Is horse riding becoming less popular?

mbf938

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Wondered what other people thought about this as a few things recently have made me think that horse riding is becoming less and less popular, to the point where horse riders are considered 'snobs' or an annoyance to others more than they used to be.

The three main things I have noticed:

1. Road users attitudes to horse riders: I saw a road users survey I think H&C TV posted on facebook highlighting that drivers think that horse riders should take a mandatory ride and road safety test before being allowed on the roads, the recent incidents of horses being hit by cars, and personal experiences of drivers going past very close or fast (and I ride on a lane that is only wide enough for one car at a time to pass and is access only going to a dead end, so who knows where they think they are going at the speeds they go!), and drivers not thanking you for pulling into the side, into gateways and waiting for them to pass. There seems to be a growing disdain for horse riders even when you are not on main roads.

2. Riding schools closing down: 2 in my local area have closed within the past 5 years. I'm not sure if this is cost of insurance premiums and tightening regulations or if less people were learning to ride but I wonder if this is a national trend? Children seem to have lost having a 'pony mad' phase now and don't seem to play outside like they used to either.

3. Bridleways: There seems to be fewer and fewer of them with more public spaces having 'no horses' signs. Makes hacking very difficult as road users want you off the roads but land owners want you off their land! Those that are still in use round me have obstructions - I looked up what the law is on this and it says that you have the right to go round the obstruction if you are still on the same landowners land, but to do this on one of my hacks you have to use a footpath that brings you back to the bridleway and, whilst this is not illegal (I checked this too although if you cause damage, you could be charged with a criminal offence relating to the damage), footpath users obviously aren't keen on it. This particular obstruction is deliberate as the landowners do not want horses using the bridleway. I fear the BHS may be fighting a losing battle re bridleways and it is very sad as it also stops cyclists and in extreme cases those on foot from using them.

Not to mention the hunting ban, although depends on your views on hunting but the hunts often organise a lot of the fun rides and usually had good relationships with landowners.

It all seems very sad as it's a healthy outdoor activity where you can see lots of the countryside and get in touch with nature etc which is something less and less people get to do when we are living in a glass and concrete world with obesity looming as the next big health crisis :-(

What do other people think?
 
Where we live we see far less riders on the roads now than we used to even 5 years ago. I think riding on the roads, especially narrow country lanes full of farm machinery and delivery vans, has become more of a nightmare than a pleasure.
 
Councils have less money to spend on maintenance of bridlepaths, although the don't disapear if not used. It is a firm principle that once a road always a road (unless extinquished legally).

Actually, I think you are right about riding being less popular. I saw friends with a riding school recently. They built an indoor school 30 years ago and would have 2 lessons going on in the school at weekends, now they hardly have any people coming for lessons. They have liveries, which pay the bills and do other things in the horse line, so they are surviving, but they have noticed a big drop in children and adults wanting to learn. Some of this is risk averse parents, plus other things that the children want to do and then generally less money about.

I remember taking part in a Discussion Group thread, and I think it was 2009 when I posted "Is the the peak for horse ownership?" Horses seemed to be making crazy money, livery yards were opening everywhere, people seemed to have several horses, it all seemed to be a bubble to me, having seen a similar situation a few years ago, when horses had gone from about £6,000 to £1,500 in the space of a year.
 
You're right about the horses going for crazy money and dropping off - I paid half of what I paid for a 15 year old 14hh pony in 2004 for my new 15.2hh 11 year old horse this year. Everything was £££ and now people seem to not be able to give really nice horses away!

My livery yard has several empty stables and no children with ponies and my old yard has seen people leaving this year - she had a waiting list a few years ago but not anymore. Recession etc probably a large factor but attitudes seem to have changed as well?
 
There are far fewer horses in my neck of the woods since the recession started, I used to hear them passing the house several times a day. I used to see children on ponies riding past and occasionally a pony heading home without its rider, now I never see any kids riding and rarely an adult.
One of the local riding schools has shut, the other survives but is mostly liveries.
I'm not sure if the interest has gone, or if it's that people's finances still haven't recovered.
 
