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  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 04/05/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies and foals are seen in the evening light on the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys after a fine sunny day with blue skies and a cold North East wind. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_WELSH_PONIES_GLW_05.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 04/05/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies and foals are seen in the evening light on the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys after a fine sunny day with blue skies and a cold North East wind. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_WELSH_PONIES_GLW_11.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 04/05/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies and foals are seen in the evening light on the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys after a fine sunny day with blue skies and a cold North East wind. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_WELSH_PONIES_GLW_06.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 04/05/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies and foals are seen in the evening light on the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys after a fine sunny day with blue skies and a cold North East wind. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_WELSH_PONIES_GLW_13.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/01/2016. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies forage for grass under the snow which fell last night on the high moorland of the Mynydd Epynt, near Builth Wells, Powys, Wales. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_PONIES_SNOW_GLW_13.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/01/2016. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies forage for grass under the snow which fell last night on the high moorland of the Mynydd Epynt, near Builth Wells, Powys, Wales. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_PONIES_SNOW_GLW_08.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/01/2016. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies forage for grass under the snow which fell last night on the high moorland of the Mynydd Epynt, near Builth Wells, Powys, Wales. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_PONIES_SNOW_GLW_03.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/01/2016. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies forage for grass under the snow which fell last night on the high moorland of the Mynydd Epynt, near Builth Wells, Powys, Wales. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_PONIES_SNOW_GLW_15.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/01/2016. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies forage for grass under the snow which fell last night on the high moorland of the Mynydd Epynt, near Builth Wells, Powys, Wales. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_PONIES_SNOW_GLW_14.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/01/2016. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies forage for grass under the snow which fell last night on the high moorland of the Mynydd Epynt, near Builth Wells, Powys, Wales. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_PONIES_SNOW_GLW_11.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/01/2016. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies forage for grass under the snow which fell last night on the high moorland of the Mynydd Epynt, near Builth Wells, Powys, Wales. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_PONIES_SNOW_GLW_10.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/01/2016. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies forage for grass under the snow which fell last night on the high moorland of the Mynydd Epynt, near Builth Wells, Powys, Wales. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_PONIES_SNOW_GLW_09.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/01/2016. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies forage for grass under the snow which fell last night on the high moorland of the Mynydd Epynt, near Builth Wells, Powys, Wales. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_PONIES_SNOW_GLW_06.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/01/2016. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies forage for grass under the snow which fell last night on the high moorland of the Mynydd Epynt, near Builth Wells, Powys, Wales. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_PONIES_SNOW_GLW_05.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/01/2016. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies forage for grass under the snow which fell last night on the high moorland of the Mynydd Epynt, near Builth Wells, Powys, Wales. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_PONIES_SNOW_GLW_04.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/01/2016. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies forage for grass under the snow which fell last night on the high moorland of the Mynydd Epynt, near Builth Wells, Powys, Wales. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_PONIES_SNOW_GLW_12.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/01/2016. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies forage for grass under the snow which fell last night on the high moorland of the Mynydd Epynt, near Builth Wells, Powys, Wales. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_PONIES_SNOW_GLW_07.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/01/2016. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies lick a cake at a feeder. Snow fell last night on the high moorland of the Mynydd Epynt, near Builth Wells, Powys, Wales. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_PONIES_SNOW_GLW_02.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/01/2016. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies forage for grass under the snow which fell last night on the high moorland of the Mynydd Epynt, near Builth Wells, Powys, Wales. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_PONIES_SNOW_GLW_01.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 05/07/2017. Mynydd Epynt, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies and foals are seen on a fine summer morning on the moorland of the Mynydd Epynt range between Builth Wells and Brecon in Powys, Wales, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_Welsh_Ponies_GLW_08.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 05/07/2017. Mynydd Epynt, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies and foals are seen on a fine summer morning on the moorland of the Mynydd Epynt range between Builth Wells and Brecon in Powys, Wales, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_Welsh_Ponies_GLW_06.