Goose pulling is an old sport originally played in parts of the
Netherlands, Belgium, England and North America from the 17th to the
19th centuries. The sport involves a goose that is hung by its legs from
a pole or rope that is stretched across a road. A man riding on
horseback at a full gallop would attempt to grab the bird by the neck in
order to pull the head off. Whoever makes off with the head is declared
winner and becomes the noble hero of the day. Goose pulling is still
practiced today, in parts of Belgium and in Grevenbicht in the
Netherlands as part of Shrove Tuesday and in some towns in Germany as
part of the Shrove Monday celebrations.
During the old days a live goose was used. To make the sport
challenging, the goose's neck was generously oiled to make it difficult
to retain a grip on it, and the bird's constant fluttering and flailing
made it difficult to target it in the first place. Sometimes "a nigger”
with a long whip in hand was stationed near the target who would harass
the horse as he passed by.
The prizes of a goose-pulling contest were trivial – often the dead bird itself, other times contributions from the audience or rounds of drinks. The main draw of such contests for the spectators was the betting on the competitors, sometimes for money or more often for alcoholic drinks.
Today, instead of live geese, dead ones are used, but that doesn’t make
the sport any less brutal. Even during the old days when animal
brutality were common, goose pulling was often frowned upon and
sometimes compared to the barbarous practice of bull-fighting. 10 more images after the break...
Belgian goose pulling is accompanied by an elaborate set of customs. The
rider who succeeds in pulling off the goose's head is "crowned" as the
"king" for one year and given a crown and mantle. At the end of his
"king year" the ruling king has to treat his "subjects" to a feast of
beer, drinks, cigars and bread pudding or sausages held either at his
home or at a local pub. The kings compete with each other to become the
"emperor".
Goose pulling in 19th-century West Virginia
Photo — Link
Goose pulling in Belgium.
Photo — Link
Goose pulling in Antwerp, Belgium.
Goose pulling in Grevenbicht, the Netherland.
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