WORKING -- Tiffany Knight
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-- Story by Alex Coolman; photo by Greg Fry
SHE IS
Keeping the horses on track
THE MAGIC OF HORSES
Tiffany Knight remembers what it was like when she was a 13-year-old
girl, falling in love with horses.
“They were just so big, but they seemed so gentle,” she said.
Today, the 33-year-old Knight works as a instructor of hunter and
jumper horses at South West Show Jumping, which maintains stables at the
Orange County Fairgrounds. She trains horses to behave properly and she
teaches their owners to ride them with grace.
The same things still amaze her about horses, she said. They’re
immense creatures, but when they’re being ridden by somebody who knows
what they’re doing, they can do extraordinary things.
AN ODD PROFESSION
Becoming an instructor isn’t always the easiest choice in the world to
make.
Knight said she’s seen a lot of stables that maintain relatively poor
horses, and the instructors who end up working with the beasts get stuck
dealing with the most unpleasant aspects of the horse trade: dirty
stables, sick animals, impatient clients.
But that hasn’t stopped Knight. She’s stuck with the profession, and
considers herself lucky to work at South West, where the owner cares
about keeping the quality high.
THAT FEELING OF FLIGHT
When a horse jumps, Knight said, it’s an extraordinary experience for
the rider.
“You have to be very still,” she said. “If you do anything erratic, it
goes against the flow of the horse.”
The whole point is to channel the energy, to put the animal in the
position where it can do easily what it is physically capable of doing.
“It’s kind of a phenomenal feeling,” Knight said. “It’s what makes you
keep coming for more.”
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