This time last week, A.J. and I were making our way back to the U.S., through a variety of cities and airports. But for the three-and-a-half days before that, we’d been in lovely Celle, Germany. Our main goal in being there was to watch the Concours International d’Attelage de Tradition (CIAT, or International Traditional Driving Event), but we also had fun exploring the old city.

The city of Celle has a remarkably well-preserved and vibrant city center, filled with hundreds of buildings built between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries. It may be difficult to see in some of these photos where I’ve used a wide-angle lens and skewed the perspective, but a lot of these buildings are really uneven — with door frames, floors, and window frames at odd angles to each other — after several centuries of settling.

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see the dates on the right-hand building (“erbaut Anno Domini 1629” and “umgebaut im Jahre 1980”)? this building was built in 1629 and renovated in 1980

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Saturday morning featured a farmers’ market that filled the squares in front of and beside the old Rathaus:

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Also on Saturday, we watched the presentation portion of the CIAT (which I’ll post photos of tomorrow). Two of the three judging stations were in front of Celle’s palace, which we wandered around in the morning to photograph.

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this path goes all the way around the castle, next to what used to be the moat

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… The third judging station for presentation, the final test during Sunday morning’s drive, and the cones competition were held at the nearby Landgestüt Celle (the state stud farm of Lower Saxony). The world-famous Hannoverian breed calls this lovely farm home, and this statue on the palace grounds commemorates the Hannoverian stallions and their trainers.

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Friday night at the World Four-in-Hand Championship featured a three-hour spectacle in the arena, with vaulters, trick riders, Spanish horses being ridden, Friesians being driven, the World Championship dressage awards ceremony, foxhounds from a local hunt, Pony Club riders, birds of prey, and more, including a huge display of local heavy-horse breeds. Some of these wonderful draft horses were hitched to carriages and wagons; some demonstrated old and newer horse-drawn farming equipment; and some of the various breed champions — stallions, broodmares, and foals — were shown in hand. 

Here are a few video clips I shot, featuring the heavy horses:

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If the embedded videos won’t work on your computer, you can see them on the CAA’s YouTube channel.

Even though we’re now practically two weeks after the fact, I wanted to wrap up the blog coverage of the recent World Four-in-Hand Championship with the awards ceremony. It was quite a spectacle.

First, all the competitors paraded into the arena and lined up in two long rows (medal winners in the front, and everyone else behind them). Then there were two medal ceremonies: one for the individual winners (gold: Boyd Exell, silver: Chester Weber, and bronze: Ysbrand Chardon) and then a second for the medal-winning teams (gold: the Netherlands, silver: Germany, and bronze: the USA). Finally, there was a huge “carousel” of teams driving around the arena and out, followed by a couple of victory laps by the winners. Throughout the entire spectacle, the crowd applauded in unison, cheered, and waved flags.

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… where we have a bit of dressage to catch up on, from the World Four-in-Hand Championship about two weeks ago. As you may remember, I spent most of the two dressage days watching the warmup arena instead of the dressage tests themselves, and I was (and remain) fascinated by the loooong, telescoping whips that the drivers use as they warm up. 

As you can see in these photos, the huge whips are usually carried by a groom and handed forward to the  driver as needed and then handed back. As they’re trotting smartly into the arena, the driver or groom either drops the whip or hands it off to a gate steward. It’s then folded back up and collected by a team member. Because so many of the modern whips used in dressage either are too short to reach the leaders or have the lash wrapped tightly around the shaft, I suppose this is a “new” way to be able to communicate (in the warmup arena, at least) with all four horses individually.

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First, we have Boyd Exell (the individual gold medalist), who drove his dressage test on Thursday.

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Next, from Friday: three photos of Koos de Ronde (a member of the Dutch gold-medal team) and then three photos of U.S. driver Jimmy Fairclough (a member of the bronze-medal team).

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Sorry about my sudden disappearance from the blog last week.

I was on vacation but still had every intention of blogging each day. But then, luckily unfortunately, it turned out that the quaint old-town hotels we stayed at in several beautiful old German cities had no wifi.

Believe it or not, I was forced to actually take a break from blogging for the entire week!

We arrived home at 1:30 this morning, and I’m back at work today after just a few hours of sleep. So, needless to say, I forgot to bring my laptop, which has all the photos from Riesenbeck and from the rest of our trip.

So I still owe y’all some photos from the World Four-in-Hand Championship (more dressage photos and the awards ceremony, specifically), and then I’ll share some photos from other parts of Germany and from the lovely CIAT (Concours International d’Attelage de Tradition, or International Competition for Traditional Carriage Driving) we attended this past weekend in beautiful Celle, Germany.

Stay tuned!