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  • Youth jumpers hoping to build on Sentower success in Compiegne this weekend
    Irelands all-conquering youth jumping programme has been the envy of Europe in recent years, and hopes are high for a similar 2026 after an outstanding opening Nations Cup weekend in Sentower laid the foundations for another assault on the series, and this summers European Championships.After a wildly successful maiden Nations Cup and European Championships season last year which garnered multiple team and individual medals, Denis Flannelly and his coaching team began their second campaign at the helm over the Easter weekend at the Belgian venue.With what many would have described as developmental teams in action, Irish riders achieved individual success across the board and, most important for Flanelly, two Nations Cups wins for the Young Rider and Pony teams. They move on to Compiegne in France to compete this weekend.The Young Rider team of Aidan OBrien, Harrison Blair, Jenny Dunlop, Ben Walsh and Charlotte Coffey set the tone on the Thursday with an impressive win, totalling 12 faults over two rounds to see off France in second and Belgium in third.Not to be outdone, Irelands Pony team of Jack Dore, Ted Fagan, Robbie Sheehan, Charlie Flynn and Saoirse ONeill showed nerves of steel to take Nations Cup glory after a jump off with France, following up the Young Rider teams win the day previous. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Epic Management Marketing (@epicmanagement_marketing)Rounding out the week, in the Prijs Philippaerts We live horses CSIOP-NC-Y 1M30 Grand Prix, Fagan and Ballyfore Rosie led home an Irish 1-2-4 with Flynn runner-up with Montana and ONeill fourth with Exodus Angies Rose.The programme sees four teams again in action in Compiegne this weekend Children on Horses, Ponies, Juniors and Young Riders, with confidence high from Sentower and hopes high of some more excellent performances and we wish them the very best.The Irish teams competing in Compiegne are as follows:Children on Horses: Colm Widger, Nina Smith, Josh Fitzgerarld, Willow Gavin and BlathnaidMurphyIndividual: Zahara Kirby CasolaPony: Sam Widger, Saoirse ONeill, Ella Rush, Robbie Sheehan and Daisy ODeaIndividuals:Bonnie Loughrey and Zoe MellettJuniors: Jack Kent, Senan Reape, Alanna Fagan, Annie Boland and Lauren AdamsIndividuals:Ruby Lily Gaines, Isobel SheehanYoung Riders: Paddy Reape, Aidan OBrien, Ben Walsh, Alex OConnor and JennyDunlopIndividuals: Billy Sinnott, Tabitha Kyle.The post Youth jumpers hoping to build on Sentower success in Compiegne this weekend appeared first on .
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    Winter Horse Riding Safety: UK Hacking And Care Tips
    10 min read Last updated: January 2026 Worried about riding and caring safely through dark, wet UK winters without wrecking your grazing? This guide gives you safer hacking habits, turnout vs stabling calls, forage-first feeding, 0C frozen-surface cut-offs, and how to report incidents after 58 horses were killed on roads in 2024so you stay confident, keep your horse sound, and help your land bounce back. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Road Hacking Safety What To Do: Wear hi-viz on horse and rider, ride single file, use a hat cam, plan quieter routes/bridleways and use clear hand signals. Choose low-traffic times and avoid icy lanes. Why It Matters: Increases driver awareness and reduces risk on high-risk UK roads. Common Mistake: Hacking in dull light without hi-viz or riding two-abreast on roads. Area: Report Every Incident What To Do: Log all incidents and near-misses via the BHS Horse i app and send footage to Operation Snap with dates, locations and vehicle details. Why It Matters: Robust data drives enforcement, lobbying and better driver education. Common Mistake: Ignoring minor scares and failing to report them promptly. Area: Turnout vs Stabling What To Do: Keep healthy horses out with shelter and ad-lib forage; stable youngsters, elderly or unwell horses and during severe wind, rain, snow or ice with good ventilation. Why It Matters: Balances natural cold tolerance with protection from wind-chill and closer health monitoring. Common Mistake: Over-stabling or leaving vulnerable horses out in storms. Area: Forage-First Feeding What To Do: Provide ad-lib hay/haylage, use slow feeders, check water twice daily (more in freezes), soak/steam dusty forage, and monitor weight weekly. Why It Matters: Fibre fermentation provides warmth and supports gut and respiratory health. Common Mistake: Adding hard feed before ensuring consistent forage and water access. Area: Frozen Surface Plan What To Do: If temperatures approach or drop below 0C, avoid riding on frozen arenas; switch to groundwork, in-hand walking or rest. Pick out hooves and use protective boots when footing is uncertain. Why It Matters: Frozen, unyielding footing raises slip risk and limb strain. Common Mistake: Testing icy schools or shaded lanes because they look firm. Area: Hacking for Soundness What To Do: Include brisk marching, hill repeats and controlled trots on suitable hardstanding; keep sessions short, straight and purposeful. Why It Matters: Builds bone, tendon and cardiovascular strength while keeping horses fresh mentally. Common Mistake: Doing all work in the arena all winter. Area: Protect Wet Grazing What To Do: Use tracks or sacrifice areas, rotate turnout, reinforce gateways/water points with hardcore, gravel or matting, then harrow (not roll) as it dries and spread composted muck. Why It Matters: Prevents poaching, preserves sward and reduces injury from deep mud. Common Mistake: Turning out on saturated fields and rolling later to fix compaction. Area: Winter Hack Kit What To Do: Wear hi-viz, a certified helmet, warm layers and grippy boots; fit your horse with reflective gear, a quarter sheet and protective boots; carry a charged phone and small emergency kit. Why It Matters: Visibility, communication and limb protection reduce avoidable incidents. Common Mistake: Heading out without a phone or reflective gear just for a quick loop. In This Guide Is winter hacking in the UK safe? Should you stable or turnout in winter? What should you feed when winter grass is scarce? When are arenas and surfaces too risky in winter? How does hacking support soundness and wellbeing in winter? How do you protect your grazing in a wet UK winter? What should you and your horse wear on winter hacks? Putting it all together: your winter plan Winter doesnt have to put your horses fitness, soundness or happiness on hold. With smart turnout, safe hacking habits and land-friendly management, you can keep riding and caring for your horse confidently through the coldest, wettest months.Key takeaway: UK horses generally cope well outdoors in winter with shelter and ample forage, while safe, hi-viz road hacking and vigilant incident reporting are essential to reduce risk on Britains busy roads.Is winter hacking in the UK safe?Yesif you ride visibly, plan routes carefully, and report every incident; however, UK roads remain high risk, with 58 horses killed and a 12% rise in horse injuries in 2024 alone. Always wear hi-viz, use a hat cam, and follow pass wide and slow guidance to stack the odds in your favour.UK riders rely on hacking due to limited off-road access outside Scotland, but that reality comes with responsibility. The British Horse Society (BHS) urges riders to report every incident or near-miss via the online hub or Horse i app, and to submit dangerous driving footage to police through Operation Snap. Data is power: accurate reporting underpins BHS lobbying for stronger safety laws and better driver education.On every winter hack:Make yourself unmissable with hi-viz for horse and rider in dull light, fog, rain or low sun.Wear a certified, well-fitted riding helmet and grippy, waterproof riding boots.Mount a hat cam, ride single file on roads, and establish clear hand signals for slowing and stopping.Choose quieter times/routes and prefer bridleways where available.According to Your Horse, nearly two horses a week are killed on UK roads. Treat visibility and reporting as non-negotiables all winter.Should you stable or turnout in winter?Most healthy horses do well living out with shelter through UK winters, while stabling helps vulnerable horses and during severe wind, rain, snow or ice. Provide draft-free field shelters and use stabling strategically for health monitoring, feeding and weather extremes.Research referenced by Haygain shows that, for many breeds (including hardy natives common in the UK), horses cope outdoors in winter, seeking shelter primarily in prolonged wind and rain. Open-sided, run-in shelters facing away from prevailing winds strike the right balance: ventilation without driving rain or snow. This aligns with our guidance at Just Horse Ridershorses are naturally adapted to cold, but wind chill and wet coats sap warmth and can stress the respiratory system, so protect from the worst of the weather with smart infrastructure and routine checks.Stabling shines for youngsters, elderly horses and those with health issues. It simplifies feeding, watering, rug changes and weight monitoring, and helps you keep a closer eye on coughs, nasal discharge, or changes in droppings intake. If you increase stable time, ensure the space is big enough for your horse