To be honest, I'd have been disappointed in you if you didn'tErr I use lead![]()
On video, old bill not interested.50+ dead birds in a pen, all with missing heads, sounds more like you need to step up your pest control.
(Unless, of course, you've got some footage of the scallywags with the catapults in action?)
And they made a great noise with great knock down power loved them, but were in short supply ammo of choice for plump young mallard and close herring gull tempted by a snack. Best not continue for fear of incriminating self1/2"" steel nuts were our ammo of choice pinch them in the hole between finger and thumb in the pouch they are deadly far more accurate than stones or ball bearings
To be fair you did question what the OP was doing on this forum, somewhat harsh given the thread and it’s contents!I have no problem referring to people who leave 50+ dead birds in a pen with heads cut off, having knocked them out of the trees with a "catty", for bets as sick scum.
Each to his own but if the remark describes you than I stand by it. It was never intended to refer to the author of thread neither did it read so.
I think it should be made a requirement for joining this site:
Before the age of 10 years you must have hunted game illegally using a home-made catapult or bow-and-arrow.
It's only the modern sportsman, often from a non-rural background, who is too virtuous to have succumbed to the primeval instinct in his early years.
It also explains why genuine fieldcraft is a dying art, and why we now have a new "thing" called bushcraft, which always seems to take place within spitting distance of a large 4x4, and only at weekends.AKA the T.O.T's (Townies in Tweeds)...
Uncommon species but easily spotted due to their disposition for driving spotless Land/Range Rovers, and lack of unhealthy habits such as smoking or chewing tobacco...
Lol those bushcrafters you speak off are really just campers redefined to sound cool, I've been practicing bushcraft for a decade i now teach , its an everyday learning curve, no 4x4 in sight for me, im an off the beaten track kinda guy on 2 feet those are the best places usually undisturbedIt also explains why genuine fieldcraft is a dying art, and why we now have a new "thing" called bushcraft, which always seems to take place within spitting distance of a large 4x4, and only at weekends.
All the gear and no idea, hunting with a catty or air rifle will definitely teach you fieldcraft through much tril and error , for me that is the best way to learnI think a lot of us of a certain age were a lot more fortunate than a lot of others. certainly 'fieldsports' be it catapaults bird nesting ferreting air rifles and pistols were things of my late childhood and early adolescence ! Followed by terriers lurcher and shotguns
What was tolerated back in the 70s is most certainly frowned upon and likely to find you on the wrong side of the law
I chuckle when I see a certain type of fieldsportsman now decked out head to toe in barbour or harkila or such with a 5k firearm and all the bells and whistles call it inverted snobbery or such
Ee when I was a ladlol
Ah, but what sort of people are you teaching? What's their background and why do they want to do it? And, more to the point, why didn't they do it when they were kids? Is it really something you can learn as an adult? I guess that's the difference between fieldcraft and what's commonly referred to as "bushcraft". Fieldcraft is something that's in you from a young age, almost an instinct, whereas bushcraft has become a weekend hobby that people go on courses to experience.Lol those bushcrafters you speak off are really just campers redefined to sound cool, I've been practicing bushcraft for a decade i now teach , its an everyday learning curve, no 4x4 in sight for me, im an off the beaten track kinda guy on 2 feet those are the best places usually undisturbed
Hahahaha yeah I'm still building huts and lighting fires albeit a bit more polishedI think a lot of us of a certain age were a lot more fortunate than a lot of others. certainly 'fieldsports' be it catapaults bird nesting ferreting air rifles and pistols were things of my late childhood and early adolescence ! Followed by terriers lurcher and shotguns
What was tolerated back in the 70s is most certainly frowned upon and likely to find you on the wrong side of the law
I chuckle when I see a certain type of fieldsportsman now decked out head to toe in barbour or harkila or such with a 5k firearm and all the bells and whistles call it inverted snobbery or such
Ee when I was a ladlol
Bushcraft lol you mean all the stuff we did as kids and teenagers as perfectly normal activities
Ah, but what sort of people are you teaching? What's their background and why do they want to do it? And, more to the point, why didn't they do it when they were kids? Is it really something you can learn as an adult? I guess that's the difference between fieldcraft and what's commonly referred to as "bushcraft". Fieldcraft is something that's in you from a young age, almost an instinct, whereas bushcraft has become a weekend hobby that people go on courses to experience.

Killed a Kingfisher with a catapult aged 9, and a mynah bird with a blowpipe aged 13, beat that! (Blowpipe illegal under the 1988 Criminal Justice Act)
The Criminal Justice Act 1988 (Offensive Weapons) Order 1988
Section 141 of the Criminal Justice Act 1988 provides that any person who manufactures, sells or hires or offers for sale or hire, exposes or has in his possession for the purpose of sale or hire, or lends or gives to any other person, a weapon to which that section applies shall be guilty of an...www.legislation.gov.uk
I'll add that this was in a former colony which had no such laws to the contrary...
Coming from where you do big lad I would have thought that was in the genes!Hahahaha yeah I'm still building huts and lighting fires albeit a bit more polished![]()
Vinnie Jones has been featured catapult hunting on Fieldsports Channel on several occasions. Pretty impressive accuracy I thought. I've never met the man myself, but he seems to be quite popular. I guess he must be sick scum too?
Anyone who didn't spend part of their childhood hunting with catapults and other home-made implements had a pretty poor upbringing, imo. My dad made me my first catty. Made one for himself at the same time. We never did get a pheasant with one, but we spent many happy hours trying!