US Equestrian offices will be closed on Friday, March 29th, 2024 in observance of Good Friday.

Valerie Kanavy

Endurance

Posted: September 2017
Length: 00:00
  • Share:

Watch two-time World Champion endurance rider and Hall of Famer Valerie Kanavy give an overview of the sport of endurance

About This Video

Endurance offers the opportunity to spend all day with your horse on the trails, beyond the confines of a ring or indoor arena. For those who love it, it's an unparalleled riding experience that allows an equestrian to compete while connecting with nature and horse over a long span of time and distance, and many endurance horses can remain competitive for 10 to 15 years. Comparable to the human marathon, endurance riding features competitions over distances ranging from 25 miles to 100 miles in a single day. Competitions adhere to rigorous standards of equine welfare and feature veterinary examinations throughout the ride and after the race's finish. The horse and rider who cross the finish first and successfully pass the final veterinary exam are the winners. Kanavy discusses these veterinary exams in depth (including procedures for checking pulse rate, soundness, and more) and other precautions taken on behalf of horse welfare.

Key Principles:

  • The course
  • Course length
  • What to expect
  • Vet examination
  • Mandatory rest periods

About The Expert

Valerie Kanavy
Two-time endurance world champion

Valerie Kanavy is the 1994 and 1998 World Endurance gold medalist and 1996 World Endurance silver medalist, behind her gold medal-winning daughter Danielle. Kanavy also has six International Arabian Horse Association (now the Arabian Horse Association) 100-mile championships and four  100-mile reserve championships to her credit, among numerous other victories and honors.

She was the American Horse Shows Association (now the United States Equestrian Federation) Horseman of the Year in 1999 and has served as the U.S. Endurance Team's chef d'equipe for World Equestrian Games competition.

Kanavy was inducted into the American Endurance Ride Conference's Hall of Fame in 2004.