The most Complete and Exhaustive Work on General Sport 



yet Published. 



Third Edition (Cloth Gilt extra), 12s. 6d. net. 



BROADLAND SPORT. 



Written and Illustrated by NICHOLAS EVERITT. 



Author of " Shots from a Lawyer's Gun," etc. 

 Also an Edition de Luxe, bound in Half-Vellum, with numerous 

 Photogravure Plates, beautifully printed on special art paper, and 

 limited to loo copies, handsomely bound in Half-Vellum, Gilt Top 

 and Silk Marker, each numbered and signed by the Author, price 

 £2 2s. net ; only a few copies left for sale. 



Leading Contents.— ^e^s and Eel BohUiuj— Decoys, and How to 

 Use Them — Wild Folding at Sea — Piint Gunning — Cnrres and 

 Short-ivinged Fowl — Wildfowling Costume— Shore Shooting — 

 Flighting — HicUing District — Horsey District — The Waveney 

 Valley— The Tare Valley — Yachts and Yachting from ISSO 

 to 1900, etc. 



PRE5S OPINIONS. 



" In acquaintance with the details of all the forms of sport 

 presented by the district of the Broads the author of 'Shots 

 from a Lawyer's Gun' can hardly be rivalled, and, with the 

 knowledge he possesses, a succinct guide to the locality might 

 easily have been produced. As it is, he has given us a number 

 of articles which have appeared from time to time in various 

 periodicals, and although the volume in which these have been 

 collected is well worth reading, especially by visitors to Norfolk 

 and Suffolk, we think that it might have been materially improved 

 by a little more pains. For those who enjoy angling for ' coarse ' 

 fish the information given will undoubtedly prove useful, 

 especially the appendix on the origin and application of the 

 fishery laws, the by-laws for the control of pleasure and other 

 boats, tables of tides, distances, etc, An interesting chapter is 

 devoted to the management of ' decoys,' by which is meant the 

 exhibition of either living or imitation ducks to attract wild birds 

 within reach of the sportsman's ambush ; also on approaching 

 birds by the aid of a canvas body representing a horse or an 

 ass, the illustrations of this being very amusing. In fact, all 

 the productions of Mr. Everitt's pencil show considerable 

 power, and some of the vignettes are beautiful. On the whole, 

 the book is pleasantly written, and the account of yachting on 

 the Broads, with illustrations of the competitors in the regattas, 

 IS admirable. The index also leaves nothing to be desireci." — 

 Athencctiin. 



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