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Field Guide to Equestrian Sports Participants
THE HUNTER RIDER: Is slightly anorexic and trying her best to achieve
the conformation of a 17-year-old male in case she ever has a clinic
with George Morris. Field marks include greeny-beige breeches and a
baseball cap when schooling or mud colored coat and hardhat with
dangling chinestrap when competing. Forks over about a grand a month to
trainer for the privilage of letting him/her "tune" up the horse, which
consists of drilling the beast until its going to put in five strides on
a 60 foot line no matter WHAT she does. Sold the Thoroughbred (and a
collection of lunging equipment, chambons, side reins) and bought a
Warmblood. (bought a ladder and a LONG set of spurs) Talks a lot about
the horse's success in Florida without exactly letting on that she
herself has never been south of the Pennsylvania line.
THE DRESSAGE QUEEN: Has her hair in an elegant ponytail and is wearing a
visor and gold earrings sporting a breed logo. A $100 dollar custom
jumper (also with breed logo) is worn over $300 dollar full-seat white
breeches and custom Koenigs. Her horse, "Leistergeidelsprundheim"
("Fleistergeidel" for short) is a 17.3-hand warmblood who was bred to be
a Grand Prix horse. The Germans are still laughing hysterically, as he
was bred to be a Grand Prix JUMPER, but as he couldn't get out of his
own way, they sold him to an American. His rider fell in love with his
lofty gaits, proud carriage, and tremendous athleticism. She admires
mostly while lunging. She lunges him a lot, because she is not actually
to keen to get up there and try to SIT that trot. When she rides, it's
not for long, because (while he looks FINE to everyone else), she can
tell that he is not as "through"
and "supple" as he should be, and gets off to call the
chiropractor/massage therapist/psychic, all of which is expensive, but
he WILL be shown, and shown right after he perfects (fill in the blank)
The blank changes often enough that the rider can avoid the stress of
being beaten at Training 1 by a Quarter Horse.
THE EVENTER: Is bent over from carrying three saddles, three bridles,
three bits, and three unrelated sets of clothing (four, if she is going
to have to do a trot up at a 3-Day) The hunched defensive posture is
reinforced by the anticipation of "a long one" a ditch and a wall, and
from living in her back protector. Perpetually broke because she pays
THREE coaches ( a Dressage Queen, a jumper rider, and her eventing guru,
none of whom approve of the other) and pay trailers/stabling/living
expenses to go 600 miles to events that are spread out over 5 days. She
is smugly convinced that Eventers are in fact the only people in the
world who CAN ride (since Dressage Queen's don't jump, the H/J crowd is
to afraid to go OUT of a ring, and the fox hunters-a related breed-don't
have to deal with dressage judges). Hat cover on cross-country helmet is
secured with a giant rubber band, so she can look like her idol,
Phillip. Her horse, (who has previously been rejected as a race horse, a
steeplechase horse-got ruled off for jumping into the in field
tailgating the crowd- a jumper, a fox hunter, and a polo pony (no bit
stops this thing) has two speeds: gallop and "no gallop" (also known as
stop 'n' dump) . Excels at over jumping into water, doing a head first
"tuck and roll" maneuver and exiting the complex (catch me if you can!)
before his rider slogs out of the pond. Often stops to lick the Crisco
off his legs before continuing gaily on to the merciless oxer jump just
ahead. Owner often threatens to sell, but as he has flunked out of every
other English-riding discipline, it will have to be to a barrel racer.
THE BACK YARD RIDER: Usually found wearing shorts and a sports bra in
the summer; flannel nightgown, muck boots, and down jacket in the
winter.
Drives a Ford 150 filled with saddleblankets and dog hair. Most have
deformed toes from being stepped on while wearing flip-flops. Has a
two-horse bumper-pull trailer, but uses it for hay storage, as her horse
hasn't been off the farm in 6 years. Can install an electric fence, set
a gate, and roll a round bale, solo. Rode well and often when she used
to board her horse, 5 years ago. Took horse home to "save money" and has
spent about 50 grand on acreage, barn, fence, tractor, etc. Has two
topics of conversation- 1) How it's too hot/cold/wet/dry to ride. And 2)
How she may ride after she fixes the fence/digs drainage ditches/stacks
4 tons of hay.
THE NATURAL HORSEMANSHIP DEVOTEE: Looks like a throwback from a Texas
ranch, despite the fact that he lives in the suburbs of New Jersey. Rope
coiled loosely in hand in case he needs to herd any of those kids on
roller-blades away from his F-350 dually in the Wal-Mart parking lot.
Cowboy hat strategically placed, and just dirty enough to look cool.
Levi's are
well worn. "Lightning" is, of course, this natural horsemanship guy's
horse. Rescued from a bad home where he was never imprinted or broke in
the natural horsemanship way, he specialized in running down his owners
at feeding time, knocking children off his back on low-hanging branches,
and baring his teeth. The hospitalization tally for his previous
handlers was 12, until he was sent to Round Pen Randy; after ten minutes
in said pen, he is now a totally broke horse, bowing to the crowd, and
can put on his own splint boots. (with R.P. Randy's trademark logo
embossed on them) R.P.R. says, of all this, "Well, shucks ma'am,
tweren't nuthin'!" "It's simple horsemanship." "With this special twirly
flickitatin' rope ($17.95 plus tax), you'll be round-pennin' like me in
no time!"
THE ENDURANCE RIDER: Wears Lycra tights in wild neon colors. The shinier
the better, so the EMT's can find her body when her horse dumps her down
a ravine. Wears hiking shoes of some sort, and T-shirts she got for
paying
$75 to complete another torturous ride. Her horse, Al Kamar Shazam, used
to be called "you bastard" until he found an owner almost as hyper as he
is. Shazam can spook at a blowing leaf, spin a 360, and not lose his big
trot rhythm or give an inch to the horse behind him. Has learned to eat,
drink, pee, and drop to his resting pulse rate on command. He has
compiled 3,450 AERC miles; his rider compiled 3,445 (the missing five
miles are the ones when he raced down the trail without his rider after
performing his trademark 360. Over-heard frequently: "Anyone have
Advil?" "Anyone got some food? I think last year's Twinkies went bad."
"For this pain I spendmoney?" "Shazam, you bastard-it's just a leaf
[thud]!"
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