THE FOWLER IN IRELAND: 



OR, 



NOTES ON THE HAUNTS AND HABITS OF 

 WILD FOWL AND SEA FOWL, 



INCLUDING 



Instructions in the Art of Shooting and 

 Capturing Them. 



BY 



SIR RALPH PAYNE-GALLWEY, BART. 



I7i One Voliane, ?>vo, 504 pages, £i is. 



With many Illiisiraiiotis of Fowling Experiences, Bii'ds, Boats, 

 Guns, and Implements, draivn by the Author and Mr. 

 C. Whyiniper. 



" No more suitable book for a country house can be imagined during the long winter 

 evenings. ' — Academy. 



•' More particular than ' Folkard's Wildfowler,' and free from the antiquated details 

 of Colonel Hawker's book, this treatise cannot fail to be of service to the sportsman. 

 The first half of this book is so valuable we have not lingered long over the technical 

 details of the other half. Every lover of birds will enjoy the first half of this book." — 

 Atliencenin. 



THE BOOK OF DUCK DECOYS: 



Their Construction, Management, and History. 



BY 



SIR RALPH PAYNE-GALLWEY, BART. 



Crown 4to, cloth, 226 pages, zuith Coloured Plates, Plans, and 

 Woodcuts, ^15^'. 



"We believe that in regard to Antiquarianism, Natural History, or Sporting (and it 

 has something in common with all), it is many years since so original or so curious a 

 volume has appeared." — Spectator. 



"In this handsome volume with its coloured plates and diagrams there is much 

 interesting and even romantic reading. Sir Ralph Payne-Gallwey is an enthusiast in 

 sport, and especially in all manner of wild-fowling." — Times. 



LONDON : 

 GURNEY & JACKSON, i, PATERNOSTER ROW 



(Successors to Mr. Van Voorst). 



