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  • 2026 NBS Breeding Initiatives Launched
    Horse Sport Ireland is delighted to announce the opening of the 2026 National Breeding Services schemes, funded by the Department of Agriculture, Food, and the Marine. These schemes contribute to the Young Horse Pathway delivered by Horse Sport Ireland. This pathway is open and available to all studbook breeders, producers, and owners in Ireland, and provides breeders with support for the breeding and production of sport horses.These schemes provide support for all aspects of the sport horse sector with something for all breeders and all studbooks at virtually each stage or age of the horses life; from conception to 7/8 years. They also provide opportunities for horse and pony breeders nationwide to add value to their herd, in terms of both breeding, performance and market value. Not only do these schemes play an important role in supporting breeding and production, but also the health and welfare of the national herd, education, and knowledge transfer.It is important to recognise that not all horses are bred or produced for a career in top sport; and the vital role that these horses play in our industry. These differences in breeding goals are well encapsulated in the schemes and initiatives offered, where many of the schemes do not require participating animals to have a performance record to participate. Additional focus has been placed on breeding and production initiatives available for ponies, where performance equivalents are in place across initiatives where relevant.We have undoubtably seen an increase in the number of breeders engaging with these schemes over the previous years and continually encourage all breeders to look at the below table or indeed talk to the HSI Breeding department if they are interested in applying for a scheme and want to understand what the best fit for their breeding programme might be.CLICK HEREfor scheme list and applications.Summary criteria:Horses/ponies must be studbook registered with a breed recorded to avail of any scheme funding.Schemes emphasise the importance for good breeding decisions, and that is borne in several ways, such as studbook registration and sire criteria.Applicants must upload a screenshot of the Equine Operator profile (ROI) /NI breeders a valid EEN.Own performance or dam line performance criteria apply to certain schemes.All equines must be registered in the correct ownership for scheme funding.Breeders and producers can also use the production schemes offered to add to dam line performance, adding value to the individual mare and her future progeny.The detail above and table provided highlights where performance is and is not a requirement of participation, please note that this is not a full list of eligibility terms.All training and production schemes require the submissions of time stamped and geotagged videos in order to avail of funds.Applicants in receipt of 5,000 or more will be required to submit a tax clearance certificateThe post 2026 NBS Breeding Initiatives Launched appeared first on .
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    UK Eventing 2025: How To Stay Competitive As Fields Grow
    11 min read Last updated: January 2026 Feeling sections tighten as UK eventing fields swell? This 2025 playbook shows exactly how to stay competitiveusing OBP benchmarking, clever fixture selection, and marginal-gain prepbacked by fresh numbers (participation up 38% in March and 62% in April), so you convert near-misses into rosettes instead of slipping down the board. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Early Season Entries What To Do: Enter popular spring fixtures early and shortlist backups. Book stabling and coaching blocks ahead of peak weeks. Why It Matters: Full sections and high demand make late entries harder to secure. Common Mistake: Leaving entries late and ending up in oversubscribed classes that dont suit your horse. Area: OBP Benchmarking What To Do: After each run, record your Opposition Beaten Percentage and compare across venues and dates. Why It Matters: OBP normalises for section size and shows true competitiveness. Common Mistake: Judging progress by placings or PBs without field context. Area: Dressage To Median What To Do: Aim to sit within 34 marks of the section median by drilling accuracy, relaxation and clean transitions. Why It Matters: Small dressage gains lift OBP quickly in deeper fields. Common Mistake: Chasing the winners score instead of beating the middle of the pack. Area: Show Jumping Precision What To Do: Walk for detail, ride an adjustable canter, and target clears relative to the sections clear rate. Why It Matters: In highclear fields, one rail can crash your OBP. Common Mistake: Overattacking or cutting lines that sacrifice balance and cause rails. Area: XC Time Management What To Do: Practise efficient lines and rhythm, then ride balanced turns to save soft seconds without rushing. Why It Matters: Good ground and busy calendars mean faster sections where time decides placings. Common Mistake: Chasing the clock with speed over flow, leading to errors and lost seconds. Area: Calendar Targeting What To Do: Choose venues that suit your horse and footing, and pivot if a target fixture overfills or the going changes. Why It Matters: Smart fixture selection boosts results without changing level. Common Mistake: Chasing fashionable venues that dont play to your strengths. Area: Kit And Readiness What To Do: Build a competition crate, run a mid-season kit check, and ensure hats, boots and leg protection meet current standards. Why It Matters: Being organised and compliant prevents avoidable penalties and stress. Common Mistake: Turning up missing essentials or with out-of-date safety gear. Area: Data-Led Logging What To Do: Track OBP, dressage delta to median, SJ rails and XC time delta, and review phase videos with your coach. Why It Matters: A simple time series reveals where marginal gains lift OBP fastest. Common Mistake: Recording only final placings and ignoring phase-by-phase trends. In This Guide Is UK eventing getting more competitive? What does the latest participation data tell us? Where are the pressures and limits on competitive fields? How to measure your competitiveness now Practical ways to stay ahead as fields deepen Seasonal strategy: target the calendar, not just the level What research still needs to be done? Are UK eventing scoreboards getting tighter? With fuller early-season start lists and better data tools, many riders are feeling the step up. Heres what the latest UK evidence showsand how to ride smarter in 2025.Key takeaway: Early-season British Eventing participation jumped 38% in March 2025 and 62% in April, signalling deeper fields at many fixtures. Use data-led benchmarking, target the calendar cleverly, and double down on preparation to keep your results competitive.Is UK eventing getting more competitive?Yesfields are fuller in early 2025 and federation memberships are rising, but definitive year-on-year scoring trends arent publicly available yet, so ride as if fixtures will be deeper and faster to place. British Eventings latest participation report shows significant early-season growth (38% more unique athletes in March, 62% in April), and British Equestrians member body registrations rose 11.7% from 2023 to 2024two strong signals of broader engagement.Competitiveness is more than headcountits about standards across dressage, show jumping, and cross-country. While a substantial UK dataset spanning 75,000+ eventing horses (20082018) exists, the published materials we have dont yet map how average dressage marks, show jumping clears, or cross-country speeds have shifted over time. What we can say with confidence is that early-season demand is high, calendar supply has expanded, and you now have better toolslike Opposition Beaten Percentage (OBP)to benchmark where you stand in a given field.Given these signals, the practical stance for riders in 2025 is straightforward: assume busier sections at popular venues, expect fewer cheap time-faults, and prioritise preparation that converts near-misses into rosettes.What does the latest participation data tell us?British Eventing reports a 38% rise in unique athletes in March 2025 and a 62% rise in April, driven by more events and better weatherclear signs of early-season appetite. That uptick aligns with a broader participation lift across British Equestrians 19 member bodies, where federation memberships increased 11.7% between 2023 and 2024.British Eventing attributes the April surge to more events + better weather, underscoring how supply (calendar capacity) and climate shape entries week to week. While overall equestrian participation in England declined from 425,900 in 2009 to 352,900 in 2016 and around 286,000 by 2023, sector data indicates renewed energy, especially among affiliated participants and enthusiasts who stay engaged year-round through training and competition.Sector leaders emphasise using data to make smart, targeted improvements. As Mandana Mehran Pour, British Equestrians Head of Participation and Development, notes:Data-driven insight gives us the foundation to take meaningful action. The findings provide a clear direction of how we can better support the people, horses and organisations that define our sector. British Equestrian State of the Nation 2024Meanwhile, public support for horse sport remains resilient despite recent challenges. Jim Eyre, Chief Executive of British Equestrian, welcomed the findings of the UKs largest attitudes study:We welcome the findings of this research, which is one of the biggest of its kind in the UK and covers our whole sector... The confirmation that we still have public acceptance, despite the difficulties that equestrianism has faced in recent years, is very positive. World Horse WelfareFor riders, the takeaway is practical: popular spring fixtures will fill; late entries may be harder; and sections can feel tighter even before you look at scoreboards. Plan early, pick dates strategically, and benchmark your performance against the field, not just your personal bests.Where are the pressures and limits on competitive fields?Capacity at riding centres is tight70% want to expand but cantso supply constraints can cap entries even as demand grows. These limits are felt most in the southeast and southwest of England, with the cost-of-living squeeze (insurance, feed, energy) and workforce shortages making it harder to increase capacity or run more activities.Seasonal weather amplifies these pressures. Springs improved conditions and expanded