Site icon EQUINE Ink

#ride4Ashley

Ashley Stout

Whenever I see a large jump in views on my blog, my heart sinks. Usually it means that there has been a rotational fall somewhere in the world (my post, What is a Rotational Fall and How can They be Prevented) has high Google rankings.

Sadly, yesterday that prediction came true. Thirteen-year old Ashley Stout and her horse, Avant Gard (Grady), both died while schooling cross country as the result of a rotational fall. My heart goes out to her family and friends. As a parent, I can’t even imagine the pain they are feeling.

Ashley was a talented rider, riding at a level where she was comfortable, jumping a fence she had cleared successfully many times. She was wearing appropriate safety equipment and she and her horse had campaigned successfully, having no cross country penalties in their 15 USEA starts. In June she won the Junior/Young Rider Open Training division at the NJ Region’s H.T. and finished second in the Prelim/Training division at the Bucks County Horse Park H.T. Ashley was preparing to represent Area II Young Rider Training Three-Day Team at The Event at Rebecca Farm later this month.

She was a talented rider, as you can tell from this helmet cam video. The USEA Area II Young Rider program is promoting the use of the hashtag #ride4Ashley in her memory.

The Most Dangerous Olympic Sport

Although much has been done to improve the safety of eventing — including the use of frangible pins, which allow “solid” fences to come down if hit hard enough to break a pin — it’s still considered to be the most dangerous Olympic sport.

FEI statistics on eventing safety released in March of 2019 (covering 2007-2018) show significantly reduced numbers of rotational falls, but that number is still too high. One in six riders involved in with rotational falls suffer serious injuries.

Fall Statistics (emphasis in bold is mine)

Injury Statistics

While many newspaper reports have called this a “freak accident”, the problem is — it isn’t. Rotational falls remain one of the most challenging problems of eventing. Yes, the numbers are coming down. But how can we bring them down even further?

Please, let there be no more hashtags in memory of riders, especially for children.

Exit mobile version