Mark Hawthorne,
Striking
at the Roots
May 2018
It’s a form of direct action known as hunt sabotage, and the activists engaged in it are known as hunt saboteurs (or simply hunt sabs). The hunt sabs also sometimes use horns to confuse the dogs and Citronella spray to prevent them from getting onto the scent of the animals.
Visit Hunt Saboteurs Association (UK)
Visit American Hunt Saboteurs Association
Sabs close in on hunters and hounds. Photo courtesy of the Hunt Saboteurs
Association.
Using dogs to hunt small mammals—most notably foxes, who are often
considered “pests”—has been an unfortunate part of British society for
hundreds of years. As red-coated hunters on horseback follow, trained dogs
with a keen sense of smell chase the scent of a fox through the countryside
until they catch and kill their prey. A law banning the blood sport, known
as the Hunting Act, came into force in February of 2005, making it illegal
to hunt foxes, hares, minks, and deer with hounds in England and Wales. (A
similar ban had been passed in Scotland in 2002.)
But many—many—hunters refuse to give up on this cruel activity and
have sought loopholes and other means to continue. One such solution was
their creation of a sort of hybrid pastime called “trail hunting,” in which
the dogs and hunters ostensibly only follow a scent (often fox urine) laid
by a hunt enthusiast, and no prey animal is killed. At least that’s how it
works in theory. Dogs don’t often follow the rules, however, and they
frequently come upon foxes and chase and kill them. When this happens, the
hunt organizers inevitably call it “an accident.”
Foxes suffer horrible deaths when they are caught by the dogs.
Working to keep the hunters honest—and animals alive—are campaigners who
go into the countryside armed with video cameras to closely monitor and even
disrupt the hunts, something they’ve been doing since long before the
Hunting Act. It’s a form of direct action known as hunt sabotage, and the
activists engaged in it are known as hunt saboteurs (or simply hunt sabs).
The hunt sabs also sometimes use horns to confuse the dogs and Citronella
spray to prevent them from getting onto the scent of the animals.
II recently spoke with Alfie Moon of the Hunt Saboteurs Association (HSA),
one of the most active groups in the UK, about his work as a hunt sab.
Can you give us a little information on your background? How long
have you been an activist and how did you get started?
I have been an activist for as long as I can remember. My mum and sisters
were anti-apartheid campaigners. I remember putting ‘Don’t Buy Apartheid’
stickers on apples in supermarkets when I was a kid! By the time I was in my
teens, I was heavily into CND [campaign for nuclear disarmament] and
anti-racist stuff.
Do you remember the first time you went out hunt sabbing? What
was your experience like?
II started sabbing when I was about 17 after running into a hunt on a country
lane when I was out on my bike. I must have known that hunting existed, but
it wasn’t high on my list of priorities until I met the arrogant bastards
for the first time. I wasn’t part of any organised group, but I continued to
disrupt hunts—probably to no real effect—every time I came across them. In
1996 I was introduced to the Croydon sab group. I was quickly shown how to
effectively disrupt a hunt. The group was very welcoming, and I am still
friends with many of them after all this time. I have sabbed almost every
weekend since then.
What impact does hunt sabbing have on hunting? Is it a successful
model of activism?
Hunt sabotage is very effective. In the days before the Hunting Act, hunts
would kill four to six foxes every time they went out un-sabbed. If sabs
were present, kills were rare. Since the Act, sabbed hunts have to be
extremely cautious and many are now genuinely trail hunting when sabs are
present. Hunt sabotage helped to keep hunting in the news, and undoubtedly
contributed to the legislation.
Are there any special skills or physical abilities required to be a
hunt saboteur?
There are many desirable skills for a hunt saboteur. Understanding how
the hunt operates is crucial to disrupting it. It helps if you can run like
the wind, navigate, and give clear, concise radio messages, and being able
to blow a hunting horn correctly is a massive bonus. Not every sab will have
all of the necessary skills, but effective teamwork overcomes that problem.
What’s a hunting horn?
The hunting horn is a small musical instrument used by the Huntsman to give
instructions to the hounds. Different tunes have different meanings. Sabs
learn to play the horn, usually blowing the ‘come back’ when hounds are
chasing something. Sabs also use homemade whips to make a noise that tells
the hounds they are doing the wrong thing when they are after live quarry.
[Here’s a quick demonstration of the hunting horn.]
Besides the hunting horn, what are some of the tools and equipment
hunt sabs use?
The key pieces of equipment for hunt sabs are a video camera, phone, GPS, OS
[ordnance survey] map, gizmo [a loudspeaker playing a recording of hounds
barking excitedly as the follow a scent], and Citronella spray.
What do you do with the video you record of the hunts?
The video cameras are mainly a deterrent, both against illegal hunting and
hunt violence. They don’t always work! Unfortunately, the Hunting Act is so
badly worded that the level of proof required for a conviction is incredibly
high. Sabs will review video footage of the day and decide if it is worth
passing to the authorities, but the police and CPS [Crown Prosecution
Service] usually claim there is insufficient evidence for a prosecution.
Most of the more damning sab video therefore ends up on social media, where,
I suspect, we are predominantly preaching to the converted!
What is your best advice for activists who would like to participate
in hunt sabs?
My advice to anyone who wants to become a sab is to get in touch with their
local group, get out there, and see how it goes. Sabbing isn’t for everyone,
but until you try it, you can’t know.
What keeps you going after all your years of activism?
What keeps me going after more than 30 years of activism is this quote: “The
only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.”
Note: There is an HSA branch in the United States, where plenty of hunting activity is ripe for disruption - American Hunt Saboteurs Association.
You will find more information about hunt sabbing and many other forms of activism in the new, expanded edition of Striking at the Roots: A Practical Guide to Animal Activism, to be published this November.
Return to: Animal Rights Activist Strategies