chris_j
Well-Known Member
BD now allows you to wear waistcoasts in hot weather, which is great because it's much cooler than a jacket but still covers up the stomach!
This has always been the case when I've competed in hot weather. What normally happens then is the person who asked tells the other riders in the collecting ring that its the case and informs the ring steward in case other riders ask the question. No big deal.2. I am a BSJA judge and in very hot or wet weather the riders will ask if they can jump without jackets/wet weather gear. The emphasis being on the riders asking, and the answer is usually yes.
This has always been the case when I've competed in hot weather. What normally happens then is the person who asked tells the other riders in the collecting ring that its the case and informs the ring steward in case other riders ask the question. No big deal.
B-B, I don't really see what your argument is in all this!!! I have competed B.E for over ten years and have rarely ever done a test without a jacket on, it is perfectly simple to slip your jacket on just before going into a test and make sure that I had drunk lots of fluids before getting on.
To throw a stick at wasps nest, maybe some of the reason some riders were so purple is because there fitness levels are not really up to scratch, as an unfit person will always struggle in the heat more than a fit person.
r.e not plaiting for a dressage test is in my opinion disgraceful, it shows a complete lack of respect to judges, stewards and other competitors that have bothered to put the effort in. You are there to present your horse in the best possible way and to show your horse off to the judge, therefore you should turn your horse out to fit with this!!! And anyone who has that much of an issue with taking twenty mins to plait a horse should hog it!!![]()
In the same way that a judge at a BE event that I was writing for gave Rodney Powell an extra mark becuase she liked him as he 'is a cheeky boy' there was no box for extra marks for cheeky boys either![]()
there was no box for extra marks for cheeky boys either![]()
Dressage is about training and painting a pretty picrture, part of that is in how you turn out yourself and your horse.
Yes, dressage is about the training but turnout in general and plaits in particular enhance the picture. Ok there is the rare horse that goes considerably better unplaited (I had one that competed up to intermediaire 1) but then the mane must be pulled very neatly and quite short. Plaits can be done to enhance the neck and make the outline better and this will help your marks. A judge shouldn't mark a horse down if it's not plaited, just like the rider shouldn't get marks for "being a cheeky boy", but the picture presented can make a difference if the judge is thinking is it nearer 6 or 7?
That is exactly what I was trying to say, even though it doesn't say it in the rules, and the judge should mark an unplaited dirty horse the same as the plaited bathed one, this is the real world, and it is the whole picture that gets the marks.
With regard to stocks and show jackets, the purpose of a stock is to support your neck. A silk stock is not that expensive and cooler than a cotton or polyester one. If it is that much of a hardship to wear one then wear ratcatcher with a collar and tie. Jackets are now made in modern materials that are lightweight and easy to wear. If you are worried about a little rain then maybe you should take up an indoor sport.
I know this is off topic to the original post, but I absolutely agree 100%I sometimes do BD without plaiting, did some BE without plaiting and regularly do RC without plaiting. And I'm never the only one. I don't see what the big deal is.
A clean brushed horse looks perfectly nice to me.
And having written for some dressage judges in the past, they told me they didn't care a fig what people did, they weren't marking them on turnout after all.
It takes me 45 mins to plait. Granted I don't do it that much, but I HATE it with a passion, and I certainly don't want to hog my horses' manes thank you - they have lovely, neat manes which suit them fine as they are, no need to roll them up into silly little balls! (I know you were being tongue-in-cheek with the hogging comment!)And anyone who has that much of an issue with taking twenty mins to plait a horse should hog it!!![]()
No, precisely, it isn't. If you are on your own, or have a horse that needs to be kept working, it may well be that your jacket is either on for the entire warm-up + test, or off.It's not just a matter of only having the jacket on for 6 minutes. ........
I also cannot afford these fabulous modern fabrics which people are talking about and only have a heavy wool hacking jacket, so being able to warm up and ride without it is a godsend.
However, I really don't see why so many have taken issue with the OP.
Ive gone from OP to She?
The system of dress will eventually be forced to change. Summers are getting hotter and sooner or later there will be somebody with serious heat exhaustion. Perhaps only when there is an accident will BE and other associations sit up and listen.
Here in France we are often confronted by very high temperatures variations (we've competed in 39degC), but common sense prevails and dress codes can change ad-hoc. FFE approved short sleeves in summer and FFE approved waterproof jackets in winter - simple , pragmatic and FFE make some money out of it.
Apologies in advance, but my relatively short exposure to competing in the UK suggest that it is run by a fairly conservative bunch that are resistant to change of any type, even if the need is blindingly obvious.
regs Richard