View Full Version : Jockeys, how exilerating is racing??
Roo
15th April 2010, 12:52 PM
(any type of racing, unsure if I can use the name jockey to catagorise everything but don't know what else to call them, and even if you have just had a go etc)
I get terrified at a gallop and constantly feel like my nose is going to get broken LOL and that is on my slow cokey
- Just interested really :) It looks pretty scary :eek:
black crow
15th April 2010, 01:04 PM
Although i didnt become an apprentice jockey [trainee jockey on the flat, basically.]
I exercised several in-training racehorses and exercised a family members racehorses as he wanted me to become a jockey [RIP Eric] so he got me doing small hurdles, which after being so used to more controlled gaits of canter and small galloping around SJ and XC courses, it was very different.
I've always loved galloping, and i still have such a big buzz for racing. Im almost too old to become a conditional or apprentice jockey, which saddens me a lot as if it wasnt for my health problems, id probably be a licenced jockey by now, or atleast a good apprentice/conditional. I never made my mind up about which i wanted. If i really could have, i'd loved to have been a conditional. I've always wanted to ride in the national.
It's risky, and it gets the adrenalin going big time. Once you get used to the way TB's gallop and how to control their gallop, its actually very enjoyable, although the entire time you are very aware of what is going on. You need to stay concentrated on everything your body is doing. This also counts as TB's can be highly unpredictable horses, so you need to keep your eyes and ears open, no matter how much you are enjoying it.
Although i love XC and SJ and always have done, exercising racers was always a big favourite of mine. Im disappointed that i never got to officially race.
Denmania
15th April 2010, 07:42 PM
I work in racing, so my job is to exercise racers on the gallops at home, and 'school' over hurdles/fences etc.
There is nothing like it! The buzz of galloping in a string of horses is amazing, I was actually thinking it today. I had my 4 favourite rides, all of them like to go on their own in front so I set the pace and it was a beautiful day, I couldn't stop smiling!
I know loads of jockeys, point to point (more like amateur jump racing) and professionals, and they love it, you can just tell. There's no way they would do that every day, risking life and limb just for £160 a ride, they love it, you've got to, to do well in it.
I was talking to someone who rode in the Grand National on Saturday and we were talking about the race and he said there's nothing like it. It's more than a job, it's a way of life.
I would love to have a go in a race, but I don't think I have the bottle for it. I have so much respect for people who ride in races every day, especially the good ones. I think anyone can ride on the flat, but it takes a lot more skill to be a jump jockey.
RacingGirl
15th April 2010, 09:15 PM
the thrill of riding work is better than sex! I have ridden work against some of the best jockeys in the world, going up a gallop upsides, clanking jerks and thinking your the best, is just awesome!
eeek
16th April 2010, 10:41 AM
RacingGirl I rated your post because I was about to say the same thing!
Winning a race is 100 times better than sex. I can't even describe how amazing it is. You've got the adrenaline pumping through your body, you're dripping in sweat, you're exhausted and you're sitting on this amazing block of solid muscle who feels exactly the same way as you! (Hmm, didn't mean that to be a vivid description of post-sex. I truly was trying to describe racing. So in a sense it's kind of similar, with the added bonus that you've just survived rather a dangerous activity. Also, anybody can have sex, pretty much. But to win a race takes years and months and weeks of hard work.)
It is such an amazing buzz. For all of you who have wanted to race and don't think they have the bottle, just do it. I didn't have the bottle, and it was crippling me. I'd race, but my nerves ruined so many races for me. I still loved it more than anything in the world, and thought of nothing else, but hated it at times as well!
The turning point was riding a horse I'd never ridden before, who transpired to only be able to turn left, and who had a mouth like steel and no brakes. That day, all logic left me. The fear was so great that I couldn't contain it - and then it just disappeared. Now that I've learned how to push the fear out of my head RACING IS SO MUCH FUN!
When I go onto the track I think to myself what a lovely day and how lucky I am to be doing this. If a small part of my brain starts to pipe up 'but it's so dangerous' the rest of my brain replies 'rubbish' :)
I highly recommend trotting. It is a lot cheaper and safer than point to pointing!
Roo
16th April 2010, 01:04 PM
It looks so fun!! And I have great respect for you all!!!!!
eeek
16th April 2010, 01:22 PM
Forgot to say - the other day after a particularly good workout on the hill with Vinny, I went into work beaming so much that people were asking me if I'd just got laid!
sparkey
25th April 2010, 01:33 PM
Exercising a racehorse is on my list of 100 things to do before I die! I just need to convince a trainer to let a 27 year old girl who's never ridden up short before to let me up on one of their horses!
