Thursday, September 20, 2007

Bahrain: New Endurance Season to Kick Off

ENDURANCE horseride season is set to commence on November 3 with the Season Opening Championship at the Bahrain International Endurance Village in Sakhir.

The timetable of the equestrian and endurance championships were approved at the Bahrain Royal Equestrian and Endurance Federation (Breef) meeting.

Breef president Shaikh Nasser bin Hamad Al Khalifa chaired the meeting which highlighted the schedule of showjumping and endurance competitions.

The showjumping season will kick off with a two-day event on November 8 and 9 at the Mounted Police Centre grounds in Budaiya.

At the meeting, Shaikh Nasser and the board members discussed Bahrain's preparations to participate in the Arab Games endurance horseride competition set to be held in Cairo on November 23.

The federation decided to address the Bahrain Olympic Committee and discussed the host country's preparations to hold the endurance race.

Shaikh Nasser stressed on the importance of co-ordinating with the private sector in Bahrain and find new sponsors for the showjumping and endurance activities for the coming season.

The Breef chief also requested to have arrangement for a meeting for the GCC Equestrian Organising Committee and activate its programmes in the near future.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

USA: Zone Team Endurance Challenge



The USEF (United States Equestrian Federation) sponosored ZTEC ride is being staged this weekend, September 22, in Fort Howes, Montana. Ride organizers Jan and Bill Stevens are hosting the event at their ranch. Jan Stevens reports that "Fritz Harshbarger, photographer and dance instructor, will be covering the ride with photos and updates.
Volunteers have started showing up with Anne Pfeiffer coming in last night. Anne has outdone herself with her customized mirrors and various other artwork to be used as awards. She's busy today creating the edible goodies (critters) that she is famous for.
Weather is looking good with highs in the upper 70's, lows in the 40's. Some chances of rain throughout the week - a welcome relief to the dry conditions we have right now.
As of right now we have 16 teams (3-4 riders per team) coming to compete - FEI, Open, and Mixed (FEI/Open). Riders are coming from Vermont to California, from Oregon to Illinois, from New Jersey to Texas, including 4 teams from Canada. Included in that mix are 4 teams with juniors and one Young Rider team (riders 16-21 years old)."

The is an AERC and FEI sanctioned event, with emphasis on Sponsored Team placement.

ZTEC Website

The following teams have registered for the event:
(Team Name, Chef d'Equipe, Riders)

APEX North

Ann Stuart
Valerie Kanavy
Hernan Barbosa
Meg Sleeper
Steve Rojek


Terengganu

Jeremy Olson
Heidi Alexander
Jeremy Olson
Ellyn Rapp
Jesse Dux


Whistle (WIS-ILL)

Roberta Harms
Peggy Brush
Linda Jacobson
Joan Fisher
Roxie Rivkind


Mountain Mettle

Susan Horne
Susan Horne
Karen DiCamillo
Jessica DiCamillo
Linda Browneller


Western Montana Endurance Riders

Suzanne Hayes
Suzanne Hayes
Melanie Shirilla
Doug Swingley
Lynn Lee


SAR

Carol Giles
Carol Giles
Michelle Roush
Ron Sproat
Becky Feidler


Marco Polo

Bill Stevens
Heather Stevens
Jennifer Stevens
Ashley Van Raalte
Frances Chase-Dunn
Kirsten Kimbler


The Ever-Readies

Tara MacLeod
Tara MacLeod
Ariel MacLeod
Makayla MacLeod
Larry Handziuk


ABC Team

Martin Marsh
Jan Marsh
Julius Bloomfield
Kathy Irvine
Terre O'Brennan


Prairie Chicks

Carol Wadey
Carol Wadey
Robyn Wadey
Rae-Anne Wadey



Prairie Fire

Brian Zwaa
Trish Dowling
Murray MacKenzie
Myna Cryderman
Crystal Fulcher


Malibu Endurance

Charisse Glenn
Charisse Glenn
Kim Fuess
Nicolas Vasquez
Carl Mergenthaler


Central Juniors

Carl Kimbler
McCamey Kimbler
Kelsey Kimbler
Darolyn Butler
Alexandria Kirkland


Nakheel

Fred Emigh
Fred Emigh
Luanne Holmsen
Sultan Bin Sulayem
Joyce Sousa


JG Ranch

Grace Ramsey
Jan Worthington
Eileen Kirsch
Guy Worthington
Julie Jackson


Team Bubba

Grace Ramsey
Candy Barbo
Anita Sinnott
Tom Gower
Michelle Mattingley

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Redefining Horizons - Endurance in the long run


