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JUDGING THE PERFORMANCE HORSE

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Horse maintains a desirable head carriage. Proper upward and downward transitions ... Horse works from one pair of diagonals to the other pair ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: JUDGING THE PERFORMANCE HORSE


1
JUDGING THE PERFORMANCE HORSE
2
Western Pleasure
  • Western Pleasure is one of the most popular show
    events.
  • A top western pleasure horse should be as the
    name implies
  • a pleasure to ride

3
Western Pleasure
  • Contestants compete simultaneously
  • Travel around the perimeter of the arena
  • Walk, jog and lope
  • Both directions of the arena.

4
Criteria used to evaluate performance horses
  • Functional correctness
  • Quality of movement
  • Consistency
  • Willingness
  • Brokeness

5
Functional correctness
  • Horse picks up and maintains proper gait
  • Each gait is correct and true
  • Horse maintains a desirable head carriage
  • Proper upward and downward transitions
  • Maintaining a proper rate of speed

6
Quality of Movement
  • Gaits must be performed with proper cadence and
    balance
  • Softness
  • Horse maintains a level top line
  • Horse maintains a collected frame

7
Consistency
  • Willingness/Broke-ness
  • Attitude and temperament
  • Prompt response with no resistance

8
Western pleasure will be judged on
  • Performance
  • Condition conformation

9
A good pleasure horse
  • has a free-flowing stride of reasonable length
  • in keeping with his conformation
  • should cover a reasonable amount of ground with
    little effort

10
A good pleasure horse
  • should have a balanced, flowing motion
  • will exhibit correct gaits that are of proper
    cadence

11
THE QUALITY OF THE MOVEMENT AND THE CONSISTENCY
OF THE GAITS IS A MAJOR CONSIDERATION
12
A good pleasure horse
  • should carry his head and neck in a relaxed,
    natural position
  • poll level with or slightly above the level of
    the withers
  • face should be level with his nose slightly in
    front of the vertical
  • has a bright expression with his ears alert

13
A good pleasure horse
  • should be shown on a loose rein
  • should be responsive and smooth in transitions
  • should extend in the same flowing motion

14
MAXIMUM CREDIT SHOULD BE GIVEN TO THE FLOWING,
BALANCED AND WILLING HORSE WHICH GIVES THE
APPEARNCE OF BEING A PLEASURE TO RIDE
15
Terminology the Walk
  • The walk is a natural, flat footed, four beat
    gait.
  • The horse must move straight and true at the
    walk.
  • The walk must be alert
  • The stride must be of a reasonable length in
    keeping with the size of the horse

16
Terminology the Jog Trot
  • A smooth, ground covering two beat diagonal gait
  • Horse works from one pair of diagonals to the
    other pair
  • Square, balanced, straight forward movement of
    feet
  • Extended jog shows same smoothness

17
Terminology the Lope
  • The lope is an easy rhythmical three beat gait
  • Horses moving to left should be on left lead
  • Horses moving to right should be on right lead
  • Natural stride should appear relaxed and smooth
  • Ridden at a speed that is a natural way of going

18
Extended Walk, Extended Trot, Back
  • Horse maintains frame and topline
  • reaches further with shoulder and hock
  • Back straight, picking feet up off ground, shows
    no resistance

19
Disqualification
  • Changing hands on reins
  • More than index finger between reins
  • Head too low more than five strides

20
Faults to be scored according to severity
  • Excessive speed
  • Wrong lead
  • Breaking gait

21
Faults to be scored according to severity
  • Excessive slowness, loss of forward momentum
  • Failure to take the appropriate gait when called
    for
  • Touching horse or saddle with free hand

22
Faults to be scored according to severity
  • Head carried too high
  • Head carried too low
  • Over flexing or straining neck in head carriage
    so the nose is carried behind the vertical

23
Faults to be scored according to severity
  • Excessive nosing out
  • Opening mouth excessively
  • Stumbling
  • Use of spurs forward of the cinch

24
Faults to be scored according to severity
  • Sullen, dull, lethargic, emaciated, drawn or
    overly tired
  • Quick, choppy or pony strided
  • Reins draped to the point that light contact is
    not maintained
  • Tail excessive movement/ dead tail

25
Organizing Notes
  • Active vision!
  • description of horse
  • colors
  • markings
  • Correctness
  • Movement
  • Consistency

26
Oral reasons
  • students can verbalize what they understand
  • make use of notes
  • start with written reasons

27
Hunter Under Saddle
  • A popular show event
  • Used to be called
  • Bridle Path Hack
  • English Pleasure
  • Similar to Western Pleasure ONLY in that the
    horses should be a pleasure to ride

28
Hunter Under Saddle
  • SUITABLE to purpose
  • follow hounds cross country
  • Preliminary class for English riding disciplines

29
Hunter Under Saddle
  • Contestants compete simultaneously
  • Travel around the perimeter of the arena
  • Walk, trot and canter
  • Both directions of the arena.

