Queen Elizabeth II to make horses part of Jubilee
Topics: From the Wires, News
FILE This Saturday June 8 1996, file photo shows Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, left, and Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother studing the field at Epsom Racecourse, south of London, before the running of the Derby. Queen Elizabeth II kicks off a long weekend of celebrations of her 60-year reign by going to the races, and perhaps no other event will give her so much pleasure. The Epsom Derby is the richest event on Britain's horse-racing calendar, and never mind that this is the only major race in which the queen has never entered a winner. Pleasure, in the gilded life of Queen Elizabeth II, often comes on four hooves. (AP Photo / Roberta Parkin) (Credit: Associated Press)LONDON (AP) — Don’t call her at the office Saturday — Queen Elizabeth II will be off to the races.
The horse-obsessed queen plans to kick off her Diamond Jubilee celebrations by attending the Epsom Derby. As one of her favorite events on Britain’s horse-racing calendar, it marks a fitting place for the start of the four-day national celebration of her 60 years on the throne.
In a life filled with duty and public engagements, and with a family that has often been troubled, diversion in the gilded life of Queen Elizabeth II often comes on four hooves. It is possible that no other event on the crowded Jubilee schedule will give the aging monarch so much pleasure — even though it is the only major British race in which she has never entered a winner.
She has long been not just a fan and an owner but an avid rider as well.
RACING POST BROUGHT TO HER EVERY DAY
One constant in the queen’s daily routine is the time she puts aside to scrutinize the racing press. It’s a highly competitive field, and to stay ahead, she has to stay informed.
Her longtime racing manager, John Warren, said the queen has the Racing Post brought to her every day for careful scrutiny and thinks about racing “every day of her life.”
Warren told BBC Radio that she “misses very little” in the racing world.
CHILDHOOD OBSESSION STILL GOING STRONG AT 86
Horses were a childhood obsession, and breeding horses and racing them have amused the monarch throughout her 60-year reign.
Biographers say that on the morning of her coronation, when Elizabeth might have been expected to be thinking about her challenging new role as queen, she was really thinking about horses. When a lady in waiting asked the queen if all was well, according to Elizabeth Longford’s biography, the queen said that things were going fine, indeed.
“Oh yes, the captain has just rung up to say that Aureole went really well,” the queen replied, referring to a favorite horse who was training that day.
Four days later, Aureole just missed giving the queen a coronation year victory in the Derby, finishing second.
A SPECIAL CURE
Longford recorded that the queen later suggested that Aureole’s excitable temperament might be tamed by a neurologist who recommended “the laying on of hands” — placing head and hands on the horse while he ate.
The treatment, Longford said, turned Aureole from an also-ran in 1953 into a winner at Epsom in the 1954 Coronation Cup and went on to make the queen the leading British owner in terms of prize money the following year.




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