The Nose Knows: Equitation Scientists Call for Monitoring of Dressage Nosebands at Competitions

Göteborg Horse Show, Dressyr

Adelinde Cornelissen and Jerich Parzival are under constant scrutiny at the top of the leaderboard in dressage. Does Parzival look like a happy athlete? Is he happy enough? How happy is too happy? Photo by Stefan Sager.

What’s the next frontier of controversy in the world of international horse sport? With the Olympics looming on the calendar, it’s time to prepare for a welfare debate we can all sink our teeth into. Or at least set our jaws around.

The 2010 Alltech FEI World Equestrian Games had their share of controversy, which may be just as memorable as the results. While the victories in all three dressage events by Edward Gal and Totilas of The Netherlands were breathtaking, what made the news and sticks in our memories is the disqualification of Gal’s teammate, Adelinde Cornelissen. She was stopped in the arena by judges who saw a fleck of blood in Parzival’s mouth.

daVinci Horse

Did Leonardo have it right? His horse has huge nostrils.

Those Games, which took place less than two years ago, are also memorable because of the way that riders were scrutinized in the warm-up ring. We had just come off the roller coaster of the “blue-tongue dressage” scandal in Europe. Rollkur was the ultimate sin and it would take symposia, research and a lot of rationalizing–including a hair-splitting wordsmithing of terms–to move on from there.

Or have we?

It’s been almost ten years that dressage has been under the edict that its horses should be “happy athletes”. The first line of the FEI’s rules of dressage state “The object of Dressage is the development of the Horse into a happy Athlete through harmonious education.” Elite-level dressage horses are supposed to look happy as they exhibit collection and impulsion and expression and correctness in front of thousands of people and almost as many clicking cameras, often thousands of miles from their homes.

I don’t know how happy quarterback Tom Brady will be during the Super Bowl on Sunday. I think golfer Tiger Woods’ facial expression always looks like an ad for stomach antacids when he’s about to putt. And what about those groaning, gasping tennis players in the silence of Wimbledon? True, they compete by choice. The horses might prefer to stay on the van, but they never do.

Not long ago, horse sports were obsessed with leg boots. Weighted hind boots gave an unfair advantage for jumpers. Front boots might disguise an irritating agent. The FEI had to initiate a thermographic testing protocol to check legs for heat. Are you old enough to remember the rapping (poling) scandal? Rapping jumpers had nothing to do with music.

Not along ago, the sport of dressage enjoyed the enlightenment of advanced diagonal placement. Prospective horse-buyers scrutinized videos of sales horses, ruling out any horse that didn’t overstep with its hind foot. Farriers cringed over that one. Then along came rollkur.

Is it any surprise that the next frontier of horse debate would be the one that so many of us understand the least: the bridle? The controversy centers specifically on the degree of tightness of the noseband, but the problem is probably compounded by the fact that so few people understand the way that bridles are designed, how they are supposed to fit, and why we use the ones we do. That group includes me.

华天骑着“木兰”在丘吉尔庄园国际三星级三项赛盛装舞步环节上 (摄影:吴鸣)Alex HuaTian rides Magenta in the dressage at Blenheim Horse Trials 2008

Bridle equipment rules vary by sport and even by level within a single sport. Alex Hua Tian of China rode Magenta in the dressage phase at Blenheim Horse Trials in a "legal" bridle for eventing's highest level. The same bridle would not be permitted at the highest level of the sport of dressage.

A bridle is like a mechanical organism. It is made up of adjustable parts, some of which are meant to be stable and secure, and some of which are designed to allow some movement. There are lever forces at work and the placement of the bridle on the head and the location and coverage of the noseband (if there is one) vary greater between horses because the size and shape of the head of one horse is not identical to another’s. And that’s even before we get to bit selection.

There’s also the problem of relative head size and shape and markings because of the sheer size of the horse. A warmblood horse in dressage has a much larger head than most other light breeds. The width and thickness of the noseband can give proportion to a head–or detract from it. Noseband placement, thickness and color have strange visual effects on white markings. There is also an element of fashion: we may have simply become accustomed to close-mouthed horses. They are ubiquitous. And imitation of the equipment used by leading riders is standard behavior in the horse world.

I remember watching a rider try to feed her horse an apple once. She turned to me and asked why he wouldn’t take it from her hand. When I pointed out that the horse’s mouth was clamped shut by his bridle, she said, “Oh yeah!” and put the apple in her pocket instead of undoing a buckle and giving him the treat he now knew was there.

