Friday 18 March 2016

The Hunt

l-r  MFH (Master of Foxhounds), Mike on Bruce, Me on Dai

The day's hunting was exhilarating. By "exhilarating" I mean fun that occasionally bordered on terrifying. Jumping rustics fences and logs was fine, but there were a few flat-out downhill gallops in slippery mud that made me glad I wore my mismatching underwear. My loaner horse Dai was very athletic and sure-footed and kept me safe. The rest of The Field - the other riders - looked after Mike and me too. Mike did 3 hours and skipped the jumping; I finished out the whole day and popped over any jumps 3 foot and under. We both ached some the next day, but it was totally worth it.


We won't be able to hunt often unless invited. A day's hunting costs more than I earn in two days. As guests we weren't required to pay the £100 cap, though we did make a donation to the hunt, and of course we tipped our grooms.

Accompanying the hunt on horseback was a tick off my bucket list. For Mike, it was a politically savvy move. I didn't understand that, in the past, gamekeepers and huntsmen could barely maintain a grumbling tolerance of each other. I suppose that gamekeepers see foxes as hungry vermin, and the Hunt view foxes as sporting quarry. One wants to eradicate the threat, the other wants to preserve a population for sport. Traditionally anyway. As I said, hunting foxes is illegal since 2004.

Mike & his young groom /minder Alice

On an estate, the landowners are most often both shooters and riders, so gamekeepers and hunts had to co-exist. But Mike is a rare keeper that supports the hunt (though it is drag hunting now) and wanted to show his support by attending a meet on horseback. In fact, it's so rare a relationship that supporters took photos for a hunting magazine. Our day's hunting opened the doors for a good working relationship between riders, supporters, and shooters in future.

After our pre-hunt glass of port, just about to mount up

Neither Mike nor I joined the Tumblers' Club - that's hunt code for falling off your horse - but my elderly tweed jacket couldn't take the strain and both shoulder seams split over my first jump. That old jacket is now officially retired. I'm back to my mostly-daily hacks on Kitty, whose steady pace I have come to appreciate after Dai's hell-for-leather one.

Terrible leg position!

6 comments:

Virginia said...

Wow, Dai is a very handsome little horse!

Janice Bendixen said...

Jen, I think you both qualify as "rare keepers"! I'm delighted you both enjoyed the hunt day and avoided joining the Tumblers Club.

Jennifer Montero said...

Janice you're very sweet. Hope the arctic weather isn't stopping your hunting and trapping!

Jennifer Montero said...

Virginia - Dai is beautifully bred and was intended as a stud horse, but he grew too long in the back which only makes him a more comfortable ride in my book!

Jennifer Montero said...

Virginia - Dai is beautifully bred and was intended as a stud horse, but he grew too long in the back which only makes him a more comfortable ride in my book!

Janice Bendixen said...

"Sub-Arctic" is more like it, Jen: 51F outside and 76 in with all the sunshine. We had 9+ inches of snow over the weekend which has now turned to mush. But it's beautiful up the way and still good spring riding (snowmobile) WX.