calendars attract riders keen to get early runs; summer hard ground can require more conditioning and careful footing choices; and a wet autumn can re-shape cross-country form. All of this influences which fixtures sell out fast and how deep a section feels by the time you trot down the centre line.Practical ways to navigate these pressure points include: booking coaching blocks and venue hires well ahead of busy months; choosing events that suit your horses way of going and your logistics; and maintaining a flexible plan so you can pivot if a primary target becomes oversubscribed.How to measure your competitiveness nowUse British Eventings Stats Centre and Opposition Beaten Percentage to benchmark your results against the field. OBP shows what share of the competition youve finished ahead ofcutting through section size and giving you a clear, comparable indicator of competitiveness across venues and dates.Pair OBP with three discipline-specific checks after every run:Dressage: Compare your score against the section median, not just the winner. If youre within 34 marks of the median, incremental gains in accuracy, relaxation, and transitions will lift your OBP.Show jumping: Track clear rounds versus section clear rate. If the fields clear rate is high, a single rail can drop your OBP dramaticallycourse-walk detail and canter control become decisive.Cross-country: Watch time relative to class norms. When calendars are busy and ground is good, sections often run quicker; practicing efficient lines and rhythm over schooling fences pays off in time saved without over-riding.The UKs 20082018 dataset of 75,000+ eventing horses highlights how much insight longitudinal analysis can yield. While publicly available materials dont yet chart discipline standards year by year, you can create your own time series: log OBP per outing, plus dressage deltas to the section median, show jumping rails, and XC time deltas to optimum. After 46 events, youll see where to focus for maximum OBP lift.Quick tip: Video every phase and review with your coach. Ten minutes spent tagging where you lose soft seconds (wide turns, over-set-ups) can unlock measurable gains at your very next start.Practical ways to stay ahead as fields deepenFocus on marginal gains you can control: preparation, welfare, kit, and cost management. When sections tighten, the riders who arrive calm, well-organised, and properly turned out tend to keep penalties off the sheet.Dress for performance and confidence: Well-fitted show wear supports focus and movement. Explore tailored looks in our womens competition clothing and ensure your hat meets the latest standards from our curated riding helmets range.Protect legs for jumping efforts: Reliable boots reduce risk and help horses recover between runs. See our horse boots and bandages for XC, show jumping, and schooling.Plan for British weather: Layer smartly to keep muscles warm pre- and post-ride. For changeable spring, have a lightweight turnout rug ready; as flies arrive, switch to breathable fly rugs to minimise irritation and wasted energy.Conditioning and recovery: Electrolytes and joint support are staples for busy calendarsbrowse proven options in our horse supplements and trusted formulas from NAF.Everyday performance basics: Good grooming improves circulation and helps you spot niggles early. Stock up from our grooming collection and streamline your pre-ring routine.Footwork and stability: Your position under pressure starts with secure footwear. Choose supportive soles and spur-friendly heels from our riding boots.Warm-up and walk courses safely: Dawn course-walks and late finishes demand visibilitykeep yourself seen with hi-vis rider gear.Brands eventers trust: For durability and fit, see seasonal picks from WeatherBeeta and performance basics from LeMieux.Pro tip: Build a competition crate that lives in your lorryspare gloves, studs, tape, plasters, numbers, safety pins, a spare rein, and a clean numnah. Small snags cost rosettes when fields are tight.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend scheduling a mid-season kit check. A 20-minute once-over (hat dates, boot stitching, rug fittings) often prevents avoidable penalties on the day.Seasonal strategy: target the calendar, not just the levelAlign your competition plan with the UK calendarspring spikes as weather improves and events multiply, while summer heat and ground conditions demand different prep. Thoughtful fixture selection can keep your OBP climbing even if you dont change levels.Spring (MarchApril): With British Eventing reporting 3862% more unique athletes early in 2025, expect busy sections and keen time across country. Book entries early, target courses that suit your horse, and prioritise accuracy in the dressage to stay competitive when the time is gettable for many.Summer: When ground firms up, fitness and efficient lines decide placings. Plan sets to build cruise canter without overloading limbs, and consider stud patterns that enhance traction but dont over-torque. If your horse thrives on flowy tracks, hand-pick venues known for rhythm and forwardness.Autumn: Wet going and trickier lines can shuffle leaderboards. Focus on adjustability and clarity at combinations; a cool, balanced round often beats raw speed as errors rise across the field.Winter: Use quieter months for dressage polish, show jumping sharpness, and gymnastic XC schools. Keep muscle tone with appropriate stable layering and occasional outdoor movementbrowse warm, breathable options in our turnout rugs and snug stable rugs to match your yards routine.Quick tip: If youre balancing family calendars, aim your peak performance windows for when you can give full focusconsistency of preparation often matters more than adding an extra class.What research still needs to be done?To confirm competitiveness trends, the UK needs timeseries data on field sizes, scores, and course difficulty from 20152025. That means aligning entry numbers with dressage score distributions, show jumping clear-round rates, cross-country speed profiles, and course technicality by level.Five high-impact steps would answer the is it more competitive? question conclusively:Time-series metrics: Track average section sizes, balloting rates, and entry demand by region and level.Performance standards: Chart dressage median and winning scores, show jumping clear percentages, and XC time trends by month and footing.Course evolution: Capture changes in technicality (e.g., combinations, related distances) and their effect on penalties.Pipeline health: Monitor first-to-second-year retention and breadth of youth team activities to gauge sustainability.Transparency tools: Expand adoption of Opposition Beaten Percentage and field-strength indicators in the BE Stats Centre so riders can compare fixtures like-for-like.For sector-wide context and methodology, consult British Equestrians ongoing State of the Nation work and public attitudes reporting via World Horse Welfare. Both underscore the value of rigorous, transparent data:British Equestrian State of the Nation 2024UK public attitudes to horse sport (World Horse Welfare)If youre a rider or organiser, consider engaging directly with British Eventing to access deeper Stats Centre insights and contribute to the evidence base. The more we measure, the better we all plan.FAQsHas eventing participation grown or declined recently in the UK?British Eventing reported strong early-season participation in 2025unique athletes were up 38% in March and 62% in April compared to the previous year. That sits alongside an 11.7% rise in federation memberships across British Equestrians member bodies from 2023 to 2024. While long-term entry trends by level arent fully published, the current picture suggests busier spring fixtures and deeper fields.Whats the best way to tell if my section was more competitive?Use Opposition Beaten Percentage (OBP) to see what proportion of the field you finished ahead of. Then compare your dressage mark to the section median, your show jumping outcome to the section clear rate, and your cross-country time versus the pattern for that day. Together, these give a truer read on competitiveness than placings alone.Are UK riding centres able to handle more aspiring eventers?Many want to, but capacity is tight. About 70% of centres report wanting to expand but facing constraints, with pressure most acute in the southeast and southwest. Rising operational costs and staffing challenges are common bottlenecks, which can indirectly cap competitive field growth.Why did April 2025 entries jump so much?British Eventing cites more events + better weather as the main drivers. When the calendar expands and the going improves, more riders take the opportunity to get early-season runs, which fills sections and sharpens competition for placings.What kit upgrades most reliably protect my results on busy days?Prioritise safety and performance essentials: a current-standard hat from our riding helmets, secure footwear from riding boots, reliable leg protection from horse boots and bandages, and weather-ready layers such as turnout rugs or fly rugs. A tidy, comfortable partnership reduces avoidable penalties.How can I prepare cost-effectively if fixtures feel more competitive?Double down on planning and prevention: nail down entries early, school efficiently with clear session goals, and keep your horse feeling great with core supplements and consistent grooming. Keep an eye on value in our Secret Tack Room clearance for seasonal savings.What one change will most improve my Opposition Beaten Percentage this spring?Clean jumping rounds move OBP fastest when fields are full. Invest time in canter quality and line-riding in your show jumping, then rehearse efficient, balanced XC turns so you bank time without taking risks. Combine that with early entries at courses that suit your horse, and youll feel the lift quickly.If youre planning your next run, give yourself every advantageset your season goals, map the fixtures that suit your horse, and fine-tune the details. And if you need help choosing the right gear, our team at Just Horse Riders is here to help you pick out the essentials that keep penalties off the board. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop Competition WearShop Riding HelmetsShop Boots & BandagesShop Turnout RugsShop Supplements
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  • Jessica von Bredow Werndl: The right balance between turn out, sport & rest |in partnership w/ Agria
    In the last episode of our visit to Jessica von Bredow Werndl, we not only meet Queen Dalera, who is currently enjoying her ...
