To some people, the prime time for horse racing is the spring and summer, whether it is for steeple chasing or flat racing. After all, the ides of March are accompanied by the Cheltenham Festival, the Grand National is in April and Royal Ascot takes place in June.
November is the last month of the flat racing season, but there are still some great jump chasing events in the late autumn and winter, as well as some wonderful courses that come into their own at this time of year.
For this reason, there will be no shortage of horse box trailers on the roads and in the fields over the coming months, with a busy programme and many courses staging their biggest and best events in the months ahead.
Be Ready For Winter Road Conditions
Needless to say, this is the time when you will most need trailers that are robust and reliable. The road conditions will be far from ideal on many occasions, with plenty of wet leaves now, some inevitable big rain days and also some snow and ice not far away.
The motorways might be well gritted, but you can be sure that sooner or later you’ll have to get up a road that isn’t. Moreover, you’ll no doubt be parking on a few fields that are soft to say the very least. You need to know your trailer is one you can trust and can handle the wear and tear that the season brings.
Having ensured your horse or horses can get safely to and from the course, you can focus on the racing ahead, with some superb venues offering great racing over the next few months.
Famous Venues, Big Events
Aintree is one place to note this month and next, with three meetings at the Grand National venue, including racing on Boxing Day. It might not quite have the glamour of the epic race made famous by the likes of Red Rum and Aldaniti, but It still offers the chance for runners, riders and spectators alike to enjoy a visit to one of the world’s most famous race venues.
If the English Grand National is not until next April (as is Scotland’s), the Welsh version is coming much sooner. Chepstow is the venue for this event and this year’s edition will take place on Saturday December 27th, one of seven races on the day.
After the brilliant victory of Val Dancer last year, there are high hopes that 2025 will be just as spectacular.
Chepstow might have the most glamorous race of the winter season, but some courses stand out for their excellent conditions for racing over the winter season.
All-Weather Wonders
The UK currently has seven all-weather courses, designed to ensure the racing goes ahead come sun, rain, wind, sleet, snow or a plague of frogs. These are located at Lingfield, Kempton Park, Wolverhampton, Southwell, Chelmsford, Newcastle and Dundalk.
Lingfield is the oldest of these, being established in the 1890s, although the current Polytrack surface was laid in the 1990s. Able to host all formats of racing, it has over 100 days of racing a year, so expect it to be busy through the winter (and not just on its all-weather surface).
Not all of the all-weather courses will be in use throughout the winter; for instance, Wolverhampton is a flat course so although there will be several meetings this month, some under its floodlights, that will then be it until the new flat season starts next year.
Nonetheless, all-weather surfaces do add a new feature to the racing calendar, as some horses run better on them than others. Moreover, when the weather is bad, that will give such runners an advantage on those who thrive when the going is soft.
All-weather surfaces also mean that you know the event won’t be called, off, which means you may have to drive the horse and trailer box through all sorts of poor on-road conditions to get to the course.
Make The Most Of The Winter
While a venue like Wolverhampton or Newcastle is in a city, others are in fairly small towns, so you may pass through more rural areas where there are fewer major roads and more chance of running into challenging conditions in winter.
The fact that the jump racing calendar remains packed through the darkest and coldest days of the year is heartening for those who enjoy going to racing or getting in the saddle, while the horses benefit from not having to run on a hot day (just look at the footage of the aftermath of a race at Ascot in June and the buckets of water being poured over them!).
With a robust trailer to make sure you can get the and back, the racing community can make the absolute most of this time of year.