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FW: [RC] The Mongol Derby - Mike Sherrell

I think the main crime the organizers are guilty above is torturing prose. I
suspect most of the hysteria against this ride was a response to the
hysterical pseudo-Hunter Thompson/Jack Kerouac of the website. 


Regards,

Mike Sherrell
Grizzly Analytical (USA)
www.grizzlyanalytical.com
707 887 2919; fax = 707 887 9834

-----Original Message-----
From: ridecamp-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:ridecamp-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Elizabeth Walker
Sent: Wednesday, July 01, 2009 7:39 AM
To: Ridecamp
Subject: Re: [RC] The Mongol Derby

No matter how well prepared - stuff happens.  It happens at AERC rides, too.
However, I don't think the organizers want their organization to get a black
eye, either.  I suggest that folks read the information on their site.  It
would appear that they are trying to think in advance of what could go
wrong, and prepare for it.

       - The horses are supposed to be conditioned ahead of time, in
coordination with a vet.  I think the horses owners are responsible for
conditioning, but I'd have to go back and check.
       - There is a vet from Great Britain, and the head vet from Mongolia
involved in this.  The GB vet has 32 years of experience, but the site
doesn't say whether that experience includes anything comparable.  It also
didn't say whether those 2 vets would have any other veterinary support, or
if it was just them.
       - There is motorized support available.  There are supposed to be
folks in vehicles following along the route (if I read that right), and 4
vehicles on 'standby'.
       - All riders have to have 2 days of pre-ride training, and the ride
management can pull any rider that they feel would be a danger to himself or
his horse(s).
       - All applicants were screened before being accepted in the first
place, as they had to have both equestrian and 'adventuring' experience.
       - The riders are subject to a weight limit.  Can't remember what it
was, and it was in Kg, so I don't know what that means in pounds.  I seem to
remember 86 kg, with a 10 kg gear limit, but that is from my (admittedly
poor) memory.  Gear is to include camping equipment.
       - Again, each horse is being asked to go only 25 miles.  That does
not eliminate problems, but it has the potential decrease them, as long as
the horses are conditioned properly, and the riders know and observe 'speed
limits' based on how the horses were conditioned.

For those folks who are concerned that this is going to be a disaster, I
have a suggestion.  Rather than condemning the race before it starts, what
about reading the information on the site, and then emailing the organizers
with constructive suggestions, based on your AERC experience?  A better
method would be to appoint someone to collect and organize the suggestions,
and then present those suggestions as a coherent email, rather than
inundating the organizers with hundreds of separate ones.


On Jun 30, 2009, at 4:32 PM, Lif Strand wrote:

Upon reflection, it appears that maybe I'm wrong to be concerned.   
Maybe Mongolian ponies are so tough they can be raced without prior 
conditioning, and they can carry more weight than a normal equine, and 
it doesn't matter if the rider knows how to ride or how tired the 
rider is, and Mongolian ponies don't need to have been wormed or 
trained or even broke to ride to be raced.  And maybe those riders 
really will forgo the adventure and glory and won't succumb to race 
fever, so that they will in fact stop in the middle of the trail if 
there's a problem and wait around for a vet to arrive to check their 
mount before proceeding.  And maybe the advertised "bleeding kidneys, 
broken limbs, open sores, sun stroke, moon stroke and a list of 
dangers longer than your arm" will somehow all not involve the ponies, 
who will remain unaffected by any of this.

Of course, there is a chance that all the above is true.  If so, I 
should sell my Arabian horses and start breeding Mongolian ponies for 
AERC competition.

_____________________________________

Lif C. Strand
Local Economic Development
Catron County, New Mexico USA

www.critterwalls.com
life sized wild animal wall stickers



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