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    Small Pony Turnout Rugs: Choose The Right Fit And Weight
    8 min read Last updated: January 2026 Battling slipping rugs, shoulder rubs and a sweaty small pony? Learn how to choose ponyspecific turnouts that truly fit0300g by UK temperatures, 600D1200D ripstop outers, and a fast fit checklistso your pony stays dry, comfy and freemoving while you build a simple threerug wardrobe that works. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Choose Pony Cut What To Do: Buy pony-specific turnout rugs with smaller necklines, shorter drops and correct chest angles; dont downsize a horse rug. Why It Matters: Proper proportions prevent shoulder rubs, slipping and restricted movement. Common Mistake: Using a horse cut that hangs too deep and gapes at the chest. Area: Pick Rug Weight What To Do: Match fill to weather and pony needs: 0g mild wet, 100150g cool spells, 200250g cold snaps, 300g+ prolonged cold or clipped/older. Why It Matters: Right warmth keeps ponies comfortable without overheating or chilling. Common Mistake: Rugging by calendar instead of conditions. Area: Measure & Fit What To Do: Measure chest to buttock; fit so the rug sits just in front of the wither, lies flat at the chest, and the drop reaches elbow/stifle. Why It Matters: Correct sizing ensures freedom to move and stable coverage. Common Mistake: Choosing size by length only and ignoring drop and neckline. Area: Adjust Fastenings What To Do: Use metal T-bars/quick-clips on the chest, set crossed surcingles to a hands breadth, and fit leg/tail straps snug not tight. Why It Matters: Secure, balanced tension stops twisting, tripping and rubs. Common Mistake: Relying on Velcro alone or leaving straps too loose. Area: Fabric & Denier What To Do: Select 1200D ripstop for herd life or 600D for careful use; insist on waterproof, breathable membranes, taped seams and smooth, wicking linings. Why It Matters: Tough, weatherproof rugs last longer and keep ponies drier. Common Mistake: Buying low-denier outers that tear or leak mid-winter. Area: Daily Checks What To Do: Feel under the rug behind the shoulder; if hot/clammy drop a weight, if cool/shivery add warmth or a neck, and groom shoulders to reduce friction. Why It Matters: Fast tweaks prevent chills, sweating and early rubs. Common Mistake: Not reassessing after weather changes or wet spells. Area: Seasonal Wardrobe What To Do: Keep a simple set: 0g, 150250g and 200300g turnouts, plus a fly rug for summer and a stable rug for nights in. Why It Matters: Covers typical UK seasons without over-complicating choices. Common Mistake: Missing a mid-weight and being forced to over- or under-rug. Area: Care & Reproofing What To Do: Air-dry after rain, brush mud when dry, wash with rug-safe cleaner, reproof when water stops beading, and inspect/replace worn hardware weekly; store bone-dry and labelled. Why It Matters: Maintenance preserves waterproofing and safety all season. Common Mistake: Using fabric softener or skipping reproofing and strap checks. In This Guide Why ponyspecific turnout rugs matter What weight turnout rug does a small pony need? How to measure and fit a small pony rug Best fabrics and denier for durable pony turnouts Key features that keep small ponies comfy A simple seasonal rug wardrobe for small ponies Care, cleaning and safety checks Short backs, deep girths and busy brains small ponies are brilliant, but they can be tricky to rug well. The right turnout keeps them dry, comfy and free to move; the wrong one rubs shoulders, slips and leaks.Key takeaway: Small ponies need pony-specific turnout rugs with the right weight (0300g across UK seasons), robust fabric (600D1200D ripstop) and secure, adjustable fastenings to prevent rubs and slipping.Why ponyspecific turnout rugs matterPonyspecific turnout rugs use smaller necklines and shorter drops so they dont hang too deep, pull at the shoulders or restrict movement. A downsized horse rug often ends up too long and too low on a ponys shoulder, which is a recipe for rubs and poor freedom of movement.Ponies arent just shorter horses their proportions are different. Native types often have wider chests, thicker necks and rounder barrels relative to length. Purposedesigned pony rugs account for that with: Shorter side drop to avoid drowning the legs and tripping risk Narrower, lower neckline that sits cleanly in front of the wither More accurate chest angle so the rug closes flat without gaping Shoulder pleats/gussets that open as your pony walks or grazesAt Just Horse Riders, we recommend choosing from dedicated pony ranges from trusted brands such as WeatherBeeta and Shires rather than trying to make do with a horse cut. The better the patterning, the less youll battle rubs, slips and leaks.What weight turnout rug does a small pony need?In UK winters, most ponies are comfortable in 200300g turnout rugs once temperatures drop below about 5C. Lighter 0100g options suit mild, wet spells when you want waterproofing without extra warmth.Think in layers and local weather, not dates on the calendar. Small native ponies often run warm thanks to dense coats and efficient metabolisms, while clipped, elderly or underweight ponies may need more help. Use this simple guide: 0g (no fill): Mild but wet or windy days; keeps rain off without overheating 100150g (light/transition): Cool, unsettled autumn/spring; good in-between option 200250g (medium): Cold snaps and typical UK winter days around 05C 300g+ (warmer medium): Prolonged cold, clipped or older ponies that feel the chillBrowse ponyfriendly options in our turnout rugs collection. For stabled ponies overnight, you can pair a turnout by day with a dedicated stable rug to keep things dry and breathable around the clock.Quick tip: Detachable necks add flexibility. Pop the neck on in driving rain or wind; take it off to prevent overheating when the sun appears an hour later very British.How to measure and fit a small pony rugMeasure from the centre of the chest to the point of the buttock (level with the tail), then choose a ponyspecific size with a proportionally shorter drop. A correct fit sits neatly in front of the wither, lies flat across the shoulder and covers the barrel without swallowing little legs.Use this fit checklist when you try on: Neck and chest: Buckles should close without straining; no gaping at the front. Tbar or buckle/clip systems beat Velcro for longterm hold. Shoulders: Shoulder pleats/gussets should sit at the point of shoulder and open in walk. No drag marks or tightness over the scapula. Wither: The rug should clear the wither without pressure; look for wither relief shaping or light padding for comfort. Depth: The drop should finish roughly at the elbow and stifle not midcannon. Too deep = rubs and tripping risk. Girth area: Crossed surcingles adjusted to a hands breadth under the belly; they should not hang low or dig in. Leg/tail straps: Secure but not tight. A fullwidth tail flap protects from wind and rain; it mustnt twist or catch.Pro tip: Smooth, wicking linings (often branded as DermoCare or similar) reduce friction and keep coats sleek a big win on compact frames where small rubs show fast. After a wet spell, check the coat under the shoulders and along the mane daily and groom through with a soft brush; our grooming range has the tools to make it quick.Best fabrics and denier for durable pony turnoutsChoose 1200D ripstop polyester for herd life and rugwrecker ponies, and 600D for lighter use, solo turnout or careful companions. Ripstop weaves add crosshatch reinforcement that helps prevent small nicks from turning into big rips.What D means: Denier measures yarn thickness higher D = tougher outer. Common options include: 600D ripstop: Light to medium strength for day turnout, milder weather or careful ponies 1200D1680D: Heavyduty outers that shrug off play, hedges and postandrail scufflesCombine the right outer with a waterproof, breathable membrane and taped seams for genuine allweather performance. Inside, silky antirub or wicking linings help shed hair and moisture while keeping the coat smooth.Quick tip: If your pony lives in a mixed herd, durability pays for itself. A tough 1200D rug usually lasts longer, looks smarter and is cheaper over the season than replacing a budget option midwinter.Key features that keep small ponies comfySecure Tbar chest fastenings, adjustable crossed surcingles and wellplaced shoulder pleats keep a pony turnout stable and rubfree. A fullwidth tail flap and wicking lining finish the job in wet, windy UK fields.Look for: Chest closures: Metal Tbars or quickclips with multiposition adjustment; avoid relying on Velcro alone Shoulder pleats/gussets: Essential for free movement on compact frames Surcingles and leg straps: Adjustable, antislip hardware; check weekly for wear Neck options: Detachable necks for changeable weather; fixed combos for fulltime protection Lining: Smooth, moisturewicking fabric to minimise rubs and help coats dry Tail flap: Deep or umbrellastyle flap for winddriven rain without restricting the dockAt Just Horse Riders, we favour brands with wellcut pony patterns and proven hardware. Explore pony favourites across Shires and WeatherBeeta to compare closure systems and neck choices.A simple seasonal rug wardrobe for small poniesBuild a threerug system: a 0g for mild wet spells, a 150250g for cool transitional weather, and a 200300g for colder snaps. Add a fly rug for summer midges and sun, and a stable rug if your pony comes in at night.Heres a practical UKready setup: Spring/autumn wet: 0g waterproof turnout to block rain and wind without extra heat Cool spells: 150200g for those 812C grey days with showers Winter: 200300g once its consistently below ~5C, adjusted for coat, clip and age Summer: A breathable fly rug for sweet itch types or strong UV days Stabled nights: A cosy, breathable stable rug sized to your ponys proportionsQuick tip: UK welfare guidance from bodies like the British Horse Society (BHS) and veterinary groups emphasises rugging the individual, not the calendar. Touch under your ponys rug behind the shoulder: warm and dry is perfect; hot or clammy means drop a weight; cool or shivering means add warmth or a neck.Care, cleaning and safety checksWash turnouts with technical cleaners, reproof when water stops beading, and check straps, stitching and seams weekly. Clean, reproofed fabric sheds rain better and keeps your pony drier for longer.Make it routine: After heavy rain: Shake off, brush mud once dry, and hang to air thoroughly Washing: Use specialist rug wash; avoid fabric softeners which clog breathability Reproofing: When water stops beading, reproof to restore the barrier Hardware check: Inspect Tbars, clips, surcingle webbing and leg