Before going any further, it should be stated two things you learned in 4-H or Pony Club: 1. Horses breathe only through their nostrils. They simply cannot breathe through their mouths the way that you can. 2) You should be able to slide two fingers under a noseband after it has been buckled. Many of us are probably riding around on horses with nosebands that are too loose, because this rule was hammered into us and we figure that too loose is better than too tight.

Dressage bridle illustration from FEI rules for dressage.

FEI dressage rules state: “A cavesson nose band may never be as tightly fixed so as to harm the Horse.” But they don’t say how tight is too tight, or how harm is defined.

Rumors abound of the practice of “cranking” on padded nosebands of dressage horses, suggesting that a tight noseband gives some advantage in the arena. Today the International Society for Equitation Science (ISES) responded to the controversy with a press release calling for steward inspection of nosebands in all equestrian sports.

Some excerpts from the ISES release:

” The International Society for Equitation Science (ISES) states that the practice of over tightening nosebands to avoid penalties in competition is covering up poor training at the expense of horse welfare. Recent research suggests that horses wearing tight nosebands undergo a physiological stress response, are sensitized to bit pressure and may have reduced blood flow with potential to cause injuries and tissue damage including nasal bone deformities, even when padding accompanies the noseband such as in the case of so-called crank nosebands.

Totilas is recognizable in his padded white-trimmed noseband. It's a lively accent. Notice the padded jawband.

“ISES notes that, in the last few decades, there has been a steady increase in the design of nosebands that effectively mask evidence of a horse’s discomfort. The incentives for athletes to
over-tighten nosebands arise from the rules of dressage that penalize displays of discomfort such as open mouths and lolling tongues. These rules were written by the sport’s governing bodies to
promote excellent training and the demonstration of qualities such as freedom, harmony, lightness and acceptance of the bit without tension…

“ISES recommends:
• a return to the established practice of placing “two fingers” under the noseband to demonstrate that it has not been over-tightened. This amount of space under the noseband allows horses to express tension or seek relief from the pressure of the bit and so aligns with the principles of ethical equitation.

•  that, for fairness and objectivity, a standard taper gauge should be used by stewards at competition. The taper gauge should be placed without force at the nasal midline and be clearly marked to show the desired stop, which, in alignment with established  industry guidance, should be the dimensions of two average adult fingers. In most equestrian disciplines, stewards check that all equipment used on horses complies with the regulations specified for that discipline. With a taper gauge, stewards could ensure that the detrimental effects of over-tightened nosebands could be eliminated or at least lessened.”

Victorian Prince

Racehorse tack is always under scrutiny. All breeds and sports could benefit from more research into respiration and how tack effects horses during competition. The technology exists but most points made in arguments are based on tradition, personal preferences and experiences, and what type of bridle is being worn by winning horses or used by winning trainers. Rennett Stowe photo.

Dressage is not the only sport where bridles are being scrutinized. The rise in popularity of “bitless” bridles is bringing the use of bits into question across the board. There are people who don’t like tongue ties in racing. There are people who don’t like clamped-shut mouths on eventers and jumpers. I don’t know anyone who likes seeing draft horses with tight check reins. Yet ISES  has issued recommendations that take aim only at elite dressage horses.

Jumpers often have a laundry list of adjustments and attachments to their bridles.

We do need more research into head carriage, respiration and the overall effects of tack. But we need it for all sports and all breeds of horses, not just dressage. Some day, we may selectively breed or buy equine athletes because they have nostrils of a certain size or shape, the way that we look for shoulder or croup angles today. Is a narrow muzzle an advantage or a disadvantage?

Perhaps this latest publicity will splash over into other sports and some new information will come forward that will benefit all horses, not just the most elite. In the meantime, it is the elite dressage horses that are setting the example that others follow and they will be under the spotlight–maybe even the microscope–at London this summer during the Olympics.

The prospects of Olympic dressage brings to mind one of the most common sights at a horse show: a helpful mom shouting from the sidelines to a petrified child entering the show ring, “SMILE! LOOK HAPPY!”

If it’s a dressage show, we might wonder if she’s speaking to the rider or the horse. In either case, looking like a happy athlete is much more easily said than done.

To learn more: Read the abstract of the paper  “The effect of double bridles and jaw-clamping crank nosebands on temperature of eyes and facial skin of horses” in the Journal of Veterinary Behavior by Professor Paul McGreevy et al, published online last week.

Built for Thederby

Horses in all sports would benefit from more research on the effects of different bridle positions and designs.

The International Society for Equitation Science (ISES) describes itself as “a not-for-profit organization that aims to facilitate research into the training of horses to enhance horse welfare and improve the horse-rider relationship”. Read more about them at www.equitationscience.com

Read the full International Society for Equitation Science position statement on bridle nosebands (cavessons).