to lie down, turn and move comfortably, and keep ventilation good to support respiratory health.For outdoor life with comfort, combine:A suitable winter rugging plan (e.g., weatherproof turnout rugs outdoors and cosy stable rugs inside as needed).Reliable shelter and dry standing areas.Ad-lib forage and fresh water.Our customers often pair a robust rug from WeatherBeeta with flexible turnout/stable routines to match daily conditions, keeping horses comfortable without over-rugging.What should you feed when winter grass is scarce?Base your winter diet around foragehay or haylageoffered ad-lib where possible, with constant access to fresh water to reduce colic risk. Fibre fermentation generates internal heat, making forage your horses natural central heating when turnout is limited.The British Horse Society is clear: forage first in winter. When grass growth stalls and fields rest, hay or haylage keeps gut motility and microbiome health on track while providing slow-release energy for warmth. Use small-holed nets or ground-level slow feeders to lengthen chew time and reduce waste, and check water buckets and troughs twice daily (more in freezing spells) to prevent dehydration.Quick tip: Soak or steam dusty forage for cough-prone horses and watch respiratory comfort closely if stabling more. If your horse needs additional calories or targeted support, add carefully chosen supplements and monitor weight weekly using a tape and condition scoring.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend planning forage stocks early, especially after wet summers or late cuts. A consistent forage supply prevents sudden changes that can unsettle the hindgut.When are arenas and surfaces too risky in winter?Below freezing (0C), many UK arenas and surfaces can freeze, turning into ice rinks that make riding unsafe; switch to groundwork, hand-walking, or horse walkers during cold snaps. Consider insulated toppings or engineered surfaces to extend safe rideability in sub-zero conditions.As Monarch Equestrian highlights, UK cold snaps commonly freeze surfaces, increase slip risk and reduce shock absorption. On these days, prioritise safety over saddle time: lunge lightly if the surface allows, or do in-hand polework on secure footing. If you hack in the cold, avoid icy lanes and shaded verges where frost lingers, and choose straight, gritted roads cautiously only when traction is reliable.Protect your horses limbs with well-fitting boots or bandages when the going is uncertain, and pick out hooves before and after work to remove packed snow or debris. Regular post-exercise grooming warms muscles, checks for rubs under rugs, and allows you to dry legs properly to avoid mud fever pressure points.If you manage an arena, levelling, drainage upkeep and appropriate surface additives can help resist freezing. For yards without these options, plan a winter training alternativeshort, purposeful sessions, more rest days, and varied exercise away from the school to maintain fitness safely.How does hacking support soundness and wellbeing in winter?Hacking in straight lines on varied terrain builds robust tendons and muscles, reduces arena wear-and-tear on joints, and keeps horses mentally fresh. Done safely, winter hacks are a cornerstone of resilient soundness and all-round training.National Dressage Champion Gareth Hughes puts it plainly:Constantly working in an arena and on a surface can be detrimental to your horses soundness so going for a hack and working your horse in straight lines on hard, flat surfaces, such as a road, can be very beneficial. Uneven ground and hill work is good for keeping tendons and muscles supple and strong, while hacking also provides variety: a relaxed ride through countryside is great for the horses brains and general wellbeing. Agria Pet InsuranceEquine vet Lucinda Ticehurst agrees:Covering distance over diverse terrain in a variety of paces mimics how horses behave in the wild... hacking creates a fun, low-pressure environment in which horses can thrive. Agria Pet InsuranceAnd for manners and rideability, professional Jonathan Chapman notes:Hacking can develop an independent horse and an independent horse is a lot more predictable and easier to manage at a competition... Learning to stand quietly at a junction, negotiating a gate, cantering in open spaces and behind other horses in control, riding away from other horses all these things teach a horse good manners. British Eventing LifeBlend short schooling sessions with purposeful hacks: brisk marching for cardiovascular fitness, hill repeats for hindquarter strength, and controlled trots on suitable hardstanding to harden bone and tendon. Always balance the benefits with road safety and surface footing; hi-viz and incident reporting remain essential.How do you protect your grazing in a wet UK winter?Keep horses off land in the wettest weather, protect gateways and high-traffic areas with hardcore, gravel or matting, and harrow rather than roll to avoid compaction. Spread muck to return organic matter and help fields recover as we head into spring.ADAS agri-environment expert Terry Finch advises a grassroots approach that starts with traffic management: set up track systems, sacrifice areas or surfaced runs to keep hooves off saturated ground, and rotate turnout to rest sodden paddocks. Focus reinforcements where churning is worstgateways, water points and shelter frontswith hardcore, gravel or protective matting to prevent poaching.As the weather improves, harrow rather than roll to lift dead matter and aerate the sward without compressing soil structure. Spreading well-composted muck returns valuable organic matter, supporting soil biology after a wet winter. These steps reduce injuries from deep, boot-sucking mud, preserve grass cover for spring, and lower your rug and hoof-care headaches.Pro tip: Position run-in shelters on well-drained pads and orient them away from prevailing winds for drier entrances and less churning. Combine with suitable winter turnout rugs so horses can choose cover or fresh air comfortably.What should you and your horse wear on winter hacks?Wear hi-viz on both horse and rider, a certified helmet, warm technical layers and grippy boots; fit your horse with reflective gear and protective boots for visibility and limb safety. A hat cam and a fully charged phone complete your winter safety kit.Start with conspicuity: drivers cant slow for what they cant see. Choose bright, reflective hi-viz for riders and horses on every hack, even at midday in winters low sun. Add a well-fitted riding helmet, insulated gloves, and base layers under durable womens jodhpurs or breeches (or childrens jodhpurs for younger riders). Waterproof, supportive riding boots with secure tread help when dismounting to open gates or negotiate icy patches.For your horse, reflective breastplates, leg bands and a quarter sheet increase your road presence, while suitable boots protect against a stumble on hidden potholes. If your horse is partially turned out, a breathable rug from WeatherBeeta can keep them warm without overheating after a hack. Bring a small emergency kit, hoof pick and a spare glove; small details reduce big problems when the weather turns.Quick tip: A lightweight, stable-safe rug is invaluable while drying off post-hack in draught-free stables, helping muscles cool gradually and comfortably.Putting it all together: your winter planCombine turnout with shelter, ad-lib forage, smart arena alternatives in icy spells, land protection measures, and visible, well-reported hacking. This integrated approach keeps your horse fit, sane and safe throughout the UK winter.Build your weekly rhythm around weather windows: hack for straight-line strength and variety, intersperse with short schooling sessions on good footing, and switch to groundwork or rest when arenas freeze. Protect fields strategically and make your horse conspicuous on the road. With the right routineand the right kityoull arrive in spring with a sound, settled horse and grazing thats ready to bounce back.If youre refining your winter set-up, explore our rider and horse essentials to make every cold, dark day easier and safer: hi-viz layers, supportive boots, protective legwear and dependable rugs from trusted brands. The right choices now pay you back all season.FAQsAre horses better off stabled indoors during UK winter storms?Horses tolerate cold well outdoors when they have shelter, but severe wind, rain, snow and ice increase chill and respiratory risks. Use stabling for the worst weather and for vulnerable horses (young, elderly, sick), and ensure any increased stable time offers space to lie down and good ventilation. See our guidance and sources from Just Horse Riders and Haygain.How dangerous are UK road hacks in winter?They carry significant risk: in 2024, 58 horses were killed on UK roads, with horse injuries up 12%. Wear hi-viz, ride considerately, and report every incident to the BHS Horse i app and Operation Snap to improve safety enforcement and awareness. Source: Your Horse and the BHS.Does hacking benefit stabled winter horses?Yeshacking delivers straight-line work for tendon and joint health, strengthens muscles on varied terrain, and supports mental wellbeing. As Gareth Hughes notes, too much arena work can be detrimental, while hacking adds vital variety. Sources: Agria Pet Insurance; British Eventing Life.How can I manage turnout on saturated fields?Keep horses off land in the wettest weather, concentrate reinforcements (hardcore/gravel/matting) in gateways and shelter fronts, and harrow rather than roll to avoid compaction. Spread muck to add organic matter as spring approaches. Source: ADAS.What diet changes help when grass is limited?Increase forage (hay/haylage) to provide heat through fibre fermentation and keep gut motility healthy, and ensure ad-lib fresh water to reduce colic risk. Add targeted supplements if needed and monitor weight weekly. Source: BHS.When are UK arenas too unsafe to use in winter?When temperatures fall below 0C, many surfaces freeze and become slippery and unyielding. Switch to groundwork, hand-walking or rest days, and consider insulated toppings or engineered surfaces if you manage an arena. Source: Monarch Equestrian.What gear should I prioritise for winter hacking?Hi-viz for both rider and horse, a certified helmet, warm technical layers such as breeches, reliable boots, and protective horse boots. A hat cam and a phone for incident reporting round out your essentials. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop Hi-Vis GearShop Turnout RugsShop Riding HelmetsShop Riding BootsShop Boots & Bandages
