Sunday, 21 October 2018

Horses of the Great War


A couple of years ago I attended a talk which was a joint venture between the Warwickshire County Committee of the British Horse Society and the Warwickshire Hunt Branch of the Pony Club.  I had forgotten that I had never posted about this talk.  

The talk still seems appropriate given that it is 100 years since the end of the Great War, and was partly about a group who recreated the British Cavalry's retreat through France in August 1914 - 'The War Horse Ride'.  However, it was also about the horses in the Great War.

We are all aware of the horrific loss of human lives between 1914 and 1918 and learn about the Somme and Ypres at school, about the trenches and the barbed wire and the football game played on Christmas Day.  However, the contribution that horses made to the war and the huge loss equine lives is rarely mentioned.  I have to admit that I have not read or seen 'War Horse' I think that I would find it too upsetting.


In August 1914 the British Army had around 25,000 horses.  At the time the cavalry was still seen as the best and one of the most senior elements of the army.  So within the first 12 days of mobilisation a further 140,000 horses were acquired , most of these horses were in effect 'seized' from their owners to serve.  Hunters, carriage and draught horses were all taken.  These horses were used not just in the cavalry but to draw artillery, ambulances and supply wagons.  They were also used for carrying messages.  The horses coped with the mud and terrain much better than any vehicle could.  Military vehicles were prone to problems, horses and mules needed much less upkeep and were much more reliable.

Mons was the first 'military conflict' which Great Britain was involved in.  Both sides used cavalry but this was nearly the last cavalry charge seen, machine guns, trenches and barbed wire meant they were impossible.  Early in 1918 the British used another cavalry charge, of the 150 horses used only 4 survived, the others were killed by machine guns.

The Battle of Mons was where the British tried to stop the German Army.  However, they were outnumbered and had to retreat - this is the retreat which was recreated to honour the men and horses. 

Cavalry horses were typically around 15hh to 15.2hh - other than those of the Household Cavalry which were traditionally 16hh or more.  With a rider and his equipment (weapons, ammunition, blankets for horse and rider, greatcoat, spare horseshoes, picketing gear and rations and fodder) the total weight carried by a cavalry horse could be more than 400 lbs!

Clydesdales were popular for hauling the guns and Cleveland Bays as a breed were nearly lost during the war.

The number of horses that were used and that lost their lives on all sides during the war is staggering.  To ensure there were enough horses Britain imported from the US, Canada, Australia and Argentina.   Of the almost 1.2 million horses provided by the US only 200 went home.

Only around a quarter of the horses lost their lives due to battle injuries.  Most died from exhaustion and disease.  Mange was a problem, equine flu, ringworm and anthrax.  Poison gas affected the horses respiratory systems - although horses had their own gas masks (many horses destroyed their gas masks thinking they were nosebags).   For every 2 British men who died, 1 horse died.  


Feeding the horses was a huge challenge and feed prices increased as the war wore on and shortages began.  Many horses died of starvation although the British horses had more feed than the French, Italian or German.  The British cavalry took the welfare of their horses very seriously. Every cavalryman was trained to look to the needs of his horse before his own and few had anything other than great affection, as one wrote at the time, for “his long faced chum”. 

The horses were a great source of morale to the army and were depended on for supply of all its needs. The affection felt by the soldiers who rode and cared for their horses was total.




The 'War Horse Ride' raised funds for the Not Forgotten Association, which is a national charity that provides entertainment, leisure and recreation for the serving wounded, injured or sick and for ex-service men and women with disabilities.  

The War Horse Ride 2014 was conceived and developed by a small group of former cavalry officers who set out early in 2013 to create an event that would be a fitting tribute to the men and horses of all the armies of 1914 and in particular to those of the Cavalry Division of the British Expeditionary Force.

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Until next time!   
Jo

Sunday, 7 October 2018

September 2018 - looked like this ....



Things are improving, it is still really strange not to have Chesney around but we have settled into a routine and the boys seem happy.  Tommy has been testing the boundaries with both Basil and me over the last few weeks, seeing if he can get away with things.  Just being a bit cheeky, a bit more confident and seeing if we keep him in his place - which we do.  He seems as though he has accepted the way it is in the last week or so and things are getting easier.  However, he is more confident in the field (Chesney was a bit of a bully to him) and I can get up to him more easily and stroke down his back.  




Basil seems fine, I think he is enjoying the extra hacks and the extra attention, now my time is only split 2 ways instead of 3. 

This is how September looked:

1st - lovely hack.  We went out for longer than we have been for quite a long time and Basil enjoyed himself!

2nd - another hack today :) Basil was a bit speedy today.

4th - arena, after first trot I decided Basil wasn't 100% right so we stopped.

7th - lunged today and Basil seemed fine, very well behaved.

8th - hack today, loving this.

9th - arena today, OK to start but then didn't quite seem right on the right rein.

11th - lunged, again seemed OK.  I decided to ring Chiropractor to organise for a visit to check all OK though.

14th - lunged again, all good again today.

15th - hack again, I do love pottering around the lanes.

16th - arena today and it was a bit windy so Basil was quite jumpy stuck to walk and trot today.


Really windy this week, and I was off work too, but did not feel it was sensible to ride.  Chiropractor was supposed to come this week but because Basil would have been too silly in the arena I decided to postpone.

22nd - another hack, GREAT.

23rd - windy but rode in the arena and really pleased because Basil was good.

24th - lunged today.

25th - hacked out, I am increasing how long we go out for and Tommy seems fine being left.  Sometimes we come back and he is grazing at the other end of the field, sometimes he is having a sleep up by the stables.

26th - arena today, squeezed in a session before the rain arrived.  Some lovely trot serpentines today, on the bit and good and active from behind.  We managed correct leads on both canter reins, although canter was a bit fast.  Tried to do some trot leg yield after cantering - mistake - Basil would not listen at all and just kept trying to canter :(

28th - lunged today, good again - I don't think this can last, we are due a mad day!

29th - rode in the arena and really nice session.  Walk & trot leg yield, serpentines were pretty good, balance and rhythm was good and on the bit.  Basil gives this to me, once we get going forward and get the balance and rhythm he just lowers his head and tucks it in - which is lovely.  Cantered today after doing some walk spirals, not many trot strides in between so he doesn't have time to get over excited.  Correct transitions but 
too fast.

31st - lunged,  very good today.



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Until next time!   
Jo