disneyhorse
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Leia... I want to point out that I believe your statement above is the REAL MEAT of this discussion. I sort of believe that checks are partly there for safety, but I think the REAL reason is for the PURPOSE of the breed ring....in the breed ring the driving horses are judged primarily on their outline and action, just like in a halter class. A completely green horse will often win if it's the fanciest mover or has the highest headset, never mind that it's on its forehand and there's a more correctly trained older horse in the corner with a bit less flash. In the ADS horses of completely different action will go head to head and are judged on how well each horse is achieving the goals of the training scale rather than how well they match a generic outline. The horse can be incredibly beautiful or flashy but if he's tossing his head, jigging, or otherwise acting up he will not be placed. The Steady Eddy pony will win because he's a pleasure to drive even though he's not as eye-catching.
One type is judged on the horse himself, one on how well the horse is trained to drive, and Reinsmanship, of course, is judged on how well the horse is being driven. Three very different methods of placing the class.
Leia
The breed ring sees a LOT of green horses. And when I say green, I mean "may or may not have a solid driving foundation under them, perhaps even having less than a month between the shafts and possibly without even ground driving more than a week before being hitched."
Now, some people DO take the time to break their horses, I am NOT saying that, I am just saying that I am betting there are more than one or two horses that hit your ring each year that are TRULY green broke. Therefore, an overcheck IS going to be a little safer than having these youngsters who may not be properly broke go around the ring bucking and getting their bridles off on the ends of the shafts (because have you ever seen anyone hook a horse too far ahead or back in the shafts at a mini show? I sure have...) and go running off. It's a lot safer to ME to have the horse just rear up and flip over upside-down in the shafts and let people try to cut it free than to have it running around in panic.
And as to kickstraps and breeching not being "the norm"... I don't think either one are banned from the breed ring. The purpose of the breed ring is to be as stripped-down and elegant as possible, so "less-is-more." You certainly can't go around in your Jerald and show harness anywhere else except in the breed ring! The saddles and breastcollars are super thin and I don't think the traces would hold up for long with REAL use. Therefore, since the breed ring is always going to be flat and well-groomed, there is no purpose for breeching (I've never had a problem without it, or thimbles, or anything! I mean, the horse stops ONCE in the class and it's not on a hill). And as to the kicking strap... well I imagine a judge asking what it was, and then having it on there would basically be an admittance to your horse's ill behavior in the judge's mind! No one else's horse in the ring has the strap, so your horse must "have a problem." I think that's maybe what the suspicions are.
At any rate... the PURPOSE of the breed ring is NOT to have a super-well-trained horse, sorry guys. I just don't believe it. In the breed ring, you walk, trot, reverse, walk some more, trot some more, and then stop and back up two measly steps and then you're done. If you have such a highly trained animal, I don't see how this would be fun for the horse OR the driver. It is extremely elementary work! The PURPOSE of the breed ring is not to have a pleasurable drive (although if you do, that makes it all the better!) it is to COMPETE and show off the ABILITY your horse has.
The purpose of the breed ring (halter and driving) is to compare your animal to others, and see if you can stack up to others who are selecting and breeding similar animals. Therefore, you are promoting your animal and double-checking against others to see if it will stack up and make a more valuable breeding animal, so that you may continue to produce animals that have the in-bred ability to look pretty and trot well. Sure, some of these offspring will further show and compete, but other offspring will go off to have careers in ADS or whatever and need the good conformation and natural athletic ability from their parents to do their job efficiently and with longevity.
Sooo.... you show your youngster in halter from ages weanling to three. As a three year old, you then have the opportunity to add performance titles to its belt, and you rush to break it to drive before you retire it to breeding.
So, with the push to keep up with futurities and other younger horses also competing, you throw the cart on, check it up, and ask for as much action/motion as you can get. The judge is looking (in the breed ring) for a SNAPSHOT of what the horse is ULTIMATELY able to do. How high it can possibly carry its head with flexion, and how extreme it can trot. A horse that has the natural ability to hold its head that way and trot that big may have genetic ability to pass these desirable qualities to its offspring... and the horse may then follow a more naturalistic training method down the road or its offspring might... but no matter HOW you train a horse, if it is not built to drive and carry itself well, no training can overcome what the horse is able to do. You cannot fight conformation, temperament, and heart and hope to win.
I have never seen the problem with how the breed ring conducts itself. It is NOT a form of dressage, nor should it be. Dressage-type driving is a lifelong partnership with a horse and the training far exceeds the amount of time that people generally are looking for in the breed ring when they need to promote their next genetic lineage, breed it, and see what the results are. The breed ring is constantly seeking a better horse, not seeking to improve the horses that are already sitting around.
Gee... sounds harsh after re-reading that... but that's kind of how I feel. I just see the opportunities in both breed ring driving and the dressage type driving. For all the similarities, they are whole different worlds. Maybe its like the difference between graphic design artists and oil painters. Both are skilled artists... but the graphic designers have to produce cutting-edge art quickly, and the oil painters take far longer to produce just one piece but it is just stunning. Both arts have value, but they are whole different worlds.
Andrea
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