Read about tack-related research at Michigan State University’s MacPhail Center for Equine Performance under the direction of Dr. Hilary Clayton.

Plan to attend the Saddle Research Trust’s 2012 conference on “Bringing Science to Saddles” in Cambridge, England next month.

——-

Photo of Adelinde and Parzival by Stefan Sager. Da Vinci horse by Lincolnblues. Alex Hua Tian and Magenta by NobleHua. Racehorses at Santa Anita by Rennett Stowe. Totilas © by Fran Jurga. Jumper by Claudio Gennari.



jumping-foal-713469 by Fran Jurga
© The Jurga Report at Equisearch.com 

Be friends with Fran Jurga on Facebook.com  

Totilas Slides by Ravel in Freestyle Dressage: What Almost Happened at Aachen Today

Totilas and Matthias Rath Aachen 2011 Deutsche Bank Prize

Totilas and Matthias Rath captured the 2011 Deutsche Bank Prize at CHIO Aachen today when they won the Grand Prix Dressage Freestyle to music over the USA's Steffen Peters and Ravel. Totilas and Rath were victorious in all three dressage events at Aachen, which attracted the world's best horses and was a preview of what's to come at next month's European Dressage Championships, as well as next year's Olympics, Photo courtesy of CHIO Aachen.

They could just rename the dressage part of the World Equestrian Festival. “Totilachen” has a nice ring to it. But the crowd all but chanted “U-S-A! U-S-A!” in the black stallion’s handsome face today as they were smitten with a multinational combo riding for the USA: Dutch-bred and trained horse, German-born rider, American owners. I know he has a French-born farrier. And who knows how many other nations contribute to the success of the USA’s Steffen Peters and Ravel?

They won at Aachen two years ago, and apparently the crowd had not forgotten them. And if they had, the pair’s performance in the freestyle caused an instant collective recall, as Ravel and Peters came within a point of Totilas and Rath.

As your eyes move down the results, you notice that the numbers are clumped together. Imagine scoring 78.725 percent for a freestyle dressage performance. It would be the thrill of a lifetime. But for Germany’s longtime champion and diva of dressage, Olympic medalist Isabell Werth, that score was only good enough for sixth place at Aachen today. Crowded above her were five other of the world’s best, and all six were subject to only the classic six degrees–or, in this case, percentage points–of separation.

And look who almost took home the prize!

Everyone thought Aachen would be a battle of nerves between Bechtolsheimer, Cornelissen and Rath. No one was looking for Peters and Ravel to improve of their 2010 WEG performance and climb within reach of Totilas, but so they did.

It wasn’t until hours after the results were announced that I realized the extraordinary fact that both Totilas and Ravel were trained by Edward Gal of The Netherlands, who lost the ride on both horses when they changed ownership hands. The Netherlands lost the horses, too. He finished ninth today on Sisther de Jeu with 77.125 but Edward Gal’s share in the victories goes without question, even as it goes largely without recognition.

It was that kind of week at Aachen: full of what ifs, might haves and could have beens. Except for Totilas, of course, who took home all the prizes, if not quite all the cheers, just as was predicted. It was the rest of the program that didn’t follow the script.

(The following is a slightly edited version of a press release from CHIO Aachen; a few changes were made for American readers)

Aachen horse head logo“I am delighted that I was able to win here three times in a sold-out stadium,“ said Germany’s Matthias Alexander Rath, overjoyed after his ride on Totilas in the Deutsche Bank Prize for the Grand Prix Freestyle CDIO. “Now we can return home with a great feeling and train for three or four weeks in a tranquil and fully concentrated atmosphere.”

Totilas and Matthias Alexander Rath scored 82.825 percent and managed to narrowly take the lead. Mistakes in the flying-changes in the freestyle routine that was choreographed especially for Totilas and instrumentalized by the disk jockey/producer, Paul van Dyk, cost him points.

“If it had been down to the crowd, the American rider

Steffen Peters would have been the winner.”


If it had been down to the crowd, the American rider Steffen Peters would have been the winner. The rider, who won the Grand Prix of Aachen in 2009, was awarded a score of 82.00 percent for his performance on the 13-year-old KWPN gelding, Ravel.

“It is a dream come true to finish so close behind Totilas. This was an amazing show for me here, the crowd was really behind me and Ravel, it was a fantastic experience and the perfect conclusion of a wonderful time in Aachen. Ravel performed a super freestyle here, he spooked a bit because of the cameras, but otherwise everything went extremely well,” reported Peters, who runs a dressage stable in San Diego, California.

“Edward Gal’s share in the victories goes without question,

even as it goes largely without recognition.”

