THE last half-dozen of us rode back to the meet as the light was slowly disappearing. Luke Speed, known as “Speedy”, a falconer and relief milker who looks after the hunt’s steppe eagle, was there to let us through some wire. The cloud cover had not cleared all day and the ground was saturated underfoot.
Hounds and huntsman had every reason to look rather smug and satisfied, having successfully concluded their last hunt and produced a top-class day’s hunting. The horses were weary; they don’t have second horses at this small pack, but in no way had that curtailed the speed or length of the day.
We had barely stopped galloping and jumping since the start, all out of deep ground but virtually entirely on grass. The only cultivations were maize stubbles, cut for dairy cow silage.
The meet had been on a grassy knoll at the back of Paul and Emma Parton’s Norton Wood Farm, from where there was a superb view of this old-fashioned bit of hunting country. The hunt supporters had put on the meet as the Partons were away, and they had a similarly hospitable welcome arranged for us when we returned to the boxes.
We were the last of a field of 40 or so riders that had started the day, many of whom were visitors, but such was the allround performance of the hounds, huntsman, and field-master that most had said their goodnights much earlier, totally fulfilled from an action-packed day.
It hadn’t been a flying scent, but a holding one, where the hounds could still hang on to the line with lots of help from their excellent huntsman David Seels, in his 11th season at the North Staffordshire.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der February 06, 2020-Ausgabe von Horse & Hound.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der February 06, 2020-Ausgabe von Horse & Hound.
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'Sorry, but I wasn't feeling it'
Fresh from the opening meet, Tessa Waugh hasn't quite yet been bitten by the hunting bug. Without the crisp autumnal air and cheek-pinching cold she hoped for, it's a sluggish start
New pair pull off a win
A former European Championships pony is on form with his new rider, while elsewhere former showjumpers and eventers take ribbons
Lording it over the rest
Horses who have returned from injury, a second generation homebred and a long format specialist score on the final weekend of the British season
Smith hits flying form
A \"her way or no way\" mare helps Zoe Smith to an impressive ribbon haul and a rider beats his own boss to the top spot
Jankorado hits the jackpot
Paul Sims is triumphant despite his interrupted jump-off preparation and a borrowed horse comes up trumps
Peanut
From \"dangerous, scary\" to hedge-hopping brilliance, hunting has been the making of this unstable but very lovable equine character
She's a corker
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'Use it or lose it'
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A new way forward
Worm control in horses is vital, but established methods will not remain effective for much longer. Tim Mair FRCVS explains why and how we need to change