kerilli
Well-Known Member
He said "We've got a good progressional ladder on the cross-country side at BE(80)T, BE(90) and BE(100) - it allows people to be ambitious and to make a mistake without being dangerous."
Do you agree with this?
Bearing in mind that a rider xc schooling on a former 4* horse was killed jumping a small fence (BE100 afaik), and that a fall at a BE(100) fence at Tweseldown last wk tragically led to the horse having to be pts, and 2 broken arms for the rider.
I know most horses can jump 1m fences pretty safely most of the time, but do you think it's reasonable to say that it isn't "dangerous", and to imply that you can get away with mistakes? Surely any fixed fence can be dangerous, even if small... I've seen a link to a full rotational fall at a tiny tyre fence while xc schooling. Not the "jumping the drop fence from the wrong direction" one either, this was on the flat.
I wonder whether there are people eventing now who would never have done so without this illusion of 'XC Safety' because of the introduction of the lower levels...
Do you agree with this?
Bearing in mind that a rider xc schooling on a former 4* horse was killed jumping a small fence (BE100 afaik), and that a fall at a BE(100) fence at Tweseldown last wk tragically led to the horse having to be pts, and 2 broken arms for the rider.
I know most horses can jump 1m fences pretty safely most of the time, but do you think it's reasonable to say that it isn't "dangerous", and to imply that you can get away with mistakes? Surely any fixed fence can be dangerous, even if small... I've seen a link to a full rotational fall at a tiny tyre fence while xc schooling. Not the "jumping the drop fence from the wrong direction" one either, this was on the flat.
I wonder whether there are people eventing now who would never have done so without this illusion of 'XC Safety' because of the introduction of the lower levels...