Duke of Richmond: āIn Britain we completely indulge our dogsā
Duke of Richmond: āIn Britain we completely indulge our dogsā
LA RobinsonSun, May 10, 2026 at 12:00 PM UTC
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The Duke of Richmond photographed for The Telegraph with Winston the dachshund and Lito the spaniel at the Kennels, Goodwood - Andrew Crowley
The Duke of Richmond is in a hurry. Itās a sunny spring afternoon at the historic Goodwood Estate, and his glossy black Mini Cooper is kicking up dust as it flies down the road between immaculately manicured emerald lawns. Awaiting his arrival, I watch the scene from a first-floor window in the Kennels, an 18th-century compound crafted specifically to house his ancestorsā foxhounds in ultimate luxury. Nowadays, it serves as a deluxe clubhouse for the members of various Goodwood associations, including their canine companions (who can join for Ā£65).
āItās a very grand building, you know ā the most luxurious dog house in the world,ā the Duke (also known as Charles Gordon-Lennox) proudly boasts when he arrives, plonking himself down in a lovingly battered leather armchair. Surrounding us, portraits of distinguished doggies adorn stone walls, and artfully designed kennels nestle seamlessly among tasteful furniture; the entire property is an upper-crust ode to the British obsession with dogs.
āDogaā (dog yoga) at Goodwoof - Christopher Ison
We are meeting to discuss Goodwoof, a lavish dog festival that is due to take place at the Kennels on May 16 and 17. āWeāve got pet masseurs flying in from LA to massage the dogs,ā the Duke says in his distinguished vocal fry, clearly amused. āThereās dog yoga and pilates, a place to dance with your dog that we call Ministry of Hound, and instead of Norland nannies ā the fancy nannies for your children ā we have Gnawland Nannies for VIP guests. Weāll take your dog away for a bit and give you a rest.ā
He laughs, well aware of how absurd this all sounds. āThe puns are terrible and endless. We keep coming up with these potty things, but anyway, itās fun.ā
Goodwoof, the Duke of Richmondās annual canine festival at Goodwood - PA Images / Alamy Stock Photo
Since taking on the management of the familyās country pile in the 1990s, the enterprising Duke has turned it into a multimillion-pound events compound ā an aristocratic playground of sorts, playing host to, among other things, the Goodwood Festival of Speed, a pulse-racing car rally, and Goodwood Revival, a classic car and vintage fashion showcase.
This is the fifth year of Goodwoof, and the Duke says they are expecting more than 13,000 canines. I suspect it will require a lot of doggy bags. There will also be a dog-and-owner fashion show, Chien Charmant, with prizes provided by HermĆØs for āthe best six legsā.
āThereās no dress code at Goodwoof, itās outdoors. But weād rather people made a bit of an effort. Iāll definitely wear a suit,ā he says. Known for his dapper tailoring, ācasualā is not a word in the Dukeās sartorial vocabulary, though he apologises for being underdressed today (his crisp suit jacket, shiny cufflinks and the gleaming chunk of silverware on his wrist say otherwise).
The Duke of Richmond with Lito (left) and her mother Ruby at Goodwoof 2022 - Jack Beasley
The events list continues: thereās āBarkitectureā, a kennel design competition among world-renowned architects, co-curated by Grand DesignsāKevin McCloud. (The theme this year is ādogs in spaceā, in honour of the late photographer Martin Parrās rather eccentric collection of Russian space dog memorabilia.)
Then there are tarot card readings, childrenās book readings by Michael Morpurgo, and vets and trainers available to get Rover on his best behaviour. If you keep your eyes peeled, you might also spot the Princess of Walesās brother, James Middleton, cycling round the grounds with a basket full of pups. He and his black spaniel Ella are regulars at the event.