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 05/07/2017. Mynydd Epynt, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies and foals are seen on a fine summer morning on the moorland of the Mynydd Epynt range between Builth Wells and Brecon in Powys, Wales, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_Welsh_Ponies_GLW_05.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 19/10/2019. Llanelwedd, Powys, Wales, UK. Ponies get ready for the bidding which starts at 1100 am on the first day of the 66th Fayre Oaks Pony Sale, held by Brightwell auctioneers at the Royal Welsh Showground, Llanelwedd in Powys, UK. The Fayre Oaks Pony Sale is the largest Sale in the World of registered Welsh Mountain Ponies Section A, Welsh Ponies Section B and their Part Breds. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_WelshPonySale_GLW_07.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 19/10/2019. Llanelwedd, Powys, Wales, UK. Ponies get ready for the bidding which starts at 1100 am on the first day of the 66th Fayre Oaks Pony Sale, held by Brightwell auctioneers at the Royal Welsh Showground, Llanelwedd in Powys, UK. The Fayre Oaks Pony Sale is the largest Sale in the World of registered Welsh Mountain Ponies Section A, Welsh Ponies Section B and their Part Breds. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_WelshPonySale_GLW_06.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 19/10/2019. Llanelwedd, Powys, Wales, UK. Ponies get ready for the bidding which starts at 1100 am on the first day of the 66th Fayre Oaks Pony Sale, held by Brightwell auctioneers at the Royal Welsh Showground, Llanelwedd in Powys, UK. The Fayre Oaks Pony Sale is the largest Sale in the World of registered Welsh Mountain Ponies Section A, Welsh Ponies Section B and their Part Breds. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_WelshPonySale_GLW_03.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 19/10/2019. Llanelwedd, Powys, Wales, UK. Ponies get ready for the bidding which starts at 1100 am on the first day of the 66th Fayre Oaks Pony Sale, held by Brightwell auctioneers at the Royal Welsh Showground, Llanelwedd in Powys, UK. The Fayre Oaks Pony Sale is the largest Sale in the World of registered Welsh Mountain Ponies Section A, Welsh Ponies Section B and their Part Breds. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_WelshPonySale_GLW_26.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 19/10/2019. Llanelwedd, Powys, Wales, UK. Ponies get ready for the bidding which starts at 1100 am on the first day of the 66th Fayre Oaks Pony Sale, held by Brightwell auctioneers at the Royal Welsh Showground, Llanelwedd in Powys, UK. The Fayre Oaks Pony Sale is the largest Sale in the World of registered Welsh Mountain Ponies Section A, Welsh Ponies Section B and their Part Breds. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_WelshPonySale_GLW_18.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 19/10/2019. Llanelwedd, Powys, Wales, UK. Ponies get ready for the bidding which starts at 1100 am on the first day of the 66th Fayre Oaks Pony Sale, held by Brightwell auctioneers at the Royal Welsh Showground, Llanelwedd in Powys, UK. The Fayre Oaks Pony Sale is the largest Sale in the World of registered Welsh Mountain Ponies Section A, Welsh Ponies Section B and their Part Breds. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_WelshPonySale_GLW_09.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 19/10/2019. Llanelwedd, Powys, Wales, UK. Ponies get ready for the bidding which starts at 1100 am on the first day of the 66th Fayre Oaks Pony Sale, held by Brightwell auctioneers at the Royal Welsh Showground, Llanelwedd in Powys, UK. The Fayre Oaks Pony Sale is the largest Sale in the World of registered Welsh Mountain Ponies Section A, Welsh Ponies Section B and their Part Breds. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_WelshPonySale_GLW_13.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 20/05/2020. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies and foals relax on the Mynydd Epynt range, on a beautiful warm sunny evening near Builth Wells in Powys,Wales, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_WelshPonies_GLW_07.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 20/05/2020. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies and foals relax on the Mynydd Epynt range, on a beautiful warm sunny evening near Builth Wells in Powys,Wales, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_WelshPonies_GLW_02.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 20/05/2020. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies and foals relax on the Mynydd Epynt range, on a beautiful warm sunny evening near Builth Wells in Powys,Wales, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_WelshPonies_GLW_01.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 20/05/2020. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. A foal gets frisky and tears around. Welsh mountain ponies and foals relax on the Mynydd Epynt range, on a beautiful warm sunny evening near Builth Wells in Powys,Wales, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_WelshPonies_GLW_11.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 20/05/2020. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies and foals relax on the Mynydd Epynt range, on a beautiful warm sunny evening near Builth Wells in Powys,Wales, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_WelshPonies_GLW_04.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 03/02/2021. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies graze in very cold Westerly winds after the snow has melted on the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_WindsweptPonies_GLW_11.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 03/02/2021. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies graze in very cold Westerly winds after the snow has melted on the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_WindsweptPonies_GLW_10.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 29/11/2020.  Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies are surrounded by fog on the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_FoggyPonies_GLW_05.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 29/11/2020.  Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies are surrounded by fog on the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_FoggyPonies_GLW_02.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 29/11/2020.  Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies are surrounded by fog on the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_FoggyPonies_GLW_01.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 29/11/2020.  Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies are surrounded by fog on the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_FoggyPonies_GLW_06.jpg
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_13.JPG
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_11.JPG
