Category Archives: foxhounds

Meet the Hunt Club at Historic yellow springs

Saturday, November 21st, 2020
9:00 AM

The Hunt Club and Historic Yellow Springs invites their friends & neighbors, along with our Chester Springs landowners, to join them in the Yellow Springs Meadow as they host the Kimberton Hunt Club.

An opening ceremony will begin at 9:00 AM in the Meadow behind the Main house followed by a brief talk that will explain the history of the Kimberton Hunt club, the history of Fox Hunting, the attire worn in the Hunt, as well as some Fox Hunting traditions. Also, a bit of Historic Yellow Springs history will be included before the hunt and foxhounds “move off” at 9:30 AM.

Open to all – no pets please. Please dress for the weather & feel free to take pictures! Parking is available at the Washington Building.

Historic Yellow Springs is located at 1685 Art School Road, Chester Springs, PA

For more information on HYS, visit their website

Hunt night 2019

Ladies Hunt Team – Mary Musheno, Ashley Spangler, Jennifer Horner Shirk

Parade of Hounds

Hound Parade
Welcome the Kimberton Hunt Club hounds to the ring. The club originally formed in 1870 and is celebrating its 150th anniversary in 2020! Kimberton has continually operated in Northern Chester County, PA from its inception, which is a remarkable feat given the population growth in the area. Originally a privat pack, Kimberton Hunt was recognized in 2016 by the Master of Foxhounds Association. They have provided good sport in an area of increasing population due in no small part to the clubs good community outreach and positive relationships with landowners. Many days hunting will find riders and hounds having their photos taken by landowner and passersby on the roadways.

The club is able to be affordable for many people because of their long-running rated horse show which is celebrating its 75th anniversary this April. Kimberton is a family oriented group of businessmen, teachers, farmers, doctors and tradesmen with ages in the hunt field ranging from 4 to 80 years old! Kimberton Hunt is a very social club for riders and non-riders alike. If you would like more information check out their website.

Sandy and Barbara Dunn have put over 50 years work and love into the Kimberton Hunt and sport of foxhunting. Today Sandy Dunn, former huntman and current MFH watches huntsman Phil Shirk lead this fine pack of Penn Marydel Foxhounds through the countryside. Sandy and his daughter, Barb Mueller serve as joint Master’s of the Hunt. Barbara Dunn serves as club president.

The third generation of Dunn’s is here tonight helping Phil; Junior Kiley Mueller whose love of the hounds is apparent from the moment they are born is beginning her whipping-in career and assisting tonight! Kiley is responsible with her brother, Hunter for naming the puppies and walking them out as youngsters. Also assisting Phil tonight is his wife, Diana Shirk. Kimberton is a family affair through and through with Phil’s wife and his brother, Enos Shirk whipping in regularly. Also joining us in the ring is Whipper-In Mary Musheno riding as she usually hunts in a side saddle. Mary has hunted at least 30 times aside in 2019 with more hunting to go this year!

Kimberton is well represented in the show ring tonight with two hunt teams competing and a total of eight riders who made the trek here to support the show and the club!

The Kimberton Hunt continues to show good sports to its followers and we look forward to many celebrations throughout this anniversary year! It’s not everyday that a hunt club celebrates a milestone like 150 years! Watch for anniversary celebrations for the club and Kimberton Horse Show throughout 2020!

Hunt Night recap

Showing in the Field Hunter Riders 35 & Under – Over Fences was Phil, Enos, Diana, Mary, Ashley, Jen with Phil bringing in the 4th place ribbon in a huge class.

The Gentlemen’s Hunter Under Saddle had Phil, Enos & Steve representing. Enos swapped out his cowboy hat for the evening pinning 4th place in a well turned out men’s class!

The Ladies Hunter Under Saddle was an incredibly huge class, having to split into 2 sections for the canter portion of the class. All the women were polished and well turned out in their shadbellies and colors.

Hunt Teams had us in the ribbons too with the Shirk Team of Phil, Diana and Enos bringing home the 2nd place ribbon. The ladies team of Mary, Ashley and Jen represented us well too in the big class!

