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Equestrian Lifestyle

The Near Side: Your Equestrian Identity

There’s a car I’ve seen driving around the area a couple of times that stands out to me because of two decals on the rear window. One is a trotting Saddlebred. The other is a reiner doing a sliding stop. It’s not weird to see either of those things around here, but it’s strange to see the two of them together. I think the owner of that car and I could be friends.*



A lot of riders choose a discipline and stick to it. It becomes part of their identity, and those car decals become like Greek letters across a t-shirt, telling the world which equestrian sorority you belong to. I’m a barrel racer, they proclaim. I’m not just a rider, I’m a dressage rider. A fox hunter. A western pleasure aficionado.



 

When you first encounter another equestrian and discover that they share your love of horses, undoubtedly one of you will ask the other, “What type of riding do you do?” Answering that question might come with more information than simply what type of tack you put on your horse, for better or worse. We all know the stereotypes. The dressage queen. The hunter princess. The country-proud barrel racer. So when you tell the other person, “Oh, I just trail ride for fun,” did you just inadvertently tell the competitive eventer that you don’t take your riding as seriously as she does? Or by telling you that she gallops her horse toward big, solid obstacles, did she out herself as a bit crazy?

Our poll question this week here on HorseChannel asks you to identify your primary discipline (take a look on the right-hand sidebar to weigh in.) Oddly, I have trouble answering this question myself, and that’s why I think I have a lot in common with the driver of that saddle seat/reiningmobile.

I used to be able to identify myself as a saddle seat rider. It’s how I rode, for the most part, from high school through most of my 20s. It’s what my horse and I competed in for most of our competitive career together. And I’m well aware that if I told another rider that I was a saddle seat rider, their inclination was probably to back away slowly, assuming I had some fire-breathing horse trapped in a stall somewhere wearing giant padded shoes and a tailset. (I didn’t. I had Snoopy, wearing plain shoes and hanging out in a pasture with his buddies in between shows. Sometimes stereotypes are wrong!)

In any case, it’s been a few years since I rode that style, and I can’t honestly call myself a saddle seat rider anymore. I even donated my cutback saddle to a horse rescue. I could hardly go back if I wanted to.

I usually say that I trail ride, but I hesitate to call myself a trail rider. Fact is, I don’t leave the farm, and the “trails” on the property are very limited. I can’t even say if I ride English or western, really, as I am currently without a saddle. Does bareback count as a discipline?

I’m trying to condition myself to saying that I ride hunt seat, because I think it’s probably the closest to the truth. I take biweekly lessons at a hunter/jumper barn. In Snoopy’s last few years of showing, we did the Morgan hunter pleasure division, which is not really the same as the hunters most people are accustomed to, but it’s some form of hunt seat. Still, I feel like a fraud putting myself in that category. Whatever the initiation ritual is for the hunt-seat sorority, I haven’t been through it yet.

The other thing is, I often talk about my theoretical “next horse.” This is the youngster I buy with my theoretical “horse budget” once Snoopy is fully retired, and this horse becomes my next project. Depending upon what day you ask me about this horse, he or she may be an endurance horse, an eventer, a cowboy mounted shooting horse, a reiner, a show jumper, or all of the above. I sort of envy the people who have picked a discipline and stick to it. I bet it’s easier to get good at a sport if you stick to it. But they’re all so great. How can you possibly pick just one?

But enough about me. I want to know if other riders feel the same. Do you identify with the type of riding you do, and do you find you gravitate toward riders of your same discipline? Do you find that other riders stereotype you based on your chosen sport (and, ‘fess up, do you do the same?) Are you a one-sport rider, or do you dabble in lots of riding styles. And what SHOULD my theoretical next horse be? Tell me in the comments.

*Fun fact: William Shatner raised Saddlebreds and competed in reining. He has horses in training around here. So maybe it’s him! Probably not.

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Leslie Potter

Leslie Potter is a graduate of William Woods University where she earned a Bachelor of Science in Equestrian Science with a concentration in saddle seat riding and a minor in Journalism/Mass Communications. She is currently a writer and photographer in Lexington, Ky.Potter worked as a barn manager and riding instructor and was a freelance reporter and photographer for the Horsemen's Yankee Pedlar and Saddle Horse Report before moving to Lexington to join Horse Illustrated as Web Editor from 2008 to 2019. Her current equestrian pursuits include being a grown-up lesson kid at an eventing barn and trail riding with her senior Morgan gelding, Snoopy.