I'm pretty sure it is becoming less popular, yes.

Years ago kids would help out at the local riding school, they would ride bareback from the field and have fun lessons. Gymkhanas were much more common place and keeping a pony was far simpler - no fancy rugs or hard feed, you simply had a field and shelter and bought in hay and fed straights if needed. You could safely hack to the local farrier where he would shoe or trim the pony. Now you need transport to get anywhere.

Nowadays there seems to be so much health and safety involved that I think we have lost the fun element. Shows are more competitive than fun for many, we need full safety gear before getting on and I'm not saying that this is wrong, but it seems a far cry from the days of vaulting on with a hard hat secured by a piece of crappy elastic as the only safety equipment in sight.
It's practically impossible to hack safely on the roads for children, so riding is often only in a school, which can be boring.

Horses are often viewed as anti social on roads by other road users; and horse muck on the road is seen as offensive as dog dirt for some, at one time it would have been gratefully scooped up for the roses!

There is also far more technology to occupy everyone, they don't feel the need to be occupied with horses and the great outdoors. Quite a few seem to be averse to the work that needs to be done too.

Horse owning is also expensive, fewer people can afford to look after a horse when things are tight and so horse owners can sometimes be viewed as privileged (never mind the sacrifices many of us make to keep the blooming things!)

Bridleways are often resurfaced for cycles/the disabled which means that riding can be restricted. Houses are springing up where once there were fields.

On the whole I think our modern lifestyles are slowly doing away with horses as a pleasurable relaxing hobby, unless you are lucky enough to live in the middle of nowhere. Sad really.
 
I think the recession has a lot to do with it. A few riding schools have closed in my area (mostly the ones that opened in the boom) and all have been hit, but I think all areas have taken a hit in recent years. My husband runs a music school which did fantastic business until the crash. Unless you are really dedicated these extras are the first to go. As far as attitudes towards riders, I have no direct experience but it seems that people are less tolerant to anyone who is different of has different needs to themselves than in the past. Maybe we need to go on a charm offensive :-D
 
On the riding school point....I think this possibly has alot to do with it being an expensive hobby and now horses cost peanuts to buy just about anyone can get one. I've seen and heard it said many times lately (usually by complete novices worryingly) that it's cheaper to just buy the horse than "faff about having lessons".
I haven't noticed a drop of riders where I live but I know schools etc are closing down.
 
Insurance premiums are to blame - because of the suing culture,which IMHO should be stopped- for many riding schools closing.
Also, a lot of land- especially in the South East- has been built on so it is harder to find anywhere to keep horses (hence also the high costs of the places that remain) let alone ride them off the roads.
 
I'm not seeing the decrease at all - maybe it's particular areas of the country?

Round here, there are waiting lists for local livery yards, several thriving riding clubs, an increase in people going hunting - there never have been many riding schools but there are certainly a lot of freelance instructors who are busy.

It's a pretty rural area, well bridle pathed and with at least one fun ride every weekend from April-October.

I moved to a new yard about 6 weeks ago, and 1st hack was up an almost impassable bridlepath. I emailed the Council on a Sunday afternoon, got a response with a map attached to confirm which path it was, and it was cleared by the council within a week.

Sorry to go against the grain but not seeing a decline here!
 
Now see I think there is an increase in horse ownership (to a big degree) and riding (to a lesser degree)

Bin end livery yards are all over the place near me and according to Facebook lots of other parts of the country too and filled with people who've bought (or 'rescued') horses, they ride in schools, never hack, never take lessons, are happy with their £10 a week livery with no turn out 8 months of the year

I think the horsey world is the most active it's been but we are actually eyeballing less horses and coping with the damn people on Facebook instead !
 
Now see I think there is an increase in horse ownership (to a big degree) and riding (to a lesser degree)

Bin end livery yards are all over the place near me and according to Facebook lots of other parts of the country too and filled with people who've bought (or 'rescued') horses, they ride in schools, never hack, never take lessons, are happy with their £10 a week livery with no turn out 8 months of the year

I think the horsey world is the most active it's been but we are actually eyeballing less horses and coping with the damn people on Facebook instead !

