Syndicates can be effective, depending on how they are run.
Depends as a lot of people seem to want to bi-pass the start at the bottom route, I remember a few year back on here a chap was complaining about no stalking around him, I asked if he shot rabbits/foxes he said " I want to shoot deer" not rabbits/foxes.For many who are ultimately just starting out, including myself, it's pretty much the only route in. Sure you can go on various paid stalks but you're still paying akin to a syndicate and many of the issues in this thread about 'deer management' being a business with aims that aren't conducive to deer management still apply. Otherwise it feels like a total catch 22. You can't get the experience because you can't get the land, you can't get land because you don't have the experience.......
I think this is fair to say but equally hasn't been my experience. I've tried to create various opportunities for myself to learn the fieldcraft side of stalking and help out in any way I can. I've essentially said to people I don't want to go stalking and pull a trigger I want to do everything else from building high seats to ride clearance to shadowing people simply so I can get hands on carcass time. Simply so I can learn. However, this hasn't led to any time on any ground so far etc. I've got one possible lead via the BASC stand by me scheme but otherwise it seems to be a closed shop and I only got that one response to my enquiry. Maybe people are worried that you will try and muscle in on their ground as I've read similar stories on here. Sure my long term goal is to get stalking access but even stating your honest intentions just to learn for as long as it takes doesn't really seem to work. I guess so much of it seems to be luck/right place right time.Depends as a lot of people seem to want to bi-pass the start at the bottom route, I remember a few year back on here a chap was complaining about no stalking around him, I asked if he shot rabbits/foxes he said " I want to shoot deer" not rabbits/foxes.
The experience comes for time on rabbits/rats as it is low power but lots to learn
Small holdings/horse paddocks as the girls dont like rabbit holes = rabbits. How many of those have you tried?I think this is fair to say but equally hasn't been my experience. I've tried to create various opportunities for myself to learn the fieldcraft side of stalking and help out in any way I can. I've essentially said to people I don't want to go stalking and pull a trigger I want to do everything else from building high seats to ride clearance to shadowing people simply so I can get hands on carcass time. Simply so I can learn. However, this hasn't led to any time on any ground so far etc. I've got one possible lead via the BASC stand by me scheme but otherwise it seems to be a closed shop and I only got that one response to my enquiry. Maybe people are worried that you will try and muscle in on their ground as I've read similar stories on here. Sure my long term goal is to get stalking access but even stating your honest intentions just to learn for as long as it takes doesn't really seem to work. I guess so much of it seems to be luck/right place right time.
None to be fair. I was more commenting on trying to get into stalking even if you can get rabbiting etc, which seems to be pretty difficult. To move up you still need to be able to demonstrate experience stalking which is hard to come by outside of syndicates and paid stalks. Personally have a natural anxiety about pulling the trigger at all when I feel under experienced. Don't get me wrong clearly I've culled deer but as a general rule in life I like to be as informed as I can possibly can and getting the hands on time in stalking (outside of actual shooting) is such a challenge. It just goes back to my original point about the usefulness of syndicates but I'm aware the main thrust of the thread was syndicates as an effective deer management vehicle.Small holdings/horse paddocks as the girls dont like rabbit holes = rabbits. How many of those have you tried?
I don't think they are as I posted earlier, however if you want all your eggs in one basket just stick to trying to find stalking, I learn to fish in a small pond as a nipper so later in life the basics were already in place when it came to bigger lakes. Same with rabbits/rats that was in placeNone to be fair. I was more commenting on trying to get into stalking even if you can get rabbiting etc, which seems to be pretty difficult. To move up you still need to be able to demonstrate experience stalking which is hard to come by outside of syndicates and paid stalks. Personally have a natural anxiety about pulling the trigger at all when I feel under experienced. Don't get me wrong clearly I've culled deer but as a general rule in life I like to be as informed as I can possibly can and getting the hands on time in stalking (outside of actual shooting) is such a challenge. It just goes back to my original point about the usefulness of syndicates but I'm aware the main thrust of the thread was syndicates as an effective deer management vehicle.
Sort of like your tag line![]()
Absolutely this!If you want effective deer managers, pay them.
It would be totally unreasonable to expect someone who's paying to stalk - either as a client or a syndicate member - to also be doing the work of a deer manager. Why should they?
That’s precisely what I do with my small syndicate lease nothing is hidden all paperwork is distributed to all members.Maybe that's what I'm doing wrong. I run my syndicates on a not for profit basis. When the rent invoice comes in, I send it out to the syndicate members and we each pay an equal share.
Regards
JCS