Fell Pony podcast is a series of conversations hosted by Fell pony Breeder, filmmaker and adventurer Tom LLoyd, with friends and guests that include riders, drivers, breeders, judges, adventurers and beyond.
On todays show I'm talking with a man who's journey from very humble beginnings has taken him to the pinnacle of horse culture. You may know him from the image of him standing on the Long Walk at Windsor castle with Carltonlima Emma paying his respects to the late Queen ElizabethSo I would like to introduce my guest Terry Pendry who for the last 28 years served as head groom to the Queen and was awarded the title of Military Knight. This podcast was recorded in May 2023.Being made a military Knight • Riding a cow as a farmers boy and riding bareback • The importance of breeding native poniesBecoming an apprentice jockey aged 15 • Joining the Blues and Royals • Basic Training • Trooping the Colour with Centennial • Stabling 200 horses for the Golden Jubilee • Breeding at Hampton Court • Irish Draught Horses for chargers and the Canadian Mounted Police • Getting horses used to traffic • Meeting the Duke of Edinburgh's Fells and finding a fell for Queen Elizabeth II • Meeting Tommy Capstick and Carltonlima Emma • The Queens funeral procession • Becoming stud groom at Windsor castle • Starting ponies at 3 years old • Driving ponies and the Bowmans • Hampton Court breeding and grading program • Horses for courses and breeding for temperament • Queens favourite horses • Being invited to work as the groom by Queen Elizabeth • Mary Longsden and the Queens birthday parade • Grey ponies •
Bringing Silage down in a black cart with a Shire/Dales crossGreenholme sixpencePauls yard and the grazing regimeGetting ponies fit for showing and attracting the judges eyeThe sport of carriage driving and driving FellsThe Duke of Edinburgh's team of Fell ponies The 3 phases of a Carriagedriving competitionCol. Sir John MillerWelsh cob Flying CometCall the herd home Making the best of your pony for showingHunter horses and looking the partHorse of The Year, Olympia and the Fell Pony Breed showMares v geldingsFred Todd master horsemanGrooming for Anne Varley pony tandem The role of a groomNW driving club in the 1980sWhat makes a good driving ponyThe importance of dressage in a 3 day eventFools breed horses for wise men to buyChoosing a stallionDeep bodied ponies for long legged jockeysDuke of Edinburgh award for carriage driving3 quick questions
The Townend Legacy, Carrock and Haltcliffe semi-feral herds on Caldbeck CommonThe early days of Eddie Wilsons father to the current 6th generation of breeders. The Townend typeThe show season and the Royal ShowStockmanshipRing-craft and show preparation and catching the judges eyeJudgingStock judgingThe future
Charlie describes the Roandale stud and farm and the rarer colours of Dales that they breed.Gina was brought up in Kirkby Lonsdale with working Gallowa's.Charlie started his working life working machines in forestry but took a turn when he went on a course to learn snigging (extracting timber with horses).Learning the ropes with George Read and getting a pony broken to pulling timber.Starting a breeding herd of Dales ponies and Wharfedale Prince Regent and their bay-roan strain.The roan strain in Fell ponies.Movement rather than action - a ground-covering and economical trot.The differences between Fell and DalesThe history of the Dales ponyThe war horseThe formation of the Dales Pony Improvement SocietyF.I.S Foal Immunodeficiency SyndromeHardiness and the future of the breed60 Dales ponies join The Presidents Ride to Barnard castle Keeping ponies in work
To begin with Walter talks about travelling with donkeys as a young boy, and how he got into breeding the Hades Hill Fell ponies in the 1950's.The late 1940s and early 50's saw the demise of the working pony but Walter started breeding ponies when everyone else was getting tractorsThe subject of the fate of the semi-feral herds is something that came up time and time again. Here he is with children at Settlebeck School in 2012 talking about the problems that need addressing.The children at Settlebeck wanted to know what's the most important quality of a Fell pony?What is it about keeping Fell ponies that you like the most.Walter was passionate about ponies living out on common land and open fell. But what are the advantages?Since the late 1970's Walter had driven a bow top waggon with a couple of Fell pair of Fell ponies from his farm outside Rochdale to Appleby Fair - one in the shafts and a sideliner and this journey was probably the thing he looked forward to most every year. Here he is describing what it feels like to make the journey horse drawn.
Eliza recently completed the Cape Wrath Trail travelling over 300km of wilderness to the most north-westerly point of Scotland with Fell pony Hades Hill Pansy.
There have been Fell Ponies at Lownthwaite since at least 1889, when Thos Wales and his mother Mary moved to Lownthwaite at a time when equines were the “power house” of agriculture. Today the Lownthwaite ponies are one of the last semi-feral herd of Fell Ponies to roam the Northern Pennines and are managed by mother and daughter who are the 5th generation of the family.So I would like to introduce my guests Christine Morton and Alison Bell, Christine is President of the Fell Png Society, and Alison site on the Fell Pony Society Council.In this show Tom talks about the history of Lownthwaite, ponies forecasting the weather, Clydesdale v Shire horses, Pit Ponies, Gallowas and Jaggers, the cycle of the seasons, and asks “Why do we do it?”
