I'm not paranoid...but I think they are out to get me.

Due at one of our permissions this morning. There will be three Guns out, me, a guest, and a regular who will be late because he has to take his dog to the vets first.

So at 0330 (ish) I am bimbling through the English countryside in my trusty old 110. There is little other traffic on the roads - just the way I like it.

Just before some roadworks, I am aware of a set of headlights behind me that seem "unnatural". I drive below the speed limit (even at 0330 hours) and most traffic is happy to overtake me and I always facilitate that. This fella did not want to overtake.

Up ahead there is a steep section of road, which turns into a dual carriageway. I assume he will take the off-side and be on his way. But no. He is hanging back. I need to turn right at the top of the dual carriageway and indicate that I will be moving over to the off-side lane which will allow him to safely "undertake' me. He declines to do so.

I am now concerned about who this is, and what they want. I take the right at the top of the dual carriage way. He follows on.

We are now in deep dark country roads territory. There is a cross-roads up ahead. I utilise a technique (legal but alarming to see) to take the cross-roads without undue hesitation.

He does the same. Then he hit the blues. I am looking in the rear-view and can see two halogen headlamps and a blue strip light. I cannot make out if the vehicle is 'marked' or not.

I give him two flashes with the hazards to let him know that I have seen him. I will not stop until I am satisfied it is the Police or I can make my way to a lit area - there is a nearby petrol station and hospital. He follows me for about a mile when suddenly there is a big house with lights showing onto the road. I pull over.

Turning in my seat to see what is approaching, I see a dark figure wearing a face-mask - I am straining to see any sign of uniform. Eventually he stands outside my driver's door and motions for me to turn off my engine. I note his uniform, taser and body-worn camera. I also note his partner take up position just behind my driver's door.

"Why did you not stop when you saw the blue lights?'

"I was going to stop when it was safe for me, to do so'?

"Well I have just called this in as a 'fail to stop'"


At about 40 mph for about a mile, it is perhaps the dullest Police chase I have ever been involved in. I decide it is prudent to not tell him that.

It is soon established that I do not have my driving licence with me, the vehicle is taxed and insured and is (in fact ) registered to my wife.

It is explained that the reason I have been stopped is the vehicle I am driving (Landrover 110) and the time of day. I have absolutely no issue with that. It is in fact, the very same reason given by the young Sergeant who stopped me about two years ago in the same lane.

The Police driver explains that he could report me for 'without due care' at the cross-roads. I explain why I did what I did, and am told that that would be a defence for the Magistrate to hear.
Fine I will tell them if I have to.

I then explain the reason I did not stop immediately was because (notwithstanding the blue lights) I could not make out if their vehicle was 'marked'.

I leaned out of the truck and look back at their car - I could still not make out any 'Battenberg' markings.

The PC suggested that perhaps he need to give me an eyesight test. This annoys me. I cannot see marking on their car because it is dark, they have two halogen lights filling my rear-view and a blue flashing strip.


In any case, Section 96 of the Road Traffic Act 1988 provides this power for Police to test your eyesight -the test can only be carried out between 8am and 9pm, and only in daylight.

I decide discretion is the better part of valour and decline to educate him on the Act.

Somehow we manage to part without FPNs or Summons being issued. I wish them both a safe night and wonder if that was his politest ever stop.

Just a simple, routine traffic stop - perhaps he was tired, perhaps he was a wee bit 'hyped' from the 'chase' but it was a great reminder how much of an impression every encounter with the public can leave on that member of public.

Anyhoo!


Back on mission.

Park up at the top of the fields. Kit up and yomp in to the seat. The vermin have completely eaten the insulation pipe and sniper tape and so I have come armed with plastic pipes (salvaged on a litter-pick) and more sniper tape. It is still only 0430 so I work quickly using a hacksaw and head-torch.

By 0500 I am settled and eating a sandwich and drinking from a flask of vile coffee.

The TI picks up a hare, a fox (which at some point is spooked by the light from the thermal eyepiece) and off in the distance a Roe.

By about 0700 I have switched over to the binocular. At about 140 yards is a deer browsing the tree line from left to right,. I cannot sex the best until about 0715.

I have placed the Vorn across the (newly repaired ) gun rail of the seat, and the shot, when it come looks good.

Wating ten minutes, I dismount and make my way across to the shot site. No sign of a dead deer. No paint. No pins.

I take off the onesie and a couple of extra layers. After an hour there is not a trace. Our syndicate dog is at the vets. this morning. Typical. I may have to call out the 'professionals'.

I go and bring the truck down to the shot site. I scan with the TI from the roof of the truck - nothing. I use the binocular through the woods - nothing. I walk the boundary of the wood - nothing.

Last week's story from @Woodsmoke starts to ring bells.

I am close to giving up. "Get back in there and criss-cross the wood".

Then at the last knockings I see her. She has turned into the wood, run about 100 yards and then fallen into a hollow the size of a two-story building. The drag out reminded me of the Highlands.

A suspended gralloch on a nearby tree and she comes in at 18kg dressed.

Quite the morning...








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Nicely-done! I'm still smarting over last Friday's loss to be honest. Hopefully tomorrow I can get out and set myself straight again.

