WHAT IS EVENTING? Eventing, also known as Combined Training, originated as a test of a Cavalry horse and rider. It is composed of three different tests: Dressage, Cross County, and Stadium Jumping. The same horse and rider perform all three tests in successive order in each competition. DRESSAGE
CROSS
COUNTRY Cross Country is a jumping test. In this test, the horse and rider are required to jump over obstacles similar to what a Cavalry horse would encounter trying to deliver a message on the battlefield. Some of these obstacles include logs; banks; ditches; jumps into, through, and out of water; hedges; gates; or a combination of any of these things. Cross Country is relatively easy to score, with horse and rider being penalized for refusing to jump a fence, falling, or being too fast or too slow in reference to an an optimum time set for the course. Refusing to jump a fence incurs 20 penalty points, falls add 65 points, and 0.4 time faults are added for each second outside the allowable time window. Additionally, while the rider can walk the course ahead of time, the horse has never seen any of the fences before jumping them. STADIUM JUMPING Stadium Jumping or Show Jumping is another jumping test.
In this test, the horse and rider jump fences in a ring. Scoring for Stadium Jumping is similar to Cross Country in that refusals (10 points), and falls (30 points) are penalized. Additionally 5 points are added for knocking a rail from a fence. Time can also be a factor, with penalties of 0.25 points for each second over the optimum time.
HORSE TRIALS & THREE DAY EVENTS Most competitions are called Horse Trials and are similar to a 10k road race; they are not all that stressful if you are in good shape, and they are a good place to practice technique. However, twice a year at the upper levels of competition (Preliminary, Intermediate, and Advanced), there are Three Day Events. These competitions are like a marathon and are the highlight of the season. 3 Days (as they're often called) have the same 3 phases as Horse Trials, except that the Cross County phase is a great deal longer and more difficult. Instead of a 5 to 7 minute Cross County, horse and rider must complete 4 phases, one after the other:
10 minute breaks are provided after Steeplechase and before Cross County to check the soundness and health of the horse and to help the horse and rider catch their breath before they continue. The most difficult jumps come on the Cross County, which is after you have already been riding your horse for an hour and a half! That is why horse and rider must be very fit to compete at a 3 Day, especially since they have to complete the Stadium Jumping Course the next day. Not everyone or every horse will compete at a Three Day Event. It takes years of hard work and dedication, and it takes a very special horse to be able to deal with all the training and competition requirements needed to make it to a 3 Day.
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