Human Hunting: Fox Hunting Gone Way Humane

A fox-friendly alternative to the British sport means chasing human prey.

ByABC News
April 15, 2008, 5:13 PM

Apr. 15, 2008— -- Fox hunting has long been a ritual in rural Britain, with slavering hounds and well-heeled horsemen and women all on the scent of a furry beast.

But on a recent sunny Sunday afternoon, the Cambridge University Draghounds are hot in pursuit of a very different prey: a rangy biochemistry professor called Ian Eperon. There's a slightly worried look on his face, but this human quarry seems to be enjoying the chase.

England banned fox hunting with hounds three years ago. For the likes of Samuel Colvin, a Cambridge Draghounds master, chasing a professor around muddy fields will never be the same as chasing a fox. But it's an afternoon in the countryside on his horse, jumping hedges, drinking port and getting away from it all.

"It's the fun of the company," he says. "You know, I talk to people before and afterward and we know each other."

And it appeals to the runner in him.

"Bit of adrenaline," he says with an endorphin-fueled smile. "I have to work a bit harder."

The Cambridge Draghounds have been doing this since the 1840s. This sport is nothing new but is flourishing in the wake of the fox hunting ban. At Knights Farm, they used to hunt foxes. Now they hunt humans.

While the hunters enjoy that glass of port and a sausage roll, the runner gets a half hour head start, dragging a dead animal -- road kill -- to give the hounds a scent. He throws himself over the gates riders love to jump.Every so often he looks nervously over his shoulder.

Runners, like Eperon, "don't need to be particularly fast," the Draghounds' Web site proclaims, but "stamina" is a prerequisite. Volunteer runners are paid $60 a day and are always invited to join the riders for a sandwich and a cup of tea when all is said and done.

"I know some fairly left-wing people at Cambridge who think it's appalling that we hunt those that can't afford to have a horse," Colvin said before loading his own steed into a trailer. "But that's really not the case."