A Heaven for Horsemen
iving in the Cotswolds Olympic without a horse is, quite eventer Vittoria frankly, a waste, because Panizzon, it’s a honey pot for horsey in Italian team A heaven for Lpeople, both professional and ama- livery, loves her teur. Horses emerge elegantly from Adlestrop base attractive yards built from mellow, horsemen yellow Cotswold stone to compete at the top European competitions, as well as Badminton, gatcombe, Hunting, hacking, polo and racing, Blenheim and Salperton horse trials, not to mention the major three-day events: which are on the doorstep, and riders are drawn to the range of competition they’re all there in the Cotswolds. centres, cross-country courses and easy access to the motorway network. Catherine Austen talks to leading equestrian Olympic dressage gold medallist figures who say they couldn’t live anywhere else Laura Bechtolsheimer has an enviable set-up at her parents’ home in Ampney Photographs by Richard Cannon I fell in love St Peter, outside Cirencester in glouces- tershire. She’s now married to seven- with this beautiful goal polo player Mark Tomlinson and place‘ and its great the high-powered couple lives between there and his family’s yard near Weston- social scene birt—the area is a hotspot for polo, too, with at least four clubs, including Cirencester Park and Beaufort. Eventers, such as Olympic gold ’ medallist Richard Meade and now his son, Harry, and racehorse trainers are drawn to the hills—perfect for gallop- ing horses up—and the Cotswolds’ ➢ The eventer vittoria Panizzon, who competed for italy at the Beijing and London Olympics, discovered the Cotswolds while at Bristol University.
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