On May 16th 2006 I completed
fifty years of crow hunting! I am, no doubt, a lucky person.
To mark this milestone, I decided to take a trip I would not
ordinarily take. I accepted a kind invitation from a fellow
crow hunter and friend from England, Jason Cook. We had been
kicking the idea around for a couple of years and the idea
of doing some “international” crow and varmint hunting had
great appeal. I could not have imagined my hobby would one
day take me 4000 miles across the Atlantic and five time
zones to chase British crows. I initially thought the trip
would be similar to several upland bird hunts I have taken
to Canada. Was I mistaken! This “go to England to shoot
crows” turned out to be quite frankly more than I expected.
I’d have to call it one of the most rewarding experiences I
have ever had.
Imagine a Johnny Reb from North Carolina in King Arthur’s
court….Old Glory mixing with the Union Jack… in pursuit of
British crows not knowing if they would “understand” either
my Gibson or Turpin crow call! Truth is, there were a lot of
‘unknowns’. One of our members recently wrote an excellent
account of a day with Bob Aronsohn. Let me give you my
account of a week with Jason and his family and seven birds
considered by the English Game & Fish as vermin!
By way of background, let me say all of my hunting took
place on or around hog farms. Jason had secured permission
for me to hunt prior to my arrival and his “hides” held
promise to produce significant numbers of crows, jackdaws,
pigeons, Woodpigeons (what a fantastic bird), rooks, magpies
and seagulls. They consider all of these birds ‘vermin’ and
can be shot year round. They could all be taken from the
same hide at virtually any time during the same day! I have
never “zipped up” in a blind or a ‘stand’ not knowing which
of SEVEN targets would present themselves. I smile now as I
recall all of this to mind because I never knew which bird
might pop into view, I had to be nimble with my fire control
system. Each bird has different flight gyrations. Plus, I
discovered British crows added a further peculiar twist:
they did not sound or behave like American crows-- more on
that later.
My activities the first day included: 3900+ miles,
crossed 5 time zones (I departed Raleigh at 6:30 EDT and
arrived in England at 7:05 Greenwich Mean Time), navigated
customs, met Jason and his daughter, Charlotte for the first
time at the airport, hopped in his diesel Peugeot for a 90
mile ride southwest of London to the historic town of
Winchester, checked into a stately bed & breakfast (that was
260 years old), changed into hunting garb, got to Jason’s
“farm” at 2 pm, loaded and literally proceeded shooting
crows within 5 minutes of exiting the car! I barely noticed
I got no sleep during this first 24 hours. I was in a target
rich environment and one cannot shirk from ones duties by
thinking they need to take a nap! Perish the thought.
Winchester, located in southern England, is 8 miles from
Romsey, Jason’s hometown. With a current population of
40,000, Winchester was the capital of England in the 10th
and 11th centuries and was once a Roman garrison. It is best
known for the Great Hall built in the 12th century. King
Arthur’s Round Table resides there and it has hung in the
Hall since 1463, or about 30 years before Columbus first
visited America. The names of all the legendary knights are
written around the edges of the table.

Jackdaw
The birds I took on that first day had several
interesting characteristics. First, the crows did not sound
like ‘our’ crows. Their voices were low and raspy, almost
identical to our Ravens. Even when we shot up some flocks
coming in, there was no “alarm”, no excitement in their
voices. Secondly, we were using a feeding setup. This was a
‘first’ for me and there was NO calling of any sort. The
birds came to feed in a steady stream and were lured into
range by Jason’s excellent electrically powered crow decoys.
I shot all birds from Jason’s “hide”, that is strips of
camouflage cloth strung between two 6-foot poles against the
tree line with excellent effect. Crows and Jackdaws often
fly (and get shot) together. The Jackdaw is about 90% the
size of a crow and except for a faintly brownish head, has
the same coloration, a smaller beak and makes a whistling
sound not unlike a Wood Duck or Pintail. They like to fly in
‘flocks’, and are often erratic flyers with a strong visual
resemblance to a crow.
Jason is a fine shot with a very ‘natural’ shooting
motion. He is a dedicated crow and pigeon hunter and he
knows his stuff. He shoots a Turkish (Hatsan Escort) 12 ga.,
uses full choke, shoots Gamebore White Gold ammo in 7 ½’s
and wears full camo. He is also an avid rabbit hunter. First
day’s TBC: 101 crows, jackdaws and pigeons before supper. I
have never had such a “mixed bag” on a crow hunt! End of day
#1.
