BurntontheoutsideTurkey
Well-Known Member
Oh dear!
Oh dear!
I suppose at least part of it is that dressage is supposed to be lightness, harmony, ease, communication etc etc. Whereas in its modern form it looks like the opposite and there's lots to criticise on that basis alone. SJ has always had less than harmonious sights and the aim has only ever been to get over the fences. Having said that Collectif pour les Chevaux (I think) has recently posted film of a SJ warmup with a horse going round like this:There are some positives from the CDJ thing and that the judges seem to , at last, be marking the more sympathetic riders more correctly. Look at Becky Moody and Lewis Carrier for their better placing recently. If the judges don’t reward the stressed overbent unhappy horses I would hope that they would be ridden in a kinder way ., there is still a long way to go . What I find odd is that all the hate is for dressage and nothing much is said about showjumping, and as for the barrel racing etc in America , I find that pretty upsetting as well
I would hope she didn't read it properly, but considering how much she's doubling down on her defence, she probably did ...Oh dear!Did she even take in the content of that comment before she fired off her dismissive response?
I would hope she didn't read it properly, but considering how much she's doubling down on her defence, she probably did ...
That's horribleI suppose at least part of it is that dressage is supposed to be lightness, harmony, ease, communication etc etc. Whereas in its modern form it looks like the opposite and there's lots to criticise on that basis alone. SJ has always had less than harmonious sights and the aim has only ever been to get over the fences. Having said that Collectif pour les Chevaux (I think) has recently posted film of a SJ warmup with a horse going round like this:
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It wasn't this photo, the horse was bay/black. The photo was from behind and not great image quality so couldn't see the horse's face. But I'm floored that anyone would share his riding as an example of 'good' in any way, I don't care how 'correct' it is.
Many masks have slipped since CDJ was outed and I'm convinced that the purpose of 'It's Time to Act' was to purport a moral superiority because GB riders were apparently leagues above other countries in terms of welfare - which we know now not to be true.
I don't think she has ever been for the horse - on national television she sidestepped around what CDJ did and instead drolled on about how humans need riding for their mental health.
She moaned about people ruining the Olympics for her because they were talking about the CDJ video all over social media.
She later campaigned for people to 'write letters' on their FB pages about what riding has done for them. As usual, it was all very human-centred with no consideration for the horse's lived experience.
The sport will die a death because people like her who have influence, refuse to take a good look in the mirror and realise how very wrong all of this is.
The sooner it dies, the better.
I wholeheartedly agree.The trouble - or one of the troubles - is that I don't think the 'elite' dressage world realise, or can even comprehend how very much they need to change in order that the horses have a positively lived life; one which they might choose; one which is acceptable to the outside world therefore.
Just going by that photo PH has shared to demonstrate something she perceives to be 'good', it is clear that she (if not most) feels it is acceptable that the horse is (still) being ridden with tension, pressured to contort into what they consider to be a pleasing shape, with the use of at least some degree of force and with the rider at odds with what would be the gentle yet powerful flow of the energy and movement.
If you take away the bridle, spurs, saddle, and anything else the rider can use as leverage and to brace against, the photo would simply fall apart.
In my opinion, there is too little change going on. In other disciplines - SJ and reining for starters - there are people actively competing at fairly high levels with just a neckrope, and softness, creating a willing relationship with their horse - sometimes never using a bridle at all, even in the beginning. It can be done.
The dressage world as a whole seems to be going about things the wrong way around - many seem to be trying to find a way or ways of just making it look less obvious how they are going about things, rather than having an epiphany and then a complete overhaul of everything, looking at things from the horses' point of view. The look of the end goal and the way the horses are trained to get there needs to change. And they're not getting it on the whole. That is the only way dressage (and any other time a horse is 'used' for human gain) can ever become truly acceptable in my opinion, if it is a life the horse would truly choose to live compared to a wild and free one with no human requirements taken from them.
THIS!!!!!The problem is that true dressage, being the ultimate harmony between horse and rider, is an art. When you try to turn it into a sport, you lose the art. It’s a shame because Olympic funding yada yada, but dressage should be an art, not a sport.
Very ambitious and lost her trainer when Charlotte had to step back. No point in spending all that money on a string of proven dressage horses if you haven't got someone guiding you at GP level.I struggle to understand how Anabelle Pidgley moved over to this yard ( I know she is with the son) as she seems to really love and care for her horses.
To be in this environment doesn't make sense
Very ambitious and lost her trainer when Charlotte had to step back. No point in spending all that money on a string of proven dressage horses if you haven't got someone guiding you at GP level.
Very true, but there are so many trainers better than Helgstrand.Very ambitious and lost her trainer when Charlotte had to step back. No point in spending all that money on a string of proven dressage horses if you haven't got someone guiding you at GP level.
