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EQUESTRIAN |
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Equestrianism refers to the skill of riding or driving
horses. This broad description includes both use of
horses for practical, working purposes as well as
recreational activities and competitive sports.
Horses are trained and ridden for practical working
purposes such as in police work or for controlling herd
animals on a ranch. They are also used in competitive
sports including, but not limited to dressage, endurance
riding, eventing, reining, show jumping, tent pegging,
vaulting, polo, horse racing, driving, and rodeo. (See
additional equestrian sports listed later in this
article for more examples.) Some popular forms of
competition are grouped together at horse shows, where
horse perform in a wide variety of disciplines. Horses
(and other equids such as mules and donkeys) are used
for non-competitive recreational riding such as fox
hunting, trail riding or hacking. There is public access
to horse trails in almost every part of the world; many
parks, ranches, and public stables offer both guided and
independent riding. Horses are also used for therapeutic
purposes, both in specialized paraequestrian competition
as well as non-competitive riding to improve human
health and emotional development.
Horses are also driven in harness racing, at horse shows
and in other types of exhibition, historical reenactment
or ceremony, often pulling carriages. In some parts of
the world, they are still used for practical purposes
such as farming.
Horses continue to be used in public service: in
traditional ceremonies (parades, funerals), police and
volunteer mounted patrols, and for mounted search and
rescue. |
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