Let me give highlights of the six hunting days that
followed, as some are jolly well worth mention.
Rained out the morning of the second day, we used that
time to visit a gun store to “top-off” our ammo needs. By
the time I left for home, we had only a few boxes left of
our original 5 cases. We were not on an ammo conservation
hunt! By afternoon the weather cleared, we dispatched 45
crows/jackdaws, all decoyed (one electric “flapper” and one
electric “pecking” crow both on an electronic delayed timer)
with no calling. I folded two crows with one shot -- my 3rd
lifetime Scottish double. Three days later I beat my own
record in a manner I could never have predicted. The BIG
news for my second day was the taking of my first
Woodpigeon!
The Woodpigeon is Britain’s major agricultural bird pest
and one of the world’s most popular sporting species. It is
legal to shoot all year around and makes good and cheap
eating. The “woodie” is the largest pigeon, occurring both
singly and in flocks and sometimes in large flocks. They are
predominately gray with a white patch on each side of the
neck of adults and have a characteristic broad white bar on
each wing. They are the only pigeon with white wing bars and
their wings tend to clatter on takeoff. With their white
wing bars, they are easy to spot at great distances. For
those of us who might remember, their wing bars are
reminiscent of the painted white stripes on the wings of
Allied aircraft used in WW II for the Normandy invasion.

Wood Pigeon
On the third day we saw the Farnborough Air Show. Of
special interest were British World War II aircraft: the
Lancaster (a British 4-engine bomber) Spitfire and Hurricane
fighters (these planes won the “Battle of Britain”), plus
Russian MiGs, V-22 Osprey, the new Typhoon and Euro-fighters
and the British precision flying team, the Red Arrows.
Not until the fourth day was I formally introduced to the
Woodpigeon. With my Beretta 391 in hand complete with my
“anointed” .020 choke tightened into place, I started
thinking of Crow-Verbs; Verses #7.5 and #8’s. King Arthur
would be saying about now “that a great victory will be
wrought on the field of honor” and all that is missing is my
shinning armor and noble steed. After today I thought, I
will be Sir Woody, the Pigeon Slayer of Winchester.
The afternoon of day four was just fantastic. I had
noticed “Woodies” using a flight path all morning. Jason
said they almost certainly would be returning on the same
path in the afternoon. I positioned myself near a wood line
and as Big Ben struck twice (about 100 miles away and I
could not hear it.. but I just knew it was striking) I
experienced some of the best and most challenging wing
shooting I have ever had. It is called “flighting” or
shooting the flyways.
Woodpigeon shooting is a huge sport in England and it is
easy for me to see why. I slayed 71 woodies, missed tons of
others, made some great shots but was mostly humiliated by
this big and very fast bird. They are the “Corsair” of the
pigeon breed and a powerhouse of a bird. Measuring the
woodpigeon against my gun, I found the head reaches the
middle of the trigger guard and the tail touches the recoil
pad. This bird is twice the size of our pigeons, very
evasive and tough to bring down, a formidable target indeed.
Some very fine BBQ at Jason’s for dinner ended this very
fine day.

Wood Pigeon's Size
From this point forward in my trip, the Woodpigeon became
the object of each days hunt, though we continued to kill
crows/jackdaws. One quick note about Jackdaws is in order
here. When I did use my crow call, the jackdaws responded
very quickly, much more quickly than the crows. Jackdaws
when responding, make quick tight turns to come at you with
very little sound other than some of their high pitched
tweeting or whistling. They are very challenging targets and
interesting birds.
The weather on day five was hot for the locals but quite
nice for this Southern boy. Temps were in the mid 80’s with
low humidity. I made more personal history mid-morning. I
was in a makeshift blind that I had put together shooting
crows/jackdaws and an occasional woodie. Around 10 o’clock,
I heard the telltale squeaking of a bunch of jackdaws. A
flock of about 20 birds had been pulled in by the motion
decoys and was now overhead. I took the last bird in the
flight. It tumbled into the pasture. The entire flock
circled back to investigate what had happened. The flock was
again in my gun range. I fired and killed two with one shot!
Amazingly, the flock circled yet again. I shot again. This
time three birds rolled out with a single load of #7 ½’s. A
Scottish Triple? Fantastic! Finally, before the flock could
escape completely, I managed to drill a straggler to make a
TBC of 7 with 4 shots in about 15 seconds!!!