I agree.I know lots of people have huge respect and love for Pammy and her family, but I can’t read her posts any more as she seems to have gone a bit bonkers. She gets into arguments with people online and comes across as silly and childish.
Just because a few people post videos bridleless jumping and reining doesn’t take away the abuse in both of those sports, what you don’t mention is the people who are posting videos doing dressage movements bridleless , just because a few show sympathetic riding doesn’t mean that the main sports (sj/reining/ barrel racing) are any better than dressage. I see many videos of barrel racing with excessive force with the reins and continuous jabbing with long spurs and wild eyed horses who don’t look like happy athletes to me. I just get a bit cross that dressage gets highlighted all of the time when there is just as bad treatment in other disciplines . All horse sports should be in the spotlight for abuse …The trouble - or one of the troubles - is that I don't think the 'elite' dressage world realise, or can even comprehend how very much they need to change in order that the horses have a positively lived life; one which they might choose; one which is acceptable to the outside world therefore.
Just going by that photo PH has shared to demonstrate something she perceives to be 'good', it is clear that she (if not most) feels it is acceptable that the horse is (still) being ridden with tension, pressured to contort into what they consider to be a pleasing shape, with the use of at least some degree of force and with the rider at odds with what would be the gentle yet powerful flow of the energy and movement.
If you take away the bridle, spurs, saddle, and anything else the rider can use as leverage and to brace against, the photo would simply fall apart.
In my opinion, there is too little change going on. In other disciplines - SJ and reining for starters - there are people actively competing at fairly high levels with just a neckrope, and softness, creating a willing relationship with their horse - sometimes never using a bridle at all, even in the beginning. It can be done.
The dressage world as a whole seems to be going about things the wrong way around - many seem to be trying to find a way or ways of just making it look less obvious how they are going about things, rather than having an epiphany and then a complete overhaul of everything, looking at things from the horses' point of view. The look of the end goal and the way the horses are trained to get there needs to change. And they're not getting it on the whole. That is the only way dressage (and any other time a horse is 'used' for human gain) can ever become truly acceptable in my opinion, if it is a life the horse would truly choose to live compared to a wild and free one with no human requirements taken from them.
I think David Marlin posted this on his fb page and he normally gets a lot of traffic on his page![]()
Researchers Ask for Review of Top Riders
Researchers provided a large number of images from the recent Amsterdam and Neumunster horse shows of top-placed dressage riders and horses.horsesport.com
Yes, he did. He insists that anyone who objects to what these photos represent provides him with 'numbers'. I'm not sure what of.I think David Marlin posted this on his fb page and he normally gets a lot of traffic on his page
Just because a few people post videos bridleless jumping and reining doesn’t take away the abuse in both of those sports, what you don’t mention is the people who are posting videos doing dressage movements bridleless , just because a few show sympathetic riding doesn’t mean that the main sports (sj/reining/ barrel racing) are any better than dressage. I see many videos of barrel racing with excessive force with the reins and continuous jabbing with long spurs and wild eyed horses who don’t look like happy athletes to me. I just get a bit cross that dressage gets highlighted all of the time when there is just as bad treatment in other disciplines . All horse sports should be in the spotlight for abuse …
Not to mention racingJust because a few people post videos bridleless jumping and reining doesn’t take away the abuse in both of those sports, what you don’t mention is the people who are posting videos doing dressage movements bridleless , just because a few show sympathetic riding doesn’t mean that the main sports (sj/reining/ barrel racing) are any better than dressage. I see many videos of barrel racing with excessive force with the reins and continuous jabbing with long spurs and wild eyed horses who don’t look like happy athletes to me. I just get a bit cross that dressage gets highlighted all of the time when there is just as bad treatment in other disciplines . All horse sports should be in the spotlight for abuse …
I don't think there's a single discipline that couldn't improve in a myriad of ways as regards welfare but this thread is about dressage and it does strike me that by concentrating on one very popular and ostentatious discipline change might be effected elsewhere too, effectively by frightening the others into improving themselves. A scattergun approach is difficult to maintain and has limited impact in each area. In addition, if the Danes and Dutch (and in time hopefully other jurisdictions) do end up passing legislation about horse sport that will presumably apply across the board, as it should.PS, you are still focusing on dressage , all that you have illustrated equally applies to the other sports, while I agree training and riding competitively and non competitively needs to change so the focus should be on all sports , and endurance![]()
I forgot racing. I used to watch racing a lot but recently there seems to be quite a few flat horses that are breaking down on the track and I now can’t watch flat racing at all and yesterday I started watching the jump racing but didn’t enjoy it so I think my racing viewing is finished… not sure if there are more fatalities or if it’s just me getting more sensitiveNot to mention racing