Yes, the horse is cantering, and I have just fired an arrow!
Karl and
his wife Zana Cousins-Greenwood run the Stampede Stunt Company and The Centre of Horseback Combat from the beautiful 18th-century stables on the
Gaddesden Estate near Berkhamstead. Only just outside the M25, it could be in
deepest Herefordshire rather than Hertfordshire; as Karl pointed out, the view from the archery field,
past the elegant Palladian lines of James Wyatt’s Gaddesden Place, hasn’t
changed in hundreds of years. Moving here after answering an advertisement in Horse & Hound, pleasingly, Karl,
Zana and their team cleaned and restored the stables, transforming the old cobweb-festooned
tack room into a dark-red haven with walls hung with bows and photographs of
the stunt riders in action. The Stampede riders travel all over the world
displaying their skills, from jousting to Roman riding (standing up on the
saddles), trick riding and, of course, archery. A new venture is the Gaddesden Banquet & Joust, during which guests gorge on a
four-course feast laid out in tents that flank the tilting field and knights
challenge each other to win fair maidens’ hearts. Check out their Facebook page for some spectacular photographs.
Prepping the class with Gaddesden Place in the distance
The archery track leads away from Wyatt's noble portico
Not a medieval castle, but not a bad backdrop nonetheless
But when they’re not galloping around showgrounds, wielding weapons with pinpoint accuracy and standing astride two horses as if they were a pair of sofas, Karl and Zana initiate lesser mortals into their secrets. They run classes in horseback archery, trick and Roman riding, stunt riding for professionals and actors, and, uniquely, rider confidence courses that draw on Karl’s background in sports hypnotherapy to teach people how to fall, how to cope with a difficult situation or bad behaviour and to regain nerve after a bad experience. Karl and Zana both have extraordinary patience and good humour, much needed when arrows are flying all over the place!
We began the day with a film of professional horse archery competitions in Korea, a spectacular display of accuracy and speed that looks impossible to emulate. Outside in the old walled garden, next to the newly built school with its bouncy rubber surface (perfect for falling off onto) we practice firing arrows on foot. These are serious weapons – the power with which they thud into the foam targets is impressive, even from a bow wielded by a beginner like me. The only other bow I have ever shot with was in Mongolia, an extremely heavy one from which I managed to fire five arrows only a few metres before my strength gave out. My Mongolian guides made it look extremely easy – I put it down to centuries of muscle memory!
Karl with an assortment of gorgeous recurve bows
A touch of colour for the arrows
Old and new: armour and medieval antics as seen in 21st-century
print journalism displayed in the meeting room,
which is stocked with Kit-Kats and coffee, rather than mead
We began the day with a film of professional horse archery competitions in Korea, a spectacular display of accuracy and speed that looks impossible to emulate. Outside in the old walled garden, next to the newly built school with its bouncy rubber surface (perfect for falling off onto) we practice firing arrows on foot. These are serious weapons – the power with which they thud into the foam targets is impressive, even from a bow wielded by a beginner like me. The only other bow I have ever shot with was in Mongolia, an extremely heavy one from which I managed to fire five arrows only a few metres before my strength gave out. My Mongolian guides made it look extremely easy – I put it down to centuries of muscle memory!
A local shows me how it's done in Mongolia in 2011
My guide Esee shrugs off his Western dress and returns
to the days of Genghis Khan
I could barely pull the string back!
Fortunately, recurve bows for horseback archery are lighter, mine being about 25lb, and shorter, for ease of use when a horse’s neck is in the way. They are beautiful objects, with many different designs available and a sweeping, curved elegance that is romantic and deadly at the same time. Karl practises the Korean-style thumb draw, pulling the string in the crook of the right thumb rather than with the fingers, holding the thumbnail firm with the index finger. The tip of the right thumb touches the two hen feathers, and the third or cock feather is a different colour and is perpendicular to the nock. Altogether, the feathers keep the arrow flying straight and true. If you feel the hen feathers with your thumb, you should be able to slide your arrow back to the string and nock it without looking. After a good deal of practice, at least.
Taking aim from the ground. Oddly, harder than on horseback!
The horseback thumb draw
I didn’t
exactly excel on the ground, especially when the four participants raced, partly
because I’m hopeless in competitions and partly because the others had all done
archery before, but for some reason I settled into a rhythm on the horse (the
splendid Jupiter). Starting at walk with a helper leading, we were all, incredibly,
shooting three arrows from canter at the end. I even got a bullseye once,
although I’m fairly sure it was a fluke! It was exhilarating and satisfying and
thrilling, requiring absolute concentration, rhythm and attention on both the
arrows and the horse at once – the horse must keep cantering the whole way, or
the competitor is disqualified, and they know immediately if you stop riding
because you’re thinking about aiming instead. The trick is not to think about
where the arrow goes, but to loose and straightaway look to the next target. My
best run came when Karl suggested I imagine the targets are something worth
shooting… my first thought was Nicola Sturgeon and her nationalist rantings, so
we agreed each target was a referendum and that if I missed, the United Kingdom
would be lost. I am delighted to say I saved the Kingdom – a noble endeavour
indeed!
An early arrow at a steady pace
Lining up a shot...
...and finishing with the requisite post-release flourish, which keeps the arm
and arrow away from the horse's neck and the rider in balance
Quite proud I snapped an arrow in flight!
And again!
Oh yes. Exhilarating!
Brilliant horse, proud pupil and even more brilliant teacher
Gaddesden archers, ready to take on an army
There are still lessons available this year, up to the end of October, and I urge you to book one now. The Stampede Stunt Company are also demonstrating at various events: Surrey County Show on September 27th with the Gulliver's Carnival Trick Riding Show, the Robin Hood Game & Country Shows at Ipswich on October 10th-11th and Newark on October 17th-18th with the Magna Carta Jousting Show, and finally at Your Horse Live at Stoneleigh Park in Warwickshire on November 14th-15th. Not to be missed!