CBC Edition

'Extreme sport' of Indian Horse Relay makes return to Manito Ahbee festival

- Josh Crabb

When the horn blows, the race starts and the adrena‐ line kicks in for competi‐ tors in the sport known as Indian Horse Relay.

Joseph Jackson, 16, a Plains Cree rider originally from Goodfish Lake, Alta., was first introduced to it when he was 11 and officially started racing when he was 12.

"Your blood's rushing, it just goes blank for me," Jack‐ son said in an interview Mon‐ day. "It's just me and the horse and you hear the thun‐ der of the feet, coming in you hear the crowd. That's the on‐ ly time you hear 'em."

The Elite Indian Relay As‐ sociation (EIRA) kicked off its 2023 racing season Monday at Assiniboia Downs as part of Manito Ahbee. The EIRA races feature a maximum of four teams racing on the track at one time. Each team is made up of a setter, a back holder, a catcher, a rider or jockey as well as three thoroughbr­ed horses.

The rider does three laps around track, switching hors‐ es within the outline of a box drawn out in the track where the riders must jump off one horse and onto another with the help of the rest of their team.

There are no saddles on the horses, so the competi‐ tors ride bareback with a bri‐ dle, and riders typically don't wear helmets. The first rider to cross the line on their fin‐ isher horse wins the race for their team.

Vern "Stick" Antoine, a member of Poundmaker Cree Nation in Saskatchew­an and president of the EIRA, said the sport is steeped in tradition.

"It's an extreme sport," An‐ toine said. "We're bringing it back alive."

"At first we were one of the fans watching out there and then we were so intrigued with all this Indian relay going on, it got our heart pumping," said Viola Frenchman, coowner of the EIRA team called

In It 2 Win It from Mosquito First Nation in Saskatchew­an.

Frenchman's partner, Charles Stone, founded the team with his late brother. He said the sport is a family affair.

"It's been in the U.S. for a long time, in Canada we're trying to promote it and it's been good," Stone said.

"It's good competitio­n. Everybody's got good horses. It's about having fun and re‐ specting the equine. They've always been a part of our lives from way back."

That team won the cham‐ pionship in 2021 in their first year of racing.

The EIRA started up five years ago, according to An‐ toine. The associatio­n has 21 teams but only eight took part in Manito Ahbee, where teams competed for $50,000 in prize money.

He said the sport is grow‐ ing in popularity, with more participan­ts taking an inter‐ est in the relay.

"They've grown up with horses and they've been around horses most of their lives so they're not scared of the horses," said Antoine, who said the horses are for‐ mer race horses purchased largely from chuckwagon dri‐ vers.

Jackson was a winner in one of the events at Manito Ahbee.

He wore regalia in the re‐ lay made up of a porcupine hair roach and homemade moccasins while riding to vic‐ tory.

"I love being around hors‐ es always ever since I was lit‐ tle and all the new people you get to meet and all the beauti‐ ful places you get to come — like this is my first time here and it's gorgeous here," Jack‐ son said.

Most of the races are held in Saskatchew­an. The next re‐ lay is scheduled for June 11 in Poundmaker Cree Nation.

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