straps weekly Storage: Bonedry, folded, and labelled by weight so you can grab and goPro tip: Keep a spare turnout on hand so youre never forced to put a damp rug back on. Our Secret Tack Room clearance often has lastchance sizes ideal as backups.If your pony is a serial rugtester, upgrade to a higher denier outer, doublestitching and robust hardware. A wellfitting, tough rug is safer and more economical than frequent mends.FAQsHow do I measure a small pony for a turnout rug?Stand your pony square and measure from the centre of the chest to the point of the buttock. Use that measurement to select a ponyspecific rug size with a shorter drop and smaller neckline. When you try on, ensure flat contact at the chest, free shoulder movement and a drop that reaches the elbow/stifle without hanging lower.Should small native ponies be rugged at all?Many native types cope well without rugs in mild, dry conditions thanks to dense coats. Rug when its persistently wet or windy, if your pony is clipped, elderly, underweight, or you need to keep a coat dry for work. UK welfare advice stresses assessing the individual: warm and dry under the rug is right; sweaty or shivery means adjust.Is 200g too heavy for autumn?On mild autumn days a 0100g is usually plenty; reserve 200g for colder snaps or leaner, clipped or older ponies. Start light, then step up if you feel coolness behind the shoulder or see your pony getting tucked up in wind and rain.Detachable neck or fixed combo for a small pony?Detachable necks offer flexibility in changeable weather and help prevent overheating. Fixed neck combos give fulltime coverage for ponies out 24/7 on exposed yards. For most UK yards, a detachable neck on a wellcut pony rug is the most versatile choice.How do I stop shoulder rubs on a small pony?Pick a ponypattern rug with a smaller neckline, correct chest angle and shoulder pleats. Check the drop isnt too deep, adjust surcingles so the rug cant shift, and choose smooth, wicking linings. Groom daily under the shoulders to lift grit and loose hair that can cause friction.What denier should I choose for a playful herd pony?Go 1200D ripstop (or higher) for durability in group turnout and with rugwreckers. 600D ripstop suits careful ponies, lighter use or solo turnout. Ripstop weaves help prevent small snags from turning into large tears.Can I use a horsesized rug on my pony if the length measures up?Its rarely a good idea. Even if the length seems right, horse rugs are deeper and broader through the shoulder and neckline, which leads to slipping and rubs on small frames. Choose from dedicated pony turnout rugs for safe, comfortable coverage tailored to pony proportions. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop Turnout RugsShop WeatherBeetaShop ShiresShop Stable RugsShop Fly Rugs
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    Horse Welfare-First Training: Progress Without Pressure
    10 min read Last updated: January 2026 Want to ask for more balance, expression and accuracy without losing relaxation or risking soundness? This warm, welfare-first guide shows you how to make progress that's clear, calm and repeatable - using the 1-new-question session blueprint - so you protect confidence, avoid pressure, and achieve measurable improvements you can reproduce from ride to ride. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Ask More Safely What To Do: Build clarity first (clear aids, straightness), confirm a few good repetitions, then raise just one element slightly. If rhythm tightens or forward drops, soften, simplify and rebuild. Why It Matters: You progress without tension and stay on the right side of welfare. Common Mistake: Forcing bigger efforts or drilling until the answer appears. Area: Spot Red Flags What To Do: Stop immediately for visible blood, irregular steps, unresolved breathing, or escalating stress. Pull up promptly at shows and check comfort, footing and tack. Why It Matters: Early action prevents injury and preserves trust. Common Mistake: Riding through pain or behaviour that worsens under pressure. Area: Plan Weekly Load What To Do: Alternate schooling with hacks, poles/jumps and real rest; keep sessions short, purposeful and use frequent walk breaks. Warm up, tackle 12 focus points, finish easy. Why It Matters: Variety builds fitness while avoiding overloading body and mind. Common Mistake: Long, grinding schools driven by a schedule instead of the horse. Area: Match Age & Stage What To Do: Set goals to suit age, conformation and training; give youngsters brief confidence-builders and older horses longer warm-ups and more recovery days. Why It Matters: Right work at the right time reduces risk and builds lasting confidence. Common Mistake: Chasing calendar targets or class lists over the horses needs. Area: Use Aids Ethically What To Do: Use whips and lunging to clarify, not coerce; follow 2026 rules. Keep lunge work concise, both reins even, aiming for rhythm and relaxation. Why It Matters: Ethical tool use supports clear communication and welfare. Common Mistake: Masking discomfort or escalating tension with equipment. Area: Warm Up & Finish What To Do: Start with free and marching walk, add easy lines and stretch; rehearse basics, ask one new question, then finish on familiar, enjoyable work. Why It Matters: This structure protects confidence while nudging standards forward. Common Mistake: Piling on multiple new demands in one session. Area: Recover & Monitor What To Do: Cool down to a soft walk, hose or ice as needed, check legs and backs, ensure hydration and forage, and log a simple post-ride checklist. Why It Matters: Catching small changes early prevents bigger setbacks. Common Mistake: Skipping checks because the horse looks fine. Area: Compete Welfare-First What To Do: Learn your 2026 rules on visible blood, whips, fitness and dangerous behaviour; keep warm-ups short and retire early if the picture unravels. Why It Matters: Compliance and kind choices safeguard horse, rider and results. Common Mistake: Staying in to chase a rosette when welfare is in doubt. In This Guide The line between progress and pressure: what asking more really means Recognise the red flags: when to stop, regroup or pull up Set the right workload: frequency, duration and variety Age, size and stage: ask what your horse can fairly offer today Tools and rules: whips, lunging and ethical schooling Fuel, recover, repeat: everyday management that protects welfare A simple session blueprint: how to fairly ask for more today Competing fairly in 2026: what welfare-led rules expect of you You want to level up your horses way of going without crossing the welfare line. The good news is you can absolutely ask for more more balance, expression, accuracy and stamina while keeping your horse confident, sound and willing.Key takeaway: Progress should feel clear, calm and repeatable; the moment you see rising tension, fatigue or pain, you change the plan not the horse.The line between progress and pressure: what asking more really meansAsking more means improving quality and consistency step by step, only increasing demands when your horse stays relaxed, forward and attentive. It is not about forcing a bigger effort or repeating an exercise until the answer appears.In practice, that looks like building clarity first (clear aids and straightness), confirming the response (a few good repetitions), and only then raising one element (slightly more engagement, a tidier transition, a more balanced line). If the rhythm tightens, the neck shortens, or you lose steering or forward desire, youve gone past the sweet spot soften, simplify and rebuild. UK sport has leaned further into this approach: 2026 rule updates across eventing, showing, riding clubs and pony activities emphasise welfare, rider responsibility and stepping back when effort turns into risk.Recognise the red flags: when to stop, regroup or pull upStop immediately if you see visible blood, irregular steps, sudden reluctance to go forward, or behaviours that escalate under pressure. In competition, 2026 eventing changes put extra weight on pulling up promptly and safely if welfare is in question.At home or away, treat any of the following as lines you wont cross today:Visible blood anywhere under tack or on the mouthLoss of rhythm, nodding, or unevenness that doesnt resolve with a stretchBreathing that doesnt settle during walk breaksEscalating stress signals tail lashing, ear pinning, grinding, repeated rushing, planting, or napping that worsens when you ask againThese are not training problems to ride through; they are information. Reassess comfort (saddle fit, bitting, boot rubs), footing, footwear, and fitness. Eventing and showing officials now have clearer powers around visible blood and horse presentation; your best defence is an early, calm decision to stop, inspect and, if needed, retire. That protects your horse today and builds trust for tomorrow.Set the right workload: frequency, duration and varietyAlternate schooling with hacking and rest days to develop fitness without overloading joints or mind. Variety keeps muscles fresh, feet moving on different surfaces, and the horses brain curious rather than defensive.The British Riding Clubs 2026 welfare code highlights two big responsibilities: ensuring the horse is fit enough for the chosen task and respecting carrying-capacity guidance. That means adjusting session length and intensity for your horses current condition and your goals, not for what a schedule or social media reel suggests. Short, high-quality schools often beat long, grinding sessions; a forward hack or hill walk can do more for topline and mind than another 20 minutes in the corners.Practical ways to balance load:Plan the week around one primary schooling day, one pole/cavaletti or jump day (if relevant), one to two varied hacks, and purposeful rest or in-hand days.Use walk breaks often; they are part of the training, not a concession.Keep sessions purposeful: warm up, address one or two focus points, finish with something easy and confirmed.Protect limbs on schooling or jump days with well-fitting protection from our horse boots and bandages range, and cool and check legs after work.For roadwork and low light, safety comes first our rider hi-vis collection helps you stay seen on verges, lanes and bridleways.Age, size and stage: ask what your horse can fairly offer todayMatch your goals to your horses age, conformation and training stage, not the calendar or class list. Welfare-led rules for 2026 from Pony Club eligibility to Horse of the Year Show adjustments to pony course dimensions underline that right work at the right time is non-negotiable.Young or green horses need short, confidence-building exposures; older horses may need longer, slower