully, he'd like to see much of it restored to its natural state
Death by Cuban Sandwich
Jun 12, 2008
By: Rick Bragg
How Cuban expats are killing Castro with roast pork, Swiss cheese, pickles, and prayer
The Plant Hunter
Jun 12, 2008
By: Daniel Wallace
The Indiana Jones of horticulture, Tony Avent travels the globe in search of rare plants for his North Carolina nursery
The Family Guns
Jun 12, 2008
By: Clyde Edgerton
When shotguns are passed from one generation to the next, they tell stories—both good and bad
Southern Dream Towns
Jun 11, 2008
By: Allston McCrady
Whether you’re looking for a place to tie up your flats skiff, stable your horse, or even put down some roots, we’ve found the twenty sweetest small towns south of the Mason-Dixon Line
Island Time
Apr 28, 2008
By: Various Writers
An intimate look at the South's wild — and undiscovered — barrier islands
Going Whole Hog
Apr 24, 2008
By: John Currence
Thirty hours of whiskey, smoke, and pure pandemonium
Davis Love's Wild Side
Apr 24, 2008
By: Joe Bargmann
When Davis Love III needs to get away from golf, he heads to his 2,890-acre spread on the Georgia coast, which he's turned into the ultimate sporting retreat. But even there, he can't always escape from a life occasionally marred by tragedy
The Legend of Black Gold
Apr 24, 2008
By: Winston Groom
An unforgettable Indian horse that gave it all — and more
Game Changers
Apr 24, 2008
By: Phil Bourjaily
Eight sporting clays guns that will help you shoot straight and look good doing it (even when you miss)
This is Quail Country
Feb 21, 2008
By: Charles W. Waring III
Sporting traditions, conservation, and history abound on the plantations of Thomasville, Georgia.
A Room at Eudora’s
Feb 21, 2008
By: Reynolds Price
Four decades of letters, visits, and memorable cocktails with a dear friend
The Soul of Slow Food
Feb 21, 2008
By: Moreton Neal
North Carolina Chef Andrea Reusing forms a delicious and ambitious partnership with area farmers
Bird Fights
Feb 21, 2008
By: Sandy Lang
Rooster and parrot struggle for life in and around the Puerto Rican rainforest of El Yunque
The Longleaf Pine
Jan 04, 2008
By: Jack Hitt
Rebuilding the fireforest of the Old South
In Full Pursuit
Jan 04, 2008
By: Hunter Kennedy
Foxhunting with Ben Hardaway and his legendary crossbred hounds
Latitude Adjustment
Jan 04, 2008
By: Carter Worrell
Tropical destinations to cure the winter doldrums
Wing Shooting on Top of the World
Jan 04, 2008
By: Geoffrey Norman
Pheasant Hunting in Virginia's Blue Ridge Mountains
Argentina Dove Shoot
Nov 06, 2007
By: John Currence
A shooter's dream, a Catholic's nightmare. On a father-son hunting trip, camaraderie and competition converge.
The Waldingfield Beagles
Nov 06, 2007
By: Bryan Hunter
The oldest beagle pack in America perseveres with the help of a Virginia doctor
Botantical Muses
Nov 06, 2007
By: Caroline McCoy
Holiday evenings inspired by Southern gardens
Fine Shotguns and Their Makers
Nov 06, 2007
By: Winston Groom
Winston Groom sets his sights on world’s best shotguns – then and now
Devoted to the Chase
Sep 25, 2007
By: Chalmers Poston
Opening day of Georgia's famed Belle Meade Hunt
Biloxi Reds
Sep 25, 2007
By: Charles Gaines
Wrestling redfish on the Louisiana Marsh
Reverie on Roanoke Island
Sep 25, 2007
By: Marjorie Hudson
An Elizabethan garden on the Outer Banks honors the mystery of the Lost Colony
Memphis Calling
Sep 25, 2007
By: Andria Lisle
How the gem of the Delta inspired the blues, Piggly Wiggly, and the Peabody Duck March
Upwardly Mobile
Jun 26, 2007
By: Jennifer Paddock
A Historic Southern City Raises Its Profile
I Was Binx Bolling
Jun 26, 2007
By: Doug Marlette
Feeling like the title character in The Moviegoer , I was at a crossroads – a perfect time to spend a day in Highlands, North Carolina with Walker Percy.
The Southern Cross
Jun 26, 2007
By: Liz Clark
A Spoonful of the Unknown – Liz Clark and the Voyage of Swell
Southern Wahine
Jun 26, 2007
By: Gary Hawkins
Shoulder-High and Glassy with Barrels
Boxwood
Jun 26, 2007
By: Allston McCrady
An Antebellum Garden with Deep Southern Roots
Under A Cuban Moon
Jun 26, 2007
By: John Wilson
Garden & Gun travels to Havana in search of Hemingway's legacy
page: 1 2 3 4 5

