Still riding at 88, the Queen trots through sunny Windsor Great Park

Blackleaf

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She might be approaching her 89th birthday (Tuesday next week; she may well end up sharing her birthday with her new great-grandchild) but nothing was going to stop the Queen from enjoying a ride in the spring sunshine on Thursday morning.

The monarch, 88, was spotted in her "civvies" trotting through Windsor Great Park aboard her faithful black Fell pony, Carltonlima Emma.

Joined by a groom on another of her Fell ponies, the Queen cut a relaxed figure as she enjoyed her ride but, as is her wont, eschewed a helmet in favour of one of her silk scarves.

The Queen, who has never worn riding helmets, has been encouraged to wear the safety hats in the past but is reportedly reluctant to wear one because of her hair.

Speaking in an interview last year, her racing trainer Ian Balding recalled the moment he asked why the monarch never wears a riding hat.

The Queen is said to have replied: 'I never have and you don’t have to have your hair done like I do.'


Still riding at 88, the Queen makes the most of the sunshine on trot through Windsor Great Park (but leaves the hard hat at home)


The Queen was spotted enjoying a ride in Windsor Great Park today

Rode her favourite Fell pony, a mare named Carltonlima Emma

Left hard hats at home and opted for one of her favourite scarves instead

By Ruth Styles for MailOnline
9 April 2015
Daily Mail

She might be approaching her 89th birthday but nothing was going to stop the Queen from enjoying a ride in the spring sunshine this morning.

The monarch, 88, was spotted trotting through Windsor Great Park aboard her faithful black Fell pony, Carltonlima Emma.

Joined by a groom on another of her Fell ponies, the Queen cut a relaxed figure as she enjoyed her ride but, as is her wont, eschewed a helmet in favour of one of her silk scarves.


Enjoying the sunshine: The Queen enjoys a ride on her Fell pony Carltonlima Emma

The Queen, who has never worn riding helmets, has been encouraged to wear the safety hats in the past but is reportedly reluctant to wear one because of her hair.

Speaking in an interview last year, her racing trainer Ian Balding recalled the moment he asked why the monarch never wears a riding hat.

The Queen is said to have replied: 'I never have and you don’t have to have your hair done like I do.'

Her Majesty is famous for her love of horses and first found herself in the saddle at the age of four after being presented with a Shetland pony named Peggy.

Since then, the royal stables have been home to a succession of steeds, among them Betsy, a black farm-bred horse who was her mount of choice in the 50s, and Surprise, a grey gelding whom the Queen famously galloped down the course at Ascot in 1961.


Equine enthusiast: Her Majesty adores the ponies and breeds them at Hampton Court



No helmet: The Queen never wears a riding helmet, preferring instead to ride in a silk headscarf



Cutting back: She has ridden less in recent years as a result of a niggling knee injury



Long term love: The Queen has ridden all her life and continues to breed several breeds of horse and pony


Recent years have seen her cut down on the amount of time she spends in the saddle - the result of a niggling knee injury that also forced her to give up presiding over Trooping the Colour on horseback.

Nevertheless, the Queen remains an enthusiastic equestrienne and, according to sources, is a familiar sight at her Windsor stables.

She is also said to take a keen interest in all her horses and ponies, some of whom are now ridden by her grandchildren, notably Prince Edward's children, Lady Louise and James, Viscount Severn.

Along with her thoroughbred race horses, the Queen also breeds Fell ponies and has a stud specialising in Highland ponies at Balmoral.


First love: The Queen's first pony was a tiny Shetland named Peggy who was given to her at the age of four (above, with her father Albert, the future King George VI)



Familiar sight: The Queen riding her much-loved horse Burmese during Trooping the Colour



THE HARDY PONIES WITH THE ROYAL SEAL OF APPROVAL: WHY THE NATIVE FELL PONY HAS BECOME A FIRM FAVOURITE WITH THE QUEEN


Seal of approval: A Fell pony foal similar to those being bred by the Queen at Hampton Court. The breed is native to the North of England


One of the oldest equine breeds on the planet, Fell ponies like the Queen's mount Carltonlima Emma, have roamed the moors of Cumbria since the Neolithic period.