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_05.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 10/11/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies graze on the bitterly cold landscape of the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK. after snow fell on high land in Powys last night. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_POWYS_SNOW_GLW_02.jpg
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_20.JPG
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_17.JPG
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_15.JPG
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_12.JPG
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_10.JPG
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_09.JPG
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_08.JPG
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_06.JPG
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_04.JPG
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_02.JPG
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_01.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 10/11/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies graze on the bitterly cold landscape of the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK. after snow fell on high land in Powys last night. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_POWYS_SNOW_GLW_15.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 10/11/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies graze on the bitterly cold landscape of the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK. after snow fell on high land in Powys last night. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_POWYS_SNOW_GLW_05.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 09/01/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh Mountain Ponies are seen at sunrise grazing on the Myndd Epynt moorland, at about 400 metres above sea-level, near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK, where temperatures dropped overnight to freezing. credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_POWYS_WEATHER_GLW_04.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 09/01/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh Mountain Ponies graze at sunrise on the Myndd Epynt moorland, at about 400 metres above sea-level, near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK, where temperatures dropped overnight to freezing. credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_POWYS_WEATHER_GLW_03.jpg
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_19.JPG
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_18.JPG
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_16.JPG
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_07.JPG
  • ©London News Pictures. 21/12/2010. In the past few days the UK has been focused on the disruption caused by the snow; commuters and holiday makers have been experiencing horrific delays.  Elsewhere in the country a small number of our four legged friends are having an entirely different experience.  At the Redwings charity horse sanctuary in Oxhill, Warwickshire, staff are working tirelessly to keep these horses, ponies and donkeys watered, stocked up on hay and sheltered from the elements.   .During the winter months the majority of the sixty seven residents at Redwings will be left out for the winter.  Each field has a water trough that has a tendency to freeze over in the sub zero conditions.  It is the job of Helen and Tom Glen, with their team of dedicated helpers, to keep these troughs topped up.  With the use of a small All Terrain Vehicle, Tom delivers up to eighty buckets of water and forty bales of hay across the thirty-acre site. .Founded in 2004, the sanctuary is now the largest in the UK.  The horses of Oxhill are rescued as a result from extreme cases of abuse, neglect and in some circumstances, the death of the owner.  Ex police horse 'Will Scarlett', named so after moving from Nottingham police force is spending his retirement here after suffering problems with his legs.  Due to the legalities involved with animal welfare cases all of the equines are re named on arrival.  One particular field of Shetland ponies have been named after cheeses - Edam, Gorgon and Zola, to name but a few.  .  The penalty for animal abuse in the UK, if convicted, can range from community service to prison. However, Tom states that "We have a field of horses and ponies that were beaten with a scaffold pole and the guy only gets 5 months.  There is not enough of a deterrent to stop people being abusive to animals".  Regardless of the their backgrounds the welfare of these horses is paramount.  The staff are passionate horsemen and women, they strive to turn each rescue into
    LNP_Rescue_Horse_Snow_ABA_03.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/06/2020. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies and foals relax on the Mynydd Epynt range, on a beautiful warm sunny evening near Builth Wells in Powys,Wales, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_HotWeatherPowys_GLW_08.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/06/2020. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies and foals relax on the Mynydd Epynt range, on a beautiful warm sunny evening near Builth Wells in Powys,Wales, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_HotWeatherPowys_GLW_02.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 10/11/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies graze on the bitterly cold landscape of the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK. after snow fell on high land in Powys last night. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_POWYS_SNOW_GLW_22.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 10/11/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies graze on the bitterly cold landscape of the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK. after snow fell on high land in Powys last night. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_POWYS_SNOW_GLW_12.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 10/11/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies graze on the bitterly cold landscape of the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK. after snow fell on high land in Powys last night. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_POWYS_SNOW_GLW_08.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 10/11/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies graze on the bitterly cold landscape of the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK. after snow fell on high land in Powys last night. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_POWYS_SNOW_GLW_19.jpg
  • © London News Pictures. 02/06/2015. Mynydd Epynt, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies huddle together in the near gale force winds today on the Mynydd Epynt moorland between Builth Wells and Brecon. Photo credit : Graham M. Lawrence/LNP.
