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Training for
Competition
With advances in technology,
horse heart rate monitor are now starting to replace stethoscopes
in many stables, studs, farms and veterinary clinics.
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The latest POLAR
Horse Heart Rate monitors (HRM) are accurate and reliable, simple to
use and quick and easy to put on your horse. In addition, there is no
'hard wire' connection between you and the horse transmitter allowing
you freedom of movement.
The HRM allows you to see the immediate heart
rate of your horse and eliminates 'human error' that can occur with
'counting the heart beats for 15 seconds'. So the technology now exists
to give you an accurate and reliable reading of your horse's heart rate
- either at rest, during exercise or during recovery. But why should you
have a HRM - what essential information will it provide you? What are
some of the ways you can use heart rate in the day-to-day management of
your horse(s)?
Below are 10 practical uses of a
HRM. |
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No. 1:
Monitoring Vital Signs
Abnormal readings of your horse's resting, exercise or recovery heart
rate (often known as 'Vital Signs') can alert you to immediate or
impending problems such as injury, illness or fatigue. Monitoring these
heart rates, and comparing them to values that you consider normal,
gives you a way to communicate with your horse and make management
decisions before any abnormal condition worsens.
In some equine disciplines (e.g., endurance riding), recovery heart rate
plays an important role in deciding whether the horse can continue in
competition. Recovery heart rate can now be measured quickly and
accurately.

Crew member checking Heart Rate
with a Polar
Healthcheck at Dubai Endurance World Championships 2005
No. 2:
Know How Hard Your Horse is Working
The usefulness of continuously seeing your horse's exercise, training or
competition heart rate comes from the knowledge there is a linear
relationship between heart rate and how hard your horse is working. In
general terms, the higher its heart rate the harder it is working. By
'heart rate auditing' each of your different training sessions you will
soon (1) know exactly how much stress each particular session imposes
and (2) exactly how each individual horse handles the session. Any
change from normality is a possible warning sign that all may be not
well. Remember, intensity or how hard your horse is working is the most
important ingredient in any training program. Working too hard for too
long invites injury and fatigue. Working at too low an intensity
provides little training benefit. In endurance riding, overtaxing your
horse during competition can lead to poor recovery and elimination from
the event.
No. 3:
Measure Your Horse's Improved Fitness
Improvements in your horse's fitness can be detected by its exercise and
recovery heart rates. Equine training studies have consistently shown an
increase in a horse's fitness is associated with a reduction in heart
rate at a given running speed. The V200 field test is often used to
identify fitness changes with training. In addition, increased fitness
is reflected in a more rapid decline in heart rate after the completion
of exercise.
No. 4:
Monitor Your Horse's Recovery During Interval Training
Many owners and trainers are now using interval training to improve
their horse's fitness. Two important components of interval training are
(1) the intensity (or hardness) of the interval and (2) the recovery
period between each interval. Recovery periods of 3-5 minutes are often
used with a suggestion the horse's heart rate should be below 100 bpm by
the end of the recovery period. A heart rate higher than this may
suggest your program is too hard, your horse needs more recovery time or
he or she has just had enough for the day.
No. 5:
Check How Well Your Horse Has Traveled
Your horse's heart rate is very responsive to physical and emotional
stress. Measuring and recording your horse's 'air travel' or 'floating'
heart rate can give you excellent information on how well your horse
has traveled.
No. 6:
What Gets Measured is What Gets Done!
Many owners and trainers don't do their own riding or driving. So how do
they know what actually occurred during the training session? With an
'on board' heart rate monitor you can give specific instructions to what
you want achieved in the training session: "10 minute warm-up at
120-130 bpm, 15 minutes between 140- 150 bpm and 10 minute warm-down at
a heart rate of less than 120 bpm". With the POLAR HHRM you can
even record this information in memory and check to see what was
actually done after the session has been completed.

The above graphic shows an
endurance training exercise for a jumping horse. The goal was to keep
the Heart Rate between 120 and 140 beats per minute. We see a warmup
phase, then 10 minutes exercise,
3 minute pause, 7 minutes exercise and
cool down.
Click on the image to see the full size graph.
No. 7:
Cross - Training
Many owners and trainers now incorporate swimming in their horse's
exercise program. This is because swimming is useful for keeping joints moving
and muscles toned as well as conditioning the cardiovascular and
respiratory (heart and lung) systems. But how hard is your horse working
when it swims? Some horses are good swimmers, some are poor, while
others are just plain lazy when in the water. Using the waterproof POLAR
HHRM, you now have a measure of exactly 'how hard' your horse is working
during its swimming session.
No. 8:
See How Your Horse Responds to New Equipment, Skills, Trails, Terrain
When your horse is exposed to new riding terrain, new rider, new
equipment, or new skill, etc., its heart rate may be abnormally high. As the horse
adapts and becomes more relaxed and/or efficient, its heart rate
should return to its original lower level. In conjunction with your
horsemanship, you now have a measure of how your horse is coping with
any change to a normal routine.
No. 9:
Increase Your Professionalism
Whether you are the owner and trainer or just the trainer, the horse is
your most important asset. By using a heart rate monitor to help your
daily management and decision making, not only will you be increasing
your knowledge on each individual horse but also be seen as a more
professional horse person. You will be seen as a person who is looking
for new initiatives and someone who is using the latest technology to
improve the horse's general health, training and day-to-day management.
No. 10:
Give Yourself an Edge Over The Opposition
Additional information on how your horse responds to training,
competition, and travel, etc. may give you that small edge over the
opposition. Add this to point No. 8 above and you will soon be
recognized as a responsible, accountable and professional horseperson.
If your not using a HHRM, the chances are your opposition are or
certainly will be in the near future.
Mr. Neil Craig, Performance
Matters Pty Ltd., Horse Heart Monitors USA
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