178 THE BOOK OF DUCK DECOYS. 



T. Gilbert Skelton made another at the NVV. angle of the lake, and 

 lastly, old George Skelton (junior) and the Rev. Mr. Fountaine added a 

 third and fourth in 1856. Finally, in 1882, as stated, the present Duke 

 of Leeds removed the netting, screens, and hoops to the new Decoy hard 

 by, and completed it with four pipes. Among a variety of birds taken at 

 Hornby a Harlequin Duck once occurred, and was preserved by the late 

 Decoyman, Savage. 



This Decoy averages from 300 to 400 ducks a season, chiefly 

 Mallard and Teal. On one occasion only has 1,000 birds been exceeded : 

 in that instance some 1,500 were taken by Barrett, the present Decoyman. 

 The late Decoyman once captured 250 fowl in a morning, and several 

 times 50 to 60 Duck and Teal have been taken in this Decoy at a drive. 



The Hornby Decoy, like the one at Osgodby, was constructed owing 

 to the successes reported at Mr. Healy's Decoy, in the neighbouring county 

 of Lincoln. The owner of the Hornby Decoy related to me that the 

 Greek guide who was with Lord A. Hervey, Mr. H. Coore, and others, at 

 the time they were captured by brigands, when yachting in the Mediter- 

 ranean, and who arranged their ransom (and maybe captivity), visited 

 Hornby when being entertained in the neighbourhood. 



Nothing he had previously been shown in England aroused his 

 interest so much as seeing the ducks decoyed. 



The treachery and cunning exhibited stirred his national instincts, 

 and he is stated to have returned to his own country vastly impressed 

 with all he saw in the Decoy. 



Perchance he considered whether something of the kind could not 

 be constructed to entrap rich, roving English sportsmen, without the neces- 

 sity of threatening death from behind a rock, a la brigand. 



Thirldeby Park, 3 miles S. of Thirsk. — I have lately (1885) constructed 

 a Decoy here. It consists of i acre of water and has 3 pipes, and 

 resembles in form Lord Lilford's in Northamptonshire, and is shown on 

 the plan facing page 55. 



Coathani, near Redcar. — On the estate of the late Mr. A. H. Turner 

 Newcomen, of Kirkleatham Hall, a Decoy was constructed in Coatham 

 marshes in 1840. The area of ground enclosed for the purpose was about 

 3 acres, with a pool of two acres, the extent of water being occasionally 

 increased when the marsh was flooded. 



