China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Equestrian sector rides on growing interest

- By ALEXIS HOOI alexishooi@chinadaily.com.cn

Beijing resident Zhang Chao grew up riding horses on the grasslands north of the capital and remembers enjoying every moment of her rustic childhood.

But as a successful businesswo­man, Zhang, 35, now wants to provide her 7-year-old daughter with more well-heeled equestrian experience­s.

“I still love horses and I hope she does too. Maybe she can try more high-end sports and activities like dressage or show jumping,” Zhang said.

She was speaking during an internatio­nal show jumping competitio­n at the capital’s Equuleus Internatio­nal Riding Club on the weekend (Sept 20-22), when more than 400 teams competed, with participan­ts from China, the Netherland­s and Belgium earning some of the top honors. Talented riders aged under 25 also received accolades at the meet.

Zhang was one of many horse enthusiast­s crowding the exclusive club during its Beijing Internatio­nal Equestrian Culture Week, which also included a major industry fair, cultural forum and charity events that altogether reflected the growing Chinese equestrian interest riding on the back of rising affluence and increasing­ly sophistica­ted recreation­al demands of urbanites.

There are about 3,200 equestrian clubs across the country, a more than threefold increase from just a few years ago, according to latest industry figures. Michelle Wang, founder and CEO of Equuleus Corp behind the event, said the sector is looking at a “golden age” of growth that goes beyond sports to encompass the business, cultural, education and other fields.

“This mix of equestrian competitio­n and events ... helps to bring the public closer to a historical­ly and culturally rich sport, to experience its beauty and attraction,” Wang said.

Chinese Equestrian Associatio­n Party branch secretary Cheng Qing said that the national equestrian team’s latest qualificat­ion for next year’s Summer Olympics in Tokyo shows not just the resolve of the athletes but also the “exciting times ahead for Chinese equestrian­ism”.

The China Horse Fair, a major industry event organized by the Tarsus Hope Exhibition Co for the past 13 years, also took place at the Equuleus club from Sept 19 to 21, drawing more than 120 leading brands from 13 countries this year. This year’s fair included nearly 30 first-time exhibitors from home and abroad, covering equestrian fields ranging from horses and riding equipment to pharmaceut­icals and stabling facilities.

The recognitio­n by domestic and foreign exhibitors for this year’s internatio­nal event complement­s the increasing buyer interest and developmen­t in the industry, according to the fair’s spokeswoma­n Ouyang Fangye.

Jeremy Michaels, internatio­nal director for The British Horse Society equestrian charity’s China operations, said one of the high points in his work training and educating those in the fast developing Chinese equestrian sector in the past years to bring them in line with internatio­nal standards and practices has been his students’ “enthusiasm and hunger for knowledge”.

There may still be cultural and other difference­s in Chinese and Western approaches to equestrian care and competitio­n at internatio­nal levels but “what I’m excited about is how things are improving and developing, and people’s enthusiasm”, he said.

Wutzala, head of the China Horse Culture, Sports and Tourism Institute, said renewed interest among Chinese horse-riding enthusiast­s will certainly expand into the cultural and tourism sectors, with new inroads being planned in major scenic and culturally rich areas such as those in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.

At a cultural forum during the weekend event, Zeng Zirong, executive director of the Citic Art Museum, said the prominent place of horses in the long history of Chinese painting alone promises to fascinate the growing number of Chinese and foreign equestrian enthusiast­s alike.

Zeng pointed to masterpiec­es such as celebrated Eastern Jin Dynasty (317-420) painter Gu Kaizhi’s Nymph of the Luo River, in which the behavior of the prized animal rolling about at rest is depicted in remarkable detail.

“Chinese art offers a crucial lens into the valuable aspects of life for people in ancient times,” Zeng said. Horses form an important perspectiv­e in that regard and will continue to do so in these times, he said.

Michelle Wang, founder and CEO of Equuleus Corp This mix of equestrian competitio­n and events ... helps to bring the public closer to a historical­ly and culturally rich sport, to experience its beauty and attraction.”

 ?? ZHOU MI / XINHUA ?? At an equestrian school in Fuzhou, Jiangxi province, student Tang Siqi is kissing a horse after riding in 2018.
ZHOU MI / XINHUA At an equestrian school in Fuzhou, Jiangxi province, student Tang Siqi is kissing a horse after riding in 2018.

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