Radnorshire. xit 



Glascwm, and killing him there, within a few miles of 

 Builtli, speaks for itself. It could not have been much 

 less than twenty miles. Another from the big woods 

 near Presteign to the Craigie rocks, and back across 

 the Vale of Radnor to Burvah, covers a fair lot of 

 ground. The West Hereford country has also done 

 well. A fox from close to Kinnersley took them to 

 Lady Lift and Kobin Hood's Butt, and on to Kings' 

 Pyon, where he got on some buildings and managed to 

 dodge them. He was found dead the next morning, two 

 fields further on, however, from over exertion. The field 

 were lost (including the master) in Lady Lift. Would 

 any hounds without a Welsh cross have gone entirely 

 through this immense woodland unaided, and for miles 

 beyond ? Nobody reached them until long after the run 

 was over. 



Mr. Reginald Herbert takes the Monniouthshi]-e, I 

 hear, in succession to Captain Hanbury Williams. 



I have not yet touched on the Worcestershire, although 

 they certainly ought not to be passed by in silence. One 

 day that I have had with them this season at the Red Lion, 

 Holt, has been by some means omitted from my notes. It was 

 not a distinguished day, and yet it is worthy of mention, 

 and shall be added here. 



" On Wednesday, the 11th, I stumbled upon the Wor- 

 cestershire at the Red Lion, Holt. Denton, the new 

 huntsman, had a pretty and workmanlike pack of bitches, 

 and the turn-out was all that it should be. I was amused 

 at the unusual incident of a lady riding up to the meet 

 laden with sandwiches or prog of some kind, which she 

 presented to the huntsman and whips. So big were the 

 parcels that they filled even their capacious pockets. The 

 field dropped in to the tune of fifty or sixty, and away we 



