It is unfortunate that class differeces have to be so nasty in a free country where "all men (and women) are created equal", well, theoretically, of course. And I agree- things like this situation do seem a bit immature when you consider that this is grown women and not elementry kids at recess. If those girls were so intent on exercising their horses, they should have simply thrown some saddles on and rode. If they can't do that, then surely if they have so much money, they could afford to hire someone who can ride. But if you're going to do that, there's really not much of a point to having the horse in the first place. Point is, it's an arena for riding, not a paddock to illegally turn out your horses.
HaHa, wouldnt it be funny if the parks department had little tags that they could attach to halters of horses that are left out there to fine the owners. Then that money could go to improving (fixing the fence their loose horse makes) to the PUBLIC arena. Or they could have a lock on the gate, like the boot for cars till they pay up. either way I would make sure I need to practice there more...guess I the drama from high society..lol
I've encountered similar problems at a public arena located in the regional park in the area where I work. I school client's horses, teach lessons, and turn out there or in one of the two public round pens on a regular basis. However, I'm very much conscious of the fact that it's a PUBLIC arena; I obey the posted rules, and I always catch a horse I'm turning out and cheerfully hand over the arena to anyone who wants to ride. But there are a couple of other trainers who bring horses in by the trailer-load, leave their horses in the round pens while they school rather than put them in the stalls (still in plain sight of the arena), and generally get in the way of anyone else wanting to use the facility. More than once I've been yelled at or been rudely talked down to by someone who actually lives in the neighborhood - one woman in particular demanded a friend and I stop riding and let her turn out her horse because, quote, "he hadn't been turned out in a month". Like the woman in your blog example, she also used the excuse that her taxes paid for the arena. I smiled and replied sweetly, "Really? Mine too! Imagine that - a public facility being paid for with *our* taxes!" She got angry and started sputtering incoherently, but my friend and I waved good-bye and hit the trails instead. I think this really has less to do with class/social status and and more to do with people's feelings of entitlement in general.
Heck I have to deal with that at my own boarding barn facility. We even have a scheduling system on a public calendar in the barn for the riding area and round pen because everyone wants to use it at the same time. Especially when the only place that has grass is the riding area and the round pen because people let their horses overgraze and claim the fields! But some people in my barn feel that since they pay for full care instead of self care like I do, THEIR horses get to graze whenever and whereever they want them to! SHEESH!
Sadly, I've seen this in all areas of horses. Like the book title says, There's no bad color for a horse. We happen to have Paints because we like a little flash. Our best riding friend loves Appys, because she likes spots. We have no problem with anyone that rides whatever, as long as they enjoy riding. Western/English, who cares? But we have had a lot of folks call us elitists because we have Paints or Appys & not a Bay or Palimino, etc. It's really silly, but they won't even accept an offer of a trail ride/picnic. And we're not talking kids here. We're talking suppossedly mature adults, 35m - 65 yrs of age. I think I'll get a mule next!
I APPRECIATE ALL OF YOUR COMMENTS. YES, I DO LIVE IN SO-CALLED "HORSETOWN, USA," WHICH IS ACTUALLY NORCO, CALIFORNIA. WE'RE STRUGGLING TO REMAIN SEMI-RURAL AND ANIMAL-FRIENDLY BUT IT'S GETTING TOUGHER EACH YEAR. AND UNFORTUNATELY, AS HORSES ARE CROWDED OUT OF OTHER AREAS THAT WERE PREVIOUSLY ZONED FOR HORSES, THE SITUATIONS LIKE I DESCRIBED IN THIS BLOG POST WILL JUST BECOME MORE COMMON. SAMANTHA'S USE OF THE WORD "ENTITLEMENT" IS CORRECT. SOME HORSE PEOPLE SEEM TO THINK THEY'RE AUTOMATICALLY ENTITLED TO MORE/BETTER/EXTRA STUFF JUST BECAUSE OF.... WHAT? AND BY THE WAY, I LIKE A GOOD MULE! :)
That sounds a lot like the place I was in while still living in So Calif. Even though words were hardly spoken, the vibes were if you didn't ride English & have a warm blooded horse you just were not good enough! Since moving to Texas the attitude is so much different! Now as long as you ride, treat your horse with care & love, it doesn't matter what you're wearing or what discipline you ride. Which helps me a lot since my riding is a fusion of both English & Western - Hahaha - I guess you'd call it Engwest? Too bad you had to witness that cat fight and spoil your day.
The barn I board at now avoids fights by having a schedule for the arena... Western riders and English riders co exist peacefully and most of us ride in jeans/t-shirts/sweatshirts... there are no class wars... I didn't realize how spoiled I was until I read your blog... I live in Ontario, Canada :)