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ILPH-MI is in the building phase of a Quadrille Team and a Tent Pegging Team, these teams will compete at as many of the Glass-Ed shows, military horse shows and dressage shows and other events.

Quadrille Defined:

Quadrille is most simply defined as team riding. The most famous, readily identifiable quadrilles are those of the Spanish Riding School, the Cadre Noir and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

Although quadrille as an equestrian pageant has been performed since the Baroque period, only in the last decade has it become a competitive sport in this country. Competitive teams of four riders perform both compulsory and musical freestyle routines.

Quadrille offers equestrian education in riding, training, and rider/horse communication in a group atmosphere of teamwork and camaraderie. It's a great way to get green riders and horses used to competing without a lot of pressure. And, it's fun!

In a quadrille competition the main criteria is the team's performance as a cohesive group. Compulsory routines test the team's ability to perform required movements according to acceptable standards. In the exciting Freestyle, the routines are more complex, creating a "kaleidoscope effect" as horses interweave choreography and music in original patterns.

Tent Pegging Defined:

Tent-pegging is one of the most popular equestrian sports and was particularly popular in the Indian sub-continent till the post war period. Although there is difference of opinion as to how and where it started, it is almost certain that tent-pegging is a sport of Asian Origin. One source dates it back to the invasion of India by Alexander the Great in 326 B.C. which lends credence to the belief that the sport originated in the North Western province of India and Afghanistan through where Alexander had entered India. The cavalry soldiers of Alexander were believed to have used tent-pegging as a battle tactics against the elephants in the army of the Indian King Porus, who fought bravely against the invaders, lost the battle, but by virtue of his heroic demeanor , charmed Alexander, who returned to Porus his kingdom and made him his friend. There is also a belief that the sport originated with the horse-mounted soldiers charging enemy camps at the crack of dawn removing the pegs which held the tents in place, with the tips of their sharp spears.

But most equestrian authorities are of the opinion that tent-pegging originated in India in the middle ages in the battle fields as a tactics used by the horsed cavalry against elephant mounted troops. The soldiers discovered that the best way to make the elephants ineffective was to attack them on their toe nails with sharp spears from the back of the galloping horse. In order to perfect this technique, the cavalry started the practice of tent-pegging which eventually turned into the modern sport. Tent-pegging is now a popular equestrian sport in many countries around the world.

These days the rider uses either a lance or a sword and charges in a full gallop across the arena which is specified in the rules and attempts to pick up the wooden / card board pegs stuck into the ground. This can be done individually or in a team.

The sport got its first official recognition when the Olympic Council of Asia accepted Tent-pegging as an official event in the 1982 New Delhi Asian Games. Thereafter India as well as other countries have been hosting International Tent-pegging events regularly which has seen participation of countries across different continents.

The modern sport of Tent-pegging now comprises Normal events meant for championships and special events, the list of which is appended below.

Normal Competitions
Lance – Individual
Lance – Team
Sword- Individual
Sword- Team
Special Competitions
Lance and Sword- Paired
Indian File (Lance or Sword)
Gallows (rings) and Peg- Lance.
Lemon and pegs- Sword
Skill at Arms.

We are being assisted in our training for the Tent Pegging by the British Tent Pegging Association

Check back for more information

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