On the eve of the Glorious Twelfth, the traditional start of the shooting season, the Scottish Gamekeepers Association says the sport needs to be sustained at a time when jobs are increasingly scarce.
Critics such as the League Against Cruel Sports have called the practice “barbaric” and insist the money spent on shoots would be diverted to other country pursuits if it was banned.
Alex Hogg, chairman of the gamekeepers’ association, said landowners’ wealth helped to keep rural schools open and supported local employment, while the upkeep of grouse moors was a key part of Scotland’s diverse landscape. “This is a modern industry creating jobs but it also about visitors’ impressions of Scotland,” he said. What Mr Hogg does not mention is the fact that on most keepered moorland their sport is only sustainable because many grouse predating raptors are being slaughtered.
“I don’t think the Disney Pixar animators of Brave, for example, would have wanted to make a film about a country covered in blanket bracken and trees.
“People admire Scotland’s diversity of landscape, its well-managed heather moorlands teeming with wildlife being a huge part of that attraction.”
‘Barbaric’
A study by Strathclyde University in 2010 found that grouse shooting sustained 1,072 jobs and contributed £23.3m to the economy each year.
This year the Glorious Twelfth has been delayed until August 13 because the season legally cannot start on a Sunday.
Despite snow and rain causing fluctuations in grouse breeding success, the association believes any boost to the rural economy is “crucial”.
Mr Hogg said: “What must be understood is that these people are creating and supporting local employment, keeping schools in remote communities open and ensuring that there are opportunities for young people to remain in these towns and villages.
“I don’t think this is something to belittle, especially in the current economic landscape with zero growth now forecast for the UK in 2012. It is something which should be embraced.
“To put it another way, if the Scottish economy was to lose its grouse shooting jobs, the Government’s welfare bill would rocket by millions overnight and I doubt if politicians or the general public would want to see that.”
Joe Duckworth, chief executive of The League Against Cruel Sports, said: “It beggars belief that a practice so barbaric in its entirety is allowed to continue in this day and age.
“Each year, from August to December, picturesque moorlands are invaded by groups of men and even children armed with guns, having paid for the pleasure of shooting and injuring thousands of terrified birds.
“If this bloodsport were banned, the people who pay many thousands for the right to blast wildlife from the skies wouldn’t simply stop spending their money. It would be spent elsewhere in the economy.”


Ironically…unlike Alex the Sage, I know what I am talking about!
I have actually been to see Brave! And guess what Alex…the outdoor scenes of the movie are set in thick woodland (not a pheasant in sight). In fact wild bears feature very prominantly in the Scottish woodlands….up for anonther introduction to keep Disney Pixar onboard?
So yet again Alex…not a clue.
Pity most of the 30 million goes to line the pockets of wealthy land-owning peers.