Sarah Charlton who has been around the Linnel ponies in one way or another for the last 45 years. The Linnel ponies are one of the very oldest Fell Pony studs with a legacy as long as you arm.Sarah talks about her early days with an old pit pony, a Welsh and a Dales, Jillarooing in Australia, working for Roy Charlton in the 70's and 80's.We move on to the Linnel heritage, R B Charlton's book “A Lifetime With Ponies”, the Dales Pony Improvement Society, pit ponies and milk floats.Sarah talks about rebuilding bloodlines, Highland ponies, and exporting Fell ponies to the Spanish ministry of Agriculture.Bob Charlton was chairman of the FPS at the time of the Foal Imunodefficiency Syndrome, and talks about the next generation, the custodians of the herd, fashion and the decline of work ponies and returning to hill breeders for hardiness.Performance Trials, Fell and Highland Pony Camp, British Eventing horse trialsand then asks What about the future?
We're going a little off piste to talk about to just Fell ponies, but also some of the other less well known native breeds that my guest has spent the last couple of years photographing in their native habit. So I would like to introduce Ruth Chambelain who many of you will know trough her Instagram account Ruth On the HoofRuth talks about being a cowboy in Montana and learning the Pirelli natural horsemanship and herd behaviour .Ruth talks about growing up near Caldbeck Common and the Waverhead stud, starting out with a camera and documenting native ponies for her project “The Hidden Hoofbeats of Britain and Ireland”.We learn about Eriskay ponies, the Carneddau ponies of Snowdonia and how ponies adapt o their environment. The Highland deer ponies, Garrons and Ghilliesand the Highland ponies at Balmoral.We finish by talking about Dales ponies, Exmoor ponies and conservation grazing.
On todays show we are talking all things ecology, conservation grazing and bringing ponies on ready for the outside world with my guest Nicola Evans whose Helmside ponies graze on The Helm outside Kendal, Nicola also sits on the Fell Pony Society's Conservation sub group.Nicola talks about the ups and the downs, problems and pitfalls of conservation grazing , combining ecology, agriculture and business and producing riding ponies for the big wide worldNicola talks about the Helmside prefix, breeding without owning your own stallion, handling un-handled youngsters, the Fell Pony Display Team, Fell Pony Camp and managing the dynamics of a herd
We're travelling across the pond to South Dakota, talking about the practicalities of establishing a herd of ponies in another country, genetic diversity how data from stud books can help establish a breeding program and a whole host of subjects that my guest has written about in her 8 books so far.
Bert Morland is a judge and breeder of the Lunesdale Fell ponies who have won shows at the highest levels. On todays show we're going to go into the finer points of breeding with Bert who's credentials in the show ring tell you that anything he doesn't know about breeding Fell ponies isn't worth knowing.Bert talks about his early days working with General Purpose ponies, Joe Baxter the stallion walker, Storm Boy and Master John, his mentor Ted Benson and Pit ponies in the 1950'sBert remembers Heltondale Sonny Boy, Lunesdale Rebeccaand talks about line breeding, the finer points of breeding, conformation, Stallions. round bone, semi-feral herd, and harness racing.We finish up talking about Dales ponies and his trip to Olympia.
Libby Robinsons journey has weaved its way through 3 countries but has always kept coming back to working ponies. A couple of years ago she managed to move her herd from France to re-establish them as a semi-feral herd on a Cumbrian Fell and now her journey has turned into a quest to to establish a Fell Pony Heritage Centre in the Lake District to protect the Fell Pony breed characteristics and preserve the working practices for future generations.In this show Libby talks about her first encounters with working ponies that shaped her future and living on working museums with horses.Competition driving, The Heritage of the Fells exhibition, The Fell Pony Heritage Centre and the importance as ponies in farming systems as part of the ecosystem.
Bill Potter breeds the Greenholme ponies on Birkbeck Common.Having been bred and reared in the harsh conditions of Shap, they are tremendously hardy and will do well in any situation. Some of the mares have never been handled andFell Pony Podcastwww.patreon.com/fellponyMusicbed SyncID:MB01XDC3TKWWQKS
As well as being current Chairman of the Fell Pony Society, As well as being current Chairman of the Fell Pony Society, Peter Boustead is a Fell Pony and Mixed Mountain & Moorland Judge and Breeder of the Summerhouse Fell Ponies.In this show we're going to talk about all things Fell Pony Society -Judging, the breed standard and a few stories about some of the old guard of the Fell Pony Society.
In this show Vyv talks about her adventures from Land End to John O' Groats. from the Isle of Skye to Smithfield market in London, and her journey to visit the white chalk horses throughout the British Isles.The Drovers roads and Horseland trekking to the ancient white chalk horses of the British IslesVyv talks about the kit she needs and the challenges one faces while ravelling on horseback.
Sue Millard is an author, editor of Fell Pony Society magazine, webmaster of the Society website and for the last 15 years has been a member of the Fell Pony Society Council. In 2002 Sue created the online Fell Pony Museum. As well as her non-fiction, Sue is about to publish her 6th novel and somewhere in her life finds time to drive her Fell pony mare Coppyhill Suzanne.In todays show we dig down deep into the history of the breed, it's origins and hear a few pearls of wisdom from the many stories author Sue Millard has gathered over the years for her many books..
Fell pony breeder Andrew Thorpe established the Wellbrow Stud in 1995 and has risen to be one of the most successful and prolific breeders of the last 25 years. Andrew talks about running a herd of semi-feral ponies on common land and how he chose the right bloodlines managed to get started by buying the right mares at the Heltondale dispersal sale.