The caliber of the horses at the Kildare’s Ballycutlane meet, the businesslike air of a field of nearly 70 riders, and the number of strange collars and buttons from other packs, including a group from the Myopia Hunt in Massachusetts, was enough, in any case, to tell me that a serious day’s hunting was anticipated.
The Kildare Hunt Club, as with so many Irish packs, emerged from amalgamations of private packs kept by Anglo-Irish landlords. The hunt officially came into being in 1804, with Sir Fenton Aylmer of Donadea Castle appointed as the first master.
Sir Fenton divided the country into five districts, each a mini hunt country in its own right, furnished with its own clubhouse with stables, kennels and a wine cellar. The hunt would move from district to district, hunting each for two or three weeks at a time.
The proximity to the national capital and the Curragh Camp — a dream posting for generations of British officers of a sporting bend — meant the Kildare was a fashionable pack right from its earliest days. Though its members no longer relocate en masse to far-flung clubhouses for three weeks of hunting and carousing, the “Killing Kildares” retain a smart, well-heeled air.
Most of the mounted field unboxed at the home of Mary Healy, who joined the mastership last season and whose motherly persona belies a fearless cross-country rider. Mary is married to Tim Dooley of the Dooley Insurance Group, and her family laid on wonderful hospitality before and after the day’s hunting.
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