Ironically, the issue of country v city in regards to fox hunting came up with my uni friends just the other day. One of my friends, Jenny, and me are utterly opposed to fox hunting. We are both country girls born and bred. On the other hand, a lot of her flatmates - all of them from cities - supported fox hunting.
I do agree with the person who said quite a lot of country people are opposed to fox hunting. Where I live (cheshire), the majority of people I know are against fox hunting, and they were all born and brought up in the countryside. Like the woman who owned the yard I used to keep my horse on. She's had horses and donkeys for all of her life (she's over 60 now) and owns her own little farm with dogs, cats and a few chickens as well as the other animals. Anyway, earlier this year she lost all but one of her hens and the cockerel to a fox because she didn't lock them in properly (she thought the hens were all in the coop when she closed it, but actually they'd hidden themselves under some bushes nearby we think). My next door neighbours, who only live in their house about 1/4 of the year because they generally live in the city where the husband works, took it upon themselves to wait for the fox to show itself and shoot it. Of course, there is no saying this was the same fox - it could have been any old unlucky sod! My yard owner was extremely upset about this - as she said, she hated losing the hens, but if you don't lock them up well enough the foxes will get at them. So it just goes to show, you can't assume all country people approve of fox hunting.
Whats worse (I hate my nextdoor neighbours), is that they never remove the body of the fox (they've done this before. When I was 14, I stumbled across the body of one of the foxes they'd shot and then left under a gap in the fence, believing it would stop the other foxes from entering the field. The fox's cubs were clambering all over the body, mewling. I was utterly distraught

). So, in the summer, something unearthed the fox's mostly decomposed body and dragged it onto the path we take when bringing the horses in and out of the field. NOT something you want to have to deal with!