Pony Club Camp (Noel and Henry Book 5)

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Pony Club Camp (Noel and Henry Book 5) Page 16

by Josephine Pullein-Thompson


  The applause went on for a very long time and Henry grinned at Noel. “Evidently they don’t bear us any malice for all that trotting without stirrups,” he said.

  When the noise died down the major spoke again. “Your parents will be arriving for the luggage at any minute,” he said. “Don’t forget your haynets or your mugs and dishes.”

  Talking excitedly everyone rushed out of the barn. Camp might be over; but there was the Inter-branch competition to look forward to and someone had remembered there was a rally on Monday.

  Camp was over; but it had happened and where the gaiety and comradeship had entered in they would endure. “Thanks tons for having us, Major Holbrooke,” said Gay, “and can it last for a fortnight next year?”

  THE END

  Jane Badger Books

  Jane Badger Books is dedicated to bringing back classic pony fiction, some of which has been out of print for over 50 years. Authors available so far include:

  Caroline Akrill

  Joanna Cannan

  Victoria Eveleigh

  Patricia Leitch

  Patience McElwee

  Marjorie Mary Oliver & Eva Ducat

  Hazel M Peel

  Diana Pullein-Thompson

  Josephine Pullein-Thompson

  www.janebadgerbooks.co.uk

  Read on for a free bonus chapter from The Ponies of Bunts

  Josephine Pullein-Thompson

  Six Ponies

  Noel has no self-confidence. John has a nasty temper. June’s mother thinks June is wonderful (and so does she). Evelyn thinks dressage is a waste of time. Her sister Hilary is not so sure, and Richard, well Richard is very good at hiding the truth from himself. The Pony Club is the despair of Major Holbrooke, its District Commissioner.

  The Pony Club is presented with six New Forest ponies to break in. How they go about it, and the problems and triumphs they experience, are still just as entertaining and informative as when the book was published over 60 years ago.

  Josephine Pullein-Thompson

  Pony Club Team

  Major Holbrooke’s friends challenge him to prove that the West Barsetshire Pony Club can improve. The only way of making sure that they do is by taking them back to basics and running a course for them: it’s dressage all the way. Nothing runs smoothly, of course, and when the Major’s nephew, Henry, arrives, sparks fly. Henry has good points, but he certainly keeps them well hidden.

  The Radney Riding Club

  Henry is in despair. His new horse, Evening Echo, is not going well. It is cold comfort that none of the other local riders seem to be any better. Henry decides he’ll start a riding club, and with the help of Noel, that’s what he does.

  Josephine Pullein-Thompson gives us another cast of wonderful characters: Alex, cursed with a pony so terrible he seems to have no redeeming features; Christo, whose black mare is only rarely under control; Eric, whose cob, Princess, is under such rigid control she barely breaks out of a canter, and Pauline, who prefers looking pretty to riding.

  The Ponies of Bunts

  The Ponies of Bunts is part of a series of three books written in the 1930s and 1940s: they’re loosely connected, with the same characters cropping up in all three books, albeit in very minor roles on occasion. The stories aren’t sequential, so it doesn’t really matter in what order you read them.

  You can read the first chapter of The Ponies of Bunts in the next section. It was one of the first pony stories to present the trope of the healing power of the countryside, and the beauty of Bunts and its attendant animals do the trick for its heroine and hero, for at this time it was quite usual for a boy to be an equal part of a pony book.

  Like the other books in the series, it’s a wonderful comfort read.

  An Exciting Visit

  “JENEFER, Jenefer,” called Miss Fairfax from the stable-yard, “you’ll be late if you don’t start. Are you ready? The ponies are waiting.”

  “Coming—coming,” answered a distant voice faintly.

  “I wish I knew when,” remarked Miss Fairfax, with a charming smile to the children standing beside a small four-wheeled cart with a pair of Dartmoor ponies ready harnessed in it. “She’s sure to be late.”‘ she continued, adding with unruffled calm, “nothing in the world is so trying as unpunctuality.”

