Horse Riding and Polo Lessons for beginners
Posted: Monday, July 02, 2007
by Darren Roberts
Summit Media
Experts say the benefits of
horseback riding include the obvious, of enjoyment as well as developing better
balance, coordination and the exercising of your brain. There are benefits also
of Polo as a sport in respect of team building and character building.
Taking Riding lessons from
an instructor with Polo experience and a school of horses rather than hopping
aboard your neighbour’s hardly trained 5-year-old nag gives you the twofold
benefits of a knowledgeable instructor and a highly experienced and well
trained horse with a good temperament that can tolerate added bouncing at
times.
The other benefits of
learning to ride a horse are that, it is a great activity for young and old
alike, and is also excellent for people with physical, cognitive or emotional
disabilities.
A quick crash course into Polo
You don't want to have a bad
experience, before you head out into the field you want to make sure that you
have control of your animal.
A lot of the gaining control
of your animal will come through experience and just gaining confidence, and
realising the horse will do what you tell it to do when you tell it to do it.
That is if you know what you're doing, and safety should always come first.
When equipped, each rider
has a long-handled mallet that they use to try and score a goal by hitting a
white wooden ball into the opposing teams’ goal. It is fast, furious and
exciting to behold, especially as the horses seem to come within inches of your
sideline lounge chair.
Polo is an incredibly fun
and exhilarating sport to watch and even more so to play. It is a game played
in seven-minute periods called chukkas, with six chukkas being the normal
length of play. There are four riders and their mounts on a team.
The Grounds and Field
On a full sized grass field,
each team has four people. The Polo grounds are 300 yards long, 160 yards wide
if boarded. Being boarded means the field has a 12-inch upright board bounding
the perimeter, which stops the ball rolling easily out of play.
If the ground is un-boarded,
it is 200 yards wide and marked with a white line.
The goal posts, which are
poisoned at each end, are measured to be 8 yards wide.
The duration of Play
A full Polo match is 8
chukkas, but often in club matches only 4 or 6 chukkas are played. Each chukka
is timed to last 7 minutes, then a bell is rung, but the game goes on until the
ball goes out of play, or for another 30 seconds when the bell is rung again,
the chukka ends where the ball is.
The clock is stopped between
the umpire blowing his whistle to stop the play, and the whistle to restart
play if a foul is committed or the ball goes out of play.
There are intervals of 3
minutes between each of the chukkas and 5 a minute half time. Ends are changed
at every goal scored - this has been found to be fairest when there is a wind.
White Rose Polo Club has
brought this article to you. White Rose Polo Club offers a variety of horse riding lessons
and Polo experiences.
Polo Days are excellent for corporate
days and corporate events.