RacingGirl
25th April 2010, 09:26 PM
Exercising a racehorse is on my list of 100 things to do before I die! I just need to convince a trainer to let a 27 year old girl who's never ridden up short before to let me up on one of their horses!
Find your local trainer and ask if you can help/ride out at weekends, thats when they need help the most
eeek
26th April 2010, 12:52 PM
Exercising a racehorse is on my list of 100 things to do before I die! I just need to convince a trainer to let a 27 year old girl who's never ridden up short before to let me up on one of their horses!
Come and ride Vinny :)
Riding him up short is completely different from riding a TB, even when you're galloping. All the TB racehorses I've ridden have a different set of gears - mind you I have never ridden a flat horse. Vinny is VERY nippy, with very quick acceleration, and he can go sideways faster than he can go forwards! Very different from NH or Point to Point horses who eat up the ground almost in slow motion, and take a long time to reach top speed (compared to Vinny who can go from a standstill to flat out in 2 strides).
*Note to self: must get myself a Pointer*
You are most welcome to have a go on Vinny if you're ever in the area :) Short or long.
Mind you, there is a much higher casualty rate with the racing saddle! Vinny has a tendency to leap sideways from underneath you, leaving you stranded in mid-air.
eeek
26th April 2010, 12:56 PM
Roo, you wanted to know how exhilirating racing is? Well put it like this: I am racing in 7 days and have started to have racing hallucinations.
Roo
26th April 2010, 10:04 PM
HALLUCINATIONS!!
Well, it is great to have a point in life, and you have found it in Vinny (I'm not saying your only life is Vinny but with the whole racing thing etc) Lol :D
I know what I mean. But good luck in future races etc. Ooo and I hope he doesn't leap sideways and leave you stranded LOL
eeek
27th April 2010, 11:00 AM
Well Roo, it's quite right that i live for racing. Did you know that the sun only bothers to get up in the morning so that people can go racing?
Roo
27th April 2010, 10:23 PM
Hahahaha :D
Teej
28th April 2010, 01:15 AM
Does galloping ex racers help?
Chip won and placed over flat and hurdles when he was a racer and I don't gallop very often as I'm fussy about the type of ground I gallop on but it is good fun! I find with Chip that as long as nothing spooks him, we are pretty safe and he always responds when I want him to slow :innocent:
Gix
26th June 2010, 03:28 PM
I have a dream that my OH has assured me will become reality. I used to race ride, I rode round worcester once, not in a race, just on excercise with first timers (green horses), to get them used to the railings, boxes, stands etc, it was great. I worked with arab racehorses, had all my own gear, but then in one breath the boss offered to retain me if i paid for license the following season, in the next breath she said she was giving up the racing and going to concerntrate on showing. I left work that evening and never went back.
I raced my moms arab mare some years later in a charity race, but mom was not into racing, more endurance. Since then I have never lost the itch.
I live with my partner who is more trhan I could ever dream of, my own house is just about to go on the market. The dream, my OH suggested getting my house sold, going to auction and buying another in need of work, sell for profit, and so on, and profits will go on buying an arab youngster, bringing it on, training and racing it. All sounds easy doesn't it? It will take a few years yet, but my dream will become a reality.
Racing is a drug, yes its extremely exhilerating....
RacingGirl
26th June 2010, 10:25 PM
My friend rides Arabs in races, sadly not this year, she is expecting her first baby...
Look at the ARO website, its the arab racing site and its full of info
Gix
26th June 2010, 11:08 PM
yeah have requested info pack yonks ago but still no pack. The racing used to be run by ahs, and was gobsmacked at how much owner/trainer/jockey reg is now, but then it has been nearly 20 years lol
Where is your friend based?
RacingGirl
28th June 2010, 12:10 AM
She is in Wiltshire, I know a few professionals that ride Arabs too..
I know a few people are ARO I will see if they have sent it too you
Gix
28th June 2010, 08:43 AM
cheers, could do with some reading material with being stuck in lol
Bright Sparkx
9th November 2010, 10:22 PM
Ive rode a racehorse up the gallops and it was the best feeling ever, id love to work on a racing yard now, or even own a racehorse would be a dream come true.
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