Riders praise 10mph advisory signs to help horses

Tom Jackson & Katherine Ganczakowski
BBC News, Cambridgeshire
Tom Jackson/BBC Charlotte Mitchell is smiling at the camera while standing outside a wooden horse stable. She wears a bright pink and grey reflective coat layered over a brown jumper, a purple jumper and a black zip-up jumper. She has a fringe and brown hair that has been tied up in a bobble.Tom Jackson/BBC
Charlotte Mitchell hoped the safety signs would not only benefit horse riders, but also pedestrians and cyclists

Signs telling drivers to pass horses with plenty of distance and no faster than 10mph have been welcomed in two Cambridgeshire villages, after riders campaigned for new road safety markers.

The Dead Slow signs in Witchford and Little Thetford came about following a British Horse Society campaign that encouraged riders to report incidents such as dangerous driving and verbal abuse.

Rider, Charlotte Mitchell, hoped the signs would get motorists to slow down, adding: "It's just frustrating because 10 seconds of someone's life could save mine, or my horse's."

The horse society said it had seen a 116% increase in incidents in Cambridgeshire.

In 2023 it recorded 43 incidents, which shot up to 93 last year including one horse fatality.

Tom Jackson/BBC The sun rises to the left of a new yellow street sign in a residential area. The sign, situated next the the road, reads 'Dead Slow - 10'. It signals for a 2m gap to be left between horses and cars. It also feature logos from Little Thetford Parish Council and The British Horse Society. Tom Jackson/BBC
The British Horse Society said nationally it recorded 3,118 road incidents involving horses last year

The charity has an app, Horse i, that allows riders to report cases directly.

It counted events like verbal abuse that left a rider or handler feeling concerned, or incidents that resulted in a horse reacting in an unsettled way.

Other reported cases concerned the potential to injure, or had injured a rider, handler or horse.

It hoped the data gathered could identify hotspots and improve rider safety.

Tom Jackson/BBC A brown horse, with a long white streak running from the top of its head down to the bottom of its nose, is sticking its head out of the stable door. The horse has a purple coat on and the letters 'MJ' are stuck on the side of the door. Tom Jackson/BBC
Motorists who did not pass horses slow and wide "ruined it" for riders wanting to enjoy the countryside, said Ms Mitchell

Ms Mitchell, who is also the chair of Little Thetford Parish Council, played a part in gathering evidence locally, after some riders in the area had negative experiences.

She said: "We can get verbally abused, we have cars sat behind us revving their engines or just shouting in general to hurry up, people tooting their horn or flying past us."

Those who did not pass horses slow and wide "ruined it" for riders who wanted to "hack out on the beautiful countryside and bridleways", she added.

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