A summary of dressage today for Hector Carmona to submit to the BBC:
In one Olympic event, competitors wear not Spandex,
but 19th Century business suits. They then perform obscure, slow movements on
horseback. A niche sport, Competitive Dressage hangs on to its Olympic status
tenuously. To pump up excitement, some competitors began exaggerating their
horses' movements. Using Rollkur (hyperflexion), they added flash, but they
also started a war. Those favoring the time-honored patient training required
by dressage as art (Classical Dressage) say Rollkur hurts horses, perverts
history, and harbors those driven by ignorance, greed, or glory.
This summary admittedly favors Classical Dressage. We
feel Competitive Dressage endangers the health and welfare of the ridden horse.
To explain our position, it's necessary to explain a bit about the history of
dressage and the politics and power struggles involved in recent events.
The origins of Classical Dressage trace to the
ancient Greek text The Art of
Horsemanship where Xenophon says forcing a horse to perform is like using "whip and spur"
on a dancer. Yet force, now blatant in training and the warm-up ring, pervades
Competitive Dressage. Over the last couple of decades and especially after
2003, the Federation Equestre Internationale (FEI), the controlling organization
for equine sports, has allowed force through abuse of bit and spur, sometimes ignoring
or violating its own rules.
Force is a
perversion of Classical Dressage, which seeks not to exploit the most talented horse
but to maximize the capabilities of any horse through careful and systematic
training. Two 20th Century masters epitomized Classical Dressage. As a young
cavalry officer, Alois Podhajsky, director of the Spanish Riding School (SRS)
from 1939-1965, won a Bronze medal in
the 1936 Olympics on a cavalry-reject Thoroughbred. Like Podhajsky, German
Olympian Reiner Klimke devoted his life to kind and careful training. Riding a
series of better horses using Classical dressage methods, he won six Olympic
Gold and two Bronze medals. This video explains both Klimke's method and the
importance of the warm-up: Aachen 95 Klimke.mpg
Abuse, already
present at the time of Klimke's death in 1999, quickly escalated. Warm-up rings
abounded with Rollkur contortions. The harsh use of bits and spurs drove German
trainer/veterinarian
Gerd Heuschman to expose the resulting injuries in his 2007 book Tug of War.
Finally, the viral Blue
Tongue video inspired
outraged petitions from around the world, forcing the FEI to pass a formal ban
of Rollkur on show grounds in 2010. However, instead of rigorously enforcing the ban, the
FEI blocked the viewing of warm-up arenas, banned cameras, and sanctioned the
use of Long, Low, and Round (LDR), a sort of Rollkur-Lite. Undercover
photos showing full
Rollkur confirmed the FEI failed to follow its own ban.
We also point to
the FEI's failure to apply longstanding dressage rules during actual competition.
Without changing the rules, the FEI simply allowed movements consistent
with Rollkur-trained horses
to win. Horses with overbent necks, faces behind the vertical (BTV), extravagant
front leg action with hollow backs and lagging hindquarters, wringing tails, and
excessive drooling now outnumber the "happy athlete" described by FEI
rules.
Many feel the violations
stem from prominent FEI officials with strong ties to Rollkur and other dubious
methods. Prominent trainer and coach Sjef
Janssen helped shape the
FEI's policy on dressage, and his wife Anky Van Grunsven brought Rollkur to
prominence in dressage. Although multiple Olympic winner Van Grunsven has distanced
herself from Rollkur after the ban, she once openly claimed it and was its most successful
practitioner. She
also taught Edward Gal, rider of Totilas, whose goose-stepping trot violated specific
FEI dressage rules yet earned record-breaking
scores. Another FEI
heavyweight is Joep Bartels. Although recently acquitted, Joep Bartels had to
defend himself in a civil case regarding purportedly Rollkur-associated
injuries suffered by a
horse entrusted to Bartels Academy.
Dressage judges
also play a role in these scandals. Anyone with a copy of the rule book for
dressage can see high-scoring horses violated rules of correct movement. Is it
possible that the FEI would penalize judges who favor the less eye-catching Classical
riding by not assigning them work? Would they reward with work judges willing
to give high marks to horses not meeting the requirements spelled out in the
FEI rulebook?
Now, the abusive practices rampant in Competitive Dressage
have reached Vienna's historic SRS, a bastion of Classical horsemanship for
close to 450 years. On November
29, 2014, Anky Van Grunsven hosted a visit to Amsterdam by the SRS. There, her
husband offered up his already well known opinion that Classical training
methods are grossly deficient. Some former SRS riders already bemoan the
"improvements" the influence of modern, Competitive Dressage training
methods has brought to the halls of the SRS.
Those of us who
love Classical Dressage, who love the horse-human partnership it shows, and who
simply love horses, ask the BBC to investigate the corruption and abuse
Competitive Dressage has brought to the
dressage world.
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