Albany and West Lodge Bassets

Albany and West Lodge Bassets
Hunt type Basset hunting
Country  England
History
Founded 2006
Hunt information
Hound breed Basset
Hunt country Rutland, Leicestershire, Hertfordshire, Lincolnshire & Cambridgeshire
Quarry Hare
Website www.albanybassets.co.uk

The Albany and West Lodge Bassets is a working basset pack.

History

The Albany and West Lodge Bassets was formed in 2006 when the Albany Bassets and the West Lodge Harehounds were amalgamated.[1]

The Albany Bassets

In 1955 members of the Basset Hound Club formed a working branch to "foster the hunting instinct inherent in every Basset Hound", initially all members of the club were encouraged to enter their pet Basset and see if it could work with a nucleus of kenneled hounds.[2]

In 1973 this pack was renamed the Albany Bassets and was registered with the Masters of Basset Hounds Association.[1] The Albany remained a part of the Basset Hound Club until 2002 when they withdrew their support and the Albany became a subscription pack.[1]

In 2002 the Hunt outcrossed their Kennel Club registered hounds with working stock to produce a lighter more agile hound that could work for longer over rough ground.[1][2]

The West Lodge Harehounds

The West Lodge Harehounds was initially formed in 1928 by Sir Douglas Ritchie as a private beagle pack with subscriptions being taken from 1934.[1] The pack was disbanded in 1941, but was reformed with basset hounds in 1950.[1]

Hunt country

The Albany's original country extends from Stamford in the south, Bourne in the north, Melton Mowbray in the west and Spalding in the east, and lies within the boundaries of the Cottesmore Hunt.[1]

The West Lodge's country runs from the northern outskirts of London to Biggleswade and Longstowe in the north, bounded by Harlow and Royston in the east, and Hatfield and Stevenage in the west.[1] Its country lies within the boundaries of the Cambrigeshire with Enfield Chase and the Puckeridge Hunt.[1]

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Liam’s.
  2. 1 2 Albany and West Lodge Bassets.

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.