I would recommend using the legs of the hare for this hare ragu recipe and keeping the loins for a later date.
Brown hares are a match for any bird of prey and for many years it was my goal to catch one with my first Harris hawk, Elly. For the first three years, try as she might, they always seemed to get the better of her. I spent countless days watching her chase, grab, fight and lose this most slippery of quarries.
“To fly and catch hares, you need a big bird with brute force that can take a bit of rough and tumble,” I was told by one of the older members of a falconry club. “Smaller birds like yours can get to them more quickly, but lack the heart and strength to hold and control them.”
My bird’s problem was not the catching, but the holding on. My hawk weighed 975g (a little over 2lb) and brown hares can go up to 5kg (11lb), but I disagreed with the assessment given by my falconry friend as Harris hawks make up for their lack of strength in brain and cunning. Every flight a Harris makes is a learning curve. They quickly discover what works and their ability to read prey is remarkable.
Over many years, whenever Elly had the chance, she flew hares with vigour and a determination of a bird double her size. One day, in early October, a hare emerged quite unexpectedly as we walked across a field. It sprung up about 20m in front of us, running across a slight incline so that it could turn and run uphill —a preferred tactic of hares.
The hawk took off from the fist and, instead of chasing the hare straight away, veered off to my right. At first, I wondered why she went the wrong way but, as the hare turned to run uphill, she cut it off, hitting it side on.
She had read it perfectly. I ran to help her, but by the time I got there, she had it folded over and controlled. After years of trying, she had bagged a 3.5kg hare. I sat with her as she tucked into her well-earned prize, enjoying the moment. Elly doesn’t miss hares any more. Her largest, a 4kg monster, proves that brute force is no match for cleverness and cunning.
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