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Gonzalo Busca and Cristiano Obolensky Snag the Win in the $117,000 LeMieux Grand Prix Qualifier CSI4*Ocala, FL A perfect Florida afternoon set the stage for the $117,000 LeMieux Grand Prix Qualifier CSI4*, where 31 horse-and-rider combinations contested top honors. Last to go, Gonzalo Busca of Spain secured the victory aboard Kalany Stables Cristiano Obolensky (Cornet Obolensky x Stakkato), edging out the competition by just one tenth of a second. Irelands Colm Quinn, an FEI Level IIISource0 Comments 0 Shares 6 ViewsPlease log in to like, share and comment!
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WWW.JUSTHORSERIDERS.CO.UKHorse Rugging On Bright Cold Days: Follow The 5C Rule10 min read Last updated: January 2026 Blue skies and chattering teethshould you rug your happily steaming cob? Youll learn exactly when to rug using the 5C rule (most healthy, unclipped horses go rug-free above 5C) plus quick checks for clipped or older types, so you prevent overheating and keep your horse comfortable and safe. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: 5C Rule What To Do: Use 5C as your baseline; above 5C leave healthy, unclipped horses unrugged, below 5C or in wet/windy weather add the lightest effective rug. Why It Matters: Aligns decisions with the horses comfort zone and prevents over-rugging. Common Mistake: Rugging because you feel chilly, not because the air temperature warrants it. Area: Bright Days Reality What To Do: Ignore sunshine; decide by air temperature and conditionsif its over 5C, dont rug healthy unclipped horses. Why It Matters: Sunlight doesnt meaningfully change a horses thermoregulation. Common Mistake: Adding a thin rug on sunny, crisp days. Area: Rug Weight Choice What To Do: Match rug to temperature: fly for 525C with flies, fleece for 010C (clipped/lean), light/medium turnout below 5C; reserve heavyweights for sustained subzero or fully clipped in exposed fields. Why It Matters: Right weights avoid overheating; even light quilts can raise surface temp ~15.8C. Common Mistake: Using too much fill in mild singledigit weather. Area: Wind & Rain What To Do: In wet or windy conditions, use a breathable, waterproof turnout of appropriate weight rather than a heavy stable rug outside. Why It Matters: Wind and rain increase heat loss and a wet coat chills quickly. Common Mistake: Prioritising thickness over waterproofing and breathability. Area: Assess Horse Factors What To Do: Rug sooner for clipped, older, underweight, finecoated or TB/Arab types; go lighter or none for wellconditioned natives/cobs in calm, dry weather. Why It Matters: Individual insulation and exposure vary widely. Common Mistake: Applying the same rugging plan to every horse. Area: Plan Day/Night What To Do: Check the full forecast for turnout hours; start lighter, then add or swap layers as temperatures drop from day to night. Why It Matters: Daily swings can push a comfortable horse into overheating or chill if not adjusted. Common Mistake: Leaving one rug on all day after a cold morning. Area: Heat/Cold Checks What To Do: Read the horse, not your hands: remove a layer if sweaty, breathing faster or irritable; add a light layer if shivering or tuckedup; dont use ear or hand-under-rug tests. Why It Matters: Behavioural and physiological signs are more reliable than touch. Common Mistake: Trusting ear warmth or a quick hand check. Area: Fit & Breathability What To Do: Choose rugs that fit well with shoulder freedom, secure fastenings and breathable, waterproof outers; check under the rug daily with grooming. Why It Matters: Proper fit prevents rubs and overheating while keeping the horse comfortable. Common Mistake: Buying more fill instead of a betterfitting, breathable rug. In This Guide Should you rug on bright, freezing days? How cold is cold for a horse? Which rug types add how much heat? When does a horse genuinely need a rug in the UK? How to pick the right rug weight today How to check if your horse is too hot or cold Common UK rugging mistakes (and quick fixes) What we recommend at Just Horse Riders Blue skies can fool even the best of us. Youre freezing on the yard, but your unclipped cob is happily mooching with steam rising off their back in the sunshine. Rug or not to rug?Key takeaway: Above 5C, most unclipped, healthy horses do not need a rug brightness doesnt change their thermal comfort, air temperature does.Should you rug on bright, freezing days?If the air temperature is above 5C and your horse is unclipped and in normal body condition, dont rug sunlight doesnt change how horses thermoregulate. If its below 5C or your horse is clipped, older, underweight or fine-coated, choose a light, well-fitted rug matched to the conditions.Horses are comfortable in a thermoneutral zone (TNZ) of roughly 5C to 25C without expending extra energy to stay warm or cool. This is far wider than ours. We often overestimate how cold horses feel because humans typically start feeling chilly around 15C when clothed. As Kim Hodgess MSc, who led UK research on rugging, put it:Humans often make decisions about rugging their horses based on whether they feel cold themselves, so they may well be using a rug on their horse when it really is not necessary. Horse & HoundOn bright days, the sun may slightly warm your horses coat, but it doesnt alter the biological fact: if the air is above 5C, a healthy, unclipped horse already sits within their comfort range.How cold is cold for a horse?For most horses, cold starts below 5C; for most humans, cold starts around 15C when dressed. That 10C gap is why we over-rug.Studies place the equine TNZ at approximately 5C to 25C. By contrast, humans are comfortable around 15C to 25C when clothed (25C to 30C un-clothed). This fundamental difference drives well-meaning but unnecessary rugging. The International Society for Equitation Science (ISES) warns:Some types of rugs can significantly increase horse surface temperature beyond temperatures that are comfortable for the horse and could therefore compromise the horses capacity to regulate their own temperature. via Horse & HoundThe British Horse Society (BHS) adds a practical caution:Its much easier for a horse to warm themselves up than it is to cool themselves down. If a thick fill rug is used in inappropriate conditions, it will trap a lot of heat, which can radiate back to the horses