View Comments

  • I think it's really hard to pick one discipline. I've done western, English, bareback (yes, I think that is a discipline in itself!), and mounted games. I can't very easily say which one I like best...they all have their charms!!

  • Good article; I agree with Cheyenne. All disciplines are great. I like show jumping, but I also enjoy pleasure/trail riding.

  • I rode saddle seat as well when I was the same age; best I can manage now is to stay on top; wish I were able to do more than I do, but even a good curry is pleasurable - just to be in the company of a horse will always be special

  • Yes, I do honestly get stereotypical thoughts branching in my mind when I hear that someone trail rides. I only then carry the conversation up a few notches to see if I may have jumped the gun on my opinion of them. If the person proves that they really do know a thing or two about horses, then my stereotype is typically rooted out of my thoughts.
    (I would consider bareback a sport. XD It is just as --if not more, difficult than riding with a saddle. If you really want to get extreme, free-riding would be the most natural and what I would consider one of the funnest ways to ride. )

  • I had trouble answering the poll too. I ended up choosing other. I like to ride as many different styles and disciplines as possible. I don't compete. I just love riding and horses. And driving!

  • I can certainly relate to the author of this article! I definitely envy those who have chosen a discipline and stuck to it (my gelding probably wishes I would have done the same!) I started out being a western pleasure rider, loved riding saddle seat, dabbled in gaming, tried riding a reining horse, trail ride mostly... So whenever a site asks me my preferred discipline, I usually choose a different answer every time!

  • I definitely can identify myself as a rider under English discipline. Been riding that way for all of my life, trained lots of young and older horses that way and also competed in showjumping events.
    Where I currently train horses, some other trainers ride under western discipline. Huge difference in the training mode, leg and rein support between the English and Western. Just as one example: we collect horses using lots of leg aids with the legs always connected to the barrells of the horse, and hands with soft connection to the bit, or noseband (if you ride bitless). The Western rider doesn't collect the horse, has less connection with the bit just when they want to stop or turn, also they keep their legs away from the sides of the horse and just touch the sides when they want the horse move faster. (That's what I saw from Western riders). I'm not saying if any of them is better than the other. It really depends on what would you like to achieve with your horse. What is your goal. Any horse that has been trained either under Western, or English discipline can be a great buddy for you on the trails, out in the country, in the arena. BUT, I do recommend to choose one discipline, especially if you plan to buy a young horse that needs to be trained. You have to pick one discipline to train the horse to. Otherwise he or she'll get confused of the different leg and rein aids you're giving, and will end up not understanding what you want from them.

  • I will never be able to make up my mind what discipline I ride. When people ask, I normally say eventer and or trick rider because they are my favorite, but I cant give up the others. The truth is I used to ride saddle seat, then I spent years at a western barn and joined a drill team, then bought a dressage horse that I trainer to ride western and we rode on the drill team (he was also my first vaulting horse). When he had to be put down, I bought my current horse. This year alone we have shown in open and state pleasure shows, hunter jumper shows and won equitation over fences champion at the state fair and his breed national show, dressage shows where we also have breed national champion titles and will be showing at USDF shows in the next few months, we ride on a flag drill team and trick riding drill team that perform all over the Midwest, he is an excellent vaulting horse, and event at horse trials (Our favorite). My horse and I love changing it up, it has helped both of us tremendously to ride different disciplines.

  • From Sarasota... Western riding adopts all the same principles from dressage, Cassandra, you must work in a barn full of back yard trainers. If you train at any discipline, this knowledge is basic, fundamental... But Sarasota, is full of yahoos. Unfortunately there is no regulation of who is calling themself a trainer or instructor, so this is an area that is a complete mess of riders with a know it all complex and no real knowledge. I attended the Mary Wanless clinic before I moved and the people attending were shouting questions while she was working with riders... That was it. That's what comes from this area. If there was SOME regulation of who trains and instructs, as it is in Canada, this wouldn't be such an issue.

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