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    Lower Leg Slipping Back In Canter: Causes And Fixes
    12 min read Last updated: January 2026 Leg keeps shooting back in canter? This guide explains the biomechanical cause and gives you 3 quick fixeslike inside leg at the girth, outside a hands width behindso you can anchor your lower leg and ride a quieter, more effective canter within 2 weeks. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Centred pelvis & alignment What To Do: Sit squarely on both seat bones, not on your pubic bone. Stack earsshouldershipsheels and let your thighs drape. Why It Matters: A balanced pelvis lets your leg hang under you instead of sliding back. Common Mistake: Perching or tipping forward, which sends both legs behind the girth. Area: Soften thighs, stop gripping What To Do: Release your knees and allow the thigh to soften; briefly take each leg off then re-drape. Breathe out on the canter stride to reduce tension. Why It Matters: A soft thigh prevents the lower leg being slung backwards. Common Mistake: Clamping with the knee when the horse gets onward-bound or spooky. Area: Weight through ankles What To Do: Drop weight through your ankles so the heel feels heavy without forcing the toe down. If you fish for stirrups, ride a hole shorter. Why It Matters: Weighted ankles anchor the lower leg and steady the canter. Common Mistake: Jamming the spur or pushing the toe down, which stiffens the leg. Area: Set for the lead What To Do: Keep inside leg at the girth, slide outside leg just behind, and keep weight over the inside seat bone. Use the outside calf as a light guard, not a clamp. Why It Matters: Correct leg set keeps the lead, balance and purpose to your lower leg. Common Mistake: Dragging the outside leg too far back and twisting the pelvis. Area: Quick self-checks What To Do: Use the armfingerheel line test; if your heel sits behind the finger, bring the leg slightly forward and re-drape. Repeat leg reset in every gait. Why It Matters: Frequent micro-corrections stop the leg creeping back unnoticed. Common Mistake: Ignoring alignment until the transition, when the leg already disappears. Area: Stability drills What To Do: Before riding, do pelvic tilts and hip clocks; in the saddle, add lunge no-stirrups, short stirrup intervals, and a forward posting-trot. Film rides to review. Why It Matters: Better hip control matches the canters motion so the leg stays quiet. Common Mistake: Long, punishing no-stirrups blocks that create gripping and fatigue. Area: Check saddle & kit What To Do: Have a fitter assess saddle balance, blocks and stirrup bar position; try an anatomical girth, stable pads, sticky-seat breeches, and supportive boots. Why It Matters: Poor tack setup can force the leg back regardless of your effort. Common Mistake: Blaming yourself while riding in a saddle that tips you onto the pubic bone. Area: Ride for conditions What To Do: In wind or excitement, prioritise rhythm and forward, ride transitions within the gait, then exhale and reset the leg. Keep winter sessions short and focused or school indoors. Why It Matters: Managing energy reduces defensive gripping that makes the leg swing. Common Mistake: Fighting the reins and clamping the thigh when the horse pulls. In This Guide Why your lower leg slips back in canter Start with your pelvis and seat bones Stop gripping: soften your thighs and weight your ankles Set your legs for the canter lead Check your tack: saddle fit and girth Build stability with smart drills Ride smarter in UK conditions Kit that helps (without hiding problems) Your lower leg swinging back in canter is frustrating, but its not a mystery. It has clear biomechanical causes and with a few targeted changes, you can fix it for good and ride a quieter, more effective canter.Key takeaway: In canter, your pelvis tips backward as the horses hindleg pushes off; if you grip with your knees or lack smooth hip control, your lower leg will slip back. Sit on both seat bones, soften your thighs, and drop weight through your ankles to anchor your leg.Why your lower leg slips back in canterYour lower leg swings back in canter because your pelvis moves into a posterior tilt during the hindleg push-off; without controlled, elastic hips and if you grip with your knees the leg slips. This is why your leg may look fine in walk and trot but disappears in canter transitions and on a bigger stride.Canter naturally rocks your pelvis: as the horse lifts the forehand, your pelvis rolls under. If you dont match that movement with eccentric (braking) control in the hip flexors and extensors, the thigh tightens, the knee pinches, and the lower leg pops back or pendulums. Many riders make it worse by tipping onto the pubic bone or bracing the upper body to sit deep on a pulling horse both drive the leg behind the girth.Another frequent trigger is defensive gripping when a horse gets onward-bound or spooky. The more you clutch with the thigh and knee, the more the leg slides back and the seat bounces, creating a loop that unsettles both horse and rider.Start with your pelvis and seat bonesCorrect your lower leg by starting at the pelvis: sit centred on both seat bones in the middle of the saddle, not tipped forward onto the pubic bone. When you tip forward, your legs will creep back; when you stack up over your seat bones, your leg can drape under you.Dressage instructor Eliza Sydnor Romm puts it plainly:Start in the middle of your bodymost position faults need to be corrected starting at the pelvis... Make sure you are sitting in the center of the saddle... with your weight straight down on your two seat bones. If you tip a bit forward and have too much weight on your pubic bone, your legs are likely to creep back. (Dressage Today)From that stacked seat, aim for the classic vertical line of earsshouldershipsheels. If your shoulders tip forward or you perch, your heels will shoot back to catch you. Let your thighs lengthen and wrap softly around the saddle, resting in the deepest part without pushing into the knee blocks. A simple off-horse check between efforts: breathe out, feel your seat bones, and allow your tailbone to gently point down without tucking hard.Quick tip: Without mirrors, hang one arm straight down from the shoulder like dead weight and point your index finger. It should line up with your heel; if it doesnt, bring your leg slightly forward until it does even in trot or canter if youre balanced.Stop gripping: soften your thighs and weight your anklesLoosen your knees and let your weight drop through your ankles; this anchors the lower leg and stops it swinging back. A soft thigh allows the leg to hang a gripping thigh slings it behind you.Two concise cues from experienced trainers say it best:If your knees are gripping too much, your lower leg will slip back. Check yourself in all three gaits occasionally by taking your whole leg off the saddle for a moment and then letting it hang again. Jessica Andrews (Dressage Today)You want weight down through your ankles... theyre too heavy they cant move... it keeps you stiller in the canter and anchors you to the horse. Riding instructor (video)Think of gently hanging your calf on the horses barrel rather than jamming the spur. Keep a tiny, alive contact with the horses side, ready for aids, but never clamped. If nerves make your knees pop off the saddle, breathe out long on the canter stride, widen your hands a touch, and let your heels feel heavy.Gear that helps: a grippy seat can reduce the urge to clamp. Consider upgrading to sticky-seat breeches (3080) so you can relax your thigh without sliding, and make sure your stirrups are a hole or two shorter than dressage long if you tend to fish for them in canter.Set your legs for the canter leadIn canter, keep the inside leg at the girth and slide the outside leg behind the girth to maintain the lead and put your weight over the inside seat bone. This alignment helps balance the horse and keeps your lower leg purposeful rather than wandering.As one riding instructor explains:In the canter your leg position should always be for whichever lead you're on... inside leg at the girth and outside leg behind