body, placing stress on the horse and making them uncomfortable. BHS guidanceIn short: your horse likely copes better with brisk than you do. Save rugs for genuinely cold, wet, or windy conditions, and for horses with reduced natural insulation.Which rug types add how much heat?Sweet itch/fly rugs raise surface temperature by about 4.2C; fleeces by 11.2C; light quilted rugs by 15.8C on average. In sub-zero weather, rugged horses showed surface temperatures of 24C30C versus unrugged controls at 12.5C18.5C.In a UK study (12 horses: 10 stabled, 2 turned out), researchers measured how different rugs affect a horses surface temperature:Sweet itch/fly rugs: average +4.2CFleece rugs: average +11.2CLight quilted rugs: average +15.8CDuring extreme cold (c. -0.5C to 4.5C), rugged horses surface temperatures reached 24C30C compared with 12.5C18.5C in the unrugged controls. Thats a big jump and a clear signal that heavier rugs in mild weather risk overheating. ISES bottom line is simple: choose the right type and weight for your horse and the days weather.Quick tip: Dont assume a thin rug cools your horse. Even the lightest fly rugs still add warmth compared with no rug at all.When does a horse genuinely need a rug in the UK?Rug when the air temperature dips below 5C, or when its wet/windy, and always for clipped, older, underweight, or fine-coated horses in cold conditions. Otherwise, many UK horses cope well unrugged in typical 510C winter days.UK winters are often damp and changeable rather than Siberian. Many days sit between 0C and 10C, with wind and rain doing most of the mischief. Use 5C as your starting line, then factor in:Coat and clip: Freshly clipped horses lose insulation and may need a light stable rug indoors or a light/medium turnout rug outdoors below 10C, stepping up if its wet or windy.Age and condition: Older or underweight horses benefit from earlier rugging.Breed/type: Thoroughbreds and Arabs often need support sooner than natives or cobs.Weather exposure: A cold, wet wind can cut through any coat; waterproof turnouts protect against chilling from rain and wind.Remember, cooling a hot horse is harder than warming a cool one. Err on the lighter side, then reassess later in the day.How to pick the right rug weight todayMatch the rug to air temperature and horse factors: sweet itch/fly rugs for 525C and fly protection; fleeces for moderate cold; light quilted or medium-weight turnouts for genuine cold snaps below 5C.Use this quick decision framework:Check the air temperature, wind, and precipitation for turnout hours (not just the morning). If daytime high is 68C but dropping to 02C overnight, plan layers or a change between day and night.Assess your horse: unclipped and well-conditioned vs clipped/older/fine-coated/underweight.Choose type and weight:5C to 25C, flies around: minimal insulation. Opt for sweet itch/fly rugs that raise surface temp modestly while protecting skin.0C to 10C, dry and light wind: consider a fleece layer or a light turnout (50100g) for clipped or lean horses. Native types may still need nothing in calm, dry conditions.Below 5C with wind/rain: a light quilted or medium turnout (c. 100200g) for most clipped or finer types; heavyweights are for sustained sub-zero spells, fully clipped horses, or living out 24/7 in exposed fields.Fit and features: Good shoulder freedom, secure fastenings, and breathable, waterproof outer for turnouts. Trusted builds from brands like WeatherBeeta and Shires help maintain comfort and durability in UK weather.Recheck at midday: Sunshine can push an over-rugged horse into the overheating zone even when air temps are single-digit.Pro tip: A mesh or cooler sheet after exercise helps wick moisture while preventing a sharp chill a better choice than throwing on a heavy rug over a damp coat.How to check if your horse is too hot or coldRely on behaviour and physiology, not touch tests: sweating, rapid breathing, lethargy, and reluctance to move signal overheating; shivering and tight posture signal cold. Ears or a hand under the rug are not reliable indicators.Research cited by Dr David Marlin highlights the limits of tactile checks. Instead, look at the whole horse:Too hot: damp/sweaty coat under the rug, flared nostrils or faster breathing at rest, irritability, moving away when you approach with the rug, or seeking shade. Remove a layer promptly.Too cold: persistent shivering, tucked-up abdomen, hunched or static posture, or cold, wet coat after rain and wind exposure. Add a light layer and reassess.Just right: dry coat, normal interest in feed and environment, relaxed movement, no signs of agitation.Good daily care makes assessment easier: regular grooming shows you whats happening under the rug, and appropriate supplements can support coat and skin health through winter.Common UK rugging mistakes (and quick fixes)The most common mistake is over-rugging based on human comfort; the fix is to use the 5C rule and your horses behaviour as your guide.Watch for these pitfalls:Rugging because youre cold: remember, your horses TNZ starts around 5C.Using heavy rugs in mild weather: light quilted rugs raised surface temperature by about 15.8C in research thats a lot on an 8C day.Ignoring wind and rain: a moderate-weight turnout rug beats a heavy stable rug if its wet and blowy.Leaving one rug on all day: a sunny afternoon after a frosty morning can push a horse from comfy to overheated. Reassess at lunch.Touch tests: ears and hand-under-rug arent reliable; read the whole horse.Quick tip: If in doubt, start lighter. Its easier to add a layer than to cool an overheated horse.Note on the evidence: The key UK study involved 12 horses total. While the trends are clear, larger samples will refine the details (e.g., colour of rugs, long-term skin effects, and whether rugs affect mutual grooming in turnout). The practical guidance above still stands: choose the lightest effective rug for todays conditions and your individual horse.What we recommend at Just Horse RidersStart light, layer only when needed, and prioritise breathability and fit especially in changeable UK weather.