Damned if you, damned if you dont ?

I saw a mini Shetland stallion there one year rear up screaming defiance at a 18.2 shire in full harness - the shire practically went cross eyed trying to look down through his blinkers at this yelling demon pony who even on his back legs was hardly up to the shire’s belly.
.

i went with my friend to a dealers many years ago and they had dozens of horses in a big field. She chose a 2yo Shetland colt who was attached to a shire's hind leg by his teeth.
He was always a feisty little git who once bit the tip off my pony's ear.
 
Sadly, this happened to me too back in the affiliated dressage @ Hickstead days ... 15.3hh heavy coloured mare with full mane and feathers and I was asked, nay TOLD, to leave the warm up ring. I was new to affiliated and quite upset, so I left the ring and plodded around the car park instead. And then I won the class.
i personally prefer to break the mold ....... :)
 
Few years back pig got loose and into yard where my horse was. My horse - not current one but previous ex racehorse - ended up with pig in next door stable and was quite happy. Friend’s ex racehorse was traumatised. Wouldn’t come into the barn the next day.
 
i went with my friend to a dealers many years ago and they had dozens of horses in a big field. She chose a 2yo Shetland colt who was attached to a shire's hind leg by his teeth.
He was always a feisty little git who once bit the tip off my pony's ear.
I knew a miniature Shetland once who used to shelter under the massive hunter and bite him on the belly when he stepped out of line. He ruled the roost.
 
A few years ago I took my ex race mare to her first show. It was quite a large show but with lots of space so I thought I would be able to find a quiet corner to work in. I had just tacked up when a massive lorry parked next to us and began to unload miniature horses. I think they had 8 on board ? I disappeared off to my corner pretty sharpish, then spent an educational couple of hours on advance and retreat until she accepted that they weren't going to eat her.
 
Or you could have tent pegging next to the main ring as they did at Larkhill one year! Totally blew our youngster’s mind. He just froze in the middle of the ring and wouldn’t do anything.
 
Royal Cornwall Show had camel racing in the main ring one year, there were show jumpers all over the place trying to get to the ring past their corral.

Or a hound parade could be fun. Make sure there’s a horn blowing demonstration as well.

Any horse in racing where there is a couple of Irish lads or lasses will have heard the horn being blown on numerous occasions. It's an Irish thing to suddenly pull one out of a pocket and start making a racket! 90% of ours are totally immune to it now ?
 
many years ago, unfortunately before mobile phones at a country show someone had decided to put one of the show rings next to the funfair including rotating pendulating purple octopus ride ...........with music etc

first ridden was interesting, the hack class was spectacular :)
 
I remember back in the distant past, being at Kenilworth Show with my youngster and they had parachutists coming down in the main ring not far from where we were parked. Mine took it very well. Also a show at Salisbury where there was a fair on the same ground. We had to walk the horses past swingboats and carousels etc, again with very little reaction.
Worst for me was an agility competition at the Town and Country Festival one year. There was a loud plane, can't remember what sort that kept going over the ring. Did not go down well with a noise sensitive dog.
 
many years ago, unfortunately before mobile phones at a country show someone had decided to put one of the show rings next to the funfair including rotating pendulating purple octopus ride ...........with music etc

first ridden was interesting, the hack class was spectacular :)
We had that at the Royal County of Berks show at Newbury, funfair was on a corner of the whp ring, made for some entertainment on occasions.

Royal Egham and Thorpe show (no longer has horses or livestock) used to have the cattle parade mid afternoon both days, often a similar time to ridden classes, plenty of equines dodging around as the cattle went past.... Donkeys had an adjacent ring to the inhand rings so plenty of kite flying going on.
One year I went, they'd moved the pig section, the other side of the wide alleyway to the main ring..... but the other side of that track was equestrian, it was carnage on day 1, by day 2 all rings had been shuffled about and pig area moved!
 
Purston BE could get interesting as the dressage arenas were close/next to the alpaca fields. Dressage at Cornbury is all within the deer parkthe flock is pretty large and skittish so have witnessed a few "moments" !!
 
Top