Fourteen reiners stepped into the arena in the hunt for points at the Canadian Equestrian Championships. After the first run, which took place at the Académie équestre de Waterloo, 12 km from the Bromont Olympic Equestrian Park, Team Saskatchewan is in the lead thanks to a remarquable performance from Brooklyn Braun. Quebec natives Stéphanie Briggs and Vicki Tzournavelis respectively finished in 2nd and 3rd place.

Reining is a Western saddle discipline in which the rider must demonstrate complete control of the horse’s movements, with no apparent resistance from the horse. The rider must master the technical aspects pursuant to the execution of various compulsory figures such as varying circles, slow circles, spins, lead changes, roll-backs and the crowd-pleasing slide stop. Cues should be subtle with reins kept long, in order to demonstrate the horse’s level of training. The maneuvers are executed at canter, in a distinct order and following a predetermined pattern.

Going in the arena, the rider starts off with a score of 70. Points are substracted or added according to the quality of execution. A score of 70 is thus considered a good performance. Third competitor to the challenge, Stéphanie Briggs, who has had a great season this year, earns a score of 70 with her horse Dunit N Starlight. She keeps the top spot until a member of Team Saskatchewan, Brooklyn Braun, shows up in the arena. Aboard Peppys On Top, Braun performs the various circles and spins to utter perfection, concluding her pattern with spectacular sliding stops. The judges grant her a score of 71.5, which no other rider would improve on.  “I was unusually nervous before going into the arena”, confided the 13 years old rider. “This is a wonderful win! I have competed in Alberta and Manitoba in the past, but this is my first participation ever to such a finale. This is a great experience for me, and I hope to come back next year!” added the lively rider, whose main objective is to perform cleanly in the second run. To win a medal in this first edition of the Canadian Equestrian Championships is a secret wish she dares not articulate aloud.

Advertisement