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The sport of endurance riding in Australia
includes training style rides from as little as 20km up to around 50km. Endurance rides start at 80km in one day up to 160km in one day. There are also marathon rides up to 400km or more over several days.
Below
is a brief history of the Tom Quilty Gold Cup ride which is Australia's
National Championship ride. This event was in Queensland in June
2000
SOME REFLECTIONS on the QUILTY.
by Erica Williams
Reports began to reach Australia through horse magazines
of a long distance competitive horse ride in the United States of America.
It was called the Tevis Cup and began at Tahoe in Nevada and crossed through
the Sierras for 100 miles to Auburn in California. Riders rode for the
satisfaction of proving it could be done in twenty-four hours or less
and so earned themselves a handsome silver Tevis belt buckle. A few of
us felt that anything the Americans could do, we should be able to do
also, and so the idea was born to have our own 100 mile ride in one day
in Australia.
The crusade was taken up by R.M.Williams, Editor of Hoofs
and Horns, a pioneer horse magazine in this country. It had a wide circulation
and printed stories and reports of the Tevis Cup, so enthusiasm for the
concept was kindled. Through the medium of Hoofs and Horns, an invitation
was extended to all interested persons to attend a meeting at the Australia
Hotel, Sydney on Tuesday 5th April, 1966 at 7 p.m. (during
Sydney Royal Show week) to discuss the possibility of organising a long
distance competitive ride somewhere in Australia.
Twenty-three people attended to hear two submissions;
one from the Mallee district of Victoria and one from the Hawkesbury district,
just west of Sydney, New South Wales. It is history now that the Sydney
offer was accepted due to its central location for most States, the veterinary
support from the University of Sydney’s Rural Veterinary Centre,
Camden, and the promise of interesting country to ride through. A steering
committee was formed to organise a 100 mile ride, modelled on the Tevis
Cup ride in the U.S.A., which had been running successfully for a few
years.
If we had known how difficult it was to be, we might not
have started. Due to enthusiasm, hard work and determination, the first
Quilty happened! We had tremendous support from Mr. Turnbull, president
of the local Shire of Colo and his assistant Shire engineer Charles (Chuck)
Stephens, Richmond Shire, Professor David Hutchins from the University
of Sydney and Mr. Charley, a prominent citizen. Ron and Val Males of Ralvon
Arab Stud, Windsor, found the track and pressganged their many friends
into assisting with the numerous tasks. Erica Williams was the secretary
who handled the paper work from afar (Eidsvold, Queensland).
Because of adverse, mis-informed newspaper articles in
the Sydney daily press in the lead up to this first ride, the Royal Society
for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals of N.S.W. was determined to prevent
the ride from happening. The R.S.P.C.A. was defeated in their efforts
essentially because of the strong support from Professor David Hutchins.
His professional standing was so high that the R.S.P.C.A. could not engage
a veterinarian who would oppose him… The role of the R.S.P.C.A. in
those early years re-inforced our conviction that very strict veterinary
standards must govern endurance riding in Australia. Professor Hutchins
based the veterinary standards which he formulated for the Quilty on those
used by the Tevis Cup plus the results of some practical work done by
two of his final year students at Rockybar, Eidsvold, Queensland. Horses
in training for the first ride plus some station working horses were ridden
over set distances and times. These Australian results confirmed the American
figures of the time. Since then, with information gained over many endurance
rides, the veterinary criteria have been made much stricter in the interest
of the welfare of our horses.
The first Quilty was declared a success by the riders
and on the day after the ride, plans were made to form an Australian Endurance
Riders Association, to formulate riding rules, adopt veterinary standards
as advised by David Hutchins and his assistant Bob Rawlinson and adopt
a constitution. This all became fact at the time of the second Quilty
in 1967. Our first president was Gabriel Stecher of Victoria, the famous
bareback winner of the first Quilty in 1966. The first secretary was Erica
Williams of Queensland, and Ron and Val Males formed a sub- committee
to attend to the details of running the next Quilty in 1968. No mean task!
The seeds had been sown, and this infant sport took several
years for the numbers of competitors to grow. Shorter fifty mile rides
began in all the States and endurance rides began to be accepted as part
of the horse scene. Hoofs and Horns magazine continued to give endurance
lots of coverage with stories, photos and printed the T.P.R. charts of
all the early Quilty Rides.
The original plan was for the riders to compete for a
prize of $1,000. It was thought that
this incentive was needed to encourage riders to train
and travel their horses to Richmond, N.S.W. Professor Hutchins stated
that he would not supervise the ride if prize money was awarded. So riders
rode for their own personal satisfaction and a trophy of a silver buckle,
‘the Quilty buckle’, now so proudly worn by riders from all
over Australia and overseas. The $1,000 donated by Tom Quilty, a Kimberley
cattleman and a great horseman, was used to make a Gold Cup, now known
as the Tom Quilty Gold Cup. It is a perpetual trophy, and the ride was
named the Tom Quilty 100 Mile Endurance Ride in his honour. It has become
our Australian National Championship ride.
It is interesting to reflect on where these first endurance
riders came from. They had little information to help them in this special
field of horsemanship. It was a case of learning by trial and error and
the most successful drew on their experience of riding on large stations,
droving and commonsense. Electrolytes for horses were unknown and strapping
techniques had to be developed.
In 1966, of the twenty-six riders who started, six were
from Victoria, four from Queensland, one from U.S.A.(Q’ld horse)
and fifteen were from New South Wales. In 1967, of the twenty-four riders
who started, two were from Victoria, two from South Australia, one from
Tasmania, seven from Queensland and twelve from New South Wales. In 1968
of the sixteen riders who started, two were from Victoria, two from South
Australia, three from Queensland and nine from New South Wales. In 1969,
of the thirty-five who started, four were from Victoria, one from South
Australia, three from Queensland, four from U.S.A. (one N.S.W. horse and
three Q’ld horses) and twenty three from New South Wales.
So it can be seen that the Quilty has always been a National
endurance ride that had its beginnings in the Hawkesbury district of N.S.W.,
because it was considered to be the most central venue for riders from
all States to travel to. Two women from West Australia even travelled
to it in the early years. N.S.W. always had the advantage of numbers because
they had the least distance to travel, some only a few miles.
In 1986, a referendum of all endurance riders in Australia
resulted in the decision to move the Quilty from State to State in rotation.
The numbers of riders increased dramatically as riders who couldn’t
afford to travel long distances to the Quilty in New South Wales now had
the opportunity to compete in the Quilty in their home State. It is an
enormous task for each State committee to run the Quilty for the Australian
Endurance Riders Association, but this only comes around every sixth year.
2000 is Queensland’s turn and in June, Boonah will be the magnet
for all serious endurance riders striving to either win or complete.
Due to the strong foundations laid by the early veterinarians
and riders of the veterinary standards and the riding rules and the continual
strengthening of these by the Australian Endurance Riders Association,
our sport is proudly taking its place among other equestrian disciplines.
Australian horses and riders are able to compete and win at the International
level and Australian endurance horses are in demand overseas. Perhaps
one day an Australian endurance team will compete at Olympic level!
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