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Encyclopedia Dubuque

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Affiliated with the Local History Network of the State Historical Society of Iowa, and the Iowa Museum Association.




Category:Athletics--Hobby Horse Riding

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HOBBY HORSE RIDING. While considered a new sport by some in the United States, hobby horse riding has an international following. Hobby horses may be constructed in several different ways. The types most frequently found in the United Kingdom have been categorized as follows:

  • Tourney horses are meant to look like a person riding a small horse that is wearing a long cloth coat. A circular or oval frame is suspended around their waist, or chest, with a skirt draped over it hanging down to the ground. The frame has a carved wooden head, often with snapping jaws (operated by pulling a string) attached to it at one end, and a tail at the other. The "rider" may wear a cape or other flowing costume to help cover the frame. In the most elaborate versions, fake legs, meant to be those of the rider, hang down the sides of the skirt, though this seems to be a fairly recent development.
  • Sieve horses are a simpler version of the tourney horse. Known only in Lincolnshire, they are made from a farm sieve frame, with head and tail attached, suspended from the performer's shoulders. The performer wears a horse blanket includes a headpiece with holes for the eyes and ears that covers them and the sieve.
  • Mast horses are meant to represent the horse itself. They have a head made of wood, or sometimes an actual horse's skull is used; it usually has hinged jaws that can be made to snap. The head is attached to a stick about 1 m (3 ft) long. The person acting the creature is covered by a cloth attached to the back of its head. When the bends over forwards or crouches, he or she holds the head in front of their own and rests the other end of the stick on the ground. A tail may be attached to the back of the cloth.

Not all hobby horses fit into these categories. The famous May Day horses at Padstow and Minehead are large constructions, suspended at shoulder level, with only the performer's head emerging; they wear tall, pointed hats and their faces are masked. The Padstow horses have circular frames, with fairly small, snapping-jawed heads on long, straight necks. Minehead horses are more boat-shaped, with pointed ends and, since about 1880, have had no heads, though they have long, trailing tails, about 2.2 m (7 ft) long.

In the South of France, in Belgium (the Ommegang de Termonde) and elsewhere, large hobby horses are carried by multiple performers; their hollow frameworks are constructed in various ways.

In Indonesia, flat silhouettes of horses are suspended between the dancers' legs. (1)

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Source:

"Hobby Horse" Wikipedia. Online: https://www.encyclopediadubuque.org/index.php?title=Category:Athletics--Hobby_Horse_Riding&action=edit&redlink=1

In Dubuque, the only known practitioner of the sport is Gwen Maiers.

Pages in category "Athletics--Hobby Horse Riding"

This category contains only the following page.