Her Majesty was said to be very frustrated when she couldn’t use it (Photo: Getty Images).

The queen returned to horseback riding nine months after being advised not to continue due to ill health.

Doctors told the monarch to refrain from activities after experiencing “malaise” in October.

This story happened just a few months before Her Majesty’s Platinum Jubilee celebration. At that time, a 96-year-old woman was unable to attend several events due to mobility problems.

But the queen now feels strong enough to get back in the saddle, The Sun reports.

According to insiders, members of the royal family enjoyed a “quiet ride” on horseback around Windsor Castle.

He traveled on horseback with his golf friends instead of horses.

A source at Windsor Castle told the Sun:

“He was able to circle around the prison square with a golf bag and put Corgi through.

Mandatory Credit: REX Photo (8558500r) Queen Elizabeth II and Elizabeth II riding horses at Philip Windsor Castle in Berkshire, England, March 29, 2017 Post-terrorism security at Windsor Castle increased in London

The Queen is reportedly enjoying a “quiet ride” around Windsor Castle again (Photo: REX)

“Getting back on the bike after all we were concerned about his health is a great sign. It’s amazing to do it at 96.”

The return of the Queen in the saddle was briefly mentioned during the Platinum Jubilee celebration.

At Thanksgiving Mass at St. Paul’s Cathedral, Archbishop Stephen Cottrell of York said:

“So thanks for staying the course.”

The Queen loves horses almost as much as she loves cormorants (Photo: Tim Graham Photo Library via Getty Images)

The Queen loves horses almost as much as she loves Corgis (Photo: Tim Graham Photo Library via Getty Images)

The queen’s love of horses is said to have begun at the age of three.

His first reported riding lesson took place in January 1930 at a private riding school at Buckingham Palace on a pony in Scotland.

He has become a stubborn participant in the Royal Ascot Race and the Annual Windsor Horse Shows.

The monarch’s love for the world of horses is the one he shares with his mother, who has been breeding and racing horses for more than 60 years.

The Queen’s relatives missed the Derby and won four of the four Flat Racing Classics (1000 Guineas and 2000 Guineas, Oaks, St Leger).

Princess Elizabeth feeds the horses on the grounds of Windsor Castle in 1944 (Photo: Getty Images)

Princess Elizabeth feeds the horses on the grounds of Windsor Castle in 1944 (Photo: Getty Images)

Women's Day: Royal Ascot-Day 3

The Queen shared her passion with her daughter Anna (Photo courtesy of Max Mumbai/Indigo/Getty Images).

Around 180 queen horses and ponies are housed in various royal dwellings and stables, from Sandringham to Balmoral.

The Queen’s cousin, Margaret Rhodes, said in an interview with the BBC documentary about the monarch’s kidnapping a few years ago: Terrible feelings and thoughts about the future and everything else.

“But when it comes to horses, I think this is another world, because you’re only human in relation to animals, and you’re not a queen, you’re just human.”

The queen’s love of horses was inherited from her daughter, Princess Anna, who loves to ride horses.

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