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Eventing Safety—Your Thoughts

Last post 05-10-2008 7:31 AM by JMFriedman. 1 replies.
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  • 05-02-2008 2:16 PM

    Eventing Safety—Your Thoughts

    From Editor Sandy Oliynyk: 

    "I was at the Rolex Three-Day Event and didn't see the falls of either Frodo Baggins and The Quiet Man, though I saw Frodo's fall in photos afterward, which gave me chills. At the breakfast stand the next day, a few of the riders said that part of the problem was that some riders don’t respect the fences enough, don’t fear them enough and go too fast to them. You’ll see in Nancy Jaffer’s article on the Practical Horseman Web site home page, the leaders of the sport give their thoughts on why there have been so many eventing accidents. But the difficulty is there doesn’t seem to be one big reason, so it’s a hard problem to fix. Do any of you have thoughts on why there seem to be so many more accidents in eventing? We’re doing a story on eventing safety for an upcoming story in Practical Horseman and we’d be interested to hear your thoughts."

     Feel free to respond here, or you can send your thoughts to practical.horseman@EquiNetwork.com.

  • 05-10-2008 7:31 AM In reply to

    Re: Eventing Safety—Your Thoughts

    I tend to agree with Roger Haller.  Never in my 47 horse-years have I seen so many people involved in jumping in general and eventing in particular.  I'm not sure what's priming the pump.  It could just be that eventing is simply the next in the long list of extreme challenges we seem to need these days to keep us feeling good.  Hmm Statistically, the more competitors participating in a sport, the greater the number of accidents will be--not the percentage, but the actual number.  The percentage might actually be dropping.  I haven't seen any studies to support or refute that.

    I think there might be some valid concern over the fact that any barn owner or instructor with an empty field can fill it with jumps and call it a "cross-country course", which I think gives some riders the impression that, if they can make it around at home and do a passable dressage test, they can sign up for the next mini-event without any further instruction.  Hopefully the recent increase in the number of eventing clinics held by successful riders will over-balance that trend. 

    I don't know whether or not it's related, but I've also noticed over the past few years that the quality of riding and of the horses being ridden at local shows has deteriorated while the number  of competitors has increased.  I'm wondering whether competition is being used as a lure to get more youngsters interested in riding (and keep them interested) to bolster the horse business in a time of economic stress.  Not that a shot in the arm isn't necessary and good, but perhaps the competitive drive is pushing the wrong buttons and giving quantity an edge over quality.

    "Four things greater than all things are
    women and power and horses and war."
    ~Kipling

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