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RideCamp@endurance.net
Re: Why We Do Endurance?
Title:
I happen to read this at a point where, returning
from a very enjoyable, albeit snowy, training ride, I have made myself a
cup of coffee and am feeling very mellow.
This is why I do endurance (20 years now) and
how I explain it to the 'locals' who think I just go out there and 'ram
around':
I have shown horses since I could sit up
straight. When I was a kid, I thought that was the most perfect place on
earth. At 21, someone challenged me to do a distance ride on my Arab show
horse. After training for months, I found that this was the closest I had
ever been to a horse- he was happier than he had ever been, and I was more
relaxed. After that ride, except for one summer where I campaigned an open
jumper for someone, I never went back to the show ring.
Riding my horse for hours through the beautiful
forests and hills around here has given me an inner confidence and a serene,
very happy outlook on life. I am sure there are many
people who can express this better than I can, but I know that when I took
several years off to pursue a career, there was a big whole in my life.
Getting on a horse and traveling the countryside - just he and I, has filled
that void- having a goal to reach (putting on several thousand endurance miles)
has been the icing on the cake
In endurance there are no subjective calls.
You have to care for your teammate and meet requirements that are concrete and
obvious- no one can manipulate them and no one can imagine them. It
doesn't matter if you have an $1800 saddle or a $100 saddle- you do not
have a better chance of reaching perimeters! How fast you go has to do with how
close to the edge of those requirements you wish to get, or can
get.
You can do endurance slow and have achievable goals
that are as important to you as if your goals were to come in first, and NO one,
I mean NO ONE, will tell you that you are not worthy, or didn't do your best, or
were less than perfect - there are no extra 'points off' for doing it your way,
as long as you met the veterinary requirements. If your goal was to finish
50 or 100 miles with a happy, healthy horse, then you have won. If you set
out to make a winner and you do two years of LSD during competition, then you
have won.
In endurance you can set your own goals and not
always be judged - and I am not necessarily comparing this sport to other horse
sports, but comparing it to life. In a high profile, high pressure career,
I was being constantly judged. There were 'performance reviews' and
annual charts and figures of my performance, always being judged by
someone. In endurance it is me and my horse against the trail that day-
'win or lose' is in my mind. I have won rides and felt bad that I didn't
do things quite right, and I have come in second to last and been
exhilarated.
Love this sport.
Laura Hayes NE AERC #2741
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, January 07, 2002 10:53
AM
Subject: RC: Why We Do Endurance?
All right Ridecamp.
Now that we have officially started a brand new year with all of it's
opportunities and challenges, I'd like to start off with a hopefully lively
discussion of what's at the very heart of our sport: Why do we do endurance?
I'll bet we have loads of different answers from folks.
Without a
doubt, since becoming acquainted with endurance in the later 90's myself, I
would have to say this is a darn hard sport to even get into much less become
proficient at. I am fairly inexperienced compared to most on this list, but I
do have 8 races under my belt although not all 50's. I find myself
sometimes contemplating the value of this time intensive sport with all the
other time grabbers this world has to offer us. For me with husband and two
kids and a job, I find it most difficult at times to balance my time spent
with the things that matter most in life. It's a constant struggle for
me.
Then some of it comes into perspective when I gaze across the
pasture and hear the thundering hooves and see the herd approach with their
tails flying high in the air. These creatures that God gave us to enjoy and
care for are marvelous creatures that are a constant reminder to us of some of
the life's most precious qualities;
love, honesty, beauty, courage,
strength, and loyalty. What a blessing these horses are!
I've tried to
examine my own heart about why I enjoy endurance so much. It is a very hard
sport to do right. It takes loads of training hours just to get a sufficient
base on the horse for this sport as we've discussed with the LSD training
threads. Then, it takes all the stuff you need to gear up the horse and you
for a race. These are the plusses for me: I love the communion with my
horse. The beauty of
the trail ( unless you do 3- 6 loops of the same trail) The joy of meeting new
people who enjoy what you enjoy.
What are your
reasons for doing endurance?
JMO,
Susan
Happy
Tails!
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