September 19 2007
In his other life as a renowned international film director Paulo Branco is known as an innovator. It was not surprising then that the vice president of the Portuguese Equestrian Federation and organiser of the 2007 European Championships would present an event that would break new ground in the sport.

Speaking on the eve of the event, he said his team’s mission had been to “recognise that the sport of endurance was gaining credibility among the other equestrian disciplines internationally but that this was the moment to push it forward still further”.

He said the benchmarks towards achieving this would focus on staging a highly competitive event in terms of participants and a challenging course, by focussing further on the safety of the horse and making a bigger impact on the public and media.
He said: “This is the direction we are heading, particularly with a new level of media coverage and we hope, the choice of a pleasant, technical and fast course in order for the riders to enjoy but also to prove their level of competitiveness.”

Sponsored by the Qatar Foundation and with the support of Turismo de Portugal, the 2007 European Championships ticked all the boxes for competitiveness with a finale that the film director himself could not have envisaged, victory, which had been firmly in the grasp of the United Arab Emirates being claimed by France just a few hundred metres from the finish line. Portugal hosted the first Open European contest jointly with Spain in 1999 at Elvas/Badahoz and it was fitting that this return to Portugal nearly a decade on produced a record line up for an Open European contest with more than 20 nations represented including the USA and Russia. Illustrating the widening reach of the sport in Eastern Europe, there were riders from Hungary and Georgia. For the first time, Greece was represented at this level. The wider than ever pool of entries from the Middle Eastern countries was a tribute to the development of the sport in that region. Alongside the United Arab Emirates came Bahrain, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the widely popular success of the Bahrain team in securing the silver medal in the Open competition signalled not only the rapid progress of countries new to the sport at this level over the past decade but also the extent to which the endurance community internationally has bonded and embraced the achievements of those setting new standards in the sport.

The course presented by the organising team through the coastal plains close to Lisbon, was indeed fast. Not as flat as a desert track, nonetheless it was over only mildly undulating countryside with no significant climbs. Cutting through estuary country criss-crossed with rice-paddies, canals and dykes as well as pine forests and oak plantations, the track was deceptive and by no means easy. The mix of stony tracks, hard ground and deep heavy sand, required thinking, intelligent riding. The resultant ride statistics disproved any suggestion that this was anything other than a championship level course. The winning speed was an average of 19.118 km/hr, a long way from the record-breaking 2005 World Championship speed of 22km/hr in the UAE. After a long-hot summer in Southern Europe, the temperatures were not unlike those faced by riders in the Middle East and the attrition rate of 60% (average for a championship event) suggested that the humidity and climatic conditions had been a factor in some metabolic eliminations.

Several technical developments were brought in for the first time at a championship. Horses taking part were fitted with a GPS chip on their bridles to keep track of their progress. "This is the first time that a GPS system has been used in a major endurance championship and this has been done at the initiative of the Portuguese Equestrian Federation," said Hallvard Sommerseth, the Foreign Technical Delegate for the championship.

The Norwegian official, said the introduction of the GPS had been to help keep track of the runners at various stages of the competition. The move aimed to ensure the welfare of the horses as well as it will give organisers insight into how the runners were faring. The results were unanimously well received. President of the appeal committee Bo Kjellgren of Sweden said: “The use of transponders for the time keeping for the first time worked perfectly.”

He was less convinced by the use of a display system showing the pulse rates of horses in the vetgates which he said would need fine-tuning after certain “technical difficulties”.