Find a complete Video Playlist of Hunt Night HERE

Shirk Hunt Team

Chester County Day 2018

This past Saturday October 6th, Kimberton Hunt turned out beautifully and in force for the 78th annual Chester County Day in the village of Birchrunville.

The representatives of “the Day” glowed about the setting in the village, the friendliness of our members and how beautiful everything was!

Thank you to everyone for your support and for the effort you all put into looking spiffy for the 200+ spectators that attended the morning’s  event with the Kimberton Hounds kicking off Chester County Day 2018.

Good Morning & Welcome to the 78th Annual Chester County Day!
The Kimberton
Hunt members, friends, horses and hounds are happy to be here today! My name is Barb Mueller, I am the Joint Master of Foxhounds. My parents; Sandy and Barbara Dunn have been at the helm of Kimberton Hunt for the last 45 years. I look forward to the traditions continuing for my children who are here today. We are a small, family-oriented club that encourages new-comers to the sport as well as children and those that have loved the thrill of following hounds for many years.

We are here in the quaint village of Birchrunville where things look much the same as they did when Kimberton Hunt was formed in nearby Kimberton in 1870. The homes, hills and valleys surrounding us this morning were standing here then. The beautiful home of our hosts, Mr. & Mrs Dulchinos was built in 1842. The architecture is quite different than the surrounding area because the owner Mr. Griffith was also a minister
along with running his cobbler shop in the small building behind the house. The front room facing the hill is quite large for the period and looks to have been used as the village chapel. This little hamlet of Birchrunville contained all the needs of its residents in the 1800’s. At the crossroads a school, cobbler shop, blacksmith, several mills, general store, a stage stop & hotel, meeting hall, seamstress, post office and even a bakery and “ice cream saloon”! Amazing that all the needs could be met right here in the valley!

Today Birchrunville is a frequent stop on bike tour trips, foodies looking for a reservation at the Birchrunville Store Cafe or locals and those out for a drive in the country stopping at the new and delicious Butterscotch Bakery! I previously mentioned that the Kimberton Hunt was formed in the nearby village of Kimberton in 1870. Farmers in the area would keep a few hounds and a riding horse in order to join together and have a bit of fun over these very same hillsides. Then, as is now, the fox was never harmed in the pursuit. The fox can often be seen waiting for the hounds on a hillside until they get a bit closer to make the game more interesting for the fox. The fox is always in charge of our day; how far we will go, where we will go and how fast we get there! Many times after a hunt a local landowner will stop me to say they watched the hunt while drinking their morning coffee and saw the fox slyly evade the hounds and walk off in the opposite direction as the hounds searched high and low for him! Similar to a game of Wiley Coyote and the road runner, the road runner is always going to come out on top and that coyote will keep trying!

Speaking of the hounds.
The hounds and huntsman are the hub of our wheel! The
entire hunt revolves around this special relationship between human and animal. When he blows his horn, talks to the hounds or tells them commands thirty hounds take heed. Sometimes hard to believe when your one house dog ignores you when you call!! The hounds are bred generation after generation to chase a fox that they will never catch and to please their master- the huntsman! Our hounds are specifically Penn-marydel hounds which were originally bred for the PA, MD, DE area and our thick forests and steep hills. Hounds with a loud voice and stamina were needed. As you are driving around the area this morning listen and you may just hear those hound voices from miles away!

https://streamable.com/ry69a

https://www.instagram.com/p/BomFdO2hxWy/?taken-by=fancyfarmerpa

So what is the huntsman saying to the hounds?
Each huntsman has their own
particular commands they use for their pack of hounds. The words the huntsman is saying may sound like gibberish to us but the hounds know exactly what is expected of them. Commands such as “come to me”, “hurry up and catch the rest of the pack”, “go away from me and hunt the woods in that particular direction”, “good job hounds”, “fox here”, “load in the truck” or “go back in the kennel”. The huntsman also uses his horn to communicate with the hounds and the riders. He will blow different calls on the horn to mean the hunt is starting or ending, the hounds have found a fox, the hounds are running a fox, the fox has gone to his earth and the run is over.

