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5 minute read
Equestrian
Honeysuckle and Rachel Blackmore at Cheltenham in March. Image © GBRI/Racingfotos.com
Honeysuckle; born in the Blackmore Vale, and then ridden by Blackmore to win the Gold Cup
Rachael Blackmore made racing history last month when she became the first female jockey to win the Champion Hurdle at Cheltenham with her victory on Honeysuckle.
But the connection to our little area of north Dorset is far closer than the jockey’s name –
Seven-year-old Honeysuckle is from Glanvilles Wootton,
just outside Sherborne, bred by Dr Geoffrey Guy and Guy’s co-owners and managers of The Glanvilles Stud, Doug and Lucy Procter
“It’s funny” laughed Doug Procter, when I caught up with him last week “I tried to sell her as a foal at Doncaster, and didn’t get a single bid. She wasn’t by a fashionable stallion, y’see. Then as a three year old I took her to the Derby sale in Ireland, and got €9,500 for her.”
He held a polite few second’s silence when I innocently enquired if that was far below what he would have hoped for, and then couldn’t hold back.
“It was a thumping great loss! And to
make it worse, the following Spring she won the first time out by 15 lengths, and literally four days later Mark O’Hare sold her on again at the Punchestown sale to Peter Maloney, who bought her for owner Kenny Alexander for £110,000!”
(In case, like me, you’re wondering, if she’d been by a fashionable stallion Doug would have expected to get £20£30,000 for her himself as an untried 3yr old).
EQUESTRIAN
Honeysuckle has stayed in
Ireland, trained by Henry de
Bromhead – and she’s never been beaten. She’s won 11 races under rules, including the Mare’s
Hurdle at Cheltenham last year.
“It was the way she did it!”
said Doug after the Champion Hurdle race at Cheltenham two weeks ago “The way she jumped and pulled clear at the second last and then just kept on going, that’s quite a way to win a Champion Hurdle.
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“I always remember people saying of Desert Orchid, ‘he’s a marvellous horse, but he hasn’t won a Gold Cup’. But as soon as he ticked that box, it cemented him up there at the top. “What else can you say about the mare? She’s never been beaten. 11 races on the trot, six Grade 1s on the trot and seven in total. She is just fantastic. I was clearly having a good day when I planned that mating!”
At first glance, one might think Glanvilles Wootton (“population not-a-lot” Doug
Honeysuckle as a 3year old at home on the Stud with youngstock manager, Vicki. Image ©Glanvilles Stud “What it’s like to see Honeysuckle cross the line at Cheltenham!“ Doug, Freddie and Lucy Procter at Cheltenham in 2020 - this year they had to be content to watch Honeysuckle on the television. image: Andrew Matthews/PA Archive/PA Images
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quipped) is an unlikely spot for a Champion Hurdle winner.
And yet there appears to be something in the grass that racehorses like: where the Blackmore Vale meets the chalk downs seems to be perfect land for rearing Thoroughbreds.
Glanvilles Stud was originally an organic dairy farm, and the land with its beautiful mature hedges and trees has created 60 acres of safe paddocks. Doug & Lucy Procter have produced two Grade 1 winners:
(“the horseracing equivalent of a football team winning the European Championship.” explained Doug)
Sam Spinner won the Long Walk at Ascot in 2017, and of course now Honeysuckle. Believe it or not, the 1959 Grand National winner Oxo was also bred in the tiny village. And just over the hill, Rooster Booster, who won the Champion Hurdle in 2003, was bred in the Piddle Valley.
Another random chance connects the Honeysuckle story to her Dorset roots – Henry De Bromhead came to visit his aunt in Sherborne, and whilst there he visited Robert Alner (himself a Dorset dairy farmer who turned his hobby of point-to-pointing into a successful training career) because his aunt owned a horse being trained at Lockets Farm in Droop, nr Hazelbury Bryan. He came for a couple of weeks, stayed for the whole season and has been training horses himself ever since.
(BHS Assistant Bridleways Officer, BHS AI, UKCC L2, PC Area 14 Centre Co-ordinator, PC Assessor E-AH test & RDA Coach)
Many of us have been in lockdown for some time, so let’s get out in the fresh air! The Easter Holidays are nearly here. Is it Time to join The Pony Club?
Pony Club teaches children togetherness, empathy, respect, learning and more importantly it gives them a whole lot of FUN. If your child is besotted by ponies and is lucky enough to have access to a pony, whether it be own, loan or at a Riding School, then why not join The Pony Club? www.pcuk.org
The Pony Club is a youth organisation for people interested in ponies and riding. It is a registered charity, and its aims are to promote learning of how to ride and care for a pony, how to develop sportsmanship, loyalty and self-discipline.
What would my child gain by joining a local Branch or riding school linked Centre I hear you ask?
qualifications. To help to get to the Test level there are Progressive Awards.
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Lots of lessons, called rallies, and camps, some ridden and some non-ridden activities, with Coaches that are fully accredited and hold DBS, safeguarding and first aid qualifications. They will get the chance to compete at local, regional and a national level in ridden sports, dressage, show jumping, eventing, mounted games, endurance, polo, polocrosse, tetrathlon and pony racing and non-ridden such as quizzes, triathlon and horse and pony care as well as online learning and competitions. There is the chance to pass tests and receive certificates as their abilities improve. The later tests can lead to equestrian There are many Achievement badges for which they will receive sew-on badges as they develop their skills. An example is a grooming badge when they can show that they know how to groom a pony.
Membership is annual from the day of joining for anyone up to the age of 25. There are different types of membership - Branch membership, Centre membership, Centre Plus membership, Family membership and Non-riding membership.
To join please use online membership by going to https:// pcuk.org/join-us/
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