9 fascinating facts about hares

We reveal 9 fascinating facts about our favourite spring mascot.

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(Image credit: Alamy Stock Photo)

1. The brown hare is Britain’s fastest land mammal, clocking speeds of up to 40mph.

2. There are about 700,000 hares in the UK — they are especially prolific in East Anglia, but sparser in the West Country and much of Wales; in northern Scotland, the brown hare is replaced by the mountain hare, Lepus timidus.

3. The true origin of Lepus europaeus is something of a mystery — there is evidence of its presence from the Iron Age onwards, but not much before that.

4. The expression to ‘kiss the hare’s foot’, meaning ‘to be late’, alludes to the hare’s great speed and the notion that, if you hesitate, it will have gone and all that will be left is a footprint.

A mountain hare (Lepus timidus)

5. Hares are solitary, not colonial, and don’t burrow. They create shallow resting places, in fields or long grass, known as ‘forms’.

6. A hare’s paw, when carried in the right-hand pocket, was believed to ward off cramp and rheumatism.

Brown hare (Lepus europaeus) adult male pursuing a female in Derbyshire.

7. It was also once believed that, if a pregnant woman saw a hare, her child would have a ‘hare lip’.

8. The phrase ‘mad as a March hare’ is derived from the antics of hares during their breeding season.

9. An image of three running hares with linked ears can be found in many medieval churches and cathedrals across Britain — possibly due to their association with the Virgin Mary and the belief that hares were hermaphrodites or as a representation of the Holy Trinity.


Aimé Tschiffely was denounced as a

Aimé Tschiffely was denounced as a "lunatic" when he set off in 1925 to ride 10,000 miles from Buenos Aires to New York. Not only did the Swiss Long Rider complete the journey, but his book, Tschiffely's Ride, has inspired seven generations to follow his example. In 1999 the Argentine Congress passed a law celebrating the 20th September of each year the "Dia Nacional del Caballo" (National Day of the Horse) in honour of the day Aimé rode into New York. Photo courtesy of Tschiffely Literary Estate.
(Image credit: Photo courtesy of Tschiffely Literary Estate.)

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