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend building a small, versatile rug wardrobe so you can match the day, not the season:Mild, fly-prone days (525C): breathable fly and sweet itch rugs for turnout.Moderate chill or post-exercise: airy fleeces and coolers for wicking and gentle warmth.Cold, wet, and windy spells: correctly weighted, waterproof winter turnout rugs with secure fastenings.Indoor comfort for clipped horses: properly fitted stable rugs that wont overheat.Our customers consistently rate the build and fit from brands like WeatherBeeta and Shires for British conditions robust outers, reliable waterproofing, and thoughtful design for shoulder movement make day-to-day management easier.Pro tip: Fit matters as much as fill. A well-fitted 100g turnout will outperform an ill-fitting heavyweight for comfort and welfare.ConclusionOn bright, freezing-feeling days, check the air temperature not your goosebumps. Above 5C, most unclipped, healthy horses dont need a rug; below 5C or in wet/windy weather, choose the lightest effective rug for your individual horse. Monitor behaviour, reassess at midday, and remember the golden rule from the BHS and ISES: its easier for horses to warm up than to cool down. For dependable, well-fitting options across the range, explore our curated turnout rugs, stable rugs, and fly rugs collections.FAQsUse 5C as your starting rule: above 5C, healthy unclipped horses rarely need a rug; below 5C or in wet, windy weather, select the lightest effective rug for your horse and the day.Is a thin turnout or fly rug colder than no rug on a bright, freezing-feeling day?No. Even sweet itch/fly rugs increased surface temperature by about 4.2C in UK research. A thin rug still adds warmth compared with no rug at all.Whats the thermoneutral zone (TNZ) for horses versus humans?Horses: ~5C to 25C. Humans: ~15C to 25C when clothed (25C to 30C without). This gap explains why owners often over-rug.Which rug types add the most heat?Average increases measured: sweet itch/fly +4.2C; fleece +11.2C; light quilted +15.8C. In very cold weather, rugged horses reached 24C30C surface temperatures versus 12.5C18.5C for unrugged controls.How can I tell if my horse is too hot in a rug?Look for sweating, rapid breathing, lethargy, irritability, or reluctance to move. Dont rely on ear temperature or putting your hand under the rug these arent reliable indicators.When should I rug in typical UK winter weather?Rug below 5C, in persistent rain or wind, and for clipped, older, underweight, or fine-coated horses. Choose breathable, waterproof turnout rugs outdoors and well-fitted stable rugs indoors as needed.Can a lightweight turnout improve welfare in mild conditions?Yes, when its mild (above 5C), a lightweight turnout can provide fly protection and modest insulation without compromising thermoregulation particularly useful for horses at pasture.What about study limitations should I be cautious?Yes, the featured UK study involved 12 horses, and more research is needed on long-term skin health, social behaviours, and rug colour effects. Still, the practical takeaway is robust: avoid over-rugging and match rug weight to todays conditions and your individual horse. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop Turnout RugsShop Stable RugsShop Fly RugsShop WeatherBeetaShop Shires0 Comments 0 Shares 23 Views
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WWW.JUSTHORSERIDERS.CO.UKSt Albans Tack Shops & Online: Seasonal Buying Plan8 min read Last updated: January 2026 Based around St Albans and want rugs, tack and yard essentials without wasted trips? Learn how to combine Just Horse Riders quick online ordering with a shortlist of 7 trusted Hertfordshire retailers, then follow a practical season-by-season plan (autumn/winter vs spring/summer) to save time, cut costs, and keep your horse comfortable yearround. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Online vs Local What To Do: Order routine kit online from Just Horse Riders; visit trusted Hertfordshire shops for fittings, repairs and feed. Why It Matters: You save time while getting handson services right when needed. Common Mistake: Making wasted trips for consumables or trying to sort fittings purely online. Area: Seasonal Planning What To Do: Map buys by season (AW rugs/layers; SS fly gear) and set calendar reminders for checks and replacements. Why It Matters: Prevents lastminute scrambles when the weather turns. Common Mistake: Shopping reactively after stock or sizes have gone. Area: InPerson Prep What To Do: Bring sizes, clear photos and any item youre replacing; call ahead to book fittings or check stock. Why It Matters: Speeds up advice and reduces returns. Common Mistake: Arriving without measurements, notes or the old item for comparison. Area: Local Services What To Do: Use GJW Titmuss for feed/bedding; book Martin Wilkinson for saddle fitting; try TC Feeds for repairs/washes; phone to confirm hours. Why It Matters: Reliable local support covers jobs best done in person. Common Mistake: Turning up without an appointment or assuming listed hours havent changed. Area: Cost Control What To Do: Buy safetycritical items new, pick durable brands, use the Secret Tack Room clearance, and duplicate small easilylost items on offer. Why It Matters: Maintains quality and safety while managing spend. Common Mistake: Cutting corners on helmets or saddlery to save a few pounds. Area: Rug Fit Fixes What To Do: Check shoulder room, wither sit, length and straps; adjust, add a silky vest, or switch cut if rubs persist. Why It Matters: Good fit prevents rubs, leaks and slipping. Common Mistake: Overtightening straps to stop movement. Area: Saddle & Tack What To Do: Book a qualified fitting if you notice resistance, stride changes or saddle slip; clean and condition bridle and girth regularly. Why It Matters: Correct fit and care prevent discomfort and extend kit life. Common Mistake: Riding on with issues instead of calling a saddler. Area: Kit Organisation What To Do: Clean/dry rugs before storage, label boxes by season, keep a yearround grab bag, and maintain a rolling kit list. Why It Matters: You can find and replace essentials fast when conditions change. Common Mistake: Stashing damp rugs or mixing seasons into one unlabelled pile. In This Guide What are your best options around St Albans? When should you shop online versus visit a local tack shop? Which local tack shops are near St Albans? What should you bring when you shop in person? How do you plan an efficient seasonal shopping list? How can you keep costs sensible without compromising quality? Whats the quickest way to troubleshoot common kit problems? How can Just Horse Riders