warm-ups and more days between intense efforts. Ponies can be mighty athletes but still deserve courses and class structures that respect their size and stride; organisers have leaned into that with careful jump-setting updates for pony divisions. Equally, the Pony Clubs 2026 provisions on dangerous behaviour serve as a reminder: if a horses way of going becomes unsafe, the answer is training, time and vet checks not more pressure.Daily management supports the plan. Make rest real (outdoor movement if possible), and keep horses comfortable in changeable UK weather. Choose breathable turnout layering from our turnout rugs collection for wet, windy days, and switch to our stable rugs for cosy overnight recovery when stabled. The right rugging supports muscle recovery and helps you start each session with a softer, more willing back.Tools and rules: whips, lunging and ethical schoolingUse schooling aids to clarify, never to coerce, and follow 2026 UK rules on whips and lunging. In dressage, a whip up to 120 cm (including lash) is legal, while eventing and showing have specific regulations on whip use and contact; rulebooks in 2026 emphasise correct use and clear limits.The Showing Councils welfare guidance also touches on appropriate lunge methods and schooling aids. Ethical lunging develops balance and communication; unethical lunging exhausts or frightens. Keep sessions concise, look for rhythm and relaxation, and prioritise even loading in both directions. If a tool escalates tension or masks a comfort issue, it is the wrong tool for that horse today.Before you tack up, a thorough groom is more than cosmetic: its your first welfare check. Run hands over saddle and girth areas, check for heat, swelling or sensitivity, and inspect the mouth and limbs. Our curated grooming range helps you spot tiny changes before they become big ones. And if youre heading into the ring, be competition-ready and comfortable in our competition clothing and safety-first with a properly fitted hat from our riding helmets collection confidence rides better when youre correctly kitted out.Fuel, recover, repeat: everyday management that protects welfareHydration, forage, and incremental conditioning underpin performance and reduce injury risk. Good training cannot outrun poor preparation, tight backs, or empty fuel tanks.Simple routines go far:Warm up with purpose free walk, then lifting stretch lines that invite the back to swing.Cool down properly return to a soft, swinging walk, then a light rug if the wind bites, and hand-walk if needed until respiration settles.After work, cold hose or ice as appropriate, then palpate tendons and backs before stabling or turning out.Support the daily diet with the right nutritional extras if advised by your vet or nutritionist; our targeted supplements range includes joint, hoof and digestion options to complement forage-based rations.Quick tip: keep a simple post-ride checklist on your phone respiration back to baseline, legs cool, appetite normal, demeanour bright. Small changes spotted early are far easier to solve.A simple session blueprint: how to fairly ask for more todayStart with a clear warm-up, ask one new question, then finish with something your horse finds easy. This simple pattern protects confidence while still nudging the standard forward.Try this flow:Warm-up: free walk, then marching walk, then easy trot lines or large circles, adding gentle bend and stretch; keep hands light and neck long.Rehearse the building blocks: clear, prompt transitions; straight lines; even tempo. Reward generously for the first yes.Ask for more in one dimension only: for example, slightly more jump in the canter for a few strides, a tidier square halt, or a more uphill trot transition. If it frays, make it easier, succeed, and try a single, shorter attempt.Finish on familiar work that the horse enjoys: a hack loop, a stretchy trot, or a favourite pole line. Let the mind leave the school feeling clever.Pro tip: redefine progress as better not more. Better balance for three strides today is more valuable than ten tense strides that you had to ride your horse into.Competing fairly in 2026: what welfare-led rules expect of youUK bodies have tightened rules on visible blood, whip use, fitness and dangerous behaviour plan and ride accordingly. Across eventing, British Riding Clubs activities, showing and Pony Club sports, 2026 changes reinforce rider responsibility to step back when welfare is at stake.Key welfare expectations echoed across sports this season:Eventing: greater emphasis on pulling up safely, clearer protocols on visible blood, and stricter whip regulations; this backs up your decision to stop when the picture is not right.British Riding Clubs: updated welfare code foregrounds equine fitness for the job and carrying-capacity considerations; bring a horse prepared for the level you enter.Showing: guidance on appropriate lunge methods, schooling whips and how much work or how many classes are reasonable for a horse in a day; quality beats quantity in the ring, too.Pony Club: sport updates covering horse age eligibility and provisions for dangerous behaviour; age- and stage-appropriate partnerships remain central.Dressage: the legal schooling whip length is 120 cm (including the lash); respect specifications and steward instructions at all times.Endurance: 2026 rule changes emphasise welfare, so plan pace, cooling and hydration with extra care, and keep learning from ride vets.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend printing or saving your disciplines 2026 rule summary and packing it with your passport. It makes on-the-day decisions simpler and helps you brief helpers and riders alike. For show days, staying organised and comfortable also matters: choose supportive, grippy footwear from our horse riding boots selection and ensure your hat remains within standards through our riding helmets range.Finally, manage the ring-day edges kindly. Arrive with time to spare, keep warm-ups short and purposeful, and if the picture unravels, retire with your head high. That choice builds a better horse than any rosette ever will.Conclusion: progress your horse with confidence and kindnessThe art of asking more is simple: be crystal clear, build slowly, watch the horse in front of you, and let welfare be your north star. The 2026 rule landscape backs you to make brave, kind choices at home and at shows. Equip well, plan with care, and youll see steadier, happier progress all season.FAQsHow can I tell if Im pushing too hard in schooling?Look for tightness replacing swing, loss of forward desire, shortened neck, inconsistent contact, or a rising heart/breath rate that doesnt settle during walk breaks. If you see visible blood, uneven steps or escalating resistance, stop, check comfort and footing, and simplify or end the session.How many classes should my horse do in a day?Follow your showing rulebooks welfare guidance on appropriate work and class participation, and prioritise your horses fitness, stage and way of going. If quality drops, recover with walk and stretching; if it doesnt return, withdraw kindly.Is a schooling whip allowed and how long can it be?Yes, but within discipline rules. In dressage, a whip up to 120 cm (including lash) is legal; other sports set different limits and contexts. Always check the current rulebook and steward guidance before you enter the warm-up.What should I do if I spot a small amount of blood at a show?Pull up and present to a steward or vet if directed. Eventing and other sports have strengthened visible-blood provisions for 2026; rider-led decisions to stop are respected and protect your horses welfare and your future partnership.How do I build fitness without a gallop track?Use varied hacking, hills, transitions, and thoughtful pole work, interspersed with proper rest. Keep surfaces varied when possible and use protection wisely; our horse boots and bandages help safeguard legs during schooling days.What kit helps reduce post-work soreness and speed recovery?Good cool-down routines, limb checks, appropriate aftercare and consistent nutrition. Consider targeted support from our supplements and dont skip the daily once-over with tools from our grooming range to spot heat or sensitivity early.My horse gets nappy when I ask for more. What now?Break the task into a smaller step and reward the first try. Confirm comfort (saddle, teeth, feet), rule out pain, and refocus on clarity: one aid, one answer, then rest. If in doubt, seek a qualified coachs eyes on the ground and adjust the goal to suit todays horse. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop Boots & BandagesShop Turnout RugsShop Stable RugsShop Grooming KitShop Hi-Vis Gear
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    British Equestrian Trade Association launches first ever Safety Conference
    The British Equestrian Trade Associations (BETA) first ever Safety Conference will take place later this year (21 April), hosting expert speakers from across the world and discussing a variety of topics.The one-day event at Loughborough University is suitable for trade members as well as those from other sectors of the equestrian industry, and will explore a wide range of subjects from latest standards and innovations in safety kit, to fitting an increasingly diverse rider population. The BETA Safety Conference has been created due to popular demand with the clear objective of helping to support all parts of the trade through providing useful information that will tangibly help with sales, fitting, safety, and supporting customers in making more informed choices, said Claire Williams, Executive Director of BETA. BETA is known for safety setting the standard when it comes to body protectors and being involved in international committees arounds hats and other safety equipment. We offer training and support for our membership, and being able to provide a way of sharing research and information that will help our members and their customers too is very much what we as an association are all about.The conference programme has been designed for members of the trade as well as members of riding bodies and disciplines, coaches, and riding school proprietors with an interest in increasing knowledge and understanding of rider safety. To find out more about the conference, visit the BETA website.Lead image Your Horse Library/Kelsey Media LtdRelated contentJason Webbs tips for what to do if you meet a loose dogHow to rebuild confidence after falling off out hackingEssential tack for every horse rider (and why you need it)This is why wearing the colour red could play a part in safer hackingThe post British Equestrian Trade Association launches first ever Safety Conference appeared first on Your Horse.
