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The Tack Room - A City of Horses

 
You can take the girl out of the country, but you can't take the country out of the girl. I have brought the country to the city with a hot stable, the sweet smell of straw and molasses, and horse ownership in a concrete forest. This is horses in Sydney’s CBD, so welcome to The Tack Room...

The Tack Room - October 2006

The Man and the Horse

October 26th 2006 14:31
A wise man of Hibernia once wrote that there are three things a man never forgets – the girl of his early youth, a devoted teacher, and a great horse. The sage must have written through generations when men were heavily exposed to horses because these days, men are not typically exposed to great horses. And especially not in Sydney.


In the equestrian circles of Sydney the man does not seem as comfortable as the woman. Numbers of women horse owners and women riders outweigh those of men heavily. The pages of saddlery catalogues are filled with images of women and accessories targeted at female riders. Jodphurs and breeches by their very nature seem designed to look better on women, while female riders cumulate over 80 percent of buyers of equestrian publications.

But hold for just a second… On the international circles of showjumping and eventing, men equal or exceed the tallies of their opposing sex. Jockeys are usually male, as are trainers. On the country circuits of reining, cutting and rodeo, men overpopulate women completely. So is it the city that soaks men away from the stables? And when did horse ownership and horse-related activities become so feminine?

Awkward, or just seems that way?
The relationship between the male and the horse has always been partnership, through war and labour, and while man writes about the horse through history as the greatest of allies there is an ensuing power struggle that is almost unnoticeable. A woman’s horse is an extension of her femininity while a man’s horse often seems like an extension of his power. Rudyard Kipling wrote in The Ballad of the King’s Jest over a century ago that “Four things greater than all things are, -- Women and Horses and Power and War”. If a woman wrote this the four things would be very different!


It is rare to see a quiet moment between a man and his horse, almost as it common to see one between a woman and her horse. The new ways of natural horsemanship have been purported across the world by men like Monty Roberts and Pat Parelli. But will that make riding more appealing to men in Sydney? Does the dress code have to change? Is the stigma firmly stuck?

The battle of the sexes is long and it is unnecessary. Do women make better riders? Do men make better masters? The connection between a horse and its human depends entirely on the partnership, and each one is different. It is unquestionable though that the horse to both man and woman is an object of desire, of connection, of fascination, and that is merely expressed differently between the sexes.

"I saw a child who couldn’t walk, sit on a horse, laugh and talk… I saw a child who could only crawl, mount a horse and sit up tall. I saw a child born into strife, take up and hold the reins of life. And that same child was heard to say, Thank God for showing me the way".

-John Anthony Davis



This photograph was taken on the morning of the 1977 Melbourne Cup. It shows Tommy Woodcock with Reckless, a four year old stallion when this photo was taken for a Fairfax newspaper. Reckless ran second in the Cup later that afternoon, and Woodcock, whose relationship with the horse was exceptional, thought no differently of his champion.
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Women and their Horses II

October 19th 2006 11:39
Actress Bo Derek, pictured here with one of her dark charges, has caught the attention of every male and female eye. A man’s imagination begins to move quicker than the horse she rides, while a woman is curious, envious, perhaps disgusted! A horsewoman looks at it and marvels at the horse! A Lusitano, or Andalusian perhaps?

Women are attracted to one animal above all others, the horse. The majority of horse owners in Sydney are women and riding is the number one participant sport in America for girls between the ages of 10 and 14. In 2000, author Melissa Holbrook Pierson published a book called Dark Horses and Black Beauties: Animals, Women, A Passion. In it she discusses the electricity between the female and her horse and gives the horsewoman her own life in hardback;

She [speaks] of riding as a path to illumination, the way to attaining a moment of limpidity: leaving confusion behind. You simply can’t be confused on a horse, or it all goes to shit. Amazingly fast. They can hear you breathing. They know your mind...

Holbrook Pierson writes that nothing resembles being in tune with a horse, that it is one of life’s greatest pleasures. She adds that the woman on horseback presents a picture of power over-ruled by gentleness, and this Bo Derek knows. Derek has been an equestrian most of her life. Her book Riding Lessons is a bland story but the photographs are wonderful, pages of wild hair flowing on equally wild horses that are in truth flawlessly educated and of Spanish origin. For a woman to ride a horse naked and be photographed, the horse must be magnificent. It must be high-stepping, naturally uphill and on the bit – all the technical elements that dressage demands. The horse must be overwhelming.

Most women lack the courage, and indeed freedom, to ride naked bareback. Perhaps it is the sexuality of wild horse and wild woman that could drive a desire like this, or just to say you could do anything with your horse. The naked man aboard his horse couldn’t provide the same picture, could he? Would it be an image more of desperation than sexuality? Women are more emotional by nature than men, their expressions filtering to the surface when required. The woman and her horse come very naturally, which begs the question. Where are all the horsemen...

Dark Horses and Black Beauties: Animals, Women, A Passion by Melissa Holbrook Pierson is available through Amazon, published by Granta Books 2001
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Women and their Horses

October 14th 2006 16:59

If I run my hands along my horse’s body and wait for him to listen, he always does. I watch his ears following and his eyes go still, and if I press my face against his I can feel a channel running thick and deep and into history. A woman and her horse – a sexual connection some like to think, a spiritual connection, or something that just is?

[ Click here to read more ]
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The Horses of the Air

October 11th 2006 04:40
The Capriole

Define the stunt that is performed by the horse. Is it the launch through glass, the dash through open flames, or the falling horse? I wonder where the stunt horse ends and the performance horse begins, because there are movements executed by the horses of the Spanish Riding School of Vienna that are defined as “advanced classical dressage” movements. Not stunts, but something similar if they were on screen.

[ Click here to read more ]
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The Movie Horses

October 2nd 2006 14:35
Daredevil in Sleepy Hollow (1999)

Horses don’t make a fortune for themselves on the silver screen, but that isn’t to say that some of them are not stars. Great horse movies of our time and times gone have pushed good horses to great stardom, like The Black Stallion’s Cass Ole, and if you watch closely you might notice these same horses time and time again.

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