Horse & Hound

Sport horse breeding

Withdrawl of funding puts British breeding back two decades, says Carole Mortimer

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Carole Mortimer

WELL, we didn’t see that one coming did we? That is the removal of funding, by the British Equestrian Federation (BEF), from the British breeding arm of its own organisati­on. Yes, a loss of income necessitat­es the need to save money and difficult decisions, but to pull the carpet from under the feet of a really small part of the federation was an easy answer. It also suggests a disinteres­t from the national federation in British breeding and means that British breeders will have no encouragem­ent or initiative­s to support what they do, from a major authority.

In my last column (6 July), which wasn’t exactly holding out for the future of breeding in the UK, I bemoaned the lack of progress since the publicatio­n, 20 years ago, of a report to produce a strategy for the breeding of British sport horses. I included a quote;

“As well as the need for

a strong, lead organisati­on that could speak to government with a single voice, it had to represent a horse industry that presented a united front.”

WHERE IS THE LEADERSHIP?

THE withdrawal of funding that financed just a few of the original recommenda­tions means we are now no better off than when this report was first written. The lack of quantifiab­le support for British breeding from any lead body, including the Olympic sporting discipline­s, never ceases to disappoint. As to the report’s major findings that “fragmentat­ion is the major problem facing the British non-racing horse industry”, how can there be a united front if there is no “strong, lead organisati­on” to unite it?

If anything, the sport horse industry is even more fragmented now than when the report was written; seemingly few people or organisati­ons are proud of our British-bred and British-registered horses. We have no single body to promote the British-bred and British studbook-registered horse. Riders don’t seem to mind what the origin of their horse is and many even seek out horses from other country’s studbooks while many British breeders register horses with foreign studbooks; practicall­y unheard of 20 years ago. In essence, without a leader everyone makes and follows their own paths.

LACK OF SUPPORT

OTHER countries have a national body that supports their home-bred horses; Horse Sport Ireland, for example, will be funding entry fees and a travel bursary to three sixyear-old and five seven-year-old horses registered in an Irish studbook (recognised by the World Breeding Federation for Sport Horses) that will be competing in this weekend’s World Breeding Championsh­ips for Young Event Horses in Le Lion d’Angers (19-22 October). And, yes, all the Irish riders are riding horses registered with the Irish Sport Horse studbook. And you can bet your bottom dollar that at Le Lion, the

Irish won’t be the only riders mounted on horses bred and registered in their country of origin and proudly supported by their federation.

At the time of writing and in light of the withdrawn funding, we await news of any future developmen­t that might support British breeding, although many British breeders have long given up any hope for support and recognitio­n and have literally given up. Yet the horse is fundamenta­l to our sports. Isn’t it about time that a governing body showed some leadership and substantia­l support for the British-bred and registered horse?

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