ÍæÅ¼½ã½ã

Farming Matters: Nicole Moore - 'Let's start being proactive, educational and welcoming'

As a shooting enthusiast, I feel privileged to be able to shoot several different species of quarry as a hobby and I take my role within the community seriously.

clock • 3 min read
Farming Matters: Nicole Moore - 'Let's start being proactive, educational and welcoming'

Having the power to use a .243 rifle to hunt for my own food certainly comes with a massive responsibility to use it safely. After all, as Uncle Ben says in Spiderman: "With great power comes great responsibility."

One of my goals is to improve the perception and knowledge of the field sports world for those who are not yet a part of it. There are many different roles within our community, not all of which involve picking up a gun, but all of which contribute to improving and maintaining our wildlife habitats.

As a working-class girl from a city council estate, I was, of course, highly unlikely to discover field sports on my own.

I was introduced to the sport about 14 years ago with a day on the clays. I thoroughly enjoyed it, and following on from this I did everything I could to get out and shoot.

Fortunately for me, the invites came thick and fast and I learned so much with each outing from many different people, all with different ways of doing things, from different backgrounds and varying levels of expertise.

The thing we all had in common was the love of the sport. The attention to detail when packing your gear ready for the outing, the peace which descends on you as you sit and wait in the beauty of nature. The other wildlife you have the privilege of seeing up close while you wait, such as barn owls, weasels and red kites.

The contented feeling of knowing you are about to fill your freezer with healthy, delicious food; wild food which has lived a good life due to the conservation efforts of others in the field, who ensure even our wildest habitats remain safe for the quarry to continue breeding successfully.

There is a lot of talk about getting more women into shooting. I am keen to see more women in our sport, but it is not my focus. I have always been the only woman on a shoot day and been treated as just another human who likes to shoot - and that is how it should be.

What I really want is to normalise our sport. It means getting more non-country folk to be aware of what we do and why, helping them to understand the importance of our role as countryside guardians and how it can directly affect them, like the price of products increasing on supermarket shelves.

Whether they choose to pick up a gun or not is their personal choice, but accepting that what a shooter does is, at its roots, hunting. And hunting and foraging is what the human race has done since time began.

It is all well and good talking about the role our sport plays in the rural community to those who are already in it, but we need to be reaching those who are not. Let them see our world through our eyes, the people who live it.

Let's start being proactive, educational and welcoming with our approach in the future and see what a difference it makes.

Outdoor Beef Finishing Coral System, available

£±Ê°¿´¡

More on Farm Life

ÍæÅ¼½ã½ã join forces with emergency services to tackle rural fires

ÍæÅ¼½ã½ã join forces with emergency services to tackle rural fires

New partnership will enable fire service to access farm-based water sources

clock 07 August 2025 • 2 min read
Kelvin and Liz Fletcher launch 'taste of the farm' gin using Peak District spring water and hedgerows

Kelvin and Liz Fletcher launch 'taste of the farm' gin using Peak District spring water and hedgerows

The Fletchers have unveiled a craft gin range, infused with foraged botanicals and water from their Peak District farm

clock 06 August 2025 • 2 min read
Government doubles shotgun licence referees requirement

Government doubles shotgun licence referees requirement

The Home Secretary has announced changes to make firearms licencing rules more stringent

Alex Black
clock 05 August 2025 • 3 min read