However, efforts by the organisers to publicise the event heavily attracted thousands of spectators, not only to soak up the activity at the vetgate and dazzling display of speeds at the finish line but also the spectacle of the pre-dawn mass start. Throughout the day big screens updated the crowds on the race positions as well as fluctuating temperature and humidity. The next step surely will be the action to be relayed on a giant TV screen. Indeed, all day, helicopters circled over the leading riders as fittingly for an event organised by a film director, the 2007 championship secured the biggest live television audience for an endurance ride in the sport’s history with live coverage throughout the day on Portuguese TV as well as Dubai and Qatar TV channels. The only element of the drama that Snr Branco was unable to organise was a fairytale finish for the host nation – armchair fans and spectators at the event cheers their team into fifth place and raised the roof when Rui Pereira and his horse Canario, the first Portuguese combination appeared on the horizon to finish in 17th place. Whoever said endurance was not a spectator sport?

Monday, September 17, 2007

A Thank You to the Global Endurance Community



Le 16 Septembre2007

Bonjour à toutes et à tous,

Lors du championnat d'Europe à Barroca d'Alva au Portugal l'équipe de France d'endurance, composée de Sophie Arnaud, Virginie Atger, Philippe Benoit, Pascale Dietsh, Jean-Philippe Frances et Philippe Tomas, a de nouveau dignement représenté notre pays en cumulant les premières places du classement individuel et par équipe.

Les cavaliers, Jérôme Boisson, Christophe Pelissier et moi-même, nous adressons un grand merci à tous ceux qui nous ont encouragés durant toute la phase préparatoire et à tous ceux qui nous ont soutenus tout au long de l'épreuve. Merci également aux rédacteurs des sympathiques messages en tous genres qui ont été adressés à toute l'équipe après l'annonce de ce beau résultat.

Ce formidable succès est le fruit d'un long travail dans lequel il convient de rendre hommage à la grande qualité des éleveurs et de l'élevage français, j'y associerai les Haras Nationaux qui soutiennent en permanence notre discipline.

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September 16, 2007

Greetings to all

At the European Championship at Barroca d' Alva in Portugal the French Endurance Team, made up of Sophie Arnaud, Virginia Atger, Philippe Benoit, Pascale Dietsh, Jean-Philippe Frances and Philippe Tomas, again represented our country with dignity

The riders, Jerome Boisson, Christophe Pelissier and myself, extend a large thank you to all those who encouraged us during the preparatory phase and to all those which supported us throughout the event. Thank you also to those who sent letters of congratulations to all the team after the tremendous results.

This formidable success is the fruit of a long work in which we must pay homage to the great quality of the stockbreeders and the French breeding, and the National Stud farms which support our discipline permanently.

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Strong competition at European Endurance Champs

The FEI European Endurance Championship Open Qatar Challenge earlier this month was the first time Portugal had hosted an endurance event of this level. Several nations were slightly apprehensive about the track at in Barroca d'Alva, which although was flat with generally good going was demanding and would require a 'thinking cap' to achieve a good result.

Lately in endurance the trend has been to have one central vet gate from which all loops start and finish. The Championship this year was different, whilst the start and finish were in the same place; all other vet gates were held at a different venue.

The start was in Companhia Das Lezirias, an area with a diverse land use ranging from forestry, to vineyards to agricultural use, located further north than Barocca d'Alva. The race began on September 8, with the first leg 34.5km long, taking competitors south along farm and woodland tracks. Loop two was shorter, only 21.75km and took competitors further south again for 10km before bringing them back up to their second vet gate at Barroca d'Alva.



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Saturday, September 15, 2007

FEI chief praises Royal Team

Bahrain Gulf Daily News
BAHRAIN'S Royal Endurance Team, led by Shaikh Nasser bin Hamad Al Khalifa, has been praised by International Equestrian Federation (FEI) endurance committee director Ian Williams for its recent successes in international competitions.

The Bahrainis last week clinched second place in the team category at the FEI European Endurance Championship in Portugal, and were also runners-up at the annual Compiegne Endurance Horseride Race in France in August.

In light of these achievements, Williams claimed that the team has a bright future in the sport. He added that their success is not a surprise because of the optimal care and attention given by Shaikh Nasser, who is the Bahrain Royal Equestrian and Endurance Federation president.

Meanwhile, the Bahrain Sports channel will broadcast a live interview with the team members tonight at 9.30pm. Viewers will have a chance to call in and personally ask questions to Shaikh Nasser and the other team members.

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