30
Criteria used to evaluate performance horses
  • Functional correctness
  • Quality of movement
  • Willingness
  • Brokeness

31
Functional correctness
  • Horse picks up and maintains proper gait
  • Each gait is correct and true
  • Horse maintains a desirable head carriage
  • Proper upward and downward transitions
  • Maintaining a proper rate of speed

32
Quality of Movement
  • Gaits must be performed with proper cadence and
    balance
  • Softness
  • Horse maintains a level top line
  • Horse maintains a collected frame

33
Willingness/Broke-ness
  • Attitude and temperament
  • Prompt response with no resistance

34
Hunter Under Saddle will be judged on
  • Performance
  • Condition conformation

35
A good hunter
  • Long, low strides
  • reaches forward smoothly
  • lengthens
  • relaxed, free-flowing movement
  • correctness in gaits
  • cadence

36
THE QUALITY OF THE MOVEMENT AND THE CONSISTENCY
OF THE GAITS IS A MAJOR CONSIDERATION
37
A good hunter
  • obedient
  • bright expression
  • alert ears
  • responsive to light hand/leg contact

38
A good hunter
  • responsive and smooth in transitions
  • extend in same flowing motion
  • poll level with or slightly above withers
  • face slightly in front of or on the vertical

39
MAXIMUM CREDIT SHALL BE GIVEN TO THE FLOWING,
BALANCED, WILLING HORSE
40
Terminology the Walk
  • Natural, flat footed, four beat gait
  • Moves straight and true at walk
  • Alert
  • Stride of reasonable length in keeping with size
    of horse
  • LOSS OF FORWARD RHYTMIC MOVEMENT SHALL BE
    PENALIZED

41
Terminology the Trot
  • Two beat gait
  • long
  • low
  • ground covering
  • cadenced
  • balanced

42
Terminology the Trot
  • Smoothness is more essential than speed
  • Knees should remain relatively flat
  • knees exhibit minimal flexion
  • SHORT, QUICK STRIDES AND EXTREME SPEED SHALL BE
    PENALIZED
  • definite lengthening during extension

43
Terminology the Canter
  • Three beat gait
  • smooth
  • free moving
  • relaxed
  • straight
  • long
  • low
  • ground covering

44
Terminology the Hand Gallop
  • definite lengthening of the stride
  • noticeable difference in speed
  • horse under control
  • hand gallop to halt in smooth, balanced manner

45
Faults to be scored according to severity
  • Quick, short, vertical strides
  • Wrong lead
  • Wrong diagonal
  • Breaking gait

46
Faults to be scored according to severity
  • Excessive speed
  • Excessive slowness
  • Failure to take the appropriate gait when called
    for

47
Faults to be scored according to severity
  • Head carried too high
  • Head carried too low
  • Over-flexing, straining neck with nose behind
    vertical
  • Excessive nosing out

48
Faults to be scored according to severity
  • Failure to maintain light contact with horses
    mouth
  • Stumbling
  • Sullen, dull, lethargic, emaciated, drawn, overly
    tired
  • Tail excessive movement/dead tail

49
Reining
  • Ten approved patterns
  • Each contestant performs individually
  • Horses are judged from the time they enter the
    pen until they complete the last maneuver

50
  • To rein a horse is not only to guide him,
  • but also to control his every movement.
  • The best reined horse should be willfully guided
    or controlled with little or no apparent
    resistance and dictated to completely.

51
  • Any movement on his own must be considered a lack
    of control.
  • All deviations from the exact written pattern
    must be considered a lack of or temporary loss of
    control, and therefore faulted according to the
    severity of deviation.

52
  • Credit will be given for smoothness, finesse,
    attitude, quickness and authority in performing
    the various maneuvers while using controlled
    speed.

