| Working Ranch Horse Clinic & Competition
to test the skills of versatile Paint Horses
FORT WORTH, TEXAS—Ready for a different take on roping, riding and
sliding action? Sign up today for the American Paint Horse
Association’s next Working Ranch Horse Clinic & Competition. Set to
take place Oct. 28–29 at the NRS Training Center in Decatur, Texas,
the event will feature trainer Carl McCuistion.
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Working Ranch Horse
competition often incorporates real terrain into its Stock Horse
Versatility class.
Hirez TIFF (6.06 mb) Hirez JPEG (929 kb) |
APHA’s Working Ranch Horse competitions, sponsored by Kent Feed
Group and Hart Trailers, offer participants a fun, friendly
atmosphere, where practical skills are tested both in and out of the
arena.
On Saturday, October 28, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., McCuistion will be on
hand to teach both horse and rider basic-to-advanced Working Ranch
Horse skills.
“We’re trying to reach a segment of our industry that we’ve
felt hasn’t been reached at this point—and that’s the working
cowboy,” said APHA Executive Committee member Carl Thurow, who was
instrumental in the contest’s development.
The two-day event will feature four classes:
• Stock Horse Pleasure—Contestants must walk, trot and lope horses
smoothly and efficiently on a designated course.
• Stock Horse Versatility—Horses perform some of the many tasks
required of them in the course of actual ranch work. For example,
they may be asked to walk over bridges, walk through brush, back into
confined spaces, jump over obstacles or drag hay bales.
• Working Stock Horse—Participants demonstrate the skill and
athleticism necessary to move cattle to specific areas while on
horseback. Roping may be performed in this class.
• Stock Horse Reining—Horses must show they can be willingly
guided and ridden through specific patterns.
Participants may enter the clinic and any of the four events. Winners
will receive cash and prizes.
“These events showcase a well-trained, all-around horse,” said Tom
Neel, who rode Paint stallion Delta Flyer Gold Bar to the Open title
at the last two Texas competitions. “The horse needs to be relaxed
enough for the pleasure, guide well enough for the trail and reining,
and have the desire to work cattle for the stock horse class.”
More about the classes
Working Ranch Horse events differ from usual show classes, which are
commonly held in an arena and have standardized routines for
contestants. The Stock Horse Versatility class, for example, includes
an outdoor trail course that incorporates natural terrain into the
obstacles.
Another departure from standard classes is the Working Stock Horse
event, which gives contestants a choice to control a cow by guiding
it in circles in the middle of the arena, as in a working cow horse
event, or by roping it. Thurow said the non-roping option was allowed
in this event because roping is a skill that many capable riders
haven’t had the opportunity to learn. The ompetition’s creators
didn’t want riders intimidated and avoiding the event because of one
part of the class.
The classes do, however, encourage many aspects of usual show
classes, giving competitors incentive to polish their riding
abilities. Judges in the Stock Horse Reining event, for example, look
for several of the skills found in a typical reining class.
“This event might be one of the hardest for the competitors,” said
Thurow. “In a days’ work, ranch horses don’t do many spins or
sliding stops.”
Thurow feels that the extra horsemanship the contest requires can
only benefit competitors in their other endeavors.
For more information
To learn more about APHA Ranch Horse competitions visit apha.com/
ranchhorse. For further information, phone (817) 834-2742, extension
249, or e-mail jmcdaniel@apha.com.
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