That ended my pursuit of crows/jackdaws for the day.
After lunch, I certainly wanted to get back to some
‘flighting’ on my woodpigeon flyway!

that IS me in the hog parlor...and if you
look closely... you will see a dead wood pigeon falling...
they fall for 50 or more yards.. they are flying so fast.
The second they hit the ground.. the hogs ate them.. I felt
so good.. I was feeding the locals...
Jason went home for lunch but I could not think of
eating. I asked him to let me hang out at the farm and
suggested he return when he could. He agreed. I got to my
“position” before 1 o’clock. The action was slow and it was
warm. By 3 pm I had killed only 11 woodies. Jason returned
about then, took up a position 75 yards north of me just in
time for the beginning of a barnburner. In the next 2 ½
hours I killed 62 more birds in some absolutely fantastic
shooting. Jason added a bunch to that total. The 23 woodies
I killed with my last 29 shots was easily my best shooting
of the trip. They come at you like F-16’s and when killed
they “fall” for 50 yards. When they popped over the tree
line, it was like shooting a bullet with bullets. I had a
scant second or two from seeing one to pulling the trigger.
As Jason puts it quite correctly “they are always on a
‘mission’ flying as fast as possible”. He made lots of fine
long shots and after a couple of them I heard him say “that
was a cracker” or a good shot. I came home with several new
hunting expressions.
I think I have failed to mention that my “position” was
in a hog parlor. There were lots of large hogs there to keep
me company. It also happened to be a breeding parlor with
lots of ‘activity’. It will suffice to say all the
inhabitants were quite friendly with each other and hardly
paid any attention to me except when a bird fell into the
lot. The instant a pigeon/crow/jackdaw hit the ground it was
gobbled up. On two occasions, I saw birds caught in mid-air
after one bounce. The hogs also chewed some of my empty
hulls and the noise of enamel against low brass ammo was
quite loud. Fortunately, none were swallowed.
It was a rewarding feeling knowing I was helping feed the
“locals” and to keep their strength up for the tasks at
hand!!
Our next to last day was the only day we shot woodies
over decoys. Jason has very effective electric motion
Woodpigeon decoys as well. One can kill hundreds of
woodpigeons this way on a good day (over 900 in one article
I read). Although our luck was not that good, I did see how
the birds decoyed readily and with full confidence. They
just plow right in and land when fooled. Decoy shooting is
easier than flighting. I bagged 28 birds over a wheat field
in some fine action. Best memory of the day was the sudden
appearance of two woodies that had slipped unnoticed into
the decoys and were making a hasty escape. Simultaneous
shots from both Jason and I puffed the two birds. That was
either excellent teamwork or pure luck!! Either way, both
shots were “crackers’.
Our last day was windy and cool. Jason had family
business to tend to so I spent the day on the farms.
Conditions were less than ideal but that was of no matter. I
knew it would probably be the last time I would see
Woodpigeons and the British variety of crow and jackdaw. I
realized we had not seen any Rooks or magpies in gun range
during the week but that was my luck. While I stood at the
ready, I reflected on the week just passed and was very
happy to relax and enjoy my surroundings. The action was
slow but steady. I managed 23 crows, 21 woodpigeons and 6
‘feral’ or ordinary pigeons before unloading for the last
time.
That evening I took Jason, Sue and Charlotte to dinner.
It was a bit of an emotional night for me. My experiences
there will never be forgotten and will always be
appreciated. Jason has a standing invitation to visit the
USA and North Carolina anytime. Although Jason has never
flown in an airplane, I told him a trans-Atlantic first
flight would quickly make him a veteran!
Since most all of our shooting was done in the open, I
cannot wait to expose Jason to the nature of run & gun
action. I admit the thought of ‘sticking’ Jason in a Pine
thicket while wrapped up in a nice batch of red briars does
produce a grin. It will be a treat for both of us!
My humble appreciation goes to Jason and his family for
inviting me to come and for surviving my visit. The Queen
could not have given me a warmer welcome or shown me more
hospitality. Thank you Jason, Sue, and Charlotte, for your
kindness and to Rob Cook who graciously let me use his 391
Beretta. I hope I did not teach it any bad manners. I
returned appreciating what we Americans have more than ever.
We are truly blessed.