OOCAll welcome. If hunting Kelvics and other shapeshifters want to show up in animal form, that's fine. If anyone wants to take the risk of trying to rescue individual creatures, that's fine too, but not stopping the hunt entirely.
28 Fall 515
The oldest farmers called the last bit of each field's crop "the neck". Whether that was because it generally the top on the humped shoulders of the haystacks or whether it was because you could get a nice neck of rabbit when the creatures bolted was something that Dove had never figured out. This year she stood back among the hunters that ringed the edge, her sling ready in her hand and a heavy pouch of sling bullets tied to her belt. Behind her, around the edge of the field, ran a low stone wall, no more than three feet high. Even as short as she was (for a human) the wall was too low to hinder her swinging sling, and she spaced herself out so she wouldn't hit either of her neighbours either.
It was a beautiful day, sunny, but not too warm, and Syna was high enough not to shine directly in anyone's eyes and spoil their aim. A few clouds drifted aimlessly, but there was only an intermittent breeze.
In the middle, two experienced farmers hefted their scythes. They had done this task before, and knew to take it slowly. The animals huddled in the last strip of wheat would start to bolt when the farmer began to cut it, and taking it slowly meant you didn't injure yourself when a rabbit dashed between your legs, or a bird exploded upwards into your face in a thrum of wingbeats. As well as rabbits there were also likely to be mice, rats, hares, even perhaps a weasel or a frog fleeing across the open space, while larks, partridges, lapwings, sparrows and robins took to the air.
With each hunter going after the animal of their choice - or after whatever came towards them - it was likely to get chaotic fast. Still, Dove hoped she'd get something. Fresh meat was a treat to rival the other fresh foods of the harvest. She looked around at her fellow hunters, trying to guess what they were most interested in by their gaze and the weapons they held.