Brackier hunt
The Brackierjagd (also brackish hunting, hunting brackish or loud hunting is) a type of hunting with special hunting dogs, Bracken . It should only be carried out in large, closed areas. In Germany, in accordance with Section 19 (1) No. 16 of the Federal Hunting Act, brackish hunting may only be carried out on areas of at least 1,000 hectares.
Brackets are used for foxes and rabbits and, in Scandinavia, for moose. The dog is strapped, i.e. H. taken off the line and slowly and steadily, with a deep nose, searches for his game in order to follow its track, to chase the game up and to lead it to the hunter . The game follows its usual bills of exchange and passes. When tracking dog to track volume give: a high, excited tone that indicates to the fighter that the dog on a trail and followed the game. He then drives the game in a wide arc towards the shooter who is parked at bills of exchange or passports.
With the advancing cultivation of moors and heaths and the increasing development of forests, brackish hunting is becoming less and less important.
literature
- Ilse Haseder , Gerhard Stinglwagner : Knaur's large hunting dictionary. Droemersche Verlagsanstalt, Munich 1996, (Weltbild-Verlag, Augsburg 2000) ISBN 3-8289-1579-5 .
- Julia Numßen : Handbook hunter language , all technical terms from A - Z compactly explained, Munich 2017, ISBN 978-3-8354-1728-1
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Article at wildundhund.de , accessed on February 5, 2008