the girth... it helps you to keep your weight over your inside seat bone. (video)To feel this, drop your inside heel momentarily as you strike off to ensure your inside seat bone stays weighted. Then let the outside calf hover a hands-width behind the girth not clamped acting like a guard rail to prevent the quarters falling out. This is consistent with how BHS-trained instructors teach canter aids in UK riding schools: inside leg maintains the jump, outside leg positions the quarters for the chosen lead.Common errors to avoid:Pulling the outside leg too far back, twisting your pelvis and shoving both legs behind you.Letting the inside leg slide back as you chase the canter keep it at the girth to maintain the rhythm.Over-bending the neck to the inside while your weight tips out; instead, feel equal reins with inside flexion and your weight over the inside seat bone.Check your tack: saddle fit and girthYes an ill-fitting saddle or poorly placed blocks can force your leg back no matter how hard you try to fix it. If your thigh is pushed up by the saddle or your knee is floating behind a huge block, your leg will migrate.Signs your tack is working against you include: constantly feeling perched on your pubic bone, knees catching under the block, or stirrup bars that place the leathers so far back your heel cant sit under your hip. A qualified saddle fitter can confirm alignment; dont underestimate the impact of flap shape, block placement, and seat depth on where your thigh naturally rests.Small kit tweaks also matter. An anatomical girth can reduce pinching that triggers defensive gripping (50150), and well-balanced saddle pads help keep the saddle steady during transitions. We rate established UK brands for durable, well-shaped pads browse Weatherbeeta pads and LeMieux pads and breeches to refine your setup.Dont forget your own contact point with the stirrup: a secure boot with a defined heel helps you weight the ankle without jamming the toe down. If yours are tired or too soft, upgrade to supportive riding boots for a more stable stirrup feel.Build stability with smart drillsBuild eccentric hip control and lower-leg stability with simple, specific drills: pelvic tilting, lunge lessons without stirrups, short bouts of no-stirrup canter on a trustworthy horse, and video feedback. These create the control to match the canters pelvic motion so your leg can hang quietly.On the ground (5 minutes before you ride):Pelvic tilts: standing tall, breathe in; as you breathe out, gently roll the pelvis posteriorly (tailbone points down), then release to neutral. Avoid big cat/cow swings keep it subtle. Match the rhythm you expect in canter to train timing.Hip clocks: imagine your pelvis is a clock and move it to 12369 with minimal upper-body shift. Focus on smooth, controlled transitions between positions.In the saddle:No-stirrup lunge work (with an experienced handler and safe horse): let your thighs drape, alternate 35 strides eyes closed with 35 open to improve feel and balance.Posting-trot tune-up: move diagonally forward with your seat, not up-and-down like a piston. A forward-posting seat sets you up to stay over your feet for the canter depart.Leg reset in all gaits: take your legs momentarily off the horse, lengthen from hip to heel, then re-drape. Repeat whenever you feel gripping creep in.Short stirrup intervals: ride 23 minutes a hole shorter to teach your ankle to carry weight, then return to normal length keeping that heaviness in the heel.Record your schooling sessions to spot when the swing starts often during transition moments, rider tension spikes, or when a horse quickens. Adjust your plan accordingly: repeat the transition more quietly, breathe, reset the leg, go again.Safety first: if youre upping your lunge or no-stirrup work, pair it with a properly fitted riding helmet. If youre hacking to build fitness when arenas are busy, add hi-vis for low-light hacks, especially through autumn and winter.Ride smarter in UK conditionsWhen your horse pulls or spooks in wet, windy UK weather, prioritise rhythm and forward, then reset your leg and release; fighting the reins or clamping the thigh makes your leg swing more. In short winter sessions or slippery arenas, invest in balance and basics indoors before asking for bigger canter work outside.On blustery days, start with transitions within the gait to channel energy: working canter for 68 strides, then a small, elastic collect, then out again. Between each change, do a leg reset: exhale, soften knees, drop weight to the ankle, check inside leg at girth/outside just behind. If your horse pulls, send him forward off a clear leg aid, then soften the hand nagging with a backward leg while hanging on the rein is the fastest route to a disappearing lower leg.Time your schooling to daylight and better footing where possible. Through autumn and winter, make use of indoor arenas for position work; on yards without one, fill shorter outdoor rides with quality: 1015 minutes of precise walktrotcanter transitions, then finish before fatigue breaks your form. When the weather rules out canter, do groundwork and in-hand lateral work to keep both of you supple for the next schooling day.Kit that helps (without hiding problems)Choose supportive kit that encourages correct alignment not gadgets that mask the cause. Youre aiming for steadier ankles, a relaxed thigh, and secure contact that lets you release the knee.Sticky-seat breeches: a small amount of grip helps you stop clamping and sit your seat bones (3080). Explore our womens jodhpurs and breeches, including gel-seat options.Supportive boots: a defined heel and a stable sole make it easier to weight the ankle without forcing the toe down. See our curated horse riding boots.Brands riders love: LeMieux breeches and pads pair function with grip where you want it, and their fabrics hold shape through UK weather swings.Safety and visibility: if youre doing lunge lessons or dusk hacks, prioritise a snug, certified riding helmet and add hi-vis layers.On a budget: you can often pick up past-season breeches or boots at great prices check the clearance in our Secret Tack Room.Note: Saddle upgrades can be transformational but costly (5002,000 for quality all-purpose or dressage models). Before replacing, try simple changes like block adjustments, pad choice, and girth shape and always involve a qualified fitter.FAQsWhy does my lower leg swing back more in canter than in walk or trot?Because canter puts your pelvis into a stronger posterior tilt during the hindleg push-off; if your hips dont eccentrically control that movement and your knees grip, your lower leg slips behind the girth. Loosen the thigh, stack over your seat bones, and let weight drop into your ankles to stabilise it.Is my saddle causing my leg to slide back?It can. A saddle that tips you onto your pubic bone, forces your knee into or behind a big block, or places the stirrup bar too far back will drag your leg with it. Get a fitter to check flap shape and block position, and experiment with pad and girth choices before replacing the saddle.How do I check my leg position without an arena mirror?Hang one arm straight down from your shoulder like dead weight, point your index finger, and line it up with your heel. If your heel is behind your finger, bring your leg slightly forward and re-drape; repeat in all three gaits as a quick self-check.Whats the fastest way to stop my legs swinging in canter today?Right away, soften your knees and let your weight drop into your ankles, keep your shoulders quiet, and let your seat follow the horse. Avoid clamping with the thigh; a few strides of leg off, re-drape can reset your position instantly.How should my legs be positioned for canter leads?Inside leg at the girth to maintain jump and straightness; outside leg just behind the girth to guard the quarters and confirm the lead. Keep your weight over the inside seat bone and avoid pulling the outside leg too far back.What if my horse pulls and my leg shoots forward or back?Get him forward off a clear aid, then soften. Dont nag with a backward leg while hanging on the rein; instead, ride transitions within the gait, breathe out, reset your leg, and ride from seat and core. If hes strong on windy days, school indoors or shorten sessions.Which clothing or kit actually helps?Sticky-seat breeches and supportive boots help you relax the thigh and weight the ankle; a well-fitted helmet keeps you safe for lunge lessons. See our breeches collection, riding boots, and helmets for rider-friendly options.At Just Horse Riders, we see this pattern every day in customer videos and yard conversations: start at your pelvis, let your legs hang, and add smart, simple drills. The result is a quieter canter, clearer aids, and a horse that goes better because youre no longer chasing your lower leg. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop Jodhpurs & BreechesShop Riding BootsShop Riding HelmetsShop Hi-Vis GearShop WeatherBeeta
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    Report A Neglected Horse In The UK: 24/7 Numbers To Call
