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Welcome to the East of Scotland Association for Wildfowling and
Conservation. Please use the links in the navigation bar above to
move around our website.
Wildfowling
Wildfowling is the pursuit of wild fowl in wild places. As a
shooting sport it is unique in that success depends more upon the
wildfowler's knowledge of the habits and habitat of his quarry than
upon his marksmanship skills. It is, however, more than just a sport.
For those who have responded to the call of a wild estuary, fowling
can become a way of life, a consuming passion which leads them
relentlessly to seek a better understanding of the birds which inhabit
the land and water beyond the tideline.
In the eyes of many folk, the wildfowler must appear to be a very
strange individual. Whether he sets out on a mild October morning,
battles against the gale of a November storm or endures frozen fingers
in late December, the longshore gunner is privy to a world which is
known to only a tiny proportion of 21st-Century mankind. The marshes
and saltings below the sea wall, especially in mid-winter, constitute
one of the last remaining areas of true wilderness to be found in this
crowded country. When the rest of the nation is asleep, a solitary
wildfowler can experience a communion with nature which is well-nigh
impossible in any other setting.
Not only will he share his world with a rich multitude of genuinely
wild fauna, he will encounter weather conditions which would send most
of his compatriots scurrying for sanctuary. To be successful at his
craft he must learn to read the natural signs - wind, tide and moon -
and become thoroughly familiar with the topography of his chosen
estuary. Dawn and dusk will become as significant to him as "News at
Ten" is to his city-bound brethren.
All the fowler's senses play their part in revealing to him the full
wonder of this environment. He sees dark storm clouds scudding across
a slowly lightening sky. He hears the ebb and flow of tides and the
myriad calling of dozens of species of shore birds. He smells the
iodine of estuarine vegetation and tastes the salt spray in the air.
All of those combine to fill out the mental images which colour his
anticipation as each new season draws nigh and they are all part of
the memories which sustain him through the days when his gun is safely
locked away in its cupboard.
The east of Scotland contains several of the UK's prime wildfowling
areas - Montrose Basin, the Tay and Eden Estuaries and several sections
of the Firth of Forth. In some place the wildfowling is now restricted
by permit schemes but, in others, it is still pursued in the
traditional manner under the ancient rights of the Scottish foreshore.
If the sport of wildfowling is to survive in the east of Scotland
(and Scotland in general), it is essential that everyone who comes
here for fowling supports this club. There are three categories of
membership: Full Member, Junior Member and Supporter Member.

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