53
Maneuver scores
  • Scored on 1/2 point increments
  • Resistance, unwilling, lacks smoothness
  • MINUS (-1/2) OR (-1) OR (-1 1/2)
  • Controlled speed, authority, aggressiveness,
    willingness
  • PLUS (1/2) OR (1) OR (1 1/2)

54
Maneuver Scores
55
Maneuver Scores and Penalty Scores are NOT the
same!
56
Reining
  • Scoring will be on the basis of 0-Infinity
  • 70 denotes an average performance

57
No Scores
  • Abuse of animal in show arena
  • Evidence that abuse has occurred prior to
    exhibition
  • Use of illegal equipment
  • wire on bits, bosals, curb chains
  • illegal bits, bosals, curb chains
  • tack collars, tie downs, nosebands
  • whips, bats

58
No Scores
  • Use of any attachment which alters movement of or
    circulation to the tail
  • Failure to provide horse and equipment to the
    appropriate judge for inspection
  • Disrespect or misconduct by the exhibitor

59
Excess rein
  • Rider may untangle excess rein
  • if it prevents the rider from completing the
    pattern
  • if it can be straightened without affecting the
    performance of the horse
  • ONLY during hesitations

60
Scores of 0
  • More than index or first finger between reins
  • Two hands or changing hands
  • Improper use of romal reins
  • Failure to complete the pattern as written
  • Performing the maneuvers other than in specified
    order

61
Scores of 0
  • Inclusion of maneuvers not specified
  • (including but not limited to)
  • backing more than 2 strides
  • turning more than 90 degrees
  • equipment failure that delays completion of
    pattern
  • Balking or refusing command
  • running off or failing to guide

62
Scores of 0
  • jogging in excess of
  • one half circle
  • one half the length of the arena
  • overspins of more than 1/4 turn
  • fall to the ground by horsed or rider

63
5 point penalties
  • Spurring in front of cinch
  • Use of free hand to instill fear
  • Holding saddle or touching horse with free hand
  • Blatant disobedience
  • kicking
  • biting
  • bucking
  • rearing

64
2 point penalties
  • Break of gait
  • Freeze up in spins or rollbacks
  • On walk in patterns, failure to stop or walk
    before executing a canter departure
  • On run in patterns, failure to be in a canter
    prior to the first marker
  • Missing markers on stops

65
Starting or performing circles or eights out of
lead
  • 1 point penalty each time out of lead per 1/4
    circle
  • 1/2 point for a delayed change of lead by one
    stride

66
Departures and Rollbacks
  • 1/2 point penalty for starting circle at jog up
    to two strides
  • 2 point penalty for more than two strides but
    less than 1/2 circle
  • 1/2 point penalty for exiting rollbacks at a jog
    up to two strides
  • 2 point penalty for more than two strides but
    less than 1/2 arena length

67
Spins
  • 1/2 point penalty for over or under spinning 1/8
    of a turn
  • 1 point penalty for over or under spinning
    1/8-1/4 of a turn

68
Rundowns
  • 1/2 point penalty for failure to remain 20 feet
    from the fence
  • when approaching a Stop or Rollback

69
Changes of lead
  • (where a change of leads is specified prior to a
    run to the end of the arena)
  • 1/2 point penalty for failure to change by one
    stride
  • 1 point penalty for failure to change before next
    maneuver
  • 2 point penalty if lead is not changed prior to
    next maneuver

70
Changes of lead
  • (in patterns requiring a run around)
  • 1 point penalty for failure to be on correct lead
    when rounding the end of the arena
  • 2 point penalty for failure to be on the correct
    lead prior to the center part of the arena

71
Faults against the horse (do not cause
disqualification)
  • opening mouth excessively
  • excessive jawing, opening mouth or head raising
    on stops
  • Lack of smooth, straight stop on haunches
  • bouncing or sideways stops

72
Faults against the horse (do not cause
disqualification)
  • Refusing to change leads
  • Anticipating signals
  • stumbling
  • backing sideways
  • knocking over markers

73
Faults against the rider (do not cause
disqualification)
  • Losing stirrup
  • unnecessary talking, petting, spurring, jerking
    of reins, etc

74
Markers
  • failure to run circles or figure eights within
    the markers is not considered a fault depending
    on arena conditions and size
  • failure to go beyond markers on rollbacks and
    stops is a fault

75
Sources
  • AQHA Rulebook, Color charts, judging videos
  • PO Box 200, Amarillo, TX 79168
  • Phone (806) 376-4811
  • www.aqha.com
  • Kansas State University 4-H Judging Guide
  • Visual Ed Products Pipkin judging videos, State
    Judging Contests
  • (800)235-4146
  • www.cev-inc.com
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