    LNP_WALES_WEATHER_GLW_04.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 10/11/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies graze on the bitterly cold landscape of the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK. after snow fell on high land in Powys last night. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_POWYS_SNOW_GLW_04.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 29/11/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. The sun raises the air temperature to a few degrees above zero as Welsh mountain ponies graze in a very cold South East wind on the wild Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK after temperatures plummeted to several degrees C below freezing in Powys last night. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_COLD_POWYS_GLW_38.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 29/11/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. The sun raises the air temperature to a few degrees above zero as Welsh mountain ponies graze in a very cold South East wind on the wild Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK after temperatures plummeted to several degrees C below freezing in Powys last night. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_COLD_POWYS_GLW_31.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 29/11/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. The sun raises the air temperature to a few degrees above zero as Welsh mountain ponies graze in a very cold South East wind on the wild Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK after temperatures plummeted to several degrees C below freezing in Powys last night. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_COLD_POWYS_GLW_26.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 29/11/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. The sun raises the air temperature to a few degrees above zero as Welsh mountain ponies graze in a very cold South East wind on the wild Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK after temperatures plummeted to several degrees C below freezing in Powys last night. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_COLD_POWYS_GLW_42.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 29/11/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. The sun raises the air temperature to a few degrees above zero as Welsh mountain ponies graze in a very cold South East wind on the wild Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK after temperatures plummeted to several degrees C below freezing in Powys last night. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_COLD_POWYS_GLW_30.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 29/11/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. The sun raises the air temperature to a few degrees above zero as Welsh mountain ponies graze in a very cold South East wind on the wild Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK after temperatures plummeted to several degrees C below freezing in Powys last night. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_COLD_POWYS_GLW_29.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 1/03/2018. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. On the first day of Spring, Welsh Mountain Ponies huddle together and put their backs to the near gale force wind in horrendous blizzard conditions on the high moorland of the Mynydd Epynt range. Blizzards and temperatures around minus 5-7 degrees Centigrade with 'feels like' of approximately minus 10 degrees on high land hit Mid Wales last night and today Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_BlizzardPowys_GLW_0007.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 1/03/2018. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. On the first day of Spring, Welsh Mountain Ponies huddle together and put their backs to the near gale force wind in horrendous blizzard conditions on the high moorland of the Mynydd Epynt range. Blizzards and temperatures around minus 5-7 degrees Centigrade with 'feels like' of approximately minus 10 degrees on high land hit Mid Wales last night and today Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_BlizzardPowys_GLW_0004.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 1/03/2018. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. On the first day of Spring, Welsh Mountain Ponies huddle together and put their backs to the near gale force wind in horrendous blizzard conditions on the high moorland of the Mynydd Epynt range. Blizzards and temperatures around minus 5-7 degrees Centigrade with 'feels like' of approximately minus 10 degrees on high land hit Mid Wales last night and today Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_BlizzardPowys_GLW_0003.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 29/11/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. The sun raises the air temperature to a few degrees above zero as Welsh mountain ponies graze in a very cold South East wind on the wild Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK after temperatures plummeted to several degrees C below freezing in Powys last night. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_COLD_POWYS_GLW_28.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/02/2019. Brecon, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies are seen after a beautiful spring-like day as the sun sets over moorland near Brecon in Powys, Wales, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_POWYS_SUNSET_GLW_03.jpg
  • © London News Pictures. 02/06/2015. Mynydd Epynt, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies huddle together in the near gale force winds today on the Mynydd Epynt moorland between Builth Wells and Brecon. Photo credit : Graham M. Lawrence/LNP.