help you shop smarter? Based around St Albans and need horse rugs, tack or yard essentials without the faff? Combine convenient online ordering with a shortlist of reliable local tack shops and youll cover both everyday top-ups and the hands-on jobs that benefit from inperson help.Key takeaway: Order routine kit online from Just Horse Riders, and use trusted Hertfordshire retailers for saddle fitting, repairs and feed runs heres the practical list and how to plan your shopping season by season.What are your best options around St Albans?Your two best options are convenient online ordering from Just Horse Riders and visiting established local tack shops in and around Hertfordshire. Both approaches complement each other: buy staple items online, and book in-person services locally when you need them.Online gives you breadth of choice across sizes and brands for essentials like turnout rugs, stable rugs, fly rugs, grooming kit and supplements. Local shops help with saddle fitting, leatherwork, feed, and any trybeforeyoubuy decisions. Do both and youll save time while keeping your horse comfortable and your kit working hard all year.When should you shop online versus visit a local tack shop?Order online for routine consumables and widely stocked items; go in person for services like saddle fitting, leather repairs, or when you want to handle products before committing. This simple split keeps your yard running smoothly and reduces wasted trips.Use online ordering for repeat buys (rugs, numnahs, boots, rider clothing and safety kit) and to compare trusted brands at a glance think WeatherBeeta rugs or thoughtfully designed rider wear. Head to a local shop for fittings, checking leatherwork, and feed or bedding pickups. If youre tight on time, call ahead to check stock or book a fitting slot.Which local tack shops are near St Albans?St Albans and the wider Hertfordshire area have a healthy mix of tack shops and specialists, including well-known names and services worth the drive. Here are the options identified in current local listings: GJW Titmuss Ltd St Albans, Hertfordshire. A large local supplier of equine feed and bedding with stated opening hours MondayFriday 9am5pm, Saturday 9am4pm. Butter Foal Stud Tack Shop St Albans, Hertfordshire. Tel: 01923 635776. Hertford Horsebits Hertford, Hertfordshire. Tel: 01992 551258. HACS Shop (Horse and Country Store) Bishops Stortford, Hertfordshire. Tel: 01279 713221. Martin Wilkinson Master Saddlers Workshop in St Albans with mobile saddle fitting across Hertfordshire. TC Feeds & Tack Haven Kensworth (south of Dunstable, Bedfordshire). Offers saddle fitting, rug washing and leather repairs. RB Equestrian Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire. Established retailer stocking horse rugs, tack, riding clothing and feed.Local services change over time, so its sensible to phone ahead for current stock, hours and appointments.What should you bring when you shop in person?Take your horses current sizes, clear photos and any kit youre trying to match; this helps staff guide you quickly to the right products. A little prep makes fittings smoother and prevents returns.Heres a simple checklist to make the most of your visit: Rug references: bring a photo of the neck/chest fit on your horse and note the size printed on the label for comparison. Saddle notes: have dates of your last fitting and any recent changes (weight, workload, behaviour under saddle). Measurements: jot down your horses approximate height and build, plus your usual rider clothing sizes. Photos: side-on and views of your horse can help with advice on shaperelated fit. Problem list: short notes on whats rubbing, slipping or wearing out. Wish list: prioritise essentials so you dont forget the basics (headcollar, lead rope, horse boots and bandages, yard gloves, baler twine!).Quick tip: If youre replacing like-for-like, take the old item with you its the fastest way to compare cut, depth and hardware.How do you plan an efficient seasonal shopping list?Group your purchases by season: rugs and stable layers for autumn/winter, fly protection for spring/summer, and yearround grooming, supplements and safety kit. This approach avoids lastminute scrambles when the weather turns.Autumn/Winter: Turnout protection: choose from our range of turnout rugs, matching neck covers and liners to layer as needed. Stable comfort: add stable rugs and cosier under-layers for clipped or finercoated horses. Rider warmth: consider legwear with grip and stretch see our womens jodhpurs and breeches or childrens jodhpurs and breeches for everyday riding.Spring/Summer: Fly protection: stock up on fly rugs and sheets, masks and lightweight layers for sensitive skin. Hivis and safety: longer daylight means more hacking; refresh your hivis rider kit and check your riding helmet is in good condition.Yearround essentials: Daily care: keep a tidy grooming kit for skin and coat health, plus firstaid basics. Nutrition support: use targeted supplements alongside a balanced diet when your horses workload, age or season requires extra support.Pro tip: Create a yard calendar with reminders to check rug condition, helmet dates and leatherwork so you can replace or repair before a small issue becomes a problem.How can you keep costs sensible without compromising quality?Prioritise safetycritical items new, pick durable brands for hardwearing yard kit, and use clearance sections for spares and seasonal colours. A simple plan reduces spend while keeping standards high.Start by deciding where quality matters most: helmets, body protectors and saddlery typically top the list for buying new and maintaining carefully. For rugs and everyday yard gear, choose reputable makes youll find longstanding names like WeatherBeeta in our ranges and keep an eye on our Secret Tack Room clearance for smart savings on lastchance sizes and colours. For daily rider wear, our womens breeches and childrens jodhpurs collections include practical options for schooling, hacking and yard chores that dont break the bank.Quick tip: Buy duplicates of small, oftenmisplaced items when theyre on offer (fly masks, lead ropes, overreach boots) so a lost one never stops play.Whats the quickest way to troubleshoot common kit problems?If a rug rubs, leaks or slips, reassess fit and fastenings; if tack pinches or slides, seek a qualified saddler for a check. Simple checks solve most