Navy tweed

skewbaldmillie

Well-Known Member
Joined
10 April 2014
Messages
333
Visit site
I am taking a younger rider out hunting with me next week and was unsure as to whether she can wear a her current navy tweed (she is 14) or needs a green/brown tweed. She will be coming out with me both Autumn hunting and after the opening meet.
Thanks
 

Bernster

Well-Known Member
Joined
14 August 2011
Messages
8,140
Location
London
Visit site
I am taking a younger rider out hunting with me next week and was unsure as to whether she can wear a her current navy tweed (she is 14) or needs a green/brown tweed. She will be coming out with me both Autumn hunting and after the opening meet.
Thanks

I'd think any tweed will do, I've got a smart navy tweed that I'll be riding in if I get out Autumn hunting.
 
Joined
25 April 2016
Messages
27
Visit site
I was unsure myself as to what colour i was allowed to wear...so i checked out my hunts photographer website n browsed the tweeds of the riders out...was bit suprised really.greys.blues.browns green n even an orange...if in doubt...check with the master of the day n hopes they enjoy
 

hibshobby

Well-Known Member
Joined
19 November 2009
Messages
195
Visit site
Tweed is tweed, whatever the colour - blue, green, brown, loud check, whatever. It's also never wrong. Historically, it's what a visitor wore ( it was considered too much to expect that a guest brought their complete hunting wardrobe to the house they were visiting for "the season", often over Christmas and New Year) and as the host was too polite to object, it's considered to to be never wrong. The ethos still continues to this day - whatever discipline, tweed is never wrong. It might look out of place a little, maybe at an affiliated dressage competition, but is never wrong and you cannot be disqualified because of wearing tweed.
 

Shay

Well-Known Member
Joined
17 August 2008
Messages
7,345
Visit site
Younger riders are expected to wear tweed all season - although the age at which you should change to a hunt coat varies from place to place. The theory being that if the rider is in tweed and falls off, others in the field will realize that it is a child and will come to their assistance swiftly. But the colour of the tweed is immaterial.
 
Top