There’s a stock horse sport called working cow horse, in which a horse and rider face off against a cow in an arena. The object of the game is for the mounted pair to take control of the cow’s immediate destiny, make it go down the arena side, turn back, turn left, turn right, turn in a circle, whether the cow wants to go along with the program or not. Some cows don’t put up much resistance; some are defiant. Cow horses need speed, nimbleness, and spunk to do it well. The rider has to stay balanced and out of the horse’s way; on a well-trained horse who’s game for the game, s/he doesn’t need to do a lot more than some subtle cuing.
Here’s an example of doing it right, on a cow who isn’t at first inclined to cooperate:
It’s a sport that’s exciting and fun to watch, and from its home in the American/Canadian West it’s spread to Europe, Germany, for example. Of course, not everyone can afford to import a well-trained Quarter Horse or Paint, a competitor sprung from generations of horses bred to take it to the cow. So our European friends will press into service whatever breed they have to hand, dress up in full Western regalia, and go for it. Even if said breed is, say, a Haflinger, a smallish but sturdy flaxen-maned golden horse with that Western cow horse look but not, perhaps, quite the same Western cow horse attitude:
What a cute story! I don’t know much about rodeo events in the US, but in Australia we have a unique event called campdrafting. There’s lots of clips on YouTube. Can’t say as I’ve ever seen a Haflinger competing though, that clip was hilarious… I do love it when people won’t be confined by their horse’s breed!
In rodeos in Australia, there’s some number of quarter horses competing, but lots ride stock horses, a unique and (IMHO) beautiful working horse. My sister had a lovely little horse, a stock horse cross ARP (Australian Riding Pony).
Campdrafting looks like it must be a blast! And must take quite a bit of skill.
Your ASH are gorgeous horses all right. The Thoroughbred influence is plain, and the specimens I checked out on Google Images were clearly built to do whatever must be done, do it well, and do it when other breeds would have dropped n harness. I’ve read that some people are crossing American stock breeds into the ASH, which would alter the type considerably if not done with great care – is it stirring up controversy?
Watching that poor bewildered Haflinger confront a menace it clearly had no idea how to handle reminded me of a video any fan of cutting horses enjoys:
If you think that looks like a mighty old video, you don’t know the half of it; the horse is Jodie Earl, a bay Quarter Horse gelding foaled 01/01/1944.