19th March 2025, a beautiful day, no wind and bright, warming sun. Earlier, it was a little hazy so I waited until the afternoon when I popped over to the finishing post of the Kipling Cotes Derby ( first run in 1519) near Loaningdale. The road with verges either side was quiet. Tall trees stood sleeping, still and winter bare. As I was setting up a woman arrived and started to work near the finishing post. I was advised that a finishing rail was to be erected near me which required the car to be parked on the adjacent verge. I set up with the intention of using only the primary colours of blue red and yellow. To these I added titanium white and began to sketch out the picture. I did resort to using a premixed black at one point. The bright sun added colour to the trees, with shadows to my left. The hedges are still bare of leaves as we are slightly elevated here. In the nearby low Wolds, hedges are greening up. I worked this large canvas with my long handled ‘Rosemary’ hogs. I met some people as I worked away including a local farmer, who as a former steward, had decades long associations with the race. A young family passing me in a large van stopped and reversed back to me, winding down the window we chatted for a short time and I asked the children if they could see the red kite. I decided I had done enough.
I managed to visit the next day, my first actual attendance at the event. I met the local farmer (92) again and we shook hands. He introduced me to his younger brother (88). Friends from Beverley, a couple who had moved from Warter and accompanied by the wife’s sister stopped for a reminiscence. Another man from Coniston came over and we had a lovely talk about the Lake District and Colin Campbell’s Bluebird
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