Horse


SUPERINTENDENTS: Ronald Walter, Melissa Fleigle, Anna Pribyl

 

General Fair Guidelines


  • Cloverbud Livestock Policy: An adult/responsible person (adult/teen leaders, parents, etc.) must be in control of the animal (handling or leading the animal) at all times.
  • Members show their own animals. 
  • Show committees and 4-H’ers are responsible for cleaning up show arenas following each exhibition.
  • Garbage (specifically twine and pop cans) may not be put in manure piles; please dispose of them properly.
  • Your animal is your responsibility at the fair. Bring everything you need to feed and care for your animal at the fair including, but not limited to, watering pans, wash pails, hay, straw, grain, and grooming equipment. Equipment is taken care of by the 4-H’er. Members are expected to ensure animals are well cared for and animal areas should be kept clean and neat for the public

Horse Show General Rules

The Wright County Fair 4-H Horse Show follows the current MN 4-H Horse Program Rule Book found hereRemember you are a 4-H exhibitor at all 4-H events and must abide by all 4-H rules. 
  1. A 4-H member (exhibitor) and their properly identified horse are considered as an entry together. A 4-H member who qualifies for a state show class must exhibit the same horse used in that class at the qualifying show. 
  2. An exhibitor may show up to two (2) horses at the Wright County Fair plus a training horse for a potential total of three (3) horses. Example: 1 performance horse, 1 game horse, 1 training project horse.
  3. No horse may be shown until it has been properly identified as a regularly enrolled 4-H project horse through the county extension office in which the exhibitor is enrolled.  Only mares, fillies, geldings or weanling colts will be allowed to show at the County Fair. No stallions. Member must own or lease the mare or gelding exhibited.
  4. The exhibitor’s household must own or lease the mare or gelding exhibited. The horse must be identified certifying ownership and/or management arrangements by the state required date on form HIDA available at the County Extension Office. If substitution, for any reason, occurs after May 15th the horse is not eligible for the State Show.
  5. All horses must be serviceably sound.
  6. A horse may be used only once in any event per show. Age, grade or type divisions are considered class divisions and not separate events. The horse may be used in an additional non-qualifying class in the same event. The exception being if a horse is shared between riders where one is showing in State Qualifying classes and one is showing in non- qualifying classes. The horse may then be shown by both youth in the same event.  A rider may compete only one time in any class, Pleasure or Games, with one horse.
  7. Any person entering the arena not meeting the attire approved guidelines will be disqualified. Suitable, neat attire as stated in the show rules must be worn in all classes and events. It is the exhibitor’s responsibility to bring any questionable attire or equipment they may be considering to the attention of show management prior to wearing or using it in competition.
  8. The decision of the judge is final. The decision on whatever it may be should be accepted in the true spirit of sportsmanship and 4-H. Exhibitors, parents, or other persons may not approach or communicate with the judge without prior consent of the show committee.
  9. Good sportsmanship must be exhibited at all times. When an exhibitor or exhibitor's parent, leader, or other person acting for the exhibitor is guilty of unsportsmanlike conduct, the show management may suspend such exhibitor's rights to participate. The exhibitor's parent, leader, or other person will be barred from the show grounds for unsportsmanlike conduct or improper behavior. Adults will conduct themselves in a manner that reflects a positive model for 4-H youth.
  10. Excessive coaching of an exhibitor while at a 4-H event and/or class is strongly discouraged. If this is deemed inappropriate by judge and /or show committee the individual may be requested to leave the arena.
  11. Cruel or rough handling of horses will not be allowed at any show or event. A horse and exhibitor may be excused from the ring, show, or event for lack of control, cruelty, rough handling, or unsportsmanlike conduct. The show management or judge has the right to disqualify anyone mistreating an animal or demonstrating unsportsmanlike conduct.
  12. All exhibitors must have their horses under complete control at all times. The gate must be closed and the rider must be independently controlling the horse before starting the class. Riders will not be allowed to leave the ring until their horses are walking under control. Riders having difficulties in the ring and desiring to leave should request permission to be excused from the ring master or judge.
  13. Show management reserves the right to refuse an exhibitor entry into any class or event if they deem that entry unsafe for the exhibitor or other exhibitors or animals. All show officials have the authority and must dismiss from the ring any entry that is unruly or not in sufficient control for the safety of the handler or other exhibitors.
  14. Trainers and adults are not allowed to exercise, work out, or ride 4-H'ers' horses at 4-H shows.
  15. At county shows the posting of individual patterns may be done at the discretion of the judge, with the exception that Trail patterns must be posted at least one hour prior to the start of the class. 
  16. A fall of either horse or rider shall be cause for elimination from that class. A horse is considered to have fallen when its shoulder touches the ground. A rider is considered to have fallen when separated from his or her horse in such a way that a remount is required. In judged events (i.e. pleasure, horsemanship, etc.) a fall shall be considered in the time when the judge begins judging and is complete when the judge has marked his/her card. In game classes this shall be when the contestant has entered the course. The course is defined as from the time the timer starts running and continues until the timer stops.

