The Mercury News

Tourists get to experience the ancient sport of falconry

- By Lisa Rathke

WOODSTOCK, VT. » Falconry is an old tradition in many parts of the world, including the United Kingdom and the Middle East. But now it’s starting to be offered as an activity for tourists at hotels, vineyards and other sites around the U.S., from Vermont to Colorado to California.

The ancient sport of using birds of prey to hunt wild animals has existed for at least 4,000 years. Experience­s designed for tourists typically show off the birds’ flight and faithful return to their handlers, though in these programs, birds don’t usually bring back creatures they’ve caught.

During a 45-minute session at the Woodstock Inn in Woodstock, Vermont, a profession­al falconer flies a trained bird and provides a history of falconry and informatio­n about raptors. Then guests can try it themselves, handling and free-flying a Harris’s hawk, or they can just observe the sport. In a longer 90-minute session, a second raptor is flown.

Bouchaine Vineyards in the Carneros region of California’s Napa Valley started using falconers in 2016 to keep other birds — like starlings and migratory species — from eating their grapes. Visitors were so intrigued to see the peregrine falcons fly and work with their trainer that the vineyard decided to offer an experience to its guests, along with wine-tasting and lunch.

“It’s wonderful to showcase the site. It’s amazing to showcase the birds, and to be able to actually hold a glove out and have a falcon land on your hand is really an incredible experience,” said Chris Kajani, Bouchaine winemaker and general manager.

At New England Falconry in Vermont last month, a young Harris’s hawk was eager to do what’s he’s trained to do. He launched from a high wooden platform soaring through the swirling winds over a grassy field and landed squarely on the falconer’s gloved hand where he was rewarded with a piece of meat.

The Harris’s hawk — the most social raptor because it hunts in groups— had rich brown and tawny feathers, sturdy yellow legs with long black talons, and intense eyes that allow him to spot prey while soaring high in the sky.

The ancient sport of using birds to hunt rabbits, squirrels, ducks, even foxes declined with the introducti­on of guns. Falconry only arrived in the U.S. in the early 1900s and tended to be a sport for the elite, according to Sheldon Nicolle, president of the North American Falconers Associatio­n.

 ?? ERIC RISBERG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Harris hawk lands on Nick Kontis during a falconry vineyard experience at Bouchaine Vineyards in Napa.
ERIC RISBERG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Harris hawk lands on Nick Kontis during a falconry vineyard experience at Bouchaine Vineyards in Napa.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States