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    UK Equestrian Business Travel 2026: Short, High-Impact Trips
    11 min read Last updated: January 2026 Trying to grow your equestrian business in 2026 without derailing your horses routine? This guide shows you how to plan short, high-impact trips under 3 nights with a simple in-person ROI test, rail-first choices, and a dual-purpose kit listso you win meetings and keep care seamless at home. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Trip Selectivity 2026 What To Do: Prioritise 13 night trips with clear outcomes; cluster conferences, supplier visits and CPD in one run. Why It Matters: Maximises impact while keeping time away from your horse minimal. Common Mistake: Accepting lowvalue trips that could be handled online. Area: InPerson ROI Test What To Do: Score the inperson premium (trust, demos, access) against costs and disruption; only travel when value beats virtual clearly. Why It Matters: Ensures every overnight is justified and productive. Common Mistake: Ignoring livery cover and routine disruption when comparing to Zoom. Area: Short Trip Planning What To Do: Aim for under three nights; batch meetings in one city and add 3045 minutes buffer to transfers. Why It Matters: Reduces disruption and avoids extra, unplanned overnights. Common Mistake: Spreading meetings across locations that force additional stays. Area: Yard Cover Setup What To Do: Prearrange feeds, turnout and checks; leave written instructions, emergency contacts and a laminated note card. Why It Matters: Keeps your horses routine consistent while youre away. Common Mistake: Relying on verbal briefs with no clear, accessible guidance. Area: Smart Rugging Rules What To Do: Provide two labelled rug options with simple switching rules; stage in use order and check straps before leaving. Why It Matters: Prevents guesswork and keeps your horse comfortable in changeable weather. Common Mistake: Leaving multiple unlabelled rugs and no weather guidance. Area: DualPurpose Kit What To Do: Pack a weatherproof jacket, wipeclean riding boots, compact grooming kit, helmet, hivis and organisers to separate clean/yard gear. Why It Matters: Lets you switch from boardroom to yard without mess or delays. Common Mistake: Mixing business and yard kit so you arrive muddy or underequipped. Area: LowCarbon Travel What To Do: Use rail for city centres, carshare for rural yards, choose flexible fares and plan buffers. Why It Matters: Cuts emissions, fatigue and timing risks for key meetings. Common Mistake: Defaulting to solo driving with traffic and parking delays. Area: Quarterly Trip Review What To Do: Log purpose, cost, outcomes and horse care notes; review quarterly to repeat winners and move weak items online. Why It Matters: Continuously improves ROI and protects budget and welfare. Common Mistake: Travelling on habit without measuring results. In This Guide What UK equestrians should expect in 2026 Is overnight business travel still worth it versus Zoom? Plan short, productive trips around your horse Pack once, ride anywhere: essential kit for hybrid travellers Sustainable and flexible choices that save time and carbon Make your data work: quarterly reviews that improve every trip UK-specific watchouts for equestrian professionals How to combine business travel with yard visits efficiently Business travel is back on British calendars and for equestrians, that means mastering the art of mixing meetings with muck boots. With European spend forecast to rise again in 2026, you can plan smarter trips that grow your business without neglecting your horses routine.Key takeaway: In 2026, prioritise short, high-impact trips (under 3 nights), justify each journey against clear outcomes, and pack dualpurpose equestrian kit so you can handle the yard and the boardroom in one run.What UK equestrians should expect in 2026European business travel spending is projected to hit 389.9 billion euros in 2026 (up 8.2% year-on-year), with Western Europe accounting for 88% of regional spend and the UK a key market. UK inbound visits are forecast at 45.5 million with 35.7 billion spend, supporting a buoyant events calendar.The headline for horse owners is volume and value: more conferences, training and internal meetings are happening in person again, and the average European overnight business trip lasts 3.1 nights. At the same time, UK trip rates for business remain below 2019 a continuation of preCOVID downward trends due to hybrid work and videoconferencing. So, youll see more worth it trips in 2026, not just more trips. For equestrian pros (coaches, saddle fitters, mobile farriers) and owners attending CPD, trade fairs or yard visits between client meetings, this selective recovery is good news: you can plan efficient, purposeful travel that justifies time away from the stable.UK residents are also travelling out more, with 96.977 million outbound trips recorded in 202526, underscoring the opportunity to combine European business with equestrian learning or supplier visits. Meanwhile, longhaul inbound to UK trade shows is still a touch slower than mainland Europes recovery expect international equestrian expos to grow, but gradually.Is overnight business travel still worth it versus Zoom?Yes 83% of European business travellers say trips are worthwhile for achieving objectives, especially for seminars, training, conferences and internal meetings that build relationships faster than video.For equestrians, put a simple decision framework to work: Define the objective: revenue, skills (e.g., CPD workshop), supplier negotiation, or team strategy. Score the in-person premium: will face-to-face accelerate trust, access equipment demos, or open doors you cant on Zoom? Compare costs and disruption: travel, livery cover, and the impact on your horses routine versus a virtual alternative. Set a threshold: reserve overnights for meetings or events where expected value beats the virtual ROI by a clear margin.Average trips run 3.1 nights; aim to cluster meetings, handson demos and CPD to fill that window. For example, book a halfday conference, a supplier yard visit, and a coaching observation in one trip rather than three separate days. This is where equestrians outperform: practical, inperson demos of saddles, boots or supplements deliver a tactile advantage screens cant match. Organizations are continuing to invest in business travel as a catalyst for growth, innovation and connection, even in the face of economic and geopolitical uncertainty. At the same time, sustainability and traveller experience are no longer optionaltheyre essential. Suzanne Neufang, CEO, GBTA (source)Plan short, productive trips around your horsePrioritise trips under three nights and time them around training or conference dates to minimise disruption to your horses routine.Heres how to make a 23 night trip work without compromising welfare: Lock in yard cover: confirm who feeds, turns out and checks rugs daily; leave clear written instructions with emergency contacts. Rug for the weather youre leaving behind: for cold snaps, line up an appropriate stable layer before you go; check the forecast for changes. Prepack spares: lay out a clean turnout and spare liners so your cover never has to guess what to use if the weather turns. Batch your agenda: aim to compress seminars, supplier visits and client meetings into one city to avoid extra overnights.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend building a travelready kit at the yard. If winter rain is on the cards, have reliable winter turnout rugs ready for quick changes, and keep a warm layer in reserve from our stable rugs collection for cold nights. Its the simplest way to keep your horse comfortable while youre away.Pack once, ride anywhere: essential kit for hybrid travellersBuild a capsule bag that handles a client lunch, a rainy arena demo and an evening yard check without repacking your car.Use this compact, proven kit list: Weatherproof layer you can smarten up: a technical riding jacket from brands like WeatherBeeta keeps you dry for outdoor demos yet passes muster over office wear. Portable grooming kit: a zipped caddy from our grooming range streamlines quick tidyups before photos, vet checks or saddle fits. Hardwearing footwear: choose smart, wipeclean horse riding boots you can drive in and hose off. Helmet for adhoc rides: stash a wellfitting hat from our riding helmets range if youre likely to hop on for a demo. Hivis for road or yard transits: if youll hack on public roads at either end, carry rider and horse visibility from our hivis collection; the British Horse Society consistently promotes high-visibility for road safety. Luggage organisers: use packing cubes to separate laptop kit from yard gear; reusable pouches live in your boot for lead ropes, gloves and spare socks. Insulated water bottle: refill at venues to cut singleuse plastic; our gifts collection is a good place to start.Quick tip: keep a laminated yard note card in your travel wallet with feed, turnout and emergency details. If travel overruns, you can text a photo to your cover person no guesswork.Sustainable and flexible choices that save time and carbonOpt for rail on domestic legs and flexible fares to reduce emissions and protect your schedule; European travellers now expect responsible journeys as standard.Rail often beats driving door-to-door when you factor traffic, parking and fatigue and it helps you arrive sharp for highstakes meetings or CPD. Consider this approach: Rail for citycentre meetings; rideshare or yard pickup for periurban stables. Car share with colleagues for rural events; split costs and lower emissions. Build 3045 minutes of slack into transfers so a delayed seminar doesnt force an extra overnight.GBTAs European outlook highlights the shift to responsible, productive travel. As CEO Suzanne Neufang