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Re: Poppies of Remembrance

Posted: Wed Nov 12, 2014 5:38 pm
by GrahamS
There is now a growing campaign to do something similar to honor the more than one million horses that were sacrificed alongside the men. Apart from the cavalry regiments that were quickly decimated in the early stages of the war, the majority of horses were commandeered from domestic owners. Working horses from farms (all of the heavy breeds such as Percherons, Shires, Suffolk Punch, which are all now endangered) warm bloods, hunters, hacks, show jumpers, dressage horses, ponies and mules were all taken by the army regardless. Men have choices, animals don't!

Re: Poppies of Remembrance

Posted: Wed Nov 12, 2014 5:45 pm
by BillyBob
distaff
I learned a new word!

Re: Poppies of Remembrance

Posted: Wed Nov 12, 2014 11:13 pm
by PFMcFarland
Definitely a moving, and thought provoking display. You did very good dealing with the crush of the crowd, Graham.

PF

Re: Poppies of Remembrance

Posted: Thu Nov 13, 2014 8:02 am
by Mike Kovacs
GrahamS wrote:There is now a growing campaign to do something similar to honor the more than one million horses that were sacrificed alongside the men. Apart from the cavalry regiments that were quickly decimated in the early stages of the war, the majority of horses were commandeered from domestic owners. Working horses from farms (all of the heavy breeds such as Percherons, Shires, Suffolk Punch, which are all now endangered) warm bloods, hunters, hacks, show jumpers, dressage horses, ponies and mules were all taken by the army regardless. Men have choices, animals don't!
Have you seen the film "The War Horse"?

"Taken" is pretty much the gist of it too. Confiscation of private property for low or no compensation is one of the things the Americans have better with "property rights".

Re: Poppies of Remembrance

Posted: Thu Nov 13, 2014 8:03 pm
by OpenWater
Graham,

These are very, very moving photos. The poppies in the moat tell a tale about a true river of suffering and death.

Mike

Re: Poppies of Remembrance

Posted: Sat Nov 15, 2014 5:40 pm
by GrahamS
Mike Kovacs wrote:
GrahamS wrote:There is now a growing campaign to do something similar to honor the more than one million horses that were sacrificed alongside the men. Apart from the cavalry regiments that were quickly decimated in the early stages of the war, the majority of horses were commandeered from domestic owners. Working horses from farms (all of the heavy breeds such as Percherons, Shires, Suffolk Punch, which are all now endangered) warm bloods, hunters, hacks, show jumpers, dressage horses, ponies and mules were all taken by the army regardless. Men have choices, animals don't!
Have you seen the film "The War Horse"?

"Taken" is pretty much the gist of it too. Confiscation of private property for low or no compensation is one of the things the Americans have better with "property rights".
Mike, behold:

Image
Thanks to Gemma Stannish.