Barrel Racers Do You Want To Be Faster?

January 11, 2019

Barrel Racing is all about Straight Lines and Tight Turns. 

An average running stride of a horse takes approximately .25 seconds while an average turn stride takes .50 seconds.

Make a run and then go examine your tracks. Decide where you can eliminate unnecessary steps.   Running straighter to the barrel and driving straight out of it to the next barrel can make a big difference.  Look where you want to go.  Ride to your pocket. (not too close, not to wide)  Keep your horse between your hands, between your legs.  Balance, rhythm, timing equals Feel, and that equals Success!

In the words of NFR Barrel Racer, Lisa Lockhart, "the success of any athletic maneuver, no matter the sport, comes down to preparation.  Even the most lightening fast moves (especially the most lightening fast moves), can be traced back to proper preparation, sometimes as subtle as a shift in weight that occurs in a fraction of a second." 

Set your horse up to Win.  Be a patient, directive rider; the release and reward method is effective.  It develops a good attitude with "try".  Your Hands communicate your message.  If you send the message, and don't release and reward  your horse for his response, he will become resistant and dead.   Your legs also communicate; Inside leg asks for the shape, outside leg keeps the shape.  Proper preparation is different for each horse, therefore, it can take some experimentation to determine the timing and combination of cues (seat, rein and leg pressure) that your horse responds best to.

Snap and quickness around a barrel comes from driving with equal and even power off both hind legs as you leave the barrel.   Helping a horse stay round in a turn has a lot to do with the degree of contact maintained through the reins and consistent, supportive, guiding contact with your legs. Round turns keep the horses hind end engaged properly, directly behind the front end.  If your horse pushes with more power on one leg than the other, a movement in one direction or the other results and your horse either bows out of the barrel or comes back over the top of it.

Barrel Racing is a process.  Miscalculations in timing, cues and application in this split second sport takes patience and perseverance to figure out.  Barrel Racing is both an Art and a Science.  Like a dance, it is horse and rider, synchronizing moves to achieve oneness.  There will be those days when you want to quit! But don't!  Persevere - you can and will - make barrel racing fun, enjoyable and efficient.

 




Leave a comment

Comments will be approved before showing up.


Also in Connolly

COUNTRY’S COOL AGAIN
COUNTRY’S COOL AGAIN

March 13, 2024

What’s the intrigue? Is it rugged individualism, uniqueness, freedom, or mystery? People can appreciate it from afar or join right in and be part of it. The trends are not inclusive to only the authentic.  Everyone can wear boots, throw on a denim jacket, buy a straw hat. Enjoy the feel and get a taste of the West.

Continue Reading

LISA'S STORY - ROUND WINNER, AVERAGE WINNER, RESERVE WORLD CHAMPION
LISA'S STORY - ROUND WINNER, AVERAGE WINNER, RESERVE WORLD CHAMPION

February 24, 2024

Lisa’s round and average win that night moved her year-end winnings to 2ndplace. Tears overflowed as she began to process what had happened in the space of only a few minutes. Although her world revolves around time measured in hundredths of seconds, this was colossal. She was Go-Round winner, Average winner, and Reserve World Champion.

Continue Reading

Dave Wagner - 2023 Legend Inductee - Montana Pro Rodeo Hall & Wall of Fame
Dave Wagner - 2023 Legend Inductee - Montana Pro Rodeo Hall & Wall of Fame

October 09, 2023

From the age of 8, PRCA Gold Card holder, Dave Wagner began accumulating buckles and saddles competing in timed-event and rough stock anywhere he could find to enter. He didn’t care what event it was. He just liked to win. Junior and Youth rodeos blended into High School rodeos, then College rodeos, and onto Open and Amateur rodeos. In 1975, at age 24, Dave got his Pro card, deciding to focus on bull riding. That decision produced 5 Montana Pro Rodeo Circuit Championships -1976, 77, 78, 79, a...

Continue Reading