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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Locals
brave tough world horse test When Ellen Bettker,
who works for a Sisters dentist, and local resident Vickie Hornbeck, headed
to Spain in mid-September to volunteer at the World Equestrian Games endurance
competition, they were expecting drought conditions.
After all, it hadn't rained
for five months in Jerez de la Frontera, in southern Andalusia, where
the games were held.
The World Equestrian Games
occur every four years, with the first event held in 1990 in Stockholm,
Sweden. Seven equestrian disciplines comprise the games: eventing, showjumping,
carriage driving, endurance, vaulting, dressage, and reining (a western
discipline, included for the first time this year).
Clouds came in on the morning
of the endurance ride, September 16, and before the 7 a.m. start the heavens
opened. The riders headed off in the midst of a thunderstorm, the likes
of which Hornbeck had never seen before.
"No one was prepared for it,"she
said.
They had come with electrolytes
for the horses and riders and summer shirts for themselves, she said.
Endurance riders are a tough
lot, though, and since many of the volunteers compete in the sport themselves,
they persevered as best they could.
The rain caused havoc on the
100-mile course, causing footing which had previously been rock hard to
turn into a quagmire which pulled shoes from horses' feet and caused lameness.
The American team did not
fare as well as expected, with some team members and two individuals unable
to complete the race due to lameness and shoeing problems.
Bettker was impressed with
the team, though.
"They got in there and did
their job regardless,"she said. "One member was really ill, but kept on
going."
Bettker's job, as volunteer
coordinator for the endurance section of the United States Equestrian
Team, had kept her busy for many months prior to the event.
"The six months leading up
to the race were really intense,"she said.
As well as communicating with
around 60 volunteers from all across the U.S. and getting commitments
that they would turn up on time in Jerez, she coordinated their accommodations
and assigned tasks for race day. She had help from a local Jerez interpreter
as well as several local teens who were familiar with the area.
The volunteers were charged
with making sure that the horse and rider teams were well taken care of
at each of the 15 water stops which occurred during the race. Each volunteer
team covered three stops, so part of the pre-ride planning was figuring
out how to get to each stop.
Setting up maps and routes
for the volunteers and rounding up equipment had Bettker "all over the
place."
Hornbeck added, "there were
little dirt roads we had to go on between each stop. Some were difficult
to get to."
After the race, Bettker and
Hornbeck treated themselves to some sightseeing. Jerez is the recognized
horse capital of Spain, and is the home of the Andalusian Academy, the
original Spanish Riding School. There, Andalusian horses are bred and
trained to the highest levels of dressage. The public is welcome at the
farm.
Hornbeck said the trip was
worth all the discomfort, "to be able to watch world class horses and
riders compete..." |
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