    8 min read Last updated: January 2026 Worried a horse in the UK is being neglected? This guide shows who to call for emergencies and non-urgent cases, what to prepare, and when, starting with the RSPCA 24/7 line 0300 1234 999, so you can make a report that reaches the right team quickly. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Define Emergencies What To Do: Treat collapsed, trapped, unable to weight bear, or severely distressed horses as emergencies; call RSPCA 0300 1234 999 (24/7). In Scotland call Scottish SPCA 03000 999 999; in Northern Ireland call USPCA 028 3025 1000. Why It Matters: Rapid triage saves lives and reduces suffering. Common Mistake: Using office-hour lines or email for urgent cases. Area: Who to Call What To Do: For non-urgent concerns, contact World Horse Welfare 0300 333 6000 (Mon-Fri 8am-5pm), the British Horse Society (Mon-Thu 8:35am-5pm; Fri 8:35am-3pm), Redwings, Bransby, HAPPA (North), or RoR (ex-racehorses). If unsure, start with World Horse Welfare or the RSPCA for routing. Why It Matters: The right body routes your report to the best-placed team quickly. Common Mistake: Contacting the owner instead of a welfare organisation. Area: Out-of-Hours Reporting What To Do: Outside office hours, call the RSPCA 24/7 or police if there is immediate danger; use your vet's emergency line if you cannot reach a welfare officer. Keep these numbers saved in your phone. Why It Matters: You will not lose critical time waiting for offices to open. Common Mistake: Waiting until morning to report urgent suffering. Area: Road Safety: Loose Horses What To Do: Call police on 101 immediately (999 if danger to life); give road number, precise location, and direction of travel. Do not herd or catch; warn traffic only if safe and highly visible. Why It Matters: Prevents collisions while keeping you and others safe. Common Mistake: Stepping into live traffic or trying to grab unfamiliar horses. Area: Prepare Details What To Do: Provide your contact details, exact location (What3Words), horse descriptions, owner/land info if known, and safe photos/video from public places. Share concise, specific observations. Why It Matters: Good information helps inspectors find and assess the horse faster. Common Mistake: Giving vague directions or trespassing for a closer look. Area: Stay Safe Reporting What To Do: Observe, record, and report only; wear hi-vis, stand well off the carriageway, use sturdy footwear/helmet near traffic, and never confront owners or enter private property. Prioritise your safety. Why It Matters: Protects you while evidence is gathered for action. Common Mistake: Challenging owners or climbing fences to check the horse. Area: Keep Numbers Handy What To Do: Save RSPCA, World Horse Welfare, BHS, police (101/999), Scottish SPCA, USPCA, and your vet's emergency line; post a laminated yard card at exits and in vehicles. Practise the call flow with your team. Why It Matters: Quick access reduces hesitation and speeds response. Common Mistake: Scrambling for numbers during a crisis. Area: Prevent Issues Early What To Do: Use season-appropriate rugs, fly control, daily checks, safe fencing, grooming, and vet-advised nutrition; store What3Words for each paddock. Fix small problems before they escalate. Why It Matters: Prevention reduces welfare risks and avoids reportable situations. Common Mistake: Ignoring gradual weight loss or poor fencing until it becomes urgent. In This Guide Who to contact about a neglected horse in the UK What counts as an emergency vs a non-urgent welfare concern? What to prepare before you call How to report during and outside office hours What happens after you report Loose horses on roads: what to do Proactive yard measures to prevent welfare issues Keep key numbers handy: a quick-reference checklist If youre worried about a horse youve seen, speed and accuracy matter. The UK has a clear pathway for reporting equine neglect and emergencies and the right call can save a life.Key takeaway: For urgent cases (collapsed, trapped, unable to weight bear), call the RSPCA 24/7 on 0300 1234 999. For non-urgent concerns, contact World Horse Welfare, The British Horse Society, Redwings, or other NEWC members during office hours.Who to contact about a neglected horse in the UKCall the RSPCA on 0300 1234 999 for urgent cases; otherwise, report to World Horse Welfare (0300 333 6000), The British Horse Society, Redwings, Bransby Horses, HAPPA (North of England only), or Retraining of Racehorses (ex-racehorses) during office hours.The UKs equine welfare bodies work together through the National Equine Welfare Council (NEWC) to route each case to the right team. For emergencies in England and Wales, the RSPCA National Cruelty Helpline operates 24/7. In Scotland, call the Scottish SPCA on 03000 999 999; in Northern Ireland, call the USPCA on 028 3025 1000. For non-urgent concerns (e.g., poor fencing, prolonged tethering without immediate distress), contact: World Horse Welfare (0300 333 6000) 8am5pm MondayFriday, UK-wide. The British Horse Society 8:35am5pm MondayThursday, 8:35am3pm Friday. Redwings Horse Sanctuary 9am5pm MondayFriday (or via email). Bransby Horses welfare reports accepted; hours vary by weekday. HAPPA North of England only. Retraining of Racehorses former racehorses only.All major organisations keep your details confidential and will not share them with the horses owner. If youre unsure who to call, start with World Horse Welfare or the RSPCA and theyll direct you.What counts as an emergency vs a non-urgent welfare concern?Emergencies are situations causing immediate suffering or risk to life (collapsed, trapped, unable to weight bear, severe distress) and require an immediate call to the RSPCA or emergency services; non-urgent issues can be reported during office hours.Examples of emergencies: Collapsed horses unable to rise Horses trapped in ditches, fences, or tangled tethers Inability to weight bear on a limb Obvious severe pain or acute distressExamples of non-urgent concerns: Long-term poor body condition without acute distress Unsuitable or dangerous fencing where no immediate harm is occurring Inadequate shelter, dirty water, or prolonged confinement Anything which is obviously causing serious pain or distress to the horse should be reported as an emergency. Please give us a call on 0300 333 6000. World Horse WelfareIf the horse is loose on a road or creating an immediate public safety risk, call the police on 101 straight away (999 if theres an active danger to life).What to prepare before you callHave your contact details, the precise location (What3Words if possible), a clear description of the horse(s), and safely obtained photos or video; the more detail you provide, the faster an inspector can find and assess the horse.Before you report, gather: Your name, phone number, and address (kept confidential by welfare organisations) Why youre concerned (specific behaviours, injuries, or conditions youve observed) Horse details: number of horses, colours, sex, approximate ages, markings Location: full address and postcode if known; if not, landmarks, road numbers, field access points, and a What3Words reference Owner/landowner details if known Photos or short video captured safely from a public place and without trespassing The more information we have the easier our inspectors will be able to find you and the animal. If you have any photos or videos of the incident or the animal please let us know. RSPCAQuick tip: If youre stopping near a road to take a location reference, wear high-visibility riding gear and stand well off the carriageway. Sensible footwear such as sturdy riding boots and, if youre close to traffic, a riding helmet improve your personal safety while you get accurate details.Do not confront owners or enter private property. Your role is to observe, record, and report; trained welfare officers and vets will handle assessment and intervention.How to report during and outside office hoursDuring office hours, contact World Horse Welfare (8am5pm MonFri), the BHS (8:35am5pm MonThu; 8:35am3pm Fri), or Redwings (9am5pm MonFri); outside office hours, call the RSPCA 24/7 or your local police/veterinary practice for emergencies.Use this simple flow: Urgent (immediate suffering/risk): RSPCA 0300 1234 999 (24/7). Scotland: Scottish SPCA 03000 999 999. Northern Ireland: USPCA 028 3025 1000. Non-urgent (no immediate risk): World Horse Welfare 0300 333 6000 (8am5pm MonFri), The British Horse Society (8:35am5pm MonThu; 8:35am3pm Fri), or Redwings (9am5pm MonFri). Outside welfare organisation hours (but urgent): contact police or your local veterinary practice for immediate guidance if you cannot reach a welfare officer.For loose horses on highways, always call the police on 101 and give road numbers, direction of travel, and exact location. Save these numbers in your phone now so youre not searching in the moment.What happens after you reportYour report is logged confidentially, triaged for urgency, and routed to the most appropriate organisation; an officer or inspector then assesses the horse, often coordinating with vets and police under the Animal Welfare Act framework.NEWC member organisations work together to avoid duplication and ensure the right expertise attends. Depending on the assessment, outcomes may include: Advice and support to the owner (e.g., feeding plans, turnout improvements) Monitoring visits and welfare checks Veterinary attendance if clinical issues are identified Police involvement if theres a public safety risk or suspected criminal offence Seizure or rehoming in severe cases where legal thresholds are metYour identity is not shared with the owner. If an organisation needs clarification, they may