    LNP_WALES_WEATHER_GLW_06.jpg
  • © London News Pictures. 02/06/2015. Mynydd Epynt, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh ponies huddle together in the near gale force winds today on the Mynydd Epynt moorland between Builth Wells and Brecon. Photo credit : Graham M. Lawrence/LNP.
    LNP_WALES_WEATHER_GLW_02.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/11/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies graze in a cold NW wind with feel-like temperatures around zero degrees C on the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_POWYS_WEATHER_GLW_03.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/02/2019. Brecon, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies are seen after a beautiful spring-like day as the sun sets over moorland near Brecon in Powys, Wales, UK. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_POWYS_SUNSET_GLW_02.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 23/10/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies graze in the fog on the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys after a very cold night with temperatures dropping to around 1.5 deg C in parts of Powys. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_PowysAutumnWeather_GLW_11.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 11/03/2019. Mynydd Epynt, UK. Welsh mountain ponies are seen in a wintry landscape on the Mynydd Epynt moorland after snow fell on high land in Powys, Wales. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_SnowWales_GLW_11.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 31/01/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Hardy Welsh mountain ponies are seen in the bitterly cold wintry landscape of the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK where temperatures dropped dramatically overnight to minus seven degrees centigrade (temperature certified by photographer) <br />
 credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_FREEZING_POWYS_GLW_03.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 03/01/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh Mountain Ponies drink from an icy pool in the freezing morning weather on the Mynydd Epynt moorland near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, at approximately 400 metres above sea-level where temperatures were around minus one degree centigrade. Temperatures drop to freezing overnight in Powys, Wales, UK. credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_FREEZING_POWYS_GLW_05.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 12/08/2020.  Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Two Welsh mountain ponies are seen against a backdrop of a large developing cumulonimbus thunderstorm cloud on the Mynydd Epynt moorland near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK. as thunder, lightning and heavy rain continue to hit many parts of Wales. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_THUNDERSTORMS_POWYS_GLW_06.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 26/02/2020. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies forage for grass under the snow on the bleak moorland of the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK. after snow fell in Powys last light. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_SnowInPowysUK_GLW_09.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 26/02/2020. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies turn their backs to the wind in the bitterly cold wind on the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK. after snow fell in Powys last light. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_SnowInPowysUK_GLW_07.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 26/02/2020. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies forage for grass under the snow on the bleak moorland of the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK. after snow fell in Powys last light. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_SnowInPowysUK_GLW_02.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 23/10/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Welsh mountain ponies graze in the fog on the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys after a very cold night with temperatures dropping to around 1.5 deg C in parts of Powys. Photo credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_PowysAutumnWeather_GLW_08.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 31/01/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Hardy Welsh mountain ponies are seen in the bitterly cold wintry landscape of the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK where temperatures dropped dramatically overnight to minus seven degrees centigrade (temperature certified by photographer) <br />
 credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_FREEZING_POWYS_GLW_25.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 31/01/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Hardy Welsh mountain ponies are seen in the bitterly cold wintry landscape of the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK where temperatures dropped dramatically overnight to minus seven degrees centigrade (temperature certified by photographer) <br />
 credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_FREEZING_POWYS_GLW_21.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 31/01/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Hardy Welsh mountain ponies are seen in the bitterly cold wintry landscape of the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK where temperatures dropped dramatically overnight to minus seven degrees centigrade (temperature certified by photographer) <br />
 credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_FREEZING_POWYS_GLW_20.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 31/01/2019. Builth Wells, Powys, Wales, UK. Hardy Welsh mountain ponies are seen in the bitterly cold wintry landscape of the Mynydd Epynt range near Builth Wells in Powys, Wales, UK where temperatures dropped dramatically overnight to minus seven degrees centigrade (temperature certified by photographer) <br />
 credit: Graham M. Lawrence/LNP
    LNP_FREEZING_POWYS_GLW_04.jpg
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