Your effort and contribution in providing this feedback is much
appreciated.
Close
Ad Feedback
Ad Feedback
Star jockey turns photographer
Published
7:35 AM EDT, Thu March 20, 2014
Link Copied!
The jockey turned photographer —
Many of former jockey Richard Dunwoody's pictures have an equine theme, including this of a boy and his blind pony in the countryside near Chimaltenango in Guatemala.
Richard Dunwoody
The jockey turned photographer —
These images were part of a project by animal charity The Brooke -- here working mules and their drivers depart from a brick kiln close to Aligarh, an Indian city near Delhi.
Richard Dunwoody
The jockey turned photographer —
A man drives his horse at full tilt down a dual carriageway with a large load of empty water barrels in Faisalabad, Pakistan.
Richard Dunwoody
The jockey turned photographer —
A carriage driver washes his mule's head in the Nile from a riverboat in Egypt. Tourism is not quite so buoyant in Luxor and drivers are finding it extremely hard to make a living.
Richard Dunwoody
The jockey turned photographer —
Working donkeys at a brick kiln in Gujranwala in Pakistan. The owners take great pride in them, often adorning their bridles with tassels and cloths.
Richard Dunwoody
The jockey turned photographer —
A dehydrated working horse about to be treated at a Brooke clinic in Lahore, Pakistan.
Richard Dunwoody
The jockey turned photographer —
A tired working donkey carrying construction materials in a slum in Delhi, India.
Richard Dunwoody
The jockey turned photographer —
Photography is a complete career change for Dunwoody, who (pictured right) rode Miinnehoma to victory in Britain's prestigious Grand National jumps race in 1994.
Phil Cole/ALLSPORT
The jockey turned photographer —
Arguably his most famous ride was Desert Orchid, who won the prestigious King George VI Chase in 1989 and 1990.
Gray Mortimore/Allsport
The jockey turned photographer —
But Dunwoody insists he doesn't miss the rigors of horse racing and the ensuing falls, such as this one on Spring Hay.