View from the
Horse Holiday Farm
Tilman Anhold
Trailriding
without a guide
Riding on the
beach
Irish Hunters
Rain on the Beach
Trailriding
in Donegal
On Donegal-Trail
Riding by the
Sea
Trailriding
Bluestake Mountains
Trailriding by the Sea
Donegal Coast
Riding on the
Beach
Evening at
the Horse Holiday Farm
|
SLIGO
,
Ireland - It's hard to imagine that there remains in this world
a man who will greet you as a friend even though you are a stranger,
house and feed you, and let you choose from among his hundred
sleek, spirited horses to ride off on your own across a gorgeous
landscape for a week or two.
To Tilman Anhold, this is simply perpetuating the generosity extended
to him three decades ago. At 29, he came on holiday to County
Sligo from Celle near Hanover in his German homeland, looked around
at this wind-torn outreach of north-western Ireland and, being
an experienced rider, decided he could best see this land by horse.
The Irish tourist board put Anhold in touch with Don Wall, who
operated a horse-drawn caravan business in County Leitrim. Wall
agreed to let Anhold have a horse for the trip and called ahead
to a friend in Dromahaire to ask whether horse and man could be
accommodated for the night. His host in Dromahaire gave Anhold
directions to the farm of Agnes McDonagh in Ballintogher, where
the German visitor could depend on lodging the next night.
Anhold spoke fairly good English; Agnes' daughter. Colette, knew
a few words of German. Together, Colette and Tilman hatched the
notion of turning Tillman's adventure into a joint-venture.
The two were married a year later. By then they had acquired 35
horses and a house on 50 acres, and started Horse Holiday Farm.
Thirsting for adventure and longing to ride on our own without
guides across the open Irish countryside, my husband, Pat, and
I travelled to County Sligo in May two years ago. Although we
bad been keen equestrians In our youth, the opportunities to ride
had dwindled. But we were confident our skills would prevail.
After a four-hour trip from Dublin by train and car, we turned
in at the gate and drove past fields and paddocks of lustrous
horses, grazing and lazing in the afternoon sun, their long manes
and tails flicking in the breeze. At the edge of a cliff high
above Donegal Bay, we stepped out at the main house and were greeted
by Colette, whose warm manner melted away the miles.
The beauty of the scene-a panorama of the Slieve League peninsula,
with four strands of beach and as many separate weather systems-left
us in awe. Colette pointed out the solitary and eerie Classiebawn
Castle at Mullaghmore, an a promontory to the distant far right.
Then, with a sweeping gesture to the left, she identified each
strand of beach:
Muliagbmore, then Cliffony, Streedagh and Lissadel, and told us
that at low tide we could ride on all four, from one to the other.
To the left was Sligo Bay, shimmering in the late-day sun, and
directly behind us a few miles away was the smooth, hulking form
of Benbulben, below whose bare, sloping head, in Drumcliffe churchyard,
lies the grave of William Butler Yeats, marked by a stone etched
with his words: "Cast a cold eye / On life, on death / Horseman,
pass by"
We turned toward the house, whose gray stucco walls and heavy
doors gave it the look of something meant to withstand the elements.
By contrast, the interior, with its polished hardwood floors and
contemporary furnishings, is warm and inviting. In the dining
room, which has a picture window overlooking the bay, a long wooden
table was set for tea.
Upstairs, our spacious room had a simple Bavarian motif, with
big puffed comforters an the beds and a view toward Mullaghmore.
Colette suggested we have some tea and cake before heading for
the stables to meet Tilman and be matched up with our mounts.
Tilman Anhold
is a fair-haired, burly man, now 60, brimming with energy and
mirth. An Irish lilt is woven into his German-accented English,
and judging from his banter with the youthful staff, he runs the
farm with firm but friendly Teutonic efficiency.
To determine which horse to offer, he asked only two questions:
How long have you been riding?
What manner of horse do you want?
Then he consulted his list of 120 and made a match: for me, a
sweet-faced dark bay named Lomond, and for Pat, a heftier, lighter
bay named Guinness.
All of Anhold's horses are Irish hunters-a cross between a thoroughbred
stallion and a warmblood Irish draught mare-or die bigger, heftier
Irish draught horses with huge plumed lower legs and feet. They
are beautiful, powerful and willing, as well as gentle and sure-footed.