contact you (unless you have requested anonymity and called a body that can process your report without follow-up, such as World Horse Welfare by phone).Loose horses on roads: what to doReport loose horses on roads to the police on 101 immediately (999 if theres an active danger), giving the road number, precise location, and direction of travel; do not put yourself at risk by attempting to herd them.If its safe and youre competent, you may warn oncoming traffic from a safe position while wearing high-visibility clothing. Never step into live traffic, and dont attempt to catch unfamiliar horses without appropriate equipment or experience. If youre riding when you encounter a loose horse, a properly fitted riding helmet and visible clothing significantly improve your safety as you call for help and position yourself out of harms way.Proactive yard measures to prevent welfare issuesGood management prevents many reportable situations: safe fencing, appropriate rugs, fly control, and routine health care reduce risk and improve welfare year-round.At Just Horse Riders, we see the same preventable triggers for welfare calls each season. Tackle them before they escalate: Weather protection: Choose season-appropriate rugs. For wet, chilly UK winters, waterproof turnout rugs help keep horses warm and dry in the field; stable-kept horses benefit from correctly weighted stable rugs. Summer fly management: Prevent rubbing, sores, and distress with breathable fly rugs and sheets and regular grooming. Injury prevention: Support legs on challenging ground or during turnout changes with protective horse boots and bandages. Daily checks: Build a routine that includes hoof picking, body scoring, and skin checks. Our range of grooming tools makes it easy to spot issues early. Nutritional support: Where advised by your vet or nutritionist, targeted supplements can help maintain condition and joint comfort, especially through winter. Trusted brands: Waterproofing, fit, and durability matter. Explore proven options from WeatherBeeta, Shires, and LeMieux for reliable yard and horsewear essentials.Pro tip: Photograph field entrances and notable landmarks now, in good weather, and save a What3Words location for each paddock. If you ever need to report quickly, youll have precise references ready.Keep key numbers handy: a quick-reference checklistSave these numbers in your phone and post them on your yard noticeboard so anyone can act fast. RSPCA (England & Wales, 24/7): 0300 1234 999 emergency guidance World Horse Welfare (MonFri 8am5pm): 0300 333 6000 report a concern The British Horse Society (MonThu 8:35am5pm; Fri 8:35am3pm): report welfare concern Police (loose horses/road safety): 101 (999 if danger to life) Scottish SPCA (Scotland): 03000 999 999 USPCA (Northern Ireland): 028 3025 1000 Your veterinary practice (emergency line): add number hereAt Just Horse Riders, we recommend keeping a laminated yard card with these contacts by every main exit and in the glovebox of the yard vehicle.FAQsShould I approach the owner first or report directly?Report directly to the appropriate organisation rather than approaching the owner. For urgent situations, call the RSPCA (0300 1234 999) immediately; for non-urgent concerns, contact World Horse Welfare, the BHS, or another NEWC member during office hours.What exactly is urgent vs non-urgent equine neglect?Urgent: collapsed horses, trapped animals, inability to weight bear, or obvious severe distress call immediately. Non-urgent: concerns like poor fencing, unsuitable shelter, or gradual weight loss without acute suffering report during office hours.Will my details be kept confidential?Yes. The RSPCA, World Horse Welfare, and the BHS state that reporter details remain confidential and are not shared with owners or third parties.What if I find a horse outside office hours?For emergencies outside office hours, call the RSPCA (0300 1234 999, 24/7). If you need immediate guidance and cannot reach a welfare officer, contact the police or your veterinary practice.What information do I need when I report?Your name and number, the precise location (using What3Words if possible), horse descriptions (number, colour, sex, age if known), owner/landowner details if known, and photos/video captured safely without trespassing.Can I report anonymously online?Anonymous reports are best made by phone. World Horse Welfare asks anonymous reporters to call 0300 333 6000 so they can gather everything in one conversation without needing to contact you later.How do I report a loose horse on the road?Call the police on 101 immediately (999 if theres an active danger). Give the road number, exact location, and direction of travel. Wear hi-vis if youre near traffic, and dont put yourself at risk. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop Hi-Vis GearShop Riding HelmetsShop Riding BootsShop Turnout RugsShop Fly Rugs
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    Reliving the Fort Worth FEI World Cup Finals 2026
    A first-time location offering Texas-sized hospitality and outstanding performances by U.S. riders were highlights of the 2026 Longines FEI Jumping World Cup Final and Zen Elite FEI Dressage World Cup Final competitions held April 7-12, in Fort Worth, Texas. U.S. jumper riders Kent Farrington and Katie Dinan placed first and third, respectively, and Christian Simonson (USA) delivered an emphatic second-place finish with Indian Rock in his first Dressage World Cup Final.The Finals were contested in the heart of Fort Worths Cultural District with horses stabled in barns on the Will Rogers Memorial Center equestrian campus. The warm-up ring, competition arena, shopping and entertainment were all located in the adjacent, state-of-the-art Dickies Arena.Dickies Arena in Fort Worth, Texas, home of the 2026 FEI World Cup Finals.Photo by Nancy Bryant/MacMillan PhotographyStaged with a decidedly Texas flair, the World Cup featured live country music performances, a festive light show, and cowboys executing rope tricks and directing at-liberty horses, to open each competition session. Country barbeque, Tex-Mex cuisine and desserts featuring Texas pecans were served during Wednesday nights draw order party. Sleek Euro-style meshed with Fort Worths Cowtown culture when all of the riders were gifted cowboy hats by Sole Rider and boots by Tony Lama.The USA previously hosted the FEI World Cup Jumping Final 11 times (Baltimore, 1980; Tampa, 1989; Del Mar, Calif., 1992; Las Vegas, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2009, 2015, and Omaha, 2017 and 2023), and the FEI Dressage Final seven times (Los Angeles, 1995; Las Vegas, 2005, 2007, 2009, 2015, and Omaha, 2017 and 2023).Farrington FliestoLongines FEI Jumping World Cup Final WinIn jumping, 35 starters from 18 countries tried their hand at course designer Anderson Limas (MEX) track in Thursdays speed class (Table C over a Table A, where 3 seconds were added to the time for each rail down). Then, on Friday all competitors who completed Thursdays class were eligible to move forward to the next class (Table A against the clock with one jump-off) when they jumped in reverse order of standings from the day before. Kent Farrington aboard Toulayna during Thursdays speed class, the first of the jumping classes. Photo by Kim MacMillan/MacMillan PhotographyOn Sunday there were two jumping rounds (A and B). In round A, the best 30 horse-and-rider pairs based on results from the previous two days competed. Then, the number was pared down to the top 20 competitors for round B (Table A not against the clock). The winner was the competitor with the fewest number of cumulative penalties. Countries with competitors were: Australia; Belgium; Brazil; Hungary; Germany; Georgia; France; Ireland; Japan; Mexico; New Zealand; Norway; Spain; Switzerland; the Netherlands; Turkey; the USA, and Uzbekistan. Total prize money offered over the series of four jumping classes was 1,300,000.00 Euros. Find the FEI World Cup Final jumper rules here.In the end, it was Air Farrington all the way through. Currently number two in the FEI World Jumper Rankings, Kent Farrington (Wellington, Fla., USA) first piloted his and Rabbit Root Stables quick and handy 12-year-old Zangersheide mare Toulayna (Toulon-Parco) to top the speed class on Thursday, April 9. Then, since a one-time horse substitution is allowed, he gathered Greyas reins to guide the classy, careful mare to win the second and third World Cup jumper classes on Friday, April 10, and Sunday, April 12. Greya (Colestus-Contender) is a 12-year-old OldenburgerSpringpferdemare owned by Farrington.Both mares performed brilliantly with Farrington laser-focused on the plan with his horses. Greya dropped just one rail in Round A on Sunday to finish with only four faults total over her two days of jumping. After the final two rounds on Sunday, Farrington lifted the Longines trophy above his head to celebrate his first-ever World Cup Final win which added a missing piece to his already-impressive rsum. A very supportive home crowd cheered and hundreds of U.S. flags waved in the stands as Farrington and the other U.S. riders competed. His win helped the USA stay atop the list of countries with the most World Cup Jumping Final wins. The USAs total is now a dozen wins over the history of the World Cup Jumping Final, keeping them two ahead of Germany which has 10 wins and six ahead of Switzerland which