Who We Are

Hunting Kind draws from a deep reserve of advisors, supporters and advocates representing the diverse cultural family of natural hunting.

With circa 70,000 followers, represented by 18 hunting organisations, our messaging is clear and effective.

Ed Swales

Ed Swales

Founder and Chairman of Hunting Kind

Ed promotes natural hunting as intrinsic to wildlife management and the protection of our cultural heritage in the political and public realm. He has enjoyed a lifetime of hounds, lurchers and hunting in Northumberland's border country

Sir Johnny Scott

Sir Johnny Scott Bt, MFH

President of the Advisory Panel

Sir Johnny is an author, natural historian, broadcaster, columnist, countryside campaigner and retired hill farmer. A lifetime advocate for the countryside and its sports, he is among other posts, former President, the Association of Working Lurchers and Longdogs, as well as Centenary Patron of BASC

charlie jacoby

Charlie Jacoby

Writer and broadcaster Charlie presents Fieldsports Britain on Fieldsports Channel

Dr Nick Fox

Dr Nick Fox OBE

Nick is a wildlife biologist, falconer, farmer and writer, living in West Wales. His interests include practical conservation, design, animal welfare and ethics. He wrote the successful submission to UNESCO resulting in Falconry being inscribed on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Mankind

Barrie Wade

Barrie Wade

As President of the National Working Terrier Federation (NWTF), and founder member and joint author of the NWTF Code of Conduct for Terrier Work, Barrie, from Staffordshire, has provided evidence, both written and oral, at Westminster as well as to the devolved administrations in Scotland and Wales. He contributed to the Burns Inquiry, the Hunting Act 2004, Protection of Wild Mammals (Scotland) Act 2002, the Bonomy Review and the more recent Hunting With Dogs (Scotland) Act 2023

Helen Nakielny

Helen Nakielny

Helen studied History at Cambridge (BA Hons.) and Law in London. Author of The Working Whippet, Joint Master of the Northumberland Crow Falcons, Specialist member of the UK Hawk Board, Welsh sheep farmer and falcon breeder

Jamie Blackett

Jamie Blackett

Jamie is a farmer, author and columnist, founder and former chairman of the Dumfriesshire and Stewartry Foxhounds

Mark Prescott

Sir Mark Prescott Bt

Sir Mark, who has trained racehorses in Newmarket for longer than any of the other 81 trainers there, is a lover of all country sports.  He ran the Waterloo Cup, the Blue Riband of hare coursing, for 17 years and is co-author of ‘The Waterloo Cup – The First 150 Years'. In 2022 he won the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe with Alpinista

Martin Scott

Martin Scott

Martin lives in Wiltshire and hunts with the Beaufort. He was previously Master of the Tiverton Foxhounds and VWH. He is considered to be the pre-eminent foxhound judge today.

Hazel Clewley

Dr Hazel Clewley MRCVS

Hazel is a practicing vet, committee member of the Veterinary Association for Wildlife Management and Master of Buckhounds. It is through the interweaving of these roles that she believes in, supports and experiences, first hand, the vital role natural hunting has in the safe, effective and crucially welfare preserving management of wildlife and the wider countryside

Tony Holdsworth

Tony Holdsworth

Starting his hunting career in the West Country, Tony then moved to the Duke of Beaufort's Hunt in Gloucestershire, as kennel huntsman, becoming huntsman in 2010 with a total of 34 years professional service

Michael Sagar

Michael Sagar

Michael has enjoyed a lifetime in the hunting field with minkhounds, harriers, foxhounds and terriers and is editor of Hounds Magazine

Michael Cummings

Michael Cummings

From a hunting family, Michael hunted the Blackcombe & District Beagles in Cumbria for 19 seasons and is Joint Master. One day, he wants his 1 year old daughter Grace to have the opportunity to hunt hounds

Alan Wally Walton

Alan Walton

A lifelong lurcher hunter, breeder and owner, Alan is from a former coal mining town in Northumberland. During the Miners' Strike in 1984, hunting provided a staple source of food for these communities and so hunting is a keenly felt part of their cultural heritage

Nigel Housden

Nigel Housden

Nigel is a professional photographer and photojournalist based in Norfolk with a passion for wildlife and conservation. He has worked for most of the mainstream media, among them Sky and BBC.  He worked on The Hunting Gene (2000) with author, the late Robin Page and is currently launching a new magazine, 'Our Rural Heritage'

Dan Kinney

Dan Kinney

Dan is Master Huntsman for the Glens of Antrim Foxhounds, formed 40 years ago by Dan's father. Providing a service to sheep farmers to control hill foxes in Northern Ireland's glens

Scott Allen

Scott Allan

Scott is a photographer and writer with a fascination for all natural hunting activities involving dogs and has travelled worldwide in pursuit of his passion

Keelan Barnes

Keelan Barnes

Brought up in the Fen country, Keelan learnt the art of hunting with lurchers from his father. An all round countryman with a keen interest in falconry, he also follows the Milton hounds. A member of the East of England Lurcher Club, he works running dogs in East Anglia. He was a founder member of the Isle of Ely Sighthound Club.

Liz Mort

Liz Mort

Liz has been a follower of hunting and hounds all her life. After working as a journalist then editor, she joined the Countryside Alliance in 1997 for 10 years, first as Public Relations Office then later Eastern Regional Director. She has run the Greyhound Stud Book since 2007, is Secretary of the National Coursing Club and Chair of the British Greyhound Breeders’ Forum

Ronan Brown

Ronan Brown

A small business owner and veteran from the Scottish Borders, Ronan has been involved in the countryside, horses and hunting all his life. He is a former  Master of the Jed Forest and with his family is involved in all aspects of rural community life

Rodney Laing

Rodney Laing

Rodney of the Tweed Valley Rat Pack has been involved in pest management all his life in and around cities and the rural areas of lowland Scotland. Using terriers, they provide a humane service which involves no secondary poisoning to other wildlife in the food chain