The Dutch dressage star Adelinde Cornelissen finished third with her World Cup winner, Jerich Parzival, (81.775 percent). The pair, who made a few mistakes – the chestnut horse fell into canter twice in the half-passes in trot – had included some very difficult movements into her freestyle including a piaffe pirouette with a change of direction.

Laura Bechtolsheimer of Great Britain, who ranked fourth with a score of 79.825 percent, had set her aims high. “I put myself under enormous pressure, because I wanted to win here,” the 2010 World Championship silver medallist admitted. “But it was bound to happen sometime or other that things didn’t go as perfectly as I’d planned. It is a shame, but now I am just pleased it happened here so I can concentrate on myself again in future. I simply put myself under too much pressure,” said Bechtolsheimer, who made several mistakes including falling into canter twice in the extensions in trot and a mistake in the transition into the flying-changes every stride.

They say a rolling stone gathers no moss but what about ponies? This topiary horse in downtown Aachen, Germany is gathering all sorts of things. Notice the mushroom on his foreleg--or is that a shoe boil? (Andreas Fozzman image)

Christoph Koschel (Hagen a.T.W.) finished fifth with Donnperignon. The pair were awarded a score of 79.7 percent for their almost flawless freestyle routine.

Isabell Werth, who rode the 10-year-old Ehrentusch son, El Santo NRW, was disappointed with her freestyle score. Her difficult freestyle routine to brand new David Bowie music – “Ernie” made a mistake in the pirouette when he spooked – was awarded a score of 78.725 percent from the judges: Sixth place.



jumping-foal-713469 by Fran Jurga
© The Jurga Report at Equisearch.com 

Be friends with Fran Jurga on Facebook.com  

FEI Dressage Committee Considers Protective Headgear, Blood Rule Changes

Lauren Sammis on Sagacioius HF

The 2007 PanAm Games Gold Medal team of Lauren Sammis and Sagacious HF; Sammis is pictured wearing a helmet during grand-prix competition. (Photo courtesy of Hyperion Farms and Al Guden)

Don’t look for helmets at the FEI World Cup or World Equestrian Games dressage events quite yet, but a discussion of a possible rule change at the Dressage Committee’s meeting earlier this month in Paris considered some regulations for head protection. Also on the discussion list: blood in the mouths of competition horses.

As always, rule revisions will be presented for National Federation approval at the FEI General Assembly in November for implementation on 1 January 2012.

Protective headgear

Background: The FEI Medical Committee has recommended making protective headgear mandatory across all disciplines when riding at show grounds outside competition arenas.

At its meeting in Paris, the Dressage Committee took on the subject. They discussed making protective headgear mandatory everywhere on the showgrounds except during competition and warm-up prior to competition. The committee discussed mandatory helmets for athletes under 18 and in Young Horse classes where they would be required everywhere, including during the test.

Note: I worried about the wording of this press release and asked my media contact at the FEI for some help in sorting out what this might mean. Malina Gueorguiev, Manager of FEI Press Relations in Lausanne, Switzerland, clarified that riders who are in competition attire before their classes would not be required to wear helmets in warmup or in the competition arena but other riders, dressed in non-competition attire, would be required to wear a helmet when mounted in warmup arenas.

A draft rule is being prepared for the next committee meeting on 2 August. This would then go forward to the General Assembly for approval and implementation on 1 January 2012.

Blood in the arena

Who could ever forget Parzival’s disqualification from the 2010 Alltech World Equestrian Games? Dutch team member Adelinde Cornelissen was stopped during her test when a tinge of blood was noticed in her horse’s mouth. Months later, it was discovered that specific language about blood in the mouth didn’t exist in the dressage rules.

At Paris, the Dressage Committee proposed a new blood rule explicitly stating that the test would be stopped if blood appears anywhere on the horse.

A press release from the FEI describes the possible new rule in this way:

“At top level events (Olympic Games, Championships and Finals for seniors), where FEI vets will be present at the warm-up arena, they would examine the horse and the test would resume if bleeding from minor injuries had stopped.

“If the bleeding had not stopped, the horse would be eliminated. Where vets are not present to examine the horse, bleeding would result in immediate elimination.”

The FEI’s Vet Committee and Legal Department are considering the proposal for this rule, which would sit in Article 430.7.1. or Article 440 of the Rules for Dressage Events.



jumping-foal-713469 by Fran Jurga
© The Jurga Report at Equisearch.com 

Be friends with Fran Jurga on Facebook.com  
  • Recent Posts

  • Archives

    • collapse2012 (44)
    • expand2011 (171)
    • expand2010 (172)
    • expand2009 (201)
    • expand2008 (269)
    • expand2007 (367)
    • expand2006 (25)
  • Links