Appaloosa Horse Club (ApHC) is proud to have the Cowboy
Mounted Shooting Association Inc. (CMSA) be a part of the 61st
National Appaloosa Show & 2008 World Championship Appaloosa Youth Show at
the Mississippi State Fairgrounds in Jackson, Miss. Participants of the CMSA
will showcase their talents in this inaugural Appaloosa competition Friday, June
27, offering $5,000 in added payouts.
Cowboy
Mounted Shooting is one of the nation’s fastest growing equestrian sports, and
has been described as “equestrian NASCAR”. Contestants mount their colorful
Appaloosas and compete in this fast-action timed event using two .45 caliber
single action revolvers, each loaded with five rounds of specially prepared
blank ammunition.
Courses of fire are set in a variety of patterns. The first
half (five targets) of a course of fire will vary with each go and requires the
Appaloosa and rider to stop, turn, change leads and accelerate rapidly. The
second half (five targets), called the "run down," is a straight course with
targets set at 36-foot intervals.
Typically, a competitor crosses the timing beam at a full
gallop and engages the first pattern of five targets. After a shooter fires the
fifth shot, he or she returns the empty revolver to a holster—while turning
around a barrel and then racing to the far end of the arena—and draws the second
revolver. At the far end, Appaloosa and rider turn another barrel and then
engage the five remaining targets of the run down at full
speed.
Scoring is based on the elapsed time, plus a five second
penalty for each target missed or barrel knocked over. An average course of fire
normally takes a contestant between 15 and 25 seconds to
complete.
Four
divisions are available for competition—Non-Pro Men (levels 1-2), Non-Pro Women
(1-2), Pro Men (3-6) and Pro Women (3-6).
Elimination classes begin at noon Friday, June 27 at the
Kirk
Fordice Equine Center. There is a $75 entry fee with 100%
payback.
The
top riders will compete in the finals Friday evening, June 27 at the Mississippi
Coliseum. The finals offer $1,200 in each division; first place will receive
$720, second place will receive $480, third place will receive a saddle pad and
fourth place will receive a headstall both donated by The Horse Teacher, Joestes
Wyatt.
Participants also have a chance to win $200 from the Rifle
Jackpot Friday night.
The CMSA was created to
develop the rules and guidelines for the equestrian sport of Cowboy Mounted
Shooting in 1992. The CMSA now
annually hosts four major championship competitions, including the Jeffers
National Championship in Tunica, Miss., the
Sundowner EUSC in Murfreesboro, Tenn., the Ruger WUSC in Guthrie, Okla. and the
World Championship in Las
Vegas. Individual CMSA clubs across the country host
hundreds of events, much like the performance at the National Appaloosa Show, so
competitors may accrue points at these events toward qualifying to compete at
the World Championship.
The
Appaloosa Horse Club would like to invite everyone to experience this exciting
sport at the 61st National Appaloosa Show & 2008 World
Championship Appaloosa Youth Show, which will be held June 23-July 5, at the
Mississippi State Fairgrounds in Jackson, Miss. Once you are there for Cowboy
Mounted Shooting, don’t miss the gravity-defying performance of the Riata Ranch
Cowboy Girls or deals at the Moonlight Madness event at the Cowboy Way Trading
Post.
For
more information about this exciting event, contact Diana Olson at (520)
661-6464 or olsondm@us.ibm.com.
To
learn about the Appaloosa Horse Club and its events, visit www.appaloosa.com.
The Appaloosa
Horse Club (ApHC) was established in 1938, with a mission of preserving,
promoting and enhancing the Appaloosa breed. The ApHC has since registered more
than 670,000 Appaloosas, which are known for their distinctive color,
intelligence and even temperament. True to their reputation as an extremely
versatile breed, Appaloosas can be found in nearly every discipline, including
racing, endurance riding or serving as reliable family horses. The international
breed registry is headquartered in Moscow, Idaho; the heart of the Palouse
region, the Appaloosa breed’s namesake and point of origin.