Reining Futurity – the seedy underbelly of abuse to horses to win

“I am no longer willing to do to the horses what it takes to run at 75+ at a reining futurity?’ breeders, owners and some respectable trainers are saying about horse abusers.

Breeders and Owners connected with some of the top horses in the country are sick of the abuse and are backing away and some are even leaving the sport forever.

The wannabes and “excusestrians” are still justify ‘what it takes’ saying the horses are the most cared for horses in the world. So what are the people talking about when they say ‘what it takes to train a horse to run a 75?

As you sit back cheering and applauding horses at the NRHA Futurity, or any other major event, think of the horse’s life and experience before the Hollywood lights were turned on and the few moments in time define the public view of reining – big slides and fast spins. A trainer has a split second to define their place in the reining sport history, and the horse will make or break them.

For that reason, the futurities bring out the worst in people, and the NRHA is an association that has built nearly its entire existence around it. For reiners, it is the basis of every conversation, every breeding program, every trainer’s waking moment – competing in the futurity and winning. Doing whatever it takes to win.

The futurity is the event that takes winners to a perceived level of godliness to those within the sport. A right of passage that seemingly allows a person to do anything they want without question. A place where ego’s flourish and rule every decision. Ego is what the entire futurity and show system is about. It is like a drug that once sampled at the lowest of levels must be pursued at all costs to reach the top.

For the uninitiated, the rules are simple for the sport of reining. To rein a horse is not only to guide him but also to control his every movement. The best-reined horse should be wilfully guided or controlled with little or no apparent resistance and dictated to completely. Any movement on his own must be considered a lack of control. A lack of control is penalized by predetermined points, and they are out of the money.

So, you have an ego-driven dictator in control of a horse’s well-being. An ego that may take any action of the horse as disobedience that must be reprimanded immediately or as they say corrected immediately to stay in the money. The excusestrians have a field day with bizarre justifications of what is outright abuse, but then horse abuse is not their problem – they enable people to do it.

It would take a very mature person to manage the balance day-in-day-out to train these horses, and an ego would be the most dangerous tool to have.

Sitting on the fence 2am-4am in the morning during futurity week and you would be hard-pressed to find a mature person respecting the horse.

Winning all weighs on the horse. The horse, a simple creature that is rarely asked for his opinion or whether it is what he wants to do, is subjected to some of the most horrific things just to feed the futurity and show ego and win. The horse has no voice. Unfortunately, horses can take a lot of abuse before succumbing, and they are usually silent about it. The horse is ridden and trained to the point of helplessness. It must wait on the rider for every movement, its legs, head, and body and be in total submission and control.

To get the results, you will not see big name trainers back off nor their wannabee underlings; the horse, will perform no matter what. They have invested time into the training, and the horse has no excuse – it must do it. The longer the animal has survived in training, the less tolerance the trainer has for any level of disobedience or movement on its own. A misunderstanding of a command can lead to untold pain and suffering for the horse. Of course, the trainer never made a mistake it is always the horse that is wrong.

Mention that pain and suffering inflicted by a trainer and the wannabes and “excusestrians” will be lined up behind them, worshipping their winning ways and trying to be just like them. It is like spawning abusers. The excusestrains will ignore any sense of compassion and intelligence to be accepted in the inner circle of a trainer barn.

So what does it take to run a 75 at the futurity or major event?

For many horses, it means hours, weeks, and months of drilling maneuvers over a two-year period. The expression Drilled Numb sums it up. Drilling that is based on a desire for complete control and the horse to sacrifice its natural behavior and perform extreme and precise maneuvers on command every time. Living in a stable and working in the same pen, day in and day out for two years.

The horse that does not comply is faced with choices as the trainer, as much as some owners are determined to make the horse do it. The trainer is living off the horse, so they will not quit anytime soon.