Check-In

Horses may check in anytime between 5:00-8:00 p.m. on Tuesday, July 18 or 6:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. on Wednesday, July 19. All horses need to be in place by 8:00 p.m. Wednesday. 
Livestock or poultry known by the exhibitor to have an infectious, communicable disease, or have been exposed to such disease, or to be from a quarantined herd or flock, may not be entered in the fair.  All livestock will be inspected by the official veterinarian, or their representative, on the opening day of the fair and daily during the fair. The official veterinarian will order the immediate removal from the fair of any livestock with symptoms of infectious or communicable diseases. Warts, ringworm, and abscesses are considered communicable diseases. A statement from a veterinarian that an animal is being treated for these diseases is NOT acceptable.
Horse Check-In:All horse exhibits should arrive between 5:00 and 8:00 p.m.*. Tuesday, July 18 or between 6:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m.* on Wednesday, July 19.  Exhibitors should first unload their horses and stop at the Horse Check-in booth near the lower barn entrance (south barn) before proceeding to stalling.  Your horses and coggins will be checked, please have your paper form ready.  After stalling, exhibitors also need to be sure to check in at the announcer stand to drop any classes, sign up for volunteer shifts, check the horse achievement books, and pick up required paperwork.
All animals must have their stall cards on display throughout the fair, especially for herdsmanship judging. Make sure you have it displayed in a prominent location or ask for a new one if it gets lost or damaged.
*Please note that entries arriving late CANNOT be checked in and therefore will be sent home, so be sure you have checked in before 8:00 p.m., or call the office if you are running late due to extenuating circumstances.

Herdsmanship

Members are expected to do the work in giving the animals proper care, fitting the animal, and for meeting showing/stalling requirements. Members may arrange with other 4-H members to care for animals on show day, but the exhibitor retains responsibility. All members exhibiting animals are expected to keep their stock, pens, tack, and stalls in neat and clean condition, and inviting to the public at all times. Herdsmanship will be judged based on cleanliness of aisle, cleanliness of storage area, cleanliness of stalls, and appearance of animals. We encourage a team spirit in keeping the barns neat and clean. 4-H members are expected to do the work, with limited adult supervision. Clubs with parents working may be docked judging points. Herdsmanship judging takes place between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Thursday through Saturday, and from noon until 4 p.m. on Sunday. Special consideration will be given on show day. Scoring of clubs will be on the following criteria:Cleanliness of aisle                5Cleanliness of storage area 5Cleanliness of stalls               5Appearance of animals        5   

Attire

  1. All 4-H’ers participating in any 4-H sponsored mounted activity are required to wear ASTM/SEI approved protective headgear, properly worn and fastened. Failure to do so results in disqualification. Helmet not properly fastened, resulting in helmet sliding back on neck, sliding off the head, or falling to the ground, will result in disqualification. This includes ALL 4-H mounted exhibitors, at any time, while on the show grounds. 
  2. Riders must wear a boot with a heel, but can wear other footwear as in the case of physical disability.
  3. Dress Code Will Be Enforced. The dress code for the 4-H show will follow the State guidelines of the MN 4-H Horse Program Rule Book. 
  4. Riding exhibitors must wear double exhibitor numbers, one on each side of the saddle pad, with the exception of Saddle Seat riders who must wear the number on their backs. If the exhibitor has the wrong number on, OR fails to properly display the numbers, the exhibitor is disqualified from that class.
A * next to the code indicates a state horse show points eligible class.

Please see State 4-H Rulebook here for descriptions of all classes and show requirements. 

 Classes containing 20 exhibitors or more, may be split.  If a class contains 5 exhibitors or less, it may be combined with either the class older or younger, whichever has the fewest entrants.  Walk/trot classes are offered for less experienced riders (all ages are eligible). A member can register for either the applicable grade class or walk/trot. Walk/trot and pleasure training classes are not eligible for State Show points or overall high-point horse award. 
Games Showmanship is not an eligible class for State Trip calculations. If you receive a blue ribbon in this class at County Fair and are awarded a State Fair trip, you may choose to show in either English Showmanship or Western Showmanship. Games Showmanship is eligible for and counts towards High Point Awards.