notes: European companies and business travellers are leading the way in demanding responsible, productive and impactful journeys. Suzanne Neufang, CEO, GBTA (source)For equestrians, responsible also means biosecurity: if youre visiting multiple yards, follow commonsense protocols championed by UK veterinary bodies such as BEVA clean boots, disinfect kit between yards, and avoid nosetonose contact when moving between premises.Make your data work: quarterly reviews that improve every tripTrack every trips purpose, cost and outcome, then review quarterly to decide which overnights to repeat and which to move online.Set up a simple sheet with: Trip basics: dates, nights away, travel mode, total cost (fares, fuel, livery cover, parking, meals). Purpose: training, conference, supplier visit, client pitch, internal meeting. Outcomes: revenue won, skills gained, supplier terms improved, new contacts made. Horse care log: rugs used, turnout days, feed changes, any stress signs on return.Review patterns every quarter. If conferences consistently produce leads or CPD value, keep them; if a monthly internal meeting works fine on video, save the time and put the budget into the events that move the dial. This is the hybrid model that successful UK teams are already running in 2026: fewer trips, higher impact.Pro tip: if your horse gets a little tight after a routine change, pencil in a gentle hack day on return and check limbs. If theyre prone to knocks or stocking up after box rest, keep supportive boots in your car; browse our riding boots for you and pick up stable or travel protection for your horse in the same run. And when youve nailed a big meeting, dont forget a small reward at the yard our gifts section includes handy travel flasks for you and thoughtful stable treats for your fourlegged colleague.UK-specific watchouts for equestrian professionalsHybrid work is keeping UK business trip rates below 2019, but inbound growth (45.5 million visits; 35.7 billion spend) supports a strong domestic events scene for 2026.Heres what that means if horses are part of your job description: Mobile professionals (farriers, physios, instructors): expect steadier local demand with tighter scheduling expectations; allow extra travel slack around peak conference weeks when clients are away. Trade shows and CPD: UKbased events should be lively; the slightly slower longhaul recovery may trim some overseas exhibitors, but European supplier presence will be strong. Budget signals: in early 2026, 20% of UK trading businesses expect a turnover dip in February, 16% expect growth, and 28% of larger firms expect increases so plan proposals and supplier meetings with a valuefirst message. Road safety and welfare: if youre riding on roads to and from meetings or stations, follow BHS best practice wear hivis, be predictable, and brief your route. Our hivis range makes this simple.At Just Horse Riders, we also recommend pretrip checks of rug fit and fastenings. If youre leaving the yard in changeable weather, lining up a breathable, waterproof outer from our turnout rugs alongside a dependable stable layer from stable rugs gives your cover person two safe, swapready options.How to combine business travel with yard visits efficientlySchedule yard stops at the start or end of your day and keep your car set up with a minimal, clean kit so you never bring mud to a meeting.Do it like this: Start early at the yard in yardonly clothes; swap into meeting wear and a clean overjacket before you drive off. Use bootliners and two storage crates: one for clean business items, one for equestrian kit. Keep wipes and hand sanitiser in the door pocket. Carry a compact grooming bag for quick tidyups; our curated grooming sets are built for grabandgo efficiency. If youre likely to do a quick saddle test or demo, stow a helmet from our riding helmets and a smart pair of riding boots that look good offhorse.Quick tip: text your arrival window to the yard 30 minutes out. It reduces missed connections and helps staff have your horse ready, keeping you on your tight travel clock.Smart rugging when youre awaySet your horse up with two clear, weatherappropriate rug options and written switching rules so your cover person can adapt safely without you.In practice: Write a oneline rule per scenario: Below 5C and dry: medium stable rug. Wet and windy: medium turnout. Leave each rug labelled with weight and fit notes; check straps and surcingles for wear before you go. Stage rugs in the order you want them used; keep a spare clean liner at the top.If you need to refresh your setup before a busy travel month, our winterready turnout rugs and cosy stable rugs cover all UK conditions from sleet to sharp frosts, with trusted options from WeatherBeeta for reliable waterproofing and fit.FAQsHas business travel fully recovered in the UK?No. UK business trip rates remain below 2019 levels, extending the preCOVID downward trend driven by hybrid work and videoconferencing. However, 77% of European travellers report travelling the same or more in 2025 than in 2019, and spend is rising into 2026, so highvalue inperson trips are very much back.How many nights should I plan for a typical UK business trip?Target under three nights. The European average is 3.1 nights, but youll reduce disruption to your horse by clustering meetings, CPD and supplier visits into a tight 13 night block.Is an overnight trip really worth it versus Zoom?Often, yes. 83% of European travellers say business travel is worthwhile for objectives like training, conferences and internal meetings where relationships and handson learning matter. Use a simple ROI test: if inperson value clearly beats virtual, go; if not, save the budget.What should I pack if Im mixing meetings with yard visits?Carry a weatherproof jacket (look to technical outerwear brands), a compact grooming kit, smart riding boots, a spare helmet, and an insulated bottle from our gifts. Keep clean and yard gear in separate organisers to stay presentable between stops.Should I drive or take the train to events?Choose rail for citycentre venues and flexible fares to protect your schedule and lower emissions; carshare for rural yards or multiyard days. If youll hack on roads at either end, pack rider and horse hivis aligned with BHS road safety guidance.Are UK firms cutting travel budgets in 2026?Signals are mixed but steady: in early 2026, 20% of UK trading businesses expect turnover to fall in February, 16% expect growth, and 28% of larger firms expect increases. The upshot is selectivity prioritise trips with clear outcomes.How can I justify attending an equestrian trade show or CPD event?Use the hybrid test: preset goals (e.g., three supplier meetings, two new demos, one CPD certificate), estimate the inperson premium versus video, and bundle meetings to hit those targets in a single 13 night trip. With UK inbound at 35.7 billion in 2026 and European spend rising, the right events will deliver outsized value.Plan with purpose, pack smart, and keep your horses routine front and centre and 2026s travel upswing can fuel both your business and your best riding year yet. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop Turnout RugsShop Stable RugsShop Hi-Vis GearShop Riding BootsShop Riding Helmets
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    Episode 33: Leash & Release How Riders and Dog Owners Can Prevent Dangerous Encounters
    Just Horse Riders Podcast Episode 33: Leash & Release, Safety, and Shared Responsibility in the CountrysideHorse riding has always been about freedom long hacks, quiet bridleways, open countryside, and that unbeatable feeling of partnership between horse and rider. But what happens when that peaceful ride suddenly becomes dangerous?In Episode 33 of the Just Horse Riders Podcast, host Aaron Englander sits down with Victoria (Endurance with Darcy) and Katie, founders of the growing Leash & Release campaign, to discuss a topic that has sparked national conversation: dog interactions with horses, rider safety, and the simple changes that could prevent life-changing incidents.This episode is not about blame its about education, awareness, and helping everyone enjoy the countryside safely. You can watch the full episode now or listen on Spotify while you muck out, drive, or head to the yard.Why This Conversation Matters More Than EverAs Aaron Englander explains during the episode, many riders assume incidents involving dogs are rare until they experience one themselves. The reality is very different.The Leash & Release campaign was born from real-life tragedies and near misses, highlighting a growing issue across UK bridleways and shared countryside spaces.One statistic discussed in the podcast stands out:96% of reported horse incidents involved off-lead dogs.That number alone changes the conversation. This isnt about banning dogs or restricting countryside access. Its about awareness and small behavioural changes that can make an enormous difference.What Is the Leash & Release Campaign?A Simple Idea With Powerful ImpactThe core message behind the campaign is surprisingly simple:Leash in the presence, release when safe.As Victoria explains in the episode, this doesnt mean dogs must remain on leads for entire walks. Instead, its about situational awareness putting a dog on a lead briefly when approaching horses, livestock, or blind corners.Sometimes, that action takes only seconds but those seconds can prevent injury, panic, or worse.Education, Not DivisionOne of the most refreshing aspects of the conversation is the campaigns balanced approach. The guests repeatedly emphasise that responsibility sits with everyone using shared outdoor spaces.Horse riders must slow down and communicate. Dog owners must maintain control. Mutual respect is the real goal.As Aaron notes during the discussion:Its about being responsible for whats going on