Surbie
Well-Known Member
GBEC have no shows planned this year. One of the local riding clubs has none planned as far as I can see, the other has one. Even Cranleigh's off.
Shame, but it might mean we get more people coming to ours...
GBEC have no shows planned this year. One of the local riding clubs has none planned as far as I can see, the other has one. Even Cranleigh's off.
Think how many Jill went to in the Ruby Ferguson books, I dreamed of hacking to a show and tying my pony up under a tree?
Which RDA? IIrc you're near me, and I'm always looking for shows to spectate/volunteer at if I'm available.I'm in the process of organising exactly that for my local RDA in July and we are hoping to have lots of people come. Without hijacking this, I'd love to know which classes were the most fun - basically so I can pinch them for our one! Fancy dress is a given...
I really hope so. We had one till last year, nows it's very aimed at county level animalsSomeone will have to bring them back eventually..
GBEC have no shows planned this year. One of the local riding clubs has none planned as far as I can see, the other has one. Even Cranleigh's off.
Horse most like its owner was popular, some owners really dressed like their horse!
the usual prettiest mare/gelding
hairiest horse (interesting as some clipped ones entered)
biggest bum (horse!) but the judge did say that was the hardest to judge, so the biggest horse won as theoretically he had the biggest bum
longest forelock
prettiest eyes
best moustache / beard (they had limited entries as only had best moustache but if say and/or beard more equines would have been eligible)
This was an inhand show so no 'idiot' galloping around, relaxed and friendly, ideal for the novice, like me.
Our hardest worker, and general goffer was in her 70's. I am not as quick as I was, but it used to annoy me that people would stand about chatting, while she did the graft of three.Having been involved with riding club for many years - the problem is getting people to help set things up and put things away. Its usually run by 3 or 4 people who don’t get paid and to run a show takes a lot of people. Some people will help, most wont and then the most annoying people say they will then dont rock up on the day. From my local experience committees that run these events are old (in their 70s often) and the younger members that come on board dont seem to want to do the nitty gritty of cleaning up and roping rings, fastening jumps back together or standing in the pissing rain all day long to organise these events… land to do them on is also hard to find and the big equestrian centres charge large sums to do anything which makes these ‘day out ‘ shows for little ones harder to justify… i dont think a lot of people have the time, inclination or gumption to get things going again… which is very sad.
Which RDA? IIrc you're near me, and I'm always looking for shows to spectate/volunteer at if I'm available.
As for ideas, possibly a little too fun, but a bareback class?
The 'no pressure' tiny jumps classes that allow adults to enter are always so popular, it's a shame there aren't more. Not all of us adult riders are brave.
Me too during the year before Mum and Dad bought me a trailer! It used to take me about 50 mins to hack to the show and then I'd spend all day there before hacking back. We used to do daft things like that years ago.I've done it! Hacked down wearing a backpack with my grooming gear, headcollar, in-hand waistcoat and cap, and the essential hip flask!
The whole Pullein-Thompson vibe was slightly ruined by the amount of hi-viz plastered on top of my lovely tweed, but self-preservation triumphed over hiraeth.
There still up and running down here near Leeds
I was on the committee running 6 shows a year for 3 years. Then some of the committee left and one person took over and has decided to aim at more 'upmarket' competitors than the fun side. The remaining older committee didn't find out they weren't committee anymore until they lost access to the groups and social media pages. I'm on the committee for two larger shows currently and have managed to get them to bring in riding club horse and pony classes and games for the children but as county shows they don't feel that having a fun section is something they want to do at the moment which is fair enough.OP, if you want fun shows, you will have to volunteer to help to run one.
I did a lot of Handy Pony in my youth. Still have a cup somewhere. My memories are of one task which was to tow a sack of straw with a rope and ponies flying up the field flat out with the judge screaming "drop the rope" ?.
Handy pony! I used to do well at this!
I remember moving a full size stuffed dummy from one oil drum to another while mounted.
Open and shut a gate.
Jump into a little square, halt, turn on the forehand, jump back out the same way you came in.
Walk over a tarpaulin.
Duck under a washing line pegged out with clothes.
We have a small hunting cob/pony that I hunt and my daughter competes on. We love the local show scene. However we have received some negative behaviour.....because the high powered mothers think we shouldn't be there as we don't do endless expensive clinics nor play the game of falling in-line with leading mothers. We couldn't give a monkeys, but they are intimidating to anyone who just wants a day out. I think they put off people, which translates to the lack of volunteers.Yes long gone,a neighbouring village ran a fun show untill around 5years ago when a local producer brought his top class show animals to gain experience,spolit it when he won all the time.