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Instead they were first found by a limer.
"The whole pleasure of this kitchen is that you really don't have to move," Ms. Limer said.
The bloodhound was typically used a limer, and the raches were normally smaller hounds.
Medieval hunting pictures generally show the limer as a hound of similar type to the running hounds, but larger and more heavily built.
Another slideshow featuring my favourite band - Nigel Limer 2008 www.nigel-limer.co.uk...
As the wild boar became extinct, and the interest of British huntsman changed to foxhunting, the limer lost its usefulness.
Ms. Limer also admired the solid, open feeling of kitchens she had seen in Morocco and the Mediterranean.
"I was not adhering to convention for convention's sake," Ms. Limer said, admiring the outcome recently from her perch at the new island.
The collar and long coiled rope reflect the Bloodhound's typical functions as a limer or leashed man-trailer in that period.
Ann Limer Lange, head of the jewelry department at Sotheby's Arcade, agrees.
Lee Limer: Dancin'
Ms. Limer contributed marble tiles she found in Madrid, and the architect integrated them into a border between the former pantry and kitchen.
Paul Mitchell, Area Supervisor and Graham Limer, Surveyor were sent to investigate.
The limer was a specialist tracker, probably outnumbered by raches in a lord's pack, in about the proportions 20:1, and it was highly valued.
A kitchen like the one she recently remodeled for Lisa Limer, a photojournalist; her husband, Ernesto Ugarte, an international economist, and their two sons.
But you give me back what I paid the limer and this bird's yours, as fine a sacrifice as the Prolocutor himself might make, and for one little card."
They are linked by a custom-made drying rack, inspired by ones that Ms. Limer used while living in Spain and designed by Tom O'Brien.
The limer would be taken out at dawn by its handler, on foot, who would identify, perhaps from droppings, perhaps from footprints, where a large animal had passed during the night.
The word 'limer' is first recorded in surviving texts from the mid fourteenth century, though the way it is used suggests it was by then a familiar term to the readers.
When arson burns out Homebody, he asks if he can join Lydia and her androgynous makeup artist and factotum, Limer, at Lydia's Eternal Acres.
In the shadows of the less than flaming passion between Lydia and St. John lurks Limer, all pain and mordant asides with her scarcely noticed yearning for Lydia.
Other writers might include the hare, bear, or wolf among animals to be harboured with the limer, but clearly raches could be hunted simply as a pack, as in modern hunting, if chasing 'lesser' game.
It was normally hunted by being harboured, or found by a 'limer', or bloodhound handled on a leash, before the pack of hounds was released to pursue it on its hot scent.
In Britain the hart, the wild boar and the fallow deer buck were the only animals to be harboured with the limer; all other game was found, as well as hunted by the free-running raches.
The limer and its handler would then set about the task of harbouring the quarry again, perhaps by following its blood-trail, and either the injured animal would be dispatched, or the hunt would resume as before.