niggles before they cause sores or behaviour changes.Rugs: check the shoulder room, length and strap tension; a good fit sits flat at the wither, moves with the shoulder and doesnt drag behind. Minor rubs can often be eased with a silky shoulder vest or by adjusting straps; persistent issues usually mean a different cut. For protection below the knee, consider supportive boots and bandages that balance protection with breathability.Tack: if your horse resists mounting, shortens stride or dips away from the saddle, its time to book a fitting specialists such as Martin Wilkinson Master Saddlers offer both workshop and mobile services in the area. Day to day, stay on top of cleaning and conditioning; a tidy, supple bridle and girth reduce pressure points and last longer.Coat and skin: persistent dandruff, scurfy patches or sweat buildup often improve with regular, thorough grooming using the right brushes for coat length and season. Organise a compact, yardproof grooming kit so the right tool is always to hand.How can Just Horse Riders help you shop smarter?Use our curated collections, trusted brands and 13,500+ verified customer reviews to choose with confidence. From everyday rugs to rider wear, you can compare styles and sizes quickly, then top up with consumables in the same order.Start with seasonal staples like turnout rugs and stable rugs, then add rider safety and comfort with a wellfitting riding helmet and practical breeches. For lighter months, refresh your fly protection, and round off with yard essentials from grooming to supplements. If you prefer to shop by brand, explore popular picks from Shires, LeMieux and more.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend keeping a short, rolling kit list for your horse and for you its a simple way to stay prepared and avoid lastminute dashes when the forecast changes.FAQsWhere can I buy equine feed and bedding in St Albans?GJW Titmuss Ltd in St Albans is a large local supplier of equine feed and bedding, with stated opening hours MondayFriday 9am5pm and Saturday 9am4pm. Always call ahead for current stock and hours, especially around bank holidays.Who offers saddle fitting or leather repairs near St Albans?Martin Wilkinson Master Saddlers operates a saddle fitting workshop in St Albans and offers mobile services across Hertfordshire. TC Feeds & Tack Haven (Kensworth, south of Dunstable) lists saddle fitting, rug washing and leather repairs among its services.Which nearby shop carries a broad range of rugs and rider clothing?RB Equestrian in Milton Keynes is an established retailer that stocks horse rugs, tack, riding clothing and feed. For online choice by brand and size, browse our turnout rugs alongside rider favourites from LeMieux and Shires.What should I check when trying a rug in store?Look for smooth shoulder movement, even coverage along the back and croup, and secure yet comfortable fastenings at the chest, belly and legs. If you spot rubs or pulling, try a different cut or adjust straps before you buy.Can I find childrens rider wear and safety kit online?Yes explore our practical childrens jodhpurs and breeches along with riding helmets for all ages. For visibility when hacking, add essentials from our hivis rider collection.Which rug brands can I compare at Just Horse Riders?You can shop a wide choice, including popular lines from WeatherBeeta and other trusted names, with sizes and styles grouped for easy comparison. Use filters to narrow by fit, weight and colour.How do I keep my yard kit organised between seasons?Clean and dry rugs before storage, label clear boxes for fly gear vs winter layers, and keep one small grab bag of yearround essentials (headcollar, spare lead rope, hoof pick, gloves). When you need to replace items, check our Secret Tack Room clearance for value, and top up grooming or consumables as you go. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. 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WWW.JUSTHORSERIDERS.CO.UKEventing Safety In The UK: Build A Safer Season Plan11 min read Last updated: January 2026 Planning your 2025 eventing season and determined to reduce risk without losing competitive edge? This guide turns UK safety data into an action planshowing how a 0.2% to 0.05% drop in somersault falls informs smarter fence strategy, fitness, kit and course selectionso you choose the right runs, manage recovery, and keep horse and rider safer all season. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Level-Based Risk What To Do: Treat FEI as a step up even at similar heights; build to it with progressive runs and avoid level-hopping. Enter based on current form, not past PBs. Why It Matters: International classes carry higher risk and demand greater intensity. Common Mistake: Jumping into FEI after limited prep or mixing levels week to week. Area: Fence Safety & Design What To Do: Favour venues using frangible tech; walk with a coach and plan lines for angled questions, open corners, downhill and light-to-dark efforts. Why It Matters: Smarter design and collapsible elements cut rotational fall risk. Common Mistake: Assuming safer fences make any course safe regardless of speed or approach. Area: Whole-Horse Conditioning What To Do: Book a pre-season vet check, periodise training, and space demanding runs to manage cumulative load. Why It Matters: Many fatalities stem from musculoskeletal issues or sudden death, not fence falls. Common Mistake: Chasing entries without the base fitness and recovery time to support them. Area: Use Safety Data What To Do: Read BE safety reports for target venues/levels and keep a post-event log (time, penalties, feel, HR at 10/20 mins, niggles). Hold two mini-audits per season. Why It Matters: Evidence-led choices reduce risk and improve planning. Common Mistake: Relying on hunches or social media instead of hard data and your own notes. Area: Ground & Weather What To Do: Check going, terrain and forecast; adjust speed, studs and lines, or pick a different run if conditions are unsuitable. Why It Matters: Footing shifts metabolic and orthopaedic load dramatically. Common Mistake: Sticking to the plan on heavy or very firm ground instead of adapting. Area: Protective Kit Essentials What To Do: Wear a current-standard helmet and body protector/air vest; fit XC boots correctly; replace kit after impacts and note replacement dates; use hi-vis for roadwork. Why It Matters: