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Re: [RC] "Endurance" riding - Trailrite

Very well said!!!!  Back in the 70's that was what attracted me to this sport....it wasn't for everyone.  Endurance riding in itself is unique.  I love riding and Endurance not only gives me a purpose to get out there and ride the boring local trails, because my reward is to see country most everyday folks will live their whole life and never see it.  My Husband and I started riding multi-day rides back in the mid 90's and every ride when we got to the 5th day, we would slow down and take it all in.  Because we weren't in a hurry to finish, pack it up, hit the road and get home to the human rat race.  Some of these rides don't exists anymore and I feel special that I got to see these places when the rides were allowed.  One of my favorite rides was the Outlaw 5 day ride in Utah, that I think I miss the most!
 
Tammy Robinson
Trail-Rite Products
18171 Lost Creek Road
Saugus, CA 91390
661/513-9269 office
661/713-3912 cell
661/513-9206 fax
www.trail-rite.com

 
In a message dated 6/24/2008 10:59:19 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time, bweary@xxxxxxxxxxxx writes:
  Our sport is so unique in so many ways, and that is part of it's
attraction. And it got that way because of it's attributes that were
clearly present in the early years, but which are, in some circles,
under pressure to change to meet the expectations and desires of it's
participants. I looked up the definition of "endure" and came up with this:

   1. To carry on through, despite hardships; undergo: /endure an Arctic
      winter./
   2. To bear with tolerance: /“We seek the truth, and will endure the
      consequences”/ <http://www.answers.com/topic/bear>
   3. To suffer patiently without yielding.

To me, the key ingredient, the reason we do this sport, and the thing
that must be maintained and protected as an attractive quality of
endurance riding, is the "hardship" or "patient suffering" mentioned
above. Our society has become so accommodating to our every comfort and
to increasing needs to be recognized in an ever more crowded world, that
some of us like to break away from that, and test our mettle against
true challenge, and regardless of recognition or rewards. We want to
test ourselves *outside our comfort zones* against fatigue (even
exhaustion), the elements (extreme heat or cold), rough terrain, etc,
all the while juggling the factors involved in caring for our equine
partners who are sharing those same challenges at the same time--just
because we asked them to. These are experiences that have been largely
lost in today's soft society, though they offer much opportunity for fun
and personal growth. I have heard it said that our most powerful lessons
come from our most painful experiences. The rides I brag about the most
are certainly the toughest and most painful ones. And I enjoy those
campfire stories told by riders like Julie Suhr and others as they
regale us with tales of the days when everyone rode in cowboy boots,
western saddles, and had never heard of electrolytes or sunblock.
It is my personal opinion that the challenge in endurance should be a
fixed parameter. Mt Everest, for example, is always the same height and
basically the same challenge, no matter who is climbing it. No climber
asks for it to be shortened so they can make it to the top, nor demands
the same or similar recognition for having climbed halfway, because they
are physically impaired or life got busy and they didn't have enough
time or money to train properly. When life gets in the way (kids, work,
financial restrictions, etc.,.) our sport responds by making available a
similar and more doable experience--limited distance riding. But, just
as there are shorter mountains out there to conquer, no one confuses
those shorter mountains with Everest, nor expects similar accolades of
having conquered it--until they actually do. And when they do, they will
have "suffered hardships patiently," and truly endured at a high level.
Each person's personal definition of suffering shouldn't define the
challenge of this sport, anymore than our tolerance levels should
determine how much recognition we get for any other achievement. Asking
for increasing levels of recognition and awards for decreasing levels of
challenge tends to water down the core principles of endurance riding,
in my mind. The challenge is there in endurance riding, fixed and
constant. The 100 mile trail awaits us, licking it's chops. An
additional level of challenge presents itself as we pit ourselves
against the long and difficult trail, helped or hindered by our own
strengths and weaknesses, whatever those may be for each individual.
Endurance riding truly allows us to embark on our own personal odyssey,
to learn what we are really made of. These are experiences not often
found in daily life, and they should be treasured, not modified to be
more easily achieved and awarded. Where would be the challenge in that?
Bruce Weary

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