Also known as tent pegging, the centuries-old pastime is becoming increasingly popular in the UK

A remote field in Bradford rumbles as a rider, resplendent in a crisp white shalwar kameez, pistachio-coloured waistcoat, turban and fan billowing upwards like peacock feathers, gallops on his horse towards a peg hammered into the ground. As the rider thunders closer to his target he lowers a long lance, impaling the peg seconds later with a jubilant roar. “Four points, clap!” a commentator cries in Urdu.

Teams across the country – all from the Pakistani diaspora – have gathered to compete at a national competition for neza bazi, or tent pegging. It is a centuries-old cavalry sport renowned across south Asia that is becoming increasingly popular in the UK.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Church of England approves compensation for sexual abuse survivors

Initial scheme could reach multimillion-pound sum as church braces for findings of…

Are indoor vertical farms really ‘future-proofing agriculture’?

Heralded as the next step in food production, this practice is gaining…

American Airlines flight diverted