As the training program continues, the tolerance of the trainer for incorrect steps or actions is reduced, and the pain and suffering increase through:

  1. Excessive spurring to the horses to the point of permanent puncture holes to the sides of the horse. From high in the stands this is not seen, but bend down at the side of a warm-up pen, and you will see horse after horse go by with scar tissue, granularized marks and punch holes.
  2. When horses react to excessive spurring by swishing their tails which is a penalty in the show ring. No problems, block their tails so they cannot show signs of spurring and discomfort. The well-known cure is easily detected as the horse’s tail hangs lifeless streaming behind the horse. Back at the stall, the mares have their tail tied around with a rope, so they don’t pee in them. The staff continually clean dirty hind ends where they shit on themselves.
  3. Excessive jerking of the reins to correct the horse. Watch a rider hauling from side to side and importantly either leaning way back in the saddle for more strength pulling on the reining or climbing over the top of the horse to haul upwards with strength.
  4. Prepping the horse to soften it as some Neanderthals attempt to justify? Bit check or tie them around for hours. A common practice according to court documents presented by Top 20 Trainer Arno Honstetter. Go to a gym and ask your trainer if you should be asked to hold an extreme position for 30-60 minutes (god help the horses for hours) and see what response you get. This is a practice that shows the lunacy of horse trainers.
  5. Overbending of the neck for sustained periods of time. Scientifically proven many times over to be detrimental to the horses breathing and muscles and causes extreme stress. But trainers know better than science, don’t they? Why they love this is it takes away the horse’s ability to fight and flight. The ultimate control
  6. Drugging the horses. Supposedly illegal but many reiners talk of the random and low level of testing that goes on. It’s a gamble worth doing when there is so much money on the line, and they can usually talk their way out of it.Do you see fines for drugging – not really? They can use a cocktail of drugs or some old favorites like Reserpine used it to calm hot and anxious horses. It changes chemicals within the brain to alter the horse’s temperament. The side effects are shocking causing permanent brain damage. Fluphenazine a popular drug for causing horses to be reluctant to move. Perfect for trainers wanting a horse in complete control. Unfortunately, the side effects can range from depression to violent episodes of head tossing, frantic and manic Those won’t make the show pen.
  7. Hock Hobbles. Tying a horse’s bit to its hocks and lunging it to bring its head down and round its back up or so they convince themselves. Side effects, torn mouths, tongues and flipping over backward.
  8. Tying high. Again, a popular approach both at home and at shows. Tying the horse high in the stall to tire it out. Make it so tired it will wait for the trainer for every move. Now there is control.

The list goes on, but that is enough for now. Now some or all of those things is a common journey to the flashing lights of Reining Hollywood where people believe its all roses and champagne for the horse.

The “excusestrians” say the horses are the best cared for in the world. They had shiny manes and tails and fed every day. Shiny coats and the trainer pats them at the end of a run showing how much they love the horse. The same thing a child abuser says about the children they abuse.

Abused TWH horse winning eventLet us share with you the comparative best of care in the world. TWH Gen has a shiny black coat and standing up tall. In this picture winning a major title, he has 8lb shoes on each front foot stacked high, weighted chains, sored legs (acid poured on his skin and into cuts), chains, tail blocked and tied high, horrific bit – Yep – that is love and care. The enabling abusers are standing by his side.

The Trainer/Rider and the Two Owners of the Horse – “Gen’s Black Maverick” – in THIS PHOTO are ALL serving USDA Federal Suspensions for the alleged SORING of THIS HORSE – “Gen’s Black Maverick.” A bit of makeup they say, and he is okay to show says the trainer.

Is reining becoming the new Big Lick Horse??? Some owners and breeders of L4 horses are very concerned.

 

 

 

What history is showing us is:

  • Winning requires extreme training to get the horse to run a 74+. Not all horses can do it, but many are pushed beyond their limits in an attempt to do so.
  • The first major win usually amplifies the likelihood of becoming a serial horse abuser as they attempt to repeat it and churn through horses to fulfill their dreams.
  • Winning lots of money means the likelihood of being abusive is high as the ego attempts to retain the top of the

As a closing statement: Hitler appeared on the front page of Time Magazine, like those horse abusers that could appear on the front page of the NRHA magazine.

