Island Life Magazine Ltd April/May 2006 | Page 42

EQUESTRIAN - Sponsored by Brickfields and Froghill “I arrived with ten pounds and a box of tools...” Herefordshire-born Phil Legge came to the Isle of Wight as a 20 year-old farrier, with an ultimatum from his father ringing in his ears: he had to give the move a good go, and so was forbidden from returning home for 12 months. As it turned out, he ended up loving the Island so much that he made his life here – and established Brickfields, the well-known equestrian centre and tourist attraction in Ryde. Here we talk to Phil about the early struggles and successes, his love for his adopted home – and his ambitious plans for the future. Born in Hereford in 1952, Phil grew up on his parents’ 150-acre dairy farm. He was one of a large family of six children, and because there was not enough money in farming in those days for all six of the Legge brood to earn a living at it, they all ended up venturing off into different trades. Phil failed the 11-plus and admits to skipping school a lot of the time to help his father on the farm or attend horse sales. “I was probably learning more at home than I was at school,” recalls Phil. “In fact, the only level I got was a spirit level!” Phil was passionate, though, when it came to horses. He had been riding them since the tender age of two, being led round the field by his father. By the age of four, he had his own pony to ride round the farm, 42 and was a member of the North Herefordshire Pony Club for several years. Phil’s earliest experience of the equestrian business was buying “green” (unbroken) horses with his father, bringing them on and then selling them for profit. This gave him a wealth of experience in riding difficult horses. “As soon as I got a horse right, my father would sell it on to anyone with a pocket full