Docile, hardy and thick-set, the majority of Fell ponies are black, grey or bay and measure between 13 and 14hh.

Highly prized by the Carvetii, the Iron Age tribe who occupied the region more than two millennia ago, the ponies later caught the eye of the invading Romans and were used as trade goods all over the Empire.

The Romans also helped develop the breed into the relatively large animal it is today. Originally thought to have stood around 12hh tall (similar to Dartmoor and Exmoor ponies), by the end of the Roman period, the average Fell was more than a hand higher.

Another invader to fall in love with the Fell pony was the Vikings, who used the animals as pack ponies; a use continued by the Normans.

By the 13th century, the Fell's usefulness as a pack animal was well-established and the pony played an important role in British trade until the end of the 18th century.

Following the Industrial Revolution, Fells were used to transport iron ore and coal from mine to town, as well as underground when the height of the shaft allowed.

Although previously used in trotting races, the Fell pony really came into its own as a riding horse in the 1950s, when its gentle nature and pretty looks made it the pony of choice for families.

Today, the pony remains a popular choice for riders of all ages, among them the Queen who breeds Fell ponies at her Hampton Court stud.

Source: The Fell Pony Society



 
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Blackleaf

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God save the Queen.


God Save the Queen (or God Save the King when the monarch is male) is the national anthem and royal anthem of the United Kingdom (since 1745) and her Crown dependencies and overseas territories, New Zealand, Tokelau (New Zealand dependency) and Norfolk Island (Australian dependency).

It is the royal anthem of Antigua and Barbuda, Australia, The Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Canada, Grenada, Jamaica, Cook Islands (New Zealand dependency), Niue (New Zealand dependency), Saint Kitts and Nevis and Tuvalu.

Queen Elizabeth II is, of course, the monarch of all these places.



God save our gracious Queen!
Long live our noble Queen!
God save the Queen!
Send her victorious,
Happy and glorious,
Long to reign over us,
God save the Queen.


Thy choicest gifts in store
On her be pleased to pour,
Long may she reign.
May she defend our laws,
And ever give us cause,
To sing with heart and voice,
God save the Queen.


During the 1745 Jacobite Rising, this additional verse was added which was used for a short period:

Lord, grant that Marshal Wade,
May by thy mighty aid,

Victory bring.
May he sedition hush,
and like a torrent rush,
Rebellious Scots to crush,
God save the King.


On the opposing side, Jacobite beliefs were demonstrated in an alternative verse used during the same period:

God bless the prince, I pray,
God bless the prince, I pray,
Charlie I mean;
That Scotland we may see

Freed from vile Presbyt'ry
Both George and his Feckie,
Ever so, Amen.


In May 1800, following an attempt to assassinate King George III at London's Drury Lane theatre, playwright Richard Sheridan immediately composed an additional verse, which was sung from the stage the same night:

From every latent foe
From the assassins blow

God save The King

O'er him Thine arm extend
For Britain's sake defend
Our father, king, and friend
God save The King!

Other short-lived verses were notably anti-French, such as the following, quoted in the book Handel, a biography of the British composer by Edward J. Dent:

From France and Pretender
Great Britain defend her,

Foes let them fall;
From foreign slavery,
Priests and their knavery,
And Popish Reverie,
God save us all.


The British tune has been used in other countries. European visitors to Britain in the eighteenth century noticed the advantage of a country possessing such a recognised musical symbol.

Lichtenstein's national anthem, Oben am jungen Rhein ("Up above the young Rhine"), is sung to the same tune as God Save the Queen, so it's rather strange when England and Liechtenstein play each other in the football. It sounds as though the Liechtenstein players are singing God Save The Queen in German.

In total, around 140 composers, including Beethoven, Haydn and Brahms, have used the tune in their compositions.

The first verse of the anthem (why not both, I don't know) is sung before football matches by England and Northern Ireland's players and before rugby matches by England's players.
 
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