Horse Show Tentative Order 

(Click here for detailed Horse Show Schedule)


Wednesday, 9:00 AMAchievement Level 6Training Program All levelsPleasure Egg & SpoonGames Egg & SpoonDriving - Horse or PonyTrail Class
Thursday, 8:00 AMPole WeavingKey RaceBarrelsJumping Figure 8 Thursday, 7:00 PMCloverbud BarrelsCloverbud HorsemanshipCloverbud Showmanship
Friday, 8:00 AMHalter ClassesWestern Showmanship at HalterEnglish Showmanship at HalterGames Showmanship at HalterRanch PleasureWestern PleasureWestern Bridle PathWestern HorsemanshipEnglish PleasureEnglish Equitation   All horse divisions will be broken down into the following classes.(The show will also follow this order for grade classes except for trail which will be reversed):      * Grades 12-13      * Grades 10-11      * Grades 8-9      * Grades 6-7     Grades 5th and under      These additional classes are also available in certain divisions:   Walk/Trot (available only in divisions with a * following the division name)Pleasure Training (available in all pleasure classes)      *Pony (56” & under), 6th grade & over (Western Pleasure Only)Pony (56” & under), 5th grade and under (Western Pleasure Only)

Classes

English Pleasure Classes

      * Showmanship at Halter, English      * English Equitation, Hunt & Saddle Seat combined*      * English Pleasure, Hunt & Saddle Seat combined* 

Western Performance Classes

Choose between Western Pleasure and Western Pleasure - Pleasure Type (cannot enter both). If you have a stock type horse, you must register for Western Pleasure. If you have a pleasure type horse (Morgan, Arabian type, Saddlebred, etc.) you must register for Western Pleasure - Pleasure Type.
      * Showmanship at Halter, Western      * Western Horsemanship*      * Western Pleasure* - Must be stock-type horse (exception ponies), may not be entered in Western Bridle Path Pleasure.      * Western Pleasurer - Pleasure Type* - Must be pleasure type horse (Morgan, Arabian, Arabian Type, Saddlebred, Etc.) may not be entered in Western Pleasure.       * Ranch Pleasure*

Halter

Halter Weanlings, all breeds combinedHalter Yearlings, all breeds combinedHalter Two Year Olds, all breeds combinedHalter Brood Mares (mare with colt at side) all breeds combined

Game Classes

   * Pole Weaving         * Jumping Figure 8   * Key Race   * Barrel Race  Games Showmanship at Halter

Egg & Spoon

Egg & Spoon - Games HorseEgg & Spoon - Pleasure HorseEgg & Spoon - Training Horse 

Trail Classes 

  * Trail - Games Horse (English or Western attire may be used)  * Trail - Pleasure Horse  * Trail - Training Games Horse  * Trail – Training Pleasure Horse 
***New this year: Trail Class – Games gaming tack may be used, so this class will NOT be state trip eligible

Driving

Driving - Exhibitors 13 & under must be accompanied by an experienced adult horse person. Helmets are required.

Horse Achievement and Training

Horse Achievement Level 6 and Horse Training will be judged at the Fair.  Bring your records in these project phases to the fair, and then demonstrate to the judge your ability to do the skills in your skill level.  Please see the 4-H Horse Program Rule Book for specific procedures and program guidelines online here or contact the Extension Office to obtain a copy. These classes have separate State Horse Show trips.

*Horse Training - Steps 1-6

The MN 4-H Horse Training Program has been designed to challenge and help you train your untrained horse using a step-by-step process. You will notice that each step builds on the previous one. As you work through the steps to become more proficient at training horses, you will develop skills that will be of use to you later in your life. The required booklet must be brought with to judging and can be downloaded on the state website here

*Horse Achievement Program - Level 6

The Member Achievement program has been designed to help youth develop knowledge and understanding necessary for proper care, maintenance, and handling of horses (your horse can be trained or untrained). The booklet to use for this program and more information can be found here.  A level 6 achievement practice run is available at the county fair to any member who has completed Levels 1 through 5 of the Achievement program book that would like to checked for readiness for State Horse.  There is no state horse show quota limit for Level 6 Achievement Program. It is open to anyone who has completed steps 1-5 of the Achievement Program.

See also under static exhibits:  Horse Related

Horse-related is a part of the Horse Project where you create an exhibit that is related to horses. You will learn about horses and will have the opportunity to create an exhibit to demonstrate what you have learned.  Examples: equipment you use or a report or a display on research you have done.

WRIGHT COUNTY HORSE SHOW GENERAL RULES

*Applies to all other horse project activities.

 

1.   * Helmet Policy. All 4-Hers participating in a 4-H sponsored mounted activity are required to wear properly fastened ASTM/SEI approved protective headgear.