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article

The Waldingfield Beagles

By: Bryan Hunter
November 06, 2007

A master of beagles employs wits and whippers-in to keep the chase alive
credit: Eduardo Galliani
I pause just long enough to breathe in the scent of damp, loamy Virginia soil overlaid with notes of pure mountain air drifting down from the distant Blue Ridge. Shouts of “Pack in!” and the staccato peals of a distant horn slice through the silence of the Albemarle County countryside. At the sound of “Tally-ho!” from a sure, steady voice, the entire sauntering field springs into double quick with the sudden energy of a stretched rubber band seeking release. Glancing across the three-acre field, I spot the huntsman as he redirects a writhing mass of thirty-odd thirteen-inch hounds and casts them onto the trail of their quarry with a new pattern of short toots of the horn. The pack responds immediately and changes direction, the fine-tuned noses picking up the warm scent of the rabbit, and they’re off on a wild chase accompanied by a sound track of their own making, with voices as distinctive and fair as those of the Metropolitan Opera. When it comes to voices in tune, none hold a candle to the Waldingfield Beagles, this storied pack that has kept Eastern cottontail rabbits minding their p’s and q’s since 1885.

Hospitably, the elusive cottontail is a most accommodating quarry. Unlike fox or deer, which run in a straight line, sometimes clear into the next county, a rabbit tends to make a full circle. Often the rabbit, hounds in tow, ends up circling back to the exact spot where the beagles first picked up the rabbit’s scent, called “the line.” The hunt staff, composed of the huntsman and the whippers-in (staff members who flank the hounds and employ long whips to keep them from “rioting,” or breaking out of the pack), keeps pace with the pack. Today, the field, made up of the group of folks following the hunt, lingers behind to “coffeehouse,” listening to the hounds in full cry while discussing the goings-on in the tight-knit community.

For a while we listen as the pack drifts off almost out of earshot, only to hear the voices crescendo. “The rabbit’s turned,” someone observes. Sure enough, now we hear the beagles almost parallel with us, off a short distance to our left. Now they’re slightly behind us, but their golden tongues gain in volume by the second. Our eyes focus on a spot at the edge of the clearing where we have been milling about. Suddenly, the rabbit materializes, a little foot-long blur of reddish-brown fur with long ears, running lickety-split for dear life, and the pack appears seconds later, sharp on its heels. We allow the hunt to pass until we’re right on its tail. We enter a thicket of saplings dodging, ducking, and sometimes swearing. The branch of a scrub oak snaps back as the lady I’m following too closely passes by, and it whips me on the cheek. Instantly, I feel a welt swell. I relish the sting of blood rising, and I’ll wear it as a badge of honor for the next week or so. After a short chase over several fields and into a stand of sparse oaks, the hounds run the rabbit to ground in a burrow and start digging frantically until the huntsman calls them in with a few blasts from his horn. Another successful day’s hunt with the Waldingfield Beagles ends, and the rabbit lives to collect himself and enjoy, perhaps, another hunt.

My first encounter with beagling occurred when I stumbled upon a book on English field sports. Looking at the illustrations, I considered the sport effete. Here were perfectly grown men, who should have known better, prepared to take to the field dressed in green blazers, white britches, and neck cloths that look like clerical collars. In the Deep South where I grew up, hunting presents two faces: On the one hand, good ole boys clad in camouflage soaked in deer urine, perching fifteen feet up in stands in the hopes that a trophy buck might pass before them for a perfect broadside shot — a pissing contest writ large. On the other, gentlemen dressed in old field coats and thorn-proof britches pinning down Gentleman Bob with well-heeled pointers and aloof setters and shooting covey rises with totemic double guns. My family was aligned with the latter, but I knew, and deeply respected, a number of deer hunters. Beaglers, dressed like they were headed to court, were unlike anything I’d ever witnessed. Yet, for some perverse reason, they enthralled me.