Most of Anhold's horses are bred and raised right there on the
farm.
That first evening, during a sumptuous dinner of shellfish and
chateaubriand with die six other guests, most of whom had also
just arrived, the mood of excitement and conviviality gave way
to gallows humour as a rainstorm began.
Back in our room, we stayed up half the night distilling the contents
of our suitcases into two small sets of saddlebags (one sack to
be left empty for halter and grooming gear) and reading a 15-page
booklet of farm rules and cautionary tales as huge gusts of wind
and rain pounded against the walls.
I thought
of naturalist John Muir, who once tied himself to a tree during
a fierce storm to experience what die tree was going through,
and I was having some serious second thoughts about riding off
into what might be six straight days of something similar.
By morning
the rain had diminished to a drizzle. After breakfast of juice,
muesli, porridge, eggs, sausage, bacon, grilled tomatoes and toast,
we saddled up for a tide on Cliffony Strand to test Anhold's match
making skills.
Itching to run, the horses began to prance when we reached the
sand. Anhold told us to give them free rein on the beach, so 1
gripped Lomond's mane just as he surged into a fast, elongated
trot and then into an undulating gallop. The horses are so big
and powerful that every sensation seemed exaggerated. The sound
of hooves pounding the sand drowned out the crashing of the surf
and was in turn muted by the rush of wind and die throb of blood
inside my head.
After half an hour of putting the horses through their paces,
we turned back toward the farm. The sun bad broken through the
overcast, and we were relishing the prospect of hitting the Donegal
Trail for a week of unfettered freedom.
Anhold gave us a map of the ride that he had hand-coloured with
Xs marking die location of each night's lodging. At each farm
there would be a bed and bath for us, a breakfast so big that
we would pack part of it each day for our lunch, and a field and
feed for die horses. Dinner with our hosts was optional.
Anhold told us we would find yellow arrows at every junction to
indicate the trail. He circled the location of a couple of pubs
we would pass, and then, placing another X on the map just before
the village of Bridgetown, he said, "Don't let die horses
drink die water here." But be didn't explain
why, and we
assumed- wrongly -that the groundwater was tainted.
Then
we were off.
For the next four days we galloped for miles across white sand
beaches and trotted down one-lane country
roads, across fields and through forests, and along narrow footpaths
lined with a riot of rhododendron, Scotch broom and hazel in full
bloom. We went for hours without seeing other people All along
the way were ghostly relics of the past-crumbling stone fences
and long-abandoned stone cottages. Windows that once glowed with
candlelight now stared back blankly through fluttering shreds
of old gray lace. Newborn lambs bleated and ran to their mothers,
startle dby the clatter of hooves.
The weather
spanned the seasons, sometimes all in one hour. One moment we
were galloping along a beach in bright sunshine as big clouds
billowed on the horizon; the next moment we faced a blackened
sky Within minutes we might be riding into a hailstorm, stones
the size of ripened peas bouncing off our helmets. We quickly
learned to get in and out of our slickers without dismounting
which was fine since we could be sun-dried 15 minutes after a
drenching rain.
The yellow
arrows proved more challenging than the weather. From the beginning
we learned that they were easy to miss or misread. The second
one we saw was bent around a utility pole. We decided it meant
"go straight," but it actually meant we should cut to
the right onto a faint trail through a field. .We ended up on
a busy road
just outside die fair-sized manufacturing town of Ballyshannon
at die 5:30p.m. rush hour.
Checking the map and realizing our mistake, we turned and rode
several kilometres back to a small quarter-horse ranch, whose
owner, coincidentally, was Colette's first cousin. After offering
us tea, which we reluctantly declined, he directed us back to
the trail.
At the end of our second day we were rescued by our intended host,
John Boyle, who was returning from the nearby town of Donegal
In time to greet us at his farm.
Hunkered in our hooded slickers, we bad missed die min and were
unknowingly following die next day's arrows.
"Will you be looking for someone?'" he asked with a
broad grin as he leaned out the car window. He led us to the farm,
where his wife, Philomena, gave us hot tea and arranged our wet
clothes around a big iron stove, the centrepiece of the living
room.
There were many more missed or missing arrows in the days to come.
In the more remote regions, when we ran out of arrows and were
just as confused by the map, we tried to go by our instincts.
