262 



BIG GAME SHOOTING 



legs with horns hke a small sambur, the brow antlers coming 

 straight up from the burr at an acute angle without the hand- { 

 some curve of those of the spotted deer. The stags are \ 

 reddish brown, their hair coarse and thick, their tails rather J 

 long and exactly of the sambur type, their ears round, not j 

 pointed like a spotted deer. When galloping through the grass ^ 

 the hogdeer carries its head low, its horns laid back on the \ 



Hogdeer shooting 



neck, and its rump high. It 

 is found throughout the high 

 grass swamps at the foot of 

 the Himalayas and on the* 

 islands and banks of the big \ 

 rivers. High grass and plenty of water are its chief requisites. 

 It extends through Assam to Burmah, and is also found in 

 Ceylon. \ 



It is usually shot when^beating the large tracts of grass in the j 

 Doon and Terai with a line of elephants, and affords pretty i 

 snap shooting from a howdah when better game is not expected. 

 The does will squat in the grass till the elephants almost kick 

 them up, but the way to get the best stags is to go well ahead ji 