I was once on my way home down the A90 from work. Cruise control set at 70, and I'm just bimbling my way down the dual carriageway, looking forward to the weekend. I passed a marked police car travelling at somewhere between 60/70 and thought little of it until a few hundred yards or so further on and I indicated left to exit at Forfar. Police car did the same, and again I thought nothing of it as Forfar has it's own police station and I assumed he was on his way there. But no, instead he followed me round and onto the Glamis road. Bimbling on, I assumed my initial thought had been incorrect and he had business elsewhere that coincided with my route home. Indeed that proved to be the case, and his blues came on telling me that I was that particular piece of business. Crapping myself in case there was a forgotten murder victim in my boot, that my face was on the CCTV captured during a jewellery heist, or that somehow I'd forgotten about 2kg of cocaine I had stashed in the car, I pulled into the next layby and idly wondered who would be the best person to look after my dogs while I was in prison :-|

His explanation that I'd been stopped because I was 'driving quite carefully', and this 'raised suspicion' had to be taken at face value and my my immediate instinct to question his parentage, present worth, and future prospects was tempered by my remembering the tale of the Dundee lad who was once stopped by the police. On discovering his MOT, insurance, driving license, and vehicle registration were all in order they apparently were left with no other option other than to charge him with wasting police time . . . . . :lol:
 
Did the fact that you had a rifle and knife (knives) on board come into the conversation?
Funny thing.

I have now been stopped twice in two years (roughly the same time) and exactly the same lane.

The reason given "Landrover and time of day" exactly the same - I have no problem with. It makes perfect Policing sense, and I am glad they are out and about and doing pro-active stuff.

On neither occasion did anyone ask about firearms or knives. On both occasions I had both on board.:-|
 
Funny thing.

I have now been stopped twice in two years (roughly the same time) and exactly the same lane.

The reason given "Landrover and time of day" exactly the same - I have no problem with. It makes perfect Policing sense, and I am glad they are out and about and doing pro-active stuff.

On neither occasion did anyone ask about firearms or knives. On both occasions I had both on board.:-|

Funnily enough, every time I have conversed with an Officer in the middle of the night they have only ever been very pleased to see me with a gun!

Alan
 
Glad to hear it all worked out successfully.

Your encounter with the police reminds me of one of my own.

Very early one morning, many years ago now, I was driving in my old Land Cruiser with my stalking mentor along our normal country lane route to the stalking ground when a car passed in the opposite direction. I could see from the reflection as it passed that it was a police car. A minute later I saw blue flashing lights in my rear view mirror. With no other traffic it was obvious what was about to happen, so I waited until the next suitable layby before pulling in. Sure enough, the patrol car pulled in behind and a male and a female officer got out and approached the vehicle.

I wound the window down:

"Is this your vehicle sir?"

"Yes"

"Can you please explain then why it is registered to a Mrs Gunn at this address?"

"Yes. She's my wife and that's our home address." (cue a somewhat crestfallen look)

"Can you please explain the purpose of your journey?"

"Yes, we are off to rendezvous with clients to take them deer stalking."

"Deer stalking???"

"Yes, hence why we are dressed in camo, have two rifles on the back seat, and that big box in case we are lucky enough to shoot a deer or two."

At this point my mentor, a recently retired Brigadier who retained a significant air of authority, leant across me and said:

"How long is this going to take? If you hold us up much longer I am going to have to call our clients and apologise for keeping them waiting."

The female police officer had, by this stage, shone her torch through the back window of the Land Cruiser and realised that all the talk of rifles was true. She had a word with her colleague and the next thing I heard was:

"Very sorry. We stopped you because we are on the lookout as there have been several reports recently of gangs of foreign gentlemen driving round in 4-wheel drives searching out isolated homes and breaking into them."

My mentor, now turning a somewhat alarming shade of red, replied with:

"Do we look like a [expletive deleted] bunch of foreign gentlemen???!!!"

"No sir, you don't sir, thank you sir, enjoy your deer stalking sir."

Having myself been the recipient of the hairdryer treatment from my mentor, my sympathies were now definitely with the two officers.

They returned somewhat sheepishly to their patrol car and pulled out of the layby onto the road ahead of us. We followed them for a few minutes until arriving at the rendezvous where I indicated and pulled over. I swear I heard a sigh of relief coming from the patrol car as they sped away.
 
Any explanation as to how it managed to run so far? Bullet, calibre, shot placement. Roe aren't exactly the toughest deer on the planet after all.
 
To be honest if I saw a masked person approaching my vehicle no matter what they were driving I would drive on and phone 999.
 
To be honest if I saw a masked person approaching my vehicle no matter what they were driving I would drive on and phone 999.
The fact he was wearing a surgical "C19" mask (in the open air?) bothered me not.

It was the fact that I could not see they were a 'liveried' vehicle, nor could I make out their uniforms until they were at the side of my truck.

I do not think it unreasonable to acknowledge their presence and continue on (not tear off at full throttle) until such time as you come to a more public place, rather than stop in an unlit, deserted country road.

To be fair to the Officer, I think he got that.
 
Ah a surgical mask got you .I pictured a full face mask for some reason .You we’re well within your rights to drive to a safe ,lit area .I was pulled on a lane at night once and the copper said why did you stop here .My reply didn’t help my cause I fear .
 
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