How do you take your partridges? With a sensuous rosé, perhaps? Or maybe a zingy, sparkling white? Then High Field drive at Tuffon Hall in the rolling countryside of north Essex is the place for you, where the birds fizz directly out from between the rows of Pinot Noir and Bacchus, and where top-quality partridge shooting and oenophilia collide. Ten years on from converting 35 of his 1,200 acres to a vineyard, Angus Crowther has a clutch of medals for his wines plus a glittering Purdey Award for game conservation. At Tufton Hall, quality English wines are an accompaniment to a dedicated programme of game and wildlife management.
Fourth generation of his family to own and farm the estate, Crowther has built what was a farm shoot yielding maybe 70 birds once or twice a month into a significant East Anglian partridge manor. The story started in the late 1980s, when his father, Michael Crowther, planted 30,000 trees and created six new drives with the assistance of the Game Conservancy’s Martin Tickler. Thirty years on, with the spinneys and coverts now maturing, Angus is bent on replacing all the shoot’s maize cover crops with wild bird seed and nectar pollen mixes, a strategy that found great favour with the Purdey judges when they visited the estate.
“We’ve seen a massive increase in small birds,” Crowther told me as we stood back behind the gun line on the second shoot of the season. “We’ve seen lots more skylarks, yellowhammers, wagtails, finches, tits, and wrens. We continue supplementary feeding long after the end of the season, which gives the smaller birds a helping hand in the cold months. The house sparrows have come back and we now see huge clouds of them.”
This story is from the October 2021 edition of The Field.
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This story is from the October 2021 edition of The Field.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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Rory Stewart - The former Cabinet minister and hit podcast host talks to Alec Marsh about the parlous state of British politics, land management and his deep love of the countryside
The gently spoken 51-year-old former Conservative Cabinet minister is a countryman at heart. That's clear: he even changes into a tweed waistcoat for the interview, which takes place at his London home and begins with a question about his precise career status. Having resigned from the Commons and the Conservative Party in 2019, the former diplomat and soldier has reinvented himself, first with an unconventional but promising run as an independent for the London mayoralty (abandoned because of COVID19 in 2020) and then as a media figure, co-hosting one of the country's most popular podcasts, The Rest Is Politics, alongside Alastair Campbell, the former Labour spin doctor.
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