  “If she doesn’t get to the station before the train comes in, it won’t be any good,” said little Pat Forbes anxiously, “because Diana and John won’t know she’s coming to meet them, and their mother will bring them up with her in the car. So they’ll miss their drive with Timmie and Rice.”

  The five children standing in the stable-yard with Miss Fairfax looked aghast at Pat’s forebodings, for this was no common occasion. Timmie and Rice had been brought in from the field by the children a good hour before it was necessary, and they had supervised every movement of Green, the coachman, while he groomed and harnessed them. They had fetched the whip, and remembered to put in the rug themselves, and now hardly took their eyes off the ponies as they stood champing their bits, and pawing the ground, impatient to be off.

  Since early morning the whole household had seethed with excitement in anticipation of the arrival of two strange children from London, Diana and John Ridley, the bosom friends of Susan and Pat Forbes.

  It was all due to Miss Fairfax; no one could cure her of her twin virtues of indulgence and hospitality. She was never so happy as when she had filled her old house at Bunts full to overflowing; she liked one or even two visitors in every room, some said in every bed. So when she heard from Susan and Pat, who had enjoyed the free run of her house ever since they were born, that they had left their dearest friends Diana and John Ridley languishing behind them in London, with no riding, no animals, and condemned to a daily walk in Kensington Gardens, her pity knew no bounds, and she exclaimed at once: “Why shouldn’t they come here and learn to ride, and grow up decent men and women? Why should they stick in that abominable London? We’ll have them here. I’ll write to their mother.”

  The next morning in London, to the unspeakable excitement of Diana and John, the invitation arrived, and after some wrangling with their parents, was accepted. All that remained to do now, therefore, was to meet them at the station, and Miss Fairfax had just asked for the twentieth time, “When is Jenefer coming?” when a slight, swift figure was seen running along the garden path, and a laughing girl of about twenty sprang into the cart and gathered up the reins, almost before they were aware she was among them.

  “I’m so sorry!” she cried to Miss Fairfax, “I could not help it, I was obliged to attend to the goats. Now, children, hurry up and open the gate for me, and you, Derek, jump in and come to the bottom of the drive to open the gate there. All right, Green—let them go.” It was all done so quickly that the ponies were moving out of the yard while the children were still scattering and Miss Fairfax was calling out: “Don’t hurry my ponies; take them quietly for the first mile, at any rate.” Then, raising her voice as the cart drew further into the distance, she called out a last injunction: “Think of my ponies—never mind the train.”

  Great as was the excitement at Bunts, it paled before the feelings of Diana and John as they drew near their destination. They had had the delights of Bunts described to them so often by Susan and Pat, that they were on fire to taste them for themselves. Their last night at home they had scarcely slept for excitement, and were awake with the first birds, so eager were they for the journey. The weather was early spring, the month was April, and, as they left London behind them, the country gradually unfolded itself clothed in pale, lovely colours. The primroses were in the woods, every bird was singing, and the trees were bursting into leaf. The further they left London behind them the more delighted they felt. They were deep in the country before they reached the little wayside station five miles from Bunts, where they were to leave the train; in their excitement they bundled out in a great hurry, but there was no one on the platform to meet them. A porter, who looked after their luggage, told Mrs. Ridley,
who had come with her children, that they would find a car waiting for them outside.

  As they emerged into the station-yard, Jenefer, who had managed to arrive in the nick of time and was standing by her ponies, thought: “Are those the Ridleys? What a beautiful family! The mother is as lovely as the children.” Her second thought was: “But how white they all look! Anyone can see they are Londoners—”

  Then she went up to the slim, elegant lady who was preparing to get into the car. “I think you must be Mrs. Ridley?” she said. “My name is Jenefer Tremayne, and I live at Bunts.”

