Heh, that story about the 'electric' hearse has vanished now. That diesel rattling we all heard must have dissolved it. [bighmmm]
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Heh, that story about the 'electric' hearse has vanished now. That diesel rattling we all heard must have dissolved it. [bighmmm]
I get the BBC on cable TV here, and am in a better time zone. Watched the whole thing as nothing else worth watching!
Those Windsor's must have some good business deals working for them, going on the collection of expensive cars! Nice old horse and cart as well!
Yes, if the Land Rover has an electric engine it is badly in need of some new bearings! I was a bit disappointed that they didn't drive it up the steps to the Chapel. Poor buggers tasked with carrying the coffin had to stop halfway up for a breather!
I really felt for the Queen. She appeared to be very stressed and showing her age. Surely at least her Lady in Waiting could have stayed with her.
I rather enjoyed watching the funeral of Prince Philip. Whether you are a Republican or Royalist, the Poms do this business superbly well. Superb singing from the choir quartet, the service personnel looked terrific & everything went like clockwork, including the Defender!
It almost brought a tear to my eye when I heard the genial rattle of the TD5!
Cheers,
Lionel
interesting how the poms raided the pyramids and took mummies of the ancient Egyptian monarchy and displayed them in museum , got me thinking are the royals safe from archaeologists of the future in their crypts?
I hope Epic_Dragon has watched this, as some very nice horses being used.
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Prince Philip’s love of carriage driving to be remembered at funeral
Prince Philip’s love of carriage driving to be remembered at funeral | Prince Philip | The Guardian
Polished dark green carriage that he rode in his 90s will be on procession route at Windsor Castle
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Prince Philip driving his carriage at the Royal Windsor horse show in May 2019. Photograph: Andrew Matthews/PA
Right into his 90s, the Duke of Edinburgh continued to drive his team of fell ponies around the royal estates from the box seat of a carriage he designed himself.
He took up the sport of carriage driving in his 50s when what he called his “dodgy” arthritic wrist forced him to give up polo playing, and continued competing into his 80s. In more recent years he could still be seen driving, reins in hand, just for fun.
His horse-drawn wheeled carriage and his black fell ponies, Balmoral Nevis and Notlaw Storm, both born in 2008, will be a poignant feature of his funeral. The polished dark green four-wheeled carriage, accompanied by two of Philip’s grooms, will stand in the Quadrangle at Windsor Castle as the duke’s coffin is carried past in a procession on a Land Rover hearse.
The carriage was built to his specifications eight years ago and can seat four people and harness up to eight horses. It has two padded black leather seats and a clock mounted on brass at the front, presented by the Queen’s Royal Irish Hussars in 1978 to mark his 25 years as their colonel-in-chief.
Philip had been designing driving carriages since the 1970s. “I am getting old, my reactions are getting slower, and my memory is unreliable, but I have never lost the sheer pleasure of driving a team through the British countryside,” he said in a book he authored about the sport.
Towards the end of the 1980s he ceased driving four-in-hand teams, but he continued to drive competitively with teams of ponies, eventually retiring from the sport in 2003, though he still took part non-competitively in his 90s.
The Countess of Wessex, in a tribute this week at Windsor, recalled that Philip had been “pulled out of a few ditches here, I seem to remember”.
Fell Ponies: Fell pony - Wikipedia
yep probably your right unlike poor King Richard iii, he was buried under a car park. sadly No land Rover for this boys reburial.
https://www.smh.com.au/technology/ki...umble%20grave.