has a total of six. Farrington, who credited bothToulaynaandGreya, talked about the achievement, Itsimportant to note I rode two horses here and Icouldnthave done it withoutToulaynaonday one. I have two exceptional mares that put me in the positionthat I needed to win the title.This means a lot to me because the World Cup Final is what I grew up watching. Ididnthave access to major events and competitions where I grew up, but I had access to video tapes of every single year of the World Cup Final. I would study all the rounds and all the rides hoping I could ride like that, so to be here winning it today isreally specialfor me.Second was Daniel Deusser from Germany riding the 12-year-old Belgian Warmblood stallion Otello de Guldenboom (Tobago Z-Caretino) owned by Stephex Stables. Deusser, who won the 2014 World Cup Final, talked about success in Fort Worth, My expectations were high. Thats why Im coming here. I had a very good start on day one, [but] one rail down that pushed me back a little on day two. Today, I have to say that [Otello de Guldenboom] really tried his heart out. He really tried his very best and Im proud of him.Daniel Deusser and Otello de Guldenboom. Photo by Allen MacMillan/MacMillan PhotographyThe USAsKatie Dinan(Wellington, Fla.)rodetheAmerican-bredmareOut of the Blue SCF, a12-year-old Belgian Warmblood mare(Verdi TN-Cassini I)owned by Grant Road Partnersandbred by Spy Coast Farm, Lexington, Ky.,to third. Last year they werethe highest-placed American pair finishingeighthin the World CupFinalin Basel, Switzerland.Katie Dinan and Out of the Blue SCF. Photo by Mary CageImin awe of my horse Out of the Blue. She was spectacular every day. I owe everything to her, Dinan said.Out of the Blue is the onlyU.S.bredjumper in the show jumping here, and I thinkthatsreally exciting. She was bred at SpyCoastand they have done an amazing job increasing U.S. breeding.This is a mare that did her whole young horse career in the U.S.Itsexciting torepresentmy country like that, especially at a World Cuponhome soil.The USA had three more combinations in the top 12. Aaron Vale (Williston, Fla.) and Carissimo 25 were seventh overall, Lillie Keenan (New York, N.Y.) and Kick On finished 10th overall, and Jacob Pope (Columbia, Md.) and Highway FBH were 12th overall in their first World Cup Final. Also competing for the USA were: Laura Kraut (Royal Palm Beach, Fla.) and Tres Bien Z, 18th; Mimi Gochman(West Palm Beach, Fla.)andInclenBH, 21st;Skylar Wireman(Bonsall, Ca.)andBarclinoB, 25th, and Kaitlin Campbell(Temecula, Ca.)and Cosm Castlefield Cornelious, 26th.US Equestrian Jumping Chef dEquipe Robert Ridland was enthusiastic about the week in Fort Worth. Its always great to win the World Cup Final, but never better than on home soil! Most impressive though was that we showed a lot of depth this week with five U.S. riders finishing in the top twelve placings. Across the board, our riders all rode extremely well, and finally, kudos to the organizers for producing a world-class event and to Anderson Lima who built masterful courses all week.Dynamic Dressage DazzlesTo say that the 2026 Zen Elite World Cup Dressage Final competition was electric and filled with dazzling performances really isnt enough to do it justice. Even without a few of the usual top contenders this year, it was spectacular. And, the crowds in Fort Worth loved it. In true Texas fashion, they often clapped, whooped and hollered during tests as one might expect for a Western reining competition, but isnt really traditional for dressage-watching etiquette. Yet, many competitors commented post-ride that they thought the enthusiasm was great for the sport and, in several cases, it helped their horses perform to an even-higher level. The crowds energy is reflected on the USAs Christian Simons smiling face during his Freestyle test with Indian Rock. Photo by Mary CageSixteen athletes from 13 countries competed in the 2026 World Cup Dressage Final in Fort Worth. At least seven of the human athletes, including the USAs Christian Simonson (Ventura, Calif.) riding Indian Rock, were competing for the first time in a World Cup Final. Countries represented there were: Australia; Austria; Belgium; Ecuador; France; Germany; Great Britain; Lithuania; Morocco; Poland; Sweden; the Netherlands, and USA. World Cup Dressage Final competition comprises two days, one using the FEI Grand Prix test and the other the FEI Grand Prix Freestyle. All athletes who score better than 60 percent in the Grand Prix test are allowed to move on to compete in the Freestyle, and this year all 16 horse-and-rider combinations scored well enough to compete both days. Scores from the Grand Prix serve as the qualifier, with scores from the Freestyle determining the final placings. Total prize money for the World Cup Dressage Final Fort Worth was 275,000.00 Euros. Find the rules for the 2025-26 Dressage World Cup series here.Number-fivedressagerider in the FEI World Rankings,Great BritainsBecky Moody and her homebredJagerbomb, a 12-year-old KWPN gelding (DanteWeltinoOLD-Jazz),came to Fort Worth hoping to dazzle the judges and win.Thatsjust what theydid;scoring 76.761 percent in the Grand Prix and a personal-best 88.33 percent in the Freestyle,dancingto a medley of Beatles songs,fortheir first World Cup Final win together.Moody andJagerbombwere also members of the bronze-medal British Team at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games. She commented that she was hoping for a personal-best score in their World CupFreestyleand that missionwasaccomplished. Ithasntsunk in yet.All our horses are complete and utter diamonds, but todayBombwasabsolutely unreal, said Moody after their win.Moody admitted that shewasntsure howBomb would handle the exuberant crowd, but she wasecstatic with the results, The crowd was insane; it was just incredible to be part of such a cool competition.Iwasntsure how he would cope [with theatmosphere],but it turned out to be the perfect place for him. He could feelthe enthusiasm, and even though it was so electric and so technical, he stayed with me so well. I need to rent that crowd everywhereI go now so they can come cheer,she said with a huge smile.Also scoring above 80 percent in their Freestyle tests to finish second and third, respectively, in the World Cup were the USAs Christian Simonsonand Indian Rock (83.810 inFreestyle and 75.413 in Grand Prix) andPolandsSandraSysojevaand Maxima Bella (80.770 in Freestyle and 71.696 in Grand Prix).Simonsonwas allsmilesthe entire week as he enjoyed his first World Cup Final experience with Rocky,a 13-year-old KWPN stallion(Apache-Vivaldi) owned by Zen Elite Equestrian Centerandwho he has ridden for only the last 14 months. He said he was taking it all in and praised his coach Adrienne Lyle for her guidance.They finished in the second-place spotonboth days of competitionwith theirscore in the Freestylea personal-bestandperformed to music from theRockymovie franchise.I dont have the right words to describe the emotions Im having right now. Im so happy to be here, and Im so proud to represent my country. What a fun night. Rocky is one in a million. To take me to the World Cup and now a double podium placingI get tearyeyedjust thinking about him,he said after their runner-up overall finish.He also said that the crowds enthusiasmreflected something bigger happening in U.S. dressage. Thatswhat we need in thesportfun.Imsuper fortunate that Heidi [Humphries] and Zen Elite have been such a big part of building up dressage in the U.S., and you could really feel that tonight with the excitement in the arena.Simonson said that competing in the World Cup was one of his aspirations. When I was around 13, I wrote down all my biggest dreams. One of them was the Pan American Games, and one of them was the World Cup Final. This whole week has been a childhood dream come true, which feels very surreal. Looking up and seeing this wall of people standing and applauding Rocky was super special. Hes such a special horse; he deserves every bit of praise.I cannot believe it, said Polands Sysojeva who was visiting the U.S. for the first time in order to compete Maxima Bella, a 10-year-old Oldenburg mare (Millennium-Christ), in Fort Worth. We did not expect this, but my horse behaved so well today with no big mistakes. Im really, really happy and very proud of her. I was afraid of the atmosphereit was so loud and everybody was clapping. Usually she gets too excited, but today she was happy, and she liked it. Shes still young and getting so much experience at shows like this. That was very special for me. If it wasnt for the show, we would never have come to Texas. But the people are very friendly, and weve really enjoyed this 10day holiday here.Sandra Sysojeva and Maxima Bella. Photo by Allen MacMillan/MacMillan PhotographySwedens Patrik Kittel and Touchdown, who won the 2025 World Cup Final in Switzerland, finished fourth overall (80.260 in their Freestyle and 72.869 in the Grand Prix). The ever-popular, US..