Properly fitted, in-date kit lowers injury severity and boosts visibility. Common Mistake: Using outdated or poorly fitted gear to save money. Area: Recovery & Monitoring What To Do: Cool promptly, remove boots, hydrate, and record recovery heart rates; watch gait, appetite and demeanour; discuss targeted supplements with your vet. Why It Matters: Early detection and good aftercare prevent minor issues becoming major. Common Mistake: Skipping cooling or HR checks when the round felt fine. Area: Season Planning What To Do: Map a build to key goals, avoid back-to-back high-intensity runs, vary surfaces, and book schooling early ahead of access changes. Why It Matters: Structured load management supports soundness and consistent performance. Common Mistake: Level-hopping and over-competing without planned rest blocks. In This Guide Is eventing safer in the UK now? What changed to make eventing safer? Why do fatalities still occur if safety has improved? How should you assess risk by level and course? What are UK governing bodies doing right now? What practical steps can you take this season? How do you use safety data well as a rider or owner? Eventing is one of the most exhilarating tests of horse and rider and one of the most scrutinised for safety. The good news is that UK eventing has made measurable progress, but the real picture is more nuanced than safer fences equal a safe sport.Key takeaway: UK national-level eventing is safer today than 20 years ago, driven by frangible fence technology and better data but elevated risks remain at international level and from non-fall-related causes, so your safety plan must go beyond fences to fitness, behaviour, kit and course choice.Is eventing safer in the UK now?Yes at UK national level, somersault falls have dropped from 0.2% (20022003) to 0.05% (2020), and serious or fatal rider injuries from 0.27% to 0.07% over the same period. Internationally, the decline is less marked, reflecting tougher physical and technical demands.Those national figures are the clearest sign that targeted safety reforms are working where theyve been consistently applied. The shift began after a watershed 1999 season, when five rider fatalities four from rotational (somersaulting) falls catalysed a new era of course design, fence technology and risk analysis. Yet at international competitions, where speeds are higher, combinations are more intense and technicality ramps up, the data shows a flatter improvement curve. That means your risk assessment should always consider the level youre entering, not just the discipline label.Context matters beyond rider risk, too. While much of the public conversation focuses on cross-country falls, recent research highlights that equine fatalities in eventing also occur from musculoskeletal injury and sudden death causes not inherently prevented by collapsible fences. Understanding this broader risk picture is essential to responsible decision-making for your horse.What changed to make eventing safer?The single biggest change has been the widespread adoption of frangible (collapsible) fence technology, which reduces rotational falls by allowing elements to give way so a horse can recover its balance. Course design, data collection and rider education have also advanced since 1999.Frangible pins, MIM clips and intelligently profiled fences are designed to lower the chance of a horse pole-vaulting when it meets a solid obstacle. When combined with modern course-building principles clearer questions, more forgiving profiles and better ground preparation theyve driven the measurable fall reductions seen at UK national level. British Eventing (BE), the sports UK governing body, has also strengthened data capture on incidents at BE-affiliated events, which feeds into rule updates and course guidelines.The availability of large-scale and up-to-date research that has highlighted risk factors for horse falls is crucial for the sport of eventing... Fence design, horse/rider behaviour and technique, and rider psychology are all areas that need more research in this field. Nottingham Trent UniversityIn other words, the story is not only about hardware. Safer fences help, but safer outcomes also depend on how horses and riders approach them fitness, technique, mindset, and the decisions you make about preparation and pace on the day.Why do fatalities still occur if safety has improved?Because many equine fatalities in eventing are not caused by cross-country fence falls; musculoskeletal injuries and sudden death account for a substantial proportion. These risks sit outside the direct control of frangible technology and demand a wider welfare lens.Recent analysis underscores that weve sometimes looked in the wrong place for answers by focusing almost exclusively on fence mechanics. Conditioning, orthopaedic soundness, cardiovascular health, recovery management and cumulative training load all influence risk and not all of these are visible at the fence line.The fact a lot of the fatalities were not associated with [cross-country] fences shows we may be missing something, and that there are other important factors we should have been looking into, but we havent been up to now because we werent aware. Heather Cameron-Whytock, Lead Researcher, University of Central Lancashire (Horse & Hound)For riders and owners, the practical implication is clear: build your safety plan around the whole horse, not only the jump phase. That means pre-season veterinary checks, progressive conditioning, careful scheduling (avoiding back-to-back high-intensity runs), and post-competition recovery protocols tailored to your horse.Supportive equipment has a place, too. Protect tendons and ligaments during schooling and competition with well-fitting horse boots and bandages, and consider targeted recovery aids and evidence-led supplements for joint and muscle support as advised by your vet. Day-to-day, consistent monitoring picking up subtle changes in gait, recovery heart rate, appetite and demeanour is one of the most powerful safety tools you have.How should you assess risk by level and course?Start by recognising that international events carry higher risk than national ones, then drill down into course design, terrain, going, weather and your horses current form to decide whether the question fits your partnership today.Practical steps:Benchmark by level: Treat international (FEI) classes