These times invariably led to a wonderful encounter with a shepherd,
a farmer, a fisherman or a
woman gardening or hanging 1aundry who would sometimes greet us
with "Aye, you must be from Tilman's," before setting
us in the right direction.
These misadventures often led to nine-hour days and late-evening
arrivals. On the first day's stopover, Rose McCaffrey, one of
the mistresses of Cavangarden, a beautiful country estate Set
in 1,000 rolling green acres, returned from her evening walk and
found me lying at a rear gate looking up at my horse. Dismounting
to open the latch, 1 had caught my foot on a saddlebag, slid to
the ground and was too exhausted to move. Laughing, Rose helped
with the gate, and we rode on in through neatly groomed grounds
to a large stone manor house an a circular driveway.
Each night was a different barn but the same routine: Brush down
the horses, give them grain and water, and turn them out into
a field for the night. In the mornings we often found them lolling
in die tall grass, sometimes allowing us to approach and even
put their halters on before they lurched up onto their feet.
We were too late for the evening meal at Cavangarden, so we washed
up and called a taxi to drive us back into Ballyshannon, the nearest
town. By the time we arrived, it was almost 10 p.m. and the three
main restaurants were closed. We finally coaxed a pizza chef to
make one last pie for us, and we carted it off to a local pub,
where we ate ravenously and drank warm Guinness stout.
As we neared Bridgetown the next day, mindful of Anhold's admonition
not to let the horses drink the water, we kept the animals from
approaching streams along die way. As we neared die town and were
riding along a lane behind some houses, we saw a large barrel
brimming with what must have been rainwater.
The horses headed straight for it, half-submerging their heads.
Just then, an elderly woman rushed around die side of die house
with both arms raised, shouting, "Don't let the horses drink
the water!" and we realized this was her drinking water,
the water that Anhold had warned us about. Apologies would not
suffice.
We
rode on, feeling stupid and remorseful.
On the third day, we turned east away from the beaches and were
heading through peat bogs and into more mountainous terrain, alternately
walking and trotting for hours through a seedling pine forest
until we suddenly carne upon the stunning Lough Derg. Rising from
the water, mirage-like, was the large, mysterious form of the
basilica known as St. Patrick's Purgatory a destination for Christian
pilgrims since medieval times.
The skies had just cleared, and I would happily have ridden around
and around die shores until nightfall, but we were driven, off
by swarms of tiny gnats with big appetites.
Itwas less than an hour's ride from here to the town of Pettigo,
where we stayed the night at Carne, the farmhouse of Mary Greene,
a reserved and soft-spoken woman who was gracious and attentive
to our needs, including proffering a packet of frozen peas for
my slightly swollen sprained thumb, as we all sat down for tea.
The next day, after riding again for hours and becoming Increasingly
anxious that we might have missed a turn, a new feature of this
treasure hunt occurred to us: We could quit. Just that fast, we
turned the horses and headed back to Pettigo. After reserving
another night at Carne, we spent the afternoon and evening riding
in the hills above the town. As the warm sunshine faded softly
and a light breeze quickened, we luxuriated in the knowledge that
we couldn't get lost.
That evening we called Anhold to tell him of our change of plans,
and he arranged to send a truck in the morning to trailer us with
the horses back to Horse Holiday Farm.
There we spent the rest of the week riding by the sea on the spectacular
trails and beaches around Horse Holiday Farm and relaxing again
in the embrace of Colette's hospitality.
It's not unusual for riders to cry when they part with their horses
on the last day at the farm, and I was no exception. Those who
find the pain unbearable can buy their horse from Anhold and take
it home. Bestowing big strokes and hugs and murmured endearments
on Lornond, I instead vowed to return another year to ride die
Sligo Trail.
Tilman and
Colette Anhold
Horse Holiday Farm Ltd.
Grange County Sligo Ireland
Telephone : (071) 9166152
Fax : (071) 9166400
From Europe Telephone : 00 353 71 9166152
Fax : 00 353 71 9166400
Formular: Anfrage und Reservierung
Anreisemöglichkeiten zur Horse
Holiday Farm
The Horse Holiday Farm is Bord Fáilte (Irish Tourist Board)
approved and
a member of A.I.R.E., the Association of Irish Riding Establishments.
|