Tour
In 1927 matches were played against Redruth, Hayle and Falmouth and in the ensuing years the club ave played against a further eight clubs in west Cornwall. The first match against Penryn was in 1930, and in the years since it has comfortably been the principle fixture on the tour, contested on some sixty eight occasions. Of these, the home side have prevailed fifty four times, and the visitors just eleven, with three drawn. Facing the formidable Borough sides of thirty or forty years ago did nothing to diminish the ODs' enthusiasm for the fixture, in fact this only made us cherish the opportunity even more. Encouragingly for Dunstonians, the trend in the last twenty years is towards redressing the balance somewhat. It is still however a treasured experience when we manage to get our hands on the bell.
Our other Principal Easter ports of call have been Falmouth and Truro. Falmouth were hosts on our first tour, and truro we first played in 1950. As the relative fortunes of the clubs, both ourselves and our opponents, have fluctuated, we have formidable opposition over the years, as the match statistics verify, bet every year we hope these can be improved.
Other cubs who have provided opposition and hospitality over the yeas include Newlyn, Penzance, St Day, St Ives Camborne and Camborne School of Mines. The current format of Penryn, Falmouth, Truro (in that order) has been in place in since 1976, and is almost set in stone, becoming a steady and reassuring constant in the fixture list of these four clubs, despite the many changes and challenges to the season's calendar that league rugby has brought with it.
Mention must also be made here of St Agnes RFC, founded 1972, and whom, through OD connections on teh north coast, we first played in 1974. These Sunday fixtures against our A team continued for many years and senior ODs on tour will have played in one or more of these matches. Unfortunately, lack of players, logistical problems associated with four games in a five day weekend, along with our Sunday lunches proved insurmountable for us to continue. However, we played St Agnes before the Falmouth match as part of the 75th celebrations in 2009.
Certainly tour has changed - it has had to in order to survive. Tour hotels and favourite pubs have come and gone. In recent years a formal Sunday Lunch has regrettably had to be shelved, and the Monday fixture moved to Sunday, the format becoming an even more demanding three games in three days. However we retain the Sunday Lunch for landmark occasions. Be it on Sunday or Monday, the Truro clubhouse never fails to provide a wonderful setting for the conclusion to festivities, with emotions invariably running high.
But the essential spirit remains undimmed. The kindness and mutual support between the clubs remains strong. On our 75th tour, we saluted our host clubs for the sincerity of the welcome we have been privileged to receive year after year. We are rightfully proud of the fact that of the dozens of clubs who, years ago, headed west at the end of the season, we are the ones who have upheld the tradition and continue to make the annual pilgrimage. That we have don so is as much, if not more so, a tribute to the warmth and hospitality of our hosts, as to the character of the ODs who have faithfully kept on touring.