It is time for Hitler to be removed from the sport. Go to the Poll and Vote for Change– now closed and the improvement of the rules to protect these horses.

© 2017 ReiningTrainers.com  All Rights Reserved.

13 replies
  1. Adrian Cameron
    Adrian Cameron says:

    I kinda have to agree on the reining being the new TWH. That picture of a sored horse and their all proud really digs at me. Reiners are too close to the fire to feel the heat – they think its normal. Sure hope they step back and start looking more seriously at welfare before it goes too far and cannot be wound back.

    Reply
  2. Peter Mitzel
    Peter Mitzel says:

    I watched Schmerschal this year and all I can say is extreme is now the go. He ripped the back end of that poor little horse. Sure would not be riding mine.

    Reply
    • Marianne Feenstra
      Marianne Feenstra says:

      You got it right there – EXTREME to the point of anyone thinking that training is done with kindness is a bigger fool than the person letting them near your horse. Watched on the livestream – L4 stands for Lunacy and the L3 are getting closer.

      Reply
    • Gary Anderson
      Gary Anderson says:

      My god if anyone sat and watched the runs Extreme is one word and drugged to the eyeballs is the other. Horses tripping over themselves and nearly falling in spins as they were unable to stay coherant. Horses loosing all sense of where they were as they were pushed to the limits. Backing up with their head on their chests and tripping. You are filthy ego maniacs and should not be allowed near horses and as for the fools cheering all around me your DISGUSTING! Don’t ever stand in front of me and say reining is good as I will smack you to ground –

      Reply
  3. Patricia Lockwood
    Patricia Lockwood says:

    And they complain about racing – at least those horses only need to gallop with a little person on their back in a straight line. There is not the torture that seems to go with these horses to get them to do it. Ugly people.

    Reply
  4. Carol
    Carol says:

    Yes. I have one of their train wrecks at home. 3yo and stuffed. L4 need the barn police for sure ! I will never blindly trust one of them again.

    Reply
  5. Carolyn Mitchell
    Carolyn Mitchell says:

    I know its a little off topic but did you see how over cooked those poor little 2yo’s were at the futurity sale. My god what is happening to these poor horses. Desperate trainers and breeders trying to justify their existence and pushing horses beyond what any reasonable person would expect. Shows me how few horseman now exist in reining. Shame Shame Shame on all of you.

    Reply
    • Randy Knight
      Randy Knight says:

      Just think what they will do to them now after seeing the winner drag its arse one inch from the ground. Copy cat hell for the babies. Its a circus act not an equine sport.

      Reply
  6. Jenny Gone
    Jenny Gone says:

    Blocked Tails – hands-up which horse did not have a blocked tail at the futurity this year? They are so obvious that its become the normal for reiners. I worked in a now big time trainer barn and it was routine. Teeth, Tails and Hocks when the vet visited. It was disguisting and the prick justified it to the stupid owners as ‘horse maintenance’ to help them win. What else he did I cannot even care to write about it was horrid – I left and I regret never filming and dobbing the bastard in. He still does it and they are all clapping him on. It sickens me watching the livestream seeing it all knowing what they have been through. I”am out.

    Reply
  7. Kimberley Maine
    Kimberley Maine says:

    They came, they saw and drank a big cup of up-sized Kool Aid. Extreme is a good word and they get rewarded. They stood cheering and whistling suspended (?) horse abuser Arno Honsettter. That says it all – Cruelty is OK at Reining World. The Sponsors are Funding Cruelty and the people are drinking the Kool-Aid.

    Reply
  8. Cassandra Miles
    Cassandra Miles says:

    Welcome to Hollywood – No Humans were harmed in the marking of the Futurity Events – can’t say so much for the horses. Sure hope everyone enjoyed their time at the expense of those poor animals. Yep – the new TWH for sure.

    Reply
  9. Andy Richter
    Andy Richter says:

    You know nothing about what it takes to win – just ask any reining person. They would even tell the most elite horseman of other disciplines the same thing. Only reining horse people know anything about anything – just ask them. In their world if the horse is not dead – its not cruel.

    Reply

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