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The Princess of Walesās brother, James Middleton, at Goodwoof - Christopher Ison
If it all sounds like circus pageantry, then so be it; the Duke is the Savile Row-suited ring leader. With human birth rates on the decline in Britain and dog ownership on the up, our canines have become like furry children, and it seems weāre content to spoil them accordingly; the UK pet care market is now a multi-billion-pound industry.
Despite the theatrics, Goodwoof continues a proud history. āWe wouldnāt do anything at Goodwood that isnāt authentic,ā says the Duke. āThe house was started because of the fox hunt.ā Up until now, heās been leaning back and experiencing the full support of the chair, his legs loosely crossed, and I do get the sense Iām meeting him in the comfort of his own home. But as he switches gears from levity to legacy, he tents his fingers authoritatively: āAnyone serious in London society would have been hunting at Charlton, a mile away; the first Duke of Richmond bought Goodwood House because of that.ā
A diptych of dogs, by artist Holly Frean, on display inside the Kennels - Andrew Crowley
But it was the third Duke who really started spoiling the hounds in 1787 when he built the Kennels. Famously, 100 years before the main house had central heating, he had it installed in the elaborate dog house to the tune of Ā£6,000 ā thatās approximately Ā£1.2m today. Described as plates of iron heated by fire, the system was essentially an Aga for dogs. A āDagaā, if you will.
Today, instead of a warm bed and immortalisation in a grand oil painting, hounds get a custom water bowl that comes with membership to the Kennels and access to state-of-the-art beds like the one by renowned architect Norman Foster, the brain behind the Gherkin and the Millennium bridge. āI think he spent a fortune making it,ā the Duke tells me with a conspiratorial smile. Weāre standing with our heads cocked, contemplating a geodesic tortoiseshell of a kennel crafted in the finest cherry wood. It was a runner-up in the Barkitecture competition of 2022.
The Norman Foster kennel created for Barkitecture in 2022 - Matt Alexander/PA Wire
The Duke himself grew up with lurchers (āfantastic for hare huntingā) and kept rescue dogs during his younger years in London. But these days, he continues the family history of keeping spaniels with eight-year-old cocker Lito: āSheās a working cocker, but poor thing, she hasnāt been trained at all. We feel bad about that.ā
Her sidekick is Winston, a yappy dachshund. āHe was bought in Covid and is actually my daughterās dog, but now sheās away working in London, so weāve got him. In Britain, we completely indulge our dogs. Theyāre like members of the family.ā
Goodwoof blends centuries of Goodwoodās hunting heritage with modern indulgence - PA Images / Alamy Stock Photo
His commitment to these words was put to the test recently, when Lito needed a life-saving operation. I ask how much it cost, and he puts his hand to his brow. āThousands and thousands,ā he sighs. āWe thought we had pet insurance, and then didnāt. But there wasnāt a moment of hesitation.ā
Even the aristocracy isnāt immune to the shock of unforeseen veterinary fees, it seems. The difference, of course, is that for some ordinary dog owners the bill can prove prohibitive, which might explain why shelters are now seeing a rise in pet abandonment. A recent study, published in the journal Animals, found that in the UK and Republic of Ireland, the number of stray dogs entering shelters jumped from 16,310 in 2021 to 23,287 in 2023, and the rate of euthanisation in that group rose from 1.9 per cent to 6.3 per cent.
Acknowledging this crisis, the Duke has made Battersea Dogs & Cats Home Goodwoofās official charity partner. Money raised from the auction of the āBarkitectureā kennels will go directly to the group, while the Duke will also marshal a morning parade of rescue dogs, kicking off the festivities by journeying from Goodwood House to the Kennels.
Perhaps the image of the Duke leading an oompah band and a lineup of dachshunds through the woods ā as he did at last yearās Goodwoof ā is a slight evolution from the aristocrat thundering by on horseback, preceded by a pack of foxhounds. But if thereās one thing the British upper crust is willing to let its stiff upper lip relax into a smile for, itās the dogs.
Source: āAOL Entertainmentā