 

2.   Dress Code will be enforced. The dress code for the 4-H show will follow the State guidelines of the MN 4-H Horse Program Rule Book. Belts are optional. 

 

3.   * Boots are a safety requirement and must be worn at all times when walking or riding your horse including parents and volunteers.

4.   Riding exhibitors must wear double exhibitor numbers, one on each side of the saddle pad, with the exception of Saddle Seat riders who must wear the number on their backs. If the exhibitor has the wrong number on OR fails to properly display the numbers, the exhibitor is disqualified from that class.

 

5.   The exhibitor is encouraged to ID (Form HIDA) multiple horses as a project horse as potential backups in the event that a horse is unable to participate.

 

6.   * A current, negative Coggins test for EIA is required to show at the fair. Remember to bring the original Coggins paper with you when you check in at the fair.

 

7.   Members must own or lease the mare or gelding exhibited.

 

8.   * Only mares, fillies, geldings or weanling colts will be allowed to show at the County Fair. No stallions.

 

9.   The exhibitor may show up to two (2) horses at the Wright County Fair plus a training horse for a potential total of three (3) horses**. Example: 1 performance horse, 1 game horse, 1 training project horse.

 

10.  You may only ride 1 horse per class with four exceptions: 

11.  * Trainers and adults are not allowed to exercise, work out, or ride 4-Her’s horses at 4-H events.

        12.  Class Size Management for Performance and Games

   If the class is 20 exhibitors or more, we reserve the right to split grades. If the class is 5 exhibitors or less, we reserve the right to combine with either the class older or younger, whichever has the fewest entrants.

   Exhibitors will enter classes by the following class descriptions:

 

Completed Grade 5 and younger     Jr. Showmanship Championship – Novice through Grade 7

Completed Grades 6 and 7              Sr. Showmanship Championship – Grades 8 through 13

Completed Grades 8 and 9

Completed Grades 10 and 11

Completed Grades 12 and 13

13.  If entering in Western Performance classes, you must choose between Western Pleasure and Western Pleasure - Pleasure Type OR Ranch Pleasure. Please refer to the State 4-H Rule Book for class specifications.

14.  For Games there is a 3 second penalty for each obstacle knocked down. For all other rules refer to the Minnesota 4-H Horse Program Rule Book.

15.  The Wright County Fair 4-H Horse Show follows the current MN 4-H Horse Program Rule Book.

16.  *Remember you are a 4-H exhibitor at all 4-H events and must abide by all 4-H rules. 

17.  If not addressed directly in the MN 4-H Program Rule Book, a decision will be made by the Horse PDC Leadership in cooperation with the 4-H Program Coordinator and show judge. If necessary, the State Horse Liaison will be contacted to determine an appropriate course of action.

State 4-H Horse Show Trip Selection Process


Point System

First place 10 points

Second place 9 points

Third place 8 points 

Continue through 10 places for point assignments.

No red ribbons earn points

Points are earned for horse and rider combination.

Trail has its own quota. Trail quota participation must come from state horse show trip winners.


Tie Breakers

State Horse Show Eligibility

4-H’ers must meet the following requirements to earn a State Horse Show trip:
  • Completed sixth grade
  • Enrolled as 4-H member by May 15
  • Registered for County Fair by June 9th on the FairEntry website.
  • Horse ID's completed by May 15 (see http://z.umn.edu/animalidinfo for more information)
  • Current Coggins paperwork
  • Participation in Wright County 4-H Food Stand is required to receive a 4-H scholarship to cover a portion of registration fees. 

State Horse show lineups will be posted in the 4-H exhibit building on 
If a winning 4-H’er does not meet these requirements, their trip will be awarded to the next ranking eligible member. 
All exhibitors who accept State Fair trips should pick up an information packet and registration form at the 4-H Desk and submit at or before the State Horse Show Exhibitor's Meeting  Wednesday July 26 at 6:30 PM at the Public Works Building.

High Point System

Western Performance

English Performance

Games

Walk Trot

Overall

 

The above High Point awards are non-age-specific and are based on horse/rider combination.  In addition, within each individual age group, the Overall High Point earner and reserve will be recognized. See the Class Management section above for the age divisions.  Each High Point will be given the highest award they earn, but only one High Point award per person per year.

PROTEST

If a protest should arise (other than a judge’s decision), contact a member of the Horse Project Leadership Team. If protest is not resolved, a written copy must be filed with the Extension Office within 24 hours of the incident. This should include all information regarding protest, signed by protestor and accompanied by a $25.00 check payable to: Wright County Extension. Protest must include names of parties involved and any other pertinent information. If the protest is ruled in favor of the filer, the fee will be returned.

2023 show-premium-handbook.pdf
member packet.pdf