Falconing is when you take a really big turd on falcons :)
falconing
Mansome - 2012 Falconing 1-79 was released on: USA: 20 November 2012
summer
For a falcon it's very short. Around 3 years. But someone in the UK claims to have one that lived up to 12 years but members of the falconing world are pretty sure they are just a bad liar.
started back with the Arabs to send messages and for small game hunting. only the richest could own falcons. they were cared by the royal falconer who took care of all the falcons, this was a very prestigious rank in their caste system.
no you can not because falcons are wild * Correction - Yes you can. However, it is a protected species and there are very strict regulations for ownership. You can also hunt with a falcon, but again, strict regulations. State and Federal regulations cover these. In New Jersey, you are required to prove that you have successfully owned and worked with a red-tailed hawk for two years before you are allowed to own a falcon. You should check your local State laws but expect to have to prove expertise prior to owning a falcon. Check the link below to learn more about starting the long education into getting a falcon license -
The peasants did not really play sport - that was the preserve of the wealthy who had the time and money to indulge themselves. They would have had Falcons for Falconing, and other types of hunting birds, hunting dogs etc - blood sports were very popular. You would also have had the jousting and events revolving around Knights etc.
Medieval queens had to be prepared to rule on behalf of their husbands or sons. Sometimes they actually ruled themselves on their own account. They had to be ready to do all the things a monarch did. So they had to keep up on politics, diplomacy, economics, relations with the nobility, relations with the Church and its leaders, the state of the military, and so on. They might be required to be active in any of these areas. There were a number of medieval queens who negotiated treaties, dealt with tax laws or lead armies in battle. Their private lives varied from one to another, just as the lives of common people did. Some queens had children they doted on. Others had no children at all. Some loved music or literature. Some attended to the needs of the poor and visited monasteries to see that the hospitals they ran had all the things they needed. Some liked hunting or falconing. Some liked to dance. I have never heard of it being done, but it would not surprise me to hear that a medieval queen weeded her own garden.