as a step up in intensity even if the nominal height is similar, and plan a season that builds to them rather than bouncing between levels.Study the course: Walk with a coach, watch earlier riders, and assess profiles that historically cause issues (angled lines, open corners, downhill combinations, light-to-dark questions).Factor in British weather: Heavy going after rain or firm summer ground changes the metabolic and orthopaedic load. Adjust speed and lines, or choose a different run if conditions are unsuitable.Check the data: Review British Eventings annual safety reports (published since 2010) for incident trends at your target venues and levels theyre invaluable context for planning and post-run reflection.Quick tip: Make a simple post-event log for time, penalties, jumping feels, recovery heart rate at 10 and 20 minutes, and any niggles. Over a season, patterns emerge that help you choose the right runs and rests.On the rider side, protective kit is non-negotiable. Invest in a correctly fitted, up-to-standard body protector or impact vest and a current-standard helmet. Explore our curated range of certified riding helmets and ensure theyre replaced after a fall or any significant impact.What are UK governing bodies doing right now?British Eventing records detailed incident data at BE-affiliated national events and has established a new equine welfare committee, while British Equestrian is implementing the FEIs animal welfare action plan in the UK from 2025. These measures aim to turn research into rules, guidance and better on-the-day decision-making.BEs strengthening of safety governance over the past decade includes systematic data capture and annual safety reporting, which inform course standards and rules. The addition of a dedicated equine welfare committee in 2024 bringing veterinary, scientific and rider expertise to the table is a significant step toward addressing non-fall-related risks across the sport.We are committed to analysing and improving horse safety in eventing, and progress is being made all the time in reducing horse falls through frangible technology and course design... At all BE-affiliated national events, we record detailed incident data, including all horse injuries and fatalities, which informs our safety strategy and policy development. British Eventing spokesperson (Horse & Hound)At the same time, researchers continue to stress that evidence must drive action:The next steps towards a safer sport, however, rely on the commitment of governing bodies to not only engage with the findings of science but also to act on them. Nottingham Trent UniversityAs a UK rider, keep an eye on BE and British Equestrian updates as the FEI animal welfare plan is rolled out, and expect evolving guidance on training loads, veterinary checks and on-event best practice.What practical steps can you take this season?Build a layered plan that covers equipment, training, horse welfare and course choice because safety gains come from the sum of small, consistent decisions, not a single silver bullet.Protect the rider: Wear a current-standard helmet and a tested body protector/air vest for jumping. Explore our riding helmets and pair them with secure, supportive horse riding boots for grip and stability across phases.Protect the horse: Use breathable, well-fitted cross-country boots and bandages to support tendons and protect from knocks, and remove promptly post-phase to aid cooling.Condition smartly: Periodise your training and compete selectively. Avoid stacking demanding runs without adequate recovery, and track recovery heart rates to guide intensity.Dress to focus: Choose comfortable, rule-compliant competition clothing that doesnt distract you or restrict movement.Manage the going: Pack stud kits, hydration, coolants and sponges, and adjust warm-up based on ground and temperature. Aftercare matters meticulous cooling, grooming and limb care reduce inflammation risk.Support recovery: Discuss targeted support with your vet, and consider joint and electrolyte supplements appropriate for your horses workload.Be seen and safe: For roadwork or hacking to condition between runs, wear hi-vis rider gear to improve visibility in variable UK light and weather.Control costs wisely: Budget for fit-for-purpose safety kit first; keep an eye on our rotating offers in the Secret Tack Room clearance to stretch your spend without compromising standards.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend pencilling in two short audit points during your season one after your first event and one mid-season to review kit, fitness, results and horse wellness. Small tweaks now often prevent bigger problems later.Pro tip: Write the replacement date inside your helmet and on your body protector label. Sun, sweat and storage degrade materials; a simple date reminder helps you stay current without guesswork.How do you use safety data well as a rider or owner?Pair British Eventings annual safety reports with your own training and competition logs to make season-by-season decisions rooted in evidence, not hunches. Then involve your vet and coach to interpret patterns and adjust your plan.BE has published detailed safety reporting since 2010, giving you year-on-year insight into incident types and trends at national level. While horse injury and fatality data are not comprehensively reported publicly by governing bodies, the available information still helps contextualise your choices. Cross-reference venue conditions youve experienced with report trends and your own notes, then plan runs that suit your horses strengths.Two further UK-specific considerations for 20252026:As British Equestrian implements the FEI animal welfare action plan, expect incremental updates on training loads, vet checks and competition protocols; staying current will help you make compliant, welfare-first decisions.Public access changes mean unrecorded bridleways will be lost after 1 January 2026, potentially increasing pressure on training venues. Book schooling slots early and vary surfaces to manage limb load.Finally, use kit checks and rider prep to convert data into action. If your logs show late-run gymnastics getting messy, build targeted schooling blocks and consider whether your current studs, fitness or pacing strategy need adjustment. If nerves spike results, dedicate time to mental skills training rider psychology is a recognised piece