-based rider from Ecuador, Julio Mendoza Loor and his Jewels Goldstrike, a.k.a. Goldie, took fourth place in the Grand Prix (72.000) and sixth overall with a score of 78.645 percent in the Freestyle. World Cup Final rookie from Germany, Raphael Netz riding SP Dieudonne, moved up to the fifth-place overall spot after a spectacular Freestyle test earned them 79.245 percent. U.S. riders Kevin Kohmann and Duenensee (Wellington, Fla., 68.674 in Grand Prix and 76.730 in Freestyle) and Benjamin Ebeling and Bellena (Wellington, Fla., 67.717in Grand Prix and74.965in Freestyle) finishedinrespectable ninth and tenthplaces, respectively.US Equestrian DressageChefdEquipeChristine Traurigcommentedonthe week in Fort Worth.Weaccomplishedanother goal we set for this year, which was to have our riders finish in the top ten. Ben and Kevin both have World Cup Finals experience, and they rode great tonight withgood resultsin front of an enthusiastic crowd. Christians finishonthe podium in second place is a fantastic result for USA Dressage and continues to build momentum towards this summers World Championships and beyond.I am so proud of our riders, their horses, the grooms, their personal trainers, and our owners. It was trulya great weekto celebrate dressage here at home in the United States.Another significant happening during the World Cup Dressage Final was the official retirement of MorganBarbanons(FRA) competitionhorse, the 20-year-old Oldenburg stallionSirDonnerhallII (Sandro Hit-Donnerhall). The emotional retirement ceremony took place during intermissionof the Freestyle competition. They had competed together for 14 years and were members of Frances 2024 Paris Olympic Team. They finished 13th in Fort Worth, earning 68.956 intheGrand Prix and 72.46 percent in the Freestyle.Morgan Barbanon gratefully waves to the crowd after a final ride on Sir Donnerhall II OLD, aka Gus. Photo by Mary CageFEI World Cup Results & Replay on DemandTo find a complete set of results for both FEI World Cup Final sports, as well as orders of go and jumper course maps, visithere.More news from the Fort Worth Finals can be viewed by going to the official event site and on US Equestrians website.Find interesting facts and figures about the World Cup Finals, plus an explanation of how the competition works, in the FEIs press kit here.Replays of the competition, plus athlete interviews, are available by subscription on FEI TV via ClipMyHorse. Find the competition link here.2027 FEI World Cup FinalsThe 2027 World Cup Finals for dressage, show jumping and vaulting will be heldat theScandinaviumin Gothenburg, Sweden, March 24-28. This event also marks the 50th anniversary of the Gothenburg Show. For more information, visit here. This recap of the 2026 Fort Worth FEI World Cup Finals is a web exclusive for Horse Illustratedmagazine.Click here to subscribe!The post Reliving the Fort Worth FEI World Cup Finals 2026 appeared first on Horse Illustrated Magazine.
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  • THEHORSE.COM
    Strangles Case Confirmed in Florida
    According to the Florida Department of Agriculture, one horse at a private facility in Broward County has tested positive for strangles. One additional horse is suspected to be positive, and 13 horses have been exposed.This is Floridas sixth confirmed strangles case of 2026.EDCC Health Watch is an Equine Network marketing program that utilizes information from the Equine Disease Communication Center (EDCC) to create and disseminate verified equine disease reports. TheEDCCis an independent nonprofit organization that is supported by industry donations in order to provide open access to infectious disease information.About StranglesStranglesin horses is an infection caused byStreptococcus equisubspeciesequiand spread through direct contact with other equids or contaminated surfaces. Horses that arent showing clinical signs can harbor and spread the bacteria, and recovered horses remain contagious for at least six weeks, with the potential to cause outbreaks long-term.Infected horses can exhibit a variety of clinical signs:FeverSwollen and/or abscessed lymph nodesNasal dischargeCoughing or wheezingMuscle swellingDifficulty swallowingVeterinarians diagnose horses using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing with either a nasal swab, wash, or an abscess sample, and they treat most cases based on clinical signs, implementing antibiotics for severe cases. Overuse of antibiotics can prevent an infected horse from developing immunity. Most horses make a full recovery in three to four weeks.A vaccine is available but not always effective. Biosecurity measures of quarantining new horses at a facility and maintaining high standards of hygiene and disinfecting surfaces can helplower the risk of outbreakorcontain one when it occurs.
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  • THEHORSE.COM
    Common Causes of Lameness in Senior Horses
    Chronic lameness in older horses most often stems from musculoskeletal conditions such as osteoarthritis, which gradually breaks down joint cartilage and leads to pain and stiffness. Other issues such as soft tissue injuries or hoof problems can also contribute to uneven movement and reduced comfort in aging horses. Lauren Trager, DVM, MS, Dipl. ACVSMR, of the Virginia-Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine, in Blacksburg, explains the common causes of lameness in senior horses in this Ask TheHorse Live excerpt.About the Expert: Lauren Trager, DVM, MS, Dipl. ACVSMRLauren Trager, DVM, MS, Dipl. ACVSMR, is a clinical assistant professor of equine sports medicine at the Virginia Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine, in Blacksburg. She is a diplomate of the American College of Veterinary Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation. Trager loves to teach and enjoys working on challenging lameness and poor performance cases, particularly those with neck and back pain and anything that involves advanced imaging.
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  • WIRRALRIDINGCENTRE.COM
    New Recording, Imagine and Social Media Policy
    New Recording, Imaging & Social Media Policy Please ReadTo help protect the privacy, safety and wellbeing of everyone at Wirral Riding Centre, we have introduced a new Recording, Imaging and Social Media Policy that applies to all riders, liveries, staff, young people, volunteers and visitors.We love celebrating our horses, riders and achievements online, but its important that we do this safely, respectfully and with the correct permissions in place. What you need to do:Please take a few minutes to read the full policy. By being on site, you agree to follow these guidelines at all times.A copy is available: On our website- https://clthhub.com/xpage/alternative-provision-policies/8 Via this link - https://drive.google.com/file/d/1z2z0HVKcM7fpSjmMU3VNfKttyZZ1r3QP/view From the office on requestThank you for helping us keep our riding centre safe, respectful and supportive for everyone
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  • Same Girl, same
    Subscribe to our YouTube channel & hit the bell! http://go.fei.org/YouTube?d Exclusive videos on #FEItv: ...
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  • WWW.BADMINTON-HORSE.CO.UK
    Anna Ross unmissable dressage display returns to the Main Arena!
    The MARS Badminton Horse Trials are delighted to welcome back international Grand Prix rider and Olympic-level coach Anna Ross to present the Dressage Display in the main arena on both Thursday and Friday at lunchtime at 12.30pm.Based in Devon, Anna runsAnna Ross Dressage, a sales and training facility where she trains, produces and develops horses and riders for international competition, from young horses through to Grand Prix and Championship level.Anna has represented Great Britain internationally for more than 25 years, competing at theEuropean Championships, Aachen CDIO, London Olympia, World Cup qualifiers, and theWorld Championships for Young Horses. Career highlights include anindividual 10th place at the European Championshipsandvictory in the World Cup qualifier in Warsaw.Alongside her competitive career, Anna is widely respected as a leading international coach. She has trained riders competing atOlympic, World Championship, European Championship, Youth Championship and Pan American Games level, producing both horses and athletes for Championship teams.Anna will be supported during the demonstrations byBeth Bainbridge, aninternational dressage winner in her own rightandAnnas Head Rider of 15 years. Beth has played a key role in producing horses through the levels and brings extensive experience in training and competition to the demonstrations.Annas contribution to the sport has been recognised with theBritish Equestrian Award for Outstanding Achievement in Dressage, and the prestigiousDavison Award at Olympia.Anna is also a regular contributor to theDressage pages in Horse & Hound, and has frequently been part of the Dressage headset commentary team at Badminton.The Horses both due to embark on their Grand Prix careers this year.Furst Encore, also known as Fergus, is an 11-year-old gelding who has had over 70% scores at Prix St George and is well on his way to Grand Prix. No stranger to a master class this pocket rocket has already struttedhis stuff at the British Dressage Championships.My Pride, also known as Marvellous Marvin, is a nine-year-old gelding who represented Great Britain at the young horse world championships as a six-year-old and has been carefully developed since then.The display will be compered by Desi Dillingham MBE former Chair of British Dressage as well as a fundraiser for our Olympic Teams since the 1980s.
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