around you even small actions can stop these issues happening.The Reality Riders Face on Everyday HacksWhy Horses React Differently Than People ExpectMany non-riders underestimate how sensitive horses are. A horse weighing half a tonne operates primarily on instinct particularly flight instinct.A barking or chasing dog may seem playful to an owner, but to a horse it can trigger survival mode.Victoria explains that riders often stay calm during incidents not because they feel safe, but because they must:Horses mirror human emotion. Panic from the rider often escalates panic in the horse.This misunderstanding leads to online criticism when videos surface viewers assume nothing serious happened because the rider appeared composed.The Chain Reaction Nobody Sees ComingAn uncontrolled dog doesnt just affect horse and rider. It can create a domino effect:Horse bolts onto a roadRider falls or is injuredDog becomes injuredMembers of the public are put at riskWhat starts as hes friendly! can quickly become a dangerous situation for everyone involved.How the Campaign Started: Real Stories Behind the MovementBoth guests share deeply personal experiences that sparked their advocacy work.Katie recounts losing her horse following an incident involving an off-lead dog an event that exposed surprising legal grey areas around responsibility and animal protection.Instead of stepping away from the industry, she channelled grief into action, determined that the loss would create positive change.Victorias viral social media experience further amplified awareness, revealing just how common these incidents are across the equestrian community.The result? A grassroots campaign that quickly gained national attention.The Legal Grey Area Most Riders Dont Know ExistsAre Horses Actually Protected by Law?One of the most eye-opening parts of the podcast explores legislation. Many riders assume laws automatically protect horses in dog attack situations but reality is far more complicated.The guests explain how horses can fall into confusing categories between livestock, property, and companion animals depending on circumstances.This leads to inconsistent enforcement and uncertainty when incidents occur.Why Reporting MattersAnother major issue is data collection. Many incidents are recorded simply as dog incidents, meaning accurate statistics about horse-related cases barely exist.Without clear data, policy change becomes difficult.The takeaway? Riders must report incidents even minor ones to build evidence for future improvements.Practical Safety Advice Every Rider Should KnowHigh Visibility Isnt Just for RoadsAaron and his guests discuss how high-visibility gear can prevent incidents before they begin. Visibility helps dog walkers spot riders earlier, giving them time to recall or leash their dogs.Whether youre hacking locally or exploring new routes, visibility matters as much as comfort alongside essentials like quality jodhpurs, reliable riding boots, and protective gloves.Use Cameras for Safety and EvidenceHelmet or body cameras are becoming increasingly common among riders. As discussed in the episode, footage can:Provide evidence during disputesHelp identify individuals involvedEncourage safer behaviour from othersPlus, they capture those unforgettable hacking moments from deer crossing your path to golden sunset gallops.Communication Is the Ultimate Safety ToolOne recurring theme throughout the conversation is communication.Victoria shares a simple approach riders can use:StopTalkWalk past calmlyThis gives dog owners time to react while reducing stress for both animals.Training Horses for Real-World SituationsConfidence Starts on the GroundThe guests emphasise groundwork and exposure training as key tools for safer hacking.Exercises such as horse agility, in-hand walking, and controlled exposure to unfamiliar stimuli help horses develop trust and confidence.As Katie explains, riders should aim to prepare horses for the unexpected because the countryside rarely goes to plan.Introducing Horses to Dogs SafelyInterestingly, one suggestion discussed involves walking horses alongside calm dogs in controlled environments. This helps desensitise horses and reduces fear responses later.Its another reminder that responsibility exists on both sides of the partnership.Insurance: The Overlooked Safety NetA surprising section of the podcast explores insurance something many riders rarely read in detail.Katie shares how policy wording can drastically affect coverage, especially in unexpected situations.The lesson is clear:Always check what your insurance actually covers.This applies to riders and dog owners alike. Public liability cover can make a significant difference if incidents occur.Shared Spaces, Shared ResponsibilityOne of the strongest messages from Episode 33 is that countryside access works best when everyone recognises shared responsibility.Dog walkers, cyclists, riders, and families all deserve to enjoy outdoor spaces safely.The Leash & Release campaign doesnt aim to restrict enjoyment it aims to preserve it.The Positive Stories That Keep the Campaign GoingDespite discussing serious topics, the episode includes uplifting examples of cooperation.From dog owners gaining confidence around horses to calm introductions leading to positive encounters, these moments show education working in real time.Small conversations create lasting behavioural change.How You Can Support Safer Riding EnvironmentsLearn More and Spread AwarenessYou can explore campaign resources and safety guidance at the official Leash & Release website.Sharing information even casually helps improve understanding between countryside users.Stay Prepared Every Time You RidePreparation goes beyond safety equipment. Comfortable clothing, suitable gear, and horse wellbeing all play a role in confident riding experiences. Many riders prepare using everyday essentials such as:Riding socks and accessoriesEveryday horse supplementsStable rugs and turnout rugs for seasonal careFly protection during warmer monthsPrepared riders are calmer riders and calm riders create safer situations.Why Conversations Like This MatterThe Just Horse Riders Podcast continues to shine by tackling real issues facing modern equestrians.This episode isnt just informative its human. It blends emotion, education, humour, and practical advice in a way that encourages cooperation rather than conflict.If you havent already, you can explore more episodes and equestrian content at Just Horse Riders, or follow along on social media:FacebookInstagramTikTokYouTubeFinal Thoughts: Small Actions, Big ImpactEpisode 33 ultimately delivers a powerful message: safety doesnt require sweeping rule changes sometimes it simply requires awareness.Leashing a dog for a few seconds. Slowing a horse to walk. Communicating calmly.These small decisions protect riders, animals, and the wider public.As Aaron Englander highlights throughout the conversation, the goal isnt conflict its collaboration.Because when everyone works together, the countryside remains what it should be: a safe, shared space for all. Watch Episode 33 now or listen on Spotify and join the conversation.
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    We reached every milestone side by side: Michael Jung announces death of one of the greatest event horses of all time
    La Biosthetique-Sam FBW, the prolific event horse campaigned by Germanys Michael Jung, has died at the age of 26. Widely considered one of the best event horses of all time, Sam was the first horse to hold World, European and Olympic titles simultaneously.He was second in the six- and seven-year-old World Young Horse Championships at Le Lion dAngers in 2006 and 2007, before winning his five-star debut at Luhmhlen in 2009. Michael made his senior squad debut on Sam at the FEI European Eventing Championships in 2009, where they won individual bronze and went on to become world champions at the FEI World Equestrian Games in Kentucky the following year.Together they also won individual gold at the European Eventing Championships in 2011, before becoming Olympic champions at the 2012 Games in London, taking home both team and individual gold.This was followed by team silver and individual gold at the 2016 Rio Olympics. That same year, Sam contributed to Michael becoming only the second rider in history, after Pippa Funnell, to win the Rolex Grand Slam of Eventing.Defining an era Sam defined an era of the sport of eventing, finishing in the top three in seven of his nine five-star (then classed as CCI4*) events. On top of his 2009 Luhmhlen victory, he finished second at Badminton in 2013 and was third at Kentucky in 2015, as well as third at Luhmhlen and a win Burghley that year too. He also won Badminton in 2016 and was second at Badminton in 2017.Michael broke the news about the geldings death via social media on Monday, 16 February, saying: This evening I lost my best friend, Sam . We reached every milestone side by side, and for years I found daily happiness in seeing you grazing in the field. Thank you for 20 years together. You will be deeply missed by all of us. Rest in peace my friend .Sam was retired in 2018 and lived out his days mostly in the field alongside other greats of Michaels stable, such as the wonderful five-star-winning mare, FischerRocana FST.Main image of Michael and Sam competing at Aachen 2017 Davide Mobelli/Crobis/Getty ImagesRelated contentFive gears a confident cross-country horse needs to haveJump out of trot to test rider balance and build trust with this exercise from Piggy MarchFive-step plan for a clear and confident jumping roundTina Cooks top tips for confident jumping on grassThe post We reached every milestone side by side: Michael Jung announces death of one of the greatest event horses of all time appeared first on Your Horse.
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