 

I’d like to debunk a few myths for you this morning and explain the attire that everyone is wearing:

  1.  Foxhunting is for the well heeled. Not even close! I’m a teacher after all! Riding with us this morning we also have farmers, therapists, blacksmiths, and students.
  2.  You have to be young, fit and brave to foxhunt. Nope! Today some that are riding with us are 80 years old and some are still in Elementary school! Some of our riders enjoy the speed of the chase and some don’t go faster than a trot. At the end of the day everyone had fun and was a part of the hunt!
  3. The fox is scared to death. Nope, not true. As I said, the fox is very much aware that the hounds are too slow and frankly not smart enough to catch him!
  4. The hounds are vicious. Couldn’t be further from the truth. In fact just last Saturday one of the younger hounds here with us today invited himself to a picnic just down the road and had to be retrieved later because he was playing with the kids and catching tennis balls! Typically though the hounds are on a mission and totally ignore house dogs, people they don’t know and anything other than the huntsman and fox!
  5. Foxhunters tend to ride wherever they wish. Really?? NO way!! I’ve grown up in this area along with my parents who have run Kimberton Hunt for over 45 years. We are members of the community and pride ourselves on keeping landowners happy. We don’t ride anywhere without permission and often have to cancel hunting because the ground is too wet. Our sport can continue on only because of the kindness of our landowners and we are cognizant of that everyday!

The history of what we are wearing:
We are traditionalists if nothing else! Riders are
asked to dress neatly and uniformly out of respect for the history of our sport, the landowners and observers. Once the uniform is understood it is easy to identify who the players are in the sport!

  1. Red coats- are actually called scarlet or pinque coats. These designate staff, for instance the Huntsman, Phil Shirk and me as the Master of Foxhounds.
  2. Male members that have been awarded their colors also will wear a pinque coat. Being awarded your colors is akin to earning a Letter in high school sports!
  3. Black coats are made of heavy melton wool to both keep riders warm and protected from the brush in the woods. Members that have been awarded their colors will have a colored collar added to their coat along with buttons from the club.
  4. If you’re going to be very particular the coats even have different number of buttons indicating staff, member or Master of the Foxhounds….admittedly we here at Kimberton are not always that particular!
  5. The ladies riding side saddle today are riding the only way a proper lady would have ridden a horse traditionally. This was true from the 1300’s right through the early 1900’s! Side saddle fell out of favor as ladies were beginning to wear pants and could ride like their male counterparts. Today side saddle is having a resurgence in popularity. The ladies with us today will compete in horse shows side saddle and even race and jump aside!
  6. A few riders today have worn the non-formal attire or tweed coats to
    demonstrate. These coats are worn in the fall, are typically lighter weight and not used for a formal hunt such as we have here today. These coats would be worn in September and October by staff and members alike. Brown boots are the norm with a tweed coat.
  7. Riders all wear a stock tie around their neck fastened with a large pin. This tie is basically a long piece of fabric that could be used as a tourniquet, sling or bandage with the pin to secure in case of emergency.
  8. Safety is paramount. All riders must wear a protective helmet and you will see some now wearing safety vests that inflate if you should unfortunately become separated from your horse!

Kimberton Hunt has a busy calendar in addition to our foxhunting!
We are hosting our 74th annual Horse Show this coming April . Information is available this morning in the tent to sponsor a class, advertise your company or otherwise support these beautiful hounds here this morning!

Our club also has lots of social activities for riders and non-riders alike! We have a fantastic themed formal party and auction every February
that also serves as a fundraiser for the club. You can follow the Hunt Club  on Instagram and Facebook for information on all these events which are open to the public!

As we depart today please remember to listen for these Kimberton Hounds and the sound of the horn as we continue on our day in the woods directly across the road from where your cars are parked. To us, foxhunting is a passion that is enjoyed all winter long, two days a week. We enjoyed giving you a glimpse into the inner workings of Kimberton Hunt and welcome you to find more information on our website at
kimbertonhunt.org! I hope that you enjoy your day in our little piece of paradise!

Thank you.