  The children, looking up at her shyly, saw a pair of soft brown eyes, a mass of wavy hair, and a face which looked as fresh as the country itself.

  Jenefer, on her side, noticed that Diana had a lively, roguish expression with her blue eyes and golden curls; while John, with straight hair and big grey eyes, looked more serious. “Dear me,” she thought to herself, as she looked at them, “what a pair of curly heads we shall have at Bunts! There’s Susan’s, and now here comes Diana’s!” Aloud, she said to Mrs. Ridley: “Miss Fairfax has sent a car to meet you, but I have driven down with the ponies as well, in case Diana or John would rather drive up with them.”

  As she spoke she pointed to Timmie and Rice, who were standing quite by themselves, as good as gold, a perfect pair of little Dartmoor ponies, both of them a rich dark brown with black manes and tails. They might not be very smartly groomed, and perhaps neither their harness nor their cart was very new, but they themselves were little beauties, and as they stood there stretching out their necks and switching their long tails after their five-mile trot, they looked so knowing, and so clever, and so friendly, that both children felt their hearts go out to them.

  “Come and talk to Timmie and Rice,” said Miss Jenefer invitingly, “they love being noticed.”

  She had a soft voice which sounded like laughter, and the children found it often fulfilled its promise, and broke into an enchanting gurgle.

  “Are you driving back with me?” she asked as they patted the ponies; “there would be just room for both of you on the front seat.”

  Diana and John took one look at her and then broke away to their mother. “Can we go with the ponies?” they cried. “Oh! Mummy, do say we may, do let us!”

  Mrs. Ridley concealed her astonishment. She too had been eyeing the turn-out, and her opinion of it was quite different from the children’s. “Would you like it?” she asked doubtfully. “Wouldn’t you rather come in the car with me?”

  “No, no,” they both cried at once with more candour than politeness; “we want to drive with the ponies. We hate the old car.”

  Miss Jenefer began to laugh, and seemed to think it was all settled.

  “Very well, then,” she said in her soft voice, “I’ll get up first, because you must never get into a cart, you know, until the coachman is up and holds the reins. We shan’t be at Bunts as soon as you will,” she said, smiling, as Mrs. Ridley helped first Diana and then John to clamber up, “but I will take the greatest care of them, and we shall turn up some time.”

  Now it so happened that Diana and John had a big car at home and had never driven behind a pair of ponies in their lives, and when Timmie and Rice began to trot they were enchanted at the merry patter their hoofs made, for it sounded like a gay accompaniment following them wherever they went; Jenefer turned out of the station-yard and they found themselves on a wide road, with telegraph poles running along the side. It was just the kind of road Diana and John knew well from motoring, and there were numbers of cars travelling up and down it now; in fact, several rushed past them in the first few minutes; but the children were surprised to see that Jenefer, far from pulling into the ditch, took her full share of the road, and when one went hooting by in a great hurry, she said: “Beastly things—I don’t know why they think they’ve bought the road!”

  This was a point of view the children had never heard before; they had taken it for granted that the road belonged to the motors, and that it was everyone’s business to get out of their way. They were careful, however, not to say so, and presently they noticed that one or two cars, generally driven by gentlemen, pulled aside and made way for the ponies, and when that happened Miss Jenefer made a little salute with her whip, as if she was making an acknowledgement to persons who understood right behaviour.

  When they had driven about a mile and had passed several cottage gardens gay with daffodils and spring flowers, each one of which looked prettier than the last, they came to a little copse, where a narrow road joined the main thoroughfare. It was a road it would never have occurred to Diana and John to use, for, instead of being wide and straight as motors love, it was narrow, and twisted at once round a corner: but no sooner did the ponies come to it than they turned their noses joyfully towards it, and Miss Jenefer exclaimed: “Thank goodness; now we can leave that slippery abomination of a road behind us, and have a little peace.”