Unfortunately spot on :(
 
Agree with above, lots of people owning more and more (multiple) horses where I am (usually "rescued") but not actually riding them. I have not ridden with another person on a horse for years simply because the last couple of yards I've been on I was the only one that rode my horse!
 
Ive definitly noticed over the past 15years that there are a lot less people riding but round me a lot keep horses as pets it would seem, out of the 20ish horses in the village, mine are the only horses ridden, its become a lot more affordable/people have more disposable income to spend.
 
You make some good observations OP. I've been wondering the same, as a number of great local venues are closing around the South East. There still seem to be a fair few livery yards which suggest enough horse owners but the stuff around that seems to be dwindling, in terms of riding schools, competition venues, bridle ways etc.

It seems a real shame at a time when as a sport the UK is doing amazingly well. Are the equestrian bodies doing enough to promote it over here?

I suspect there is a mix of recession, tax and insurance, higher demanded for land for housing, and a million other things. It does make me sad though and I'm really conscious now of the need to support local centres and events.

As for drivers, not sure,on that one but I do make an effort to always thank them, wear high vis and be considerate.
 
It seems as if a lot of comp centres have closed too...Lordsbridge, Patchetts, Norton Heath, Towerlands... I've been out of the swing of things for ages due to horse illness & financial reasons, & planning to (literally) jump back in in the spring, but I've been wondering lately what I'm going to come back to. I've also been window-shopping lorries on ebay, & they seem to not sell/go for not much when I'm sure not many years ago there would have been a fight to the death for a reasonable 7.5 ton...

T x
 
I agree. It is very very sad. I was watching some path`e news on the pony club when it first started. You could see how popular horses were. I used to see people riding horse where I live,but I do not see them as much. I wish children today could see how much fun you can have on a pony. I hate how society has become. When I take my Miniature Horse`s out,(one at a time) on my mobility scooter, most of the time I get a good response and people do say. What a lovely site to see ,you have cheered me up. On the other hand you get the idiots who laugh at me and say I hope you have got your poo bag with you. How can we turn things around. The attude of driver`s, well if I had my way.I would crush the vechicle. I get the same abuse when I am on my big mobility scooter,get of the road etc
 
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Our culture is increasingly risk averse. I'm one of very few parents still happy to see my kids hurtling across a field bareback. Many never leave the manege, so become 'invisible' to everyone else. There do also seem to be a lot of pet horses owned by people who're way too nervous to actually ride them. This is sad for the poor horses.
 
It sounds like we are lucky where we are then. It us unusual for us to drive from one village to the next without seeing at least one person hacking. all the yards near us are full,but we are lucky to be near a lot of good x country courses,Equestrian centres and there are 3 hunts locally. We are pretty spoilt for choice riding wise.My children have hacked out since they were tiny,but people have stopped me and said how nice it us to see them as children don't hack out these days,so I'm guessing most don't?

We were on the west close of Ireland recently,and spent all our time in the countryside,from Killarney up to Connemara and we didn't see one person riding, either in a field or hacking and were pretty amazed. Everyone seems to buy their horses from Ireland and we thought it'd be horse riding heaven,especially with the quiet roads.It was really odd not to see anyone out at all.
 
My riding school I volunteer at hasn't got enough hours or enough horses to do the amount of clients wanting to ride. Sometimes I have to forgo riding to fit others. Every school in the area is the same, worked off their feet.
 
Seems to be as popular as ever if not more so around us!

Norton Heath is still going strong for unaff and we have a new essex centre just about to open its doors and another just being planned that's almost a cert :)
 
I hope that it doesn't end up here the same way that it did where I came from in the USA. The nearest riding school to me was around 30 minute drive, it specialised in hunter/jumper type riding and hellishly expensive, no one really hacked out, the roads were too busy for one thing. There were next to no horses anywhere that I recall. This was because land was so expensive and riding was seen as an elitist hobby. It was so lovely to discover it wasn't that way here in England. It would be a shame if it changed.
 
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