Horse Jumping From the Fields to the
Olympics
Since
the time when man has first mounted
a horse for transportation, war, or hunting, he has valued this
animal’s intelligence. A horse can be trained for a wide
range of jobs, from pulling a hearse to fancy riding that looks
more like a dance. And horses have always needed to be able
to take a good jump over barriers or water.
But the real need
for horse jumping did not happen until about the eighteenth century
in England, when hunters starting to go after foxes needed animals
to jump fences. The sport has become very popular, even though few
horse jumpers are actually out hunting foxes. For almost one
hundred years, horse jumping has been a Summer Olympic
sport.
In the Beginning
Gentlemen had
always hunted in England, and much of the gentry rode a horse to do
it. The horse had to be speedy, and able to run through
underbrush. But that changed in eighteenth century
England. Landowners began to get solid title to their land,
and they did something quite unheard of; they put up fences, walls,
and hedgerows.
The hunt would
continue, of course, but now horses needed to jump and clear fences
as much as five or six feet high. The breeders went to work
and soon the image of a horse jumping over a rock wall carrying a
red-clad hunter became an English icon.
Horse Jumping for Fun
No doubt the
hunters liked the exhilaration of the hunt and prided themselves on
good horsemanship and fine stunts. The sportsmen of other
countries saw this and started to train their horses to jump as
well, and incorporated horse jumping into races. On the continent,
cross-country races began to include certain hedges, and sometimes
walls built specially for the purpose. By the start of the
20th century, it was a common sport among horse
fanciers.
Today’s
equestrian jumping events can be complicated, and amazing to
watch. There is a horse high jumping competition, for
example, in which some horses can leap over barriers seven feet
high. Other obstacles include fences set close together so the
horse must sometimes jump without a running start. A horse
and rider lose points if the horse knocks down part of the
barrier. Horse riders must train themselves and their animals
for years so that both can work together well enough to complete
these stunts.
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