  The children did not understand this at all; but they were far too absorbed watching Timmie and Rice and their amusing ways to ask questions, and they had not gone twenty yards along the lane when they found themselves in a new, an enchanting world. The hedges disappeared, and instead, the road wound through smooth green sward running into true English woodland on either side, and the children saw that the bright April sun threw shadows from the big oak trees over ground dappled with delicate white wood anemones and clumps of pale primroses.

  Long before they were tired of it, this beautiful woodland came to an end, and the lane, plunging down between two deep green banks, became so narrow that the wheels of the pony-cart almost touched either side.

  “What should we do if we met a motor here?” asked Diana suddenly.

  “Why, either they, or we, should have to back to the nearest gateway,” answered Miss Jenefer, as if it were the most natural thing in the world.

  “Has that ever happened?” asked John solemnly.

  “Oh yes!” said she easily; “once I met a hay-cart, in a lane as narrow as this, with such an enormous load the horses couldn’t possibly back, so I had to make my ponies back and back nearly all the way we’d come. I did get so tired of it, and so did the ponies. They hated it.”

  As they were talking the sides of the lane widened out and they found themselves at the top of a long steep hill; Jenefer pulled up the ponies, and said, most unexpectedly, to the children: “Now we must all get out and walk.”

  Almost before the words were out of her mouth she gave a spring and was standing in the road. The children had never seen anybody as light and quick on her feet before, and while they were still wondering how they should get down she was round at their side of the cart.

  Diana and John had never been asked to walk up or down a hill before their lives, for their motor sailed serenely over all difficulties; but Jenefer explained that they must ease the ponies, so down they got. The hill itself was lovely; the banks on each side were very deep, much deeper than in the lane, and along the top stood some great beech-trees, with half their grey roots hanging down in queer shapes over the road, just as if they were trying to make nooks and corners for the fairies. Lower down, the banks were covered with primroses, and no sooner did the children see them than they cried:

  “Oh! May we pick some?”

  “Yes!” said Jenefer, laughing, “this isn’t Kensington Gardens; you can pick as many as you like.”

  So Diana and John set to work with little screams of pleasure, and soon found that holding the pink, soft, woolly stalks of the primroses in their hands and sniffing their faint delicate perfume was better than looking at them growing behind railings. They were so absorbed in choosing the biggest out of each tuft that the ponies quite outstripped them, and they had to pelt after them as fast as they could lay legs to the ground before they caught them up. Then they snatched a few more flowers and ran after the ponies again, and this went on until at last Jenefer was at the very bottom of the hill and called out that she was waiting.

  “I�
�m beginning to want my tea,” said she, whipping up the ponies when they were once more in the cart; “how do you feel?”

  The air was so fresh and keen, and picking the primroses and running after the ponies had been such exciting work, that Diana and John forgot that in London they disliked their food, and said they wanted their tea too.

  “Well,” said Jenefer, “we’re a little more than halfway there; and now, if you look where I am pointing, you can see Bunts Hill. You can’t see our house for it is on the other side, but that’s the hill where we live,” and she waved her whip towards a big hill straight in front of them, with a conspicuous clump of trees on the summit.

  The children looked so intently where she pointed that for some moments they forgot all about the ponies and were astonished to hear Jenefer say suddenly: “You horrible, lazy little Timmie!”

  Wondering what could be the matter, they looked quickly at the culprit and saw Rice right up in the collar, pulling as if his life depended on it, while Timmie, with slack traces, lolled beside him, for all the world as if he were enjoying a pleasant snooze. Not for long, however, did he preserve his comfortable leisure: Jenefer’s lash fell so sharply on him that he started forward, his happy dream rudely dispelled, and the whip continued to rise and fall regularly on his back as she said bitterly: “You see what he does: he knows perfectly well when I’m not paying attention to him, and instead of behaving honourably like the other ponies, he takes advantage of me, and lets Rice do all the work. He knows as well as you do why he’s being punished now, but he will do the same thing again and again. He’s the most hateful, lazy character I know.”

 

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