We Ride Sport and Trail Magazine January 2017 | Page 51

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Ranch website at www.vonholtenranch.com

Follow me as we discuss how we have changed this obstacle to create new challenges for competitors:

1. Make three barrels be in-line and only go half way around the circle.

2. Put a bridge in the path that the equine must encounter while you are winding the clock.

3. Staple a tarp, or orange construction webbing on the board.

4. Place the stationary board on a bale of hay instead of a barrel.

5. Place six barrels in-line to create two separate wind the clocks. Have the competitor do a half circle with one hand, and a second half circle with the other hand.

6. Have the competitor back a half circle.

7. Instead of using a timber, board or PVC pipe, use a rope with the handle being a jolly ball. This would require the stationary end to be attached to a pole that is in the barrel. I would highly recommend not creating an obstacle that cannot come apart especially with a rope. I would hang clothes on the rope as another option, so it looks like a clothes line.

8. Require the rider to complete the circle in different gaits or add a stop.

9. Require the competitor to dismount and lead their equine while you are doing the obstacle.

10. In our latest obstacle competition, we had one barrel suspended from the rafters of the arena and had the competitors complete a half circle.

There are countless ways to make any obstacle feel new and exciting while not blowing your budget. I have seen highly ranked equine in different organizations have difficulty when something so minor is changed. Obstacle training is a tool used to increase the bravery of your equine and your horsemanship skills. You have way more obstacles present than what you realized, you just need to spend the time to get creative! You have nothing to lose and everything to gain. What ideas have you come up with now?

#10 one of the two barrels being suspended from arena rafters creating a new level skills to be applied