of the safety puzzle.Our customers often tell us that having a streamlined competition kit bag reduces stress on the day. Keep essentials together helmet, body protector, studs, cooling gear, spare gloves so your focus stays on riding the plan.FAQsHas eventing actually become safer, or is the data misleading?At UK national level, eventing has demonstrably become safer: somersault falls dropped from 0.2% to 0.05%, and serious or fatal rider injuries from 0.27% to 0.07% since the early 2000s. At international level the decline is less obvious, reflecting tougher physical and technical demands.What specific changes made eventing safer?Frangible (collapsible) fences and improved course design have significantly reduced rotational falls by allowing fences to give way so horses can recover their balance. Better incident data and education have reinforced these gains.Are horse fatalities being properly tracked in the UK?Comprehensive public reporting of equine injuries and fatalities is lacking at both national and international level. British Eventing records detailed incident data for BE-affiliated events, but full public documentation of horse injury and fatality rates is not yet standard.Why do fatalities still occur if frangible fences work?Because many equine fatalities are unrelated to cross-country fence falls, arising instead from musculoskeletal injuries and sudden death. That means welfare, conditioning, veterinary oversight and recovery management are as important as fence safety.Is international eventing significantly more dangerous than UK national events?Yes. Safety improvements are less apparent at international level, which carries greater physical and technical demands than most national classes. Plan your season to build to FEI runs and avoid frequent level-hopping.Where can I find official UK eventing safety information?Start with British Eventings annual safety reports (published since 2010) for incident trends and insights at BE-affiliated national events. Also follow updates from British Equestrian as the FEI animal welfare action plan is implemented.What rider and horse kit should I prioritise for safety?Prioritise a current-standard helmet and body protector/air vest, supportive cross-country boots, and reliable riding boots. Between runs, use considered grooming and cooling routines and vet-advised supplements to support recovery. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop Riding HelmetsShop Boots & BandagesShop Riding BootsShop SupplementsShop Grooming Kit0 Comments 0 Shares 30 Views
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WWW.YOURHORSE.CO.UKBurghley reveals charity of the yearDefender Burghley Horse Trials has announced that World Horse Welfare will be its official charity for the 2026 event, which takes place from Thursday 3 Sunday 6 September.Were delighted to be partnering with such an important charity, which has achieved so much for horse welfare over the years, said Martyn Johnson, Burghleys event director.World Horse Welfare is the only horse charity dedicated to helping every single type of horse, including those in leisure and sport.As charity of the year, World Horse Welfare will be able to raise funds, boost awareness of their work and further develop their supporter base through a range of on-site initiatives throughout the four-day competition.Visitors will be able to add a voluntary donation to World Horse Welfare when they buy their tickets, volunteers from the charity will man the Shop and Drop facility during the event and the cross-country course will feature a World Horse Welfare-themed jump.Significant opportunityAs long-time partners of Defender Burghley Horse Trials, we are delighted to further cement this relationship through being its Charity of the Year for 2026, said Roly Owers, chief executive at World Horse Welfare.In the UK, the rescue and rehoming of horses in need is a vital aspect of our work, particularly at this time of the year, with a lack of forage such an issue, and when reports of welfare concerns are often at their highest. We aim to use this significant opportunity to highlight the value of rehoming from our charity and the valuable role World Horse Welfare companions play in being friends to horses and humans alike.When horse welfare is prioritised, equestrian sport such as eventing is such an extraordinary demonstration of the horse-human relationship and we look forward to seeing this in action during this years event.New initiativeWorld Horse Welfare patron and content creator Esme Higgs will also be launching a new initiative from the charity on Burghleys Insights Stage during the event ahead of the charitys centenary celebrations next year.World Horse Welfare has always been a charity close to my heart, but it wasnt until I rehomed Duke that I truly experienced the transformative impact of their work, said Esme.Through Duke, I have seen first-hand how their dedication changes horses lives for the better. He has brought immense joy to me, my family and my other horses and we are proud to honour World Horse Welfares promise of providing him with lifelong security. I am delighted that World Horse Welfare is celebrating its vital rescue and rehoming work as Charity of the Year at the 2026 Defender Burghley Horse Trials and I hope the thousands of equestrians attending will visit the stand to discover whether they might find a new friend among the horses and ponies looking for a loving home.Image Tim Wilkinson.Related 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 Burghley reveals charity of the year appeared first on Your Horse.0 Comments 0 Shares 32 Views
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2026 NBS Breeding Initiatives LaunchedHorse 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 .0 Comments 0 Shares 58 Views
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WWW.JUSTHORSERIDERS.CO.UKUK Eventing 2025: How To Stay Competitive As Fields Grow11 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 Supplements0 Comments 0 Shares 71 Views
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Jessica von Bredow Werndl: The right balance between turn out, sport & rest |in partnership w/ AgriaIn the last episode of our visit to Jessica von Bredow Werndl, we not only meet Queen Dalera, who is currently enjoying her ...0 Comments 0 Shares 58 Views
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