WOODCOCK SHOOTING eiiie, 
more extraordinary labor, and consequent fatigue, im- 
posed on the dogs, the latter being an indispensable 
factor in the sport if any success worth considering is 
sought. While intrinsically the sport possesses all the 
requirements of the highest degree of wing shooting, 
the writers on it have deemed it fitting that it be 
dressed in a glamor of romance, presumably that a lit- 
tle knowledge might be presented in an elaboration of 
high colors which touched on the sky, the sunshine 
as it glinted through the alders, the beautiful color of 
the foliage, the balmy zephyrs laden with nature’s per- 
fumes, ad infinitum, all of which are present in all 
other kinds of shooting, or, indeed, present if there is 
no shooting at all. The shooting of woodcock is diffi- 
cult, it is true, but not so extraordinary in its diff- 
culty as to be distinctly special, and far from being 
so difficult as most shooters make it from injudicious 
selection of guns, loads, etc. 
Woodcock shooting is close shooting, the closest of 
any kind of shooting recognized as legitimate sport 
with the shotgun. While the woodcock is called a 
game bird, it is gentle and mild in its habits, with 
none of the pugnacity or extraordinary vitality pos- 
sessed by members of the grouse family. The small- 
est of shot is sufficiently heavy to kill it, and the cylin- 
der-bore gun is amply close enough for the ranges 
which one must accept in shooting it. The choke bore 
of any kind is out of place in such extremely short 
ranges, and unfit to use on a bird so easily killed; 
though, strange to say, the use of it is not uncommon, 
