Equestrian Hub Magazine November 2019

Page 38

YOUNG RIDER

A cut above Addison Dudley may only be 12 years old, but she has a maturity that goes well beyond her years, writes AMANDA MAC.

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n a western style cutting contest, horse and rider work together to cut out a cow from a small herd of cattle and then prevent it from

returning to the herd. This process is known as a ‘run’ – and it’s something that Addison Dudley, who hails from the Queensland town of Goondiwindi, is particularly good at. “In 2018 at the Victorian Futurity, I was Champion in the Junior Youth and got my very first buckle,” says the 12-year-old wunderkind. “I was shaking when the presentation was happening because I was so excited. I also won the Darling Downs Cutting Club Champion Champions Junior Youth.” So far, 2019 has also proved to be a very good year with Addison winning Reserve Champion at the Balonne River Cutting Club in the Junior Youth competition, Champion and Reserve Champion at the Northern Rivers Cutting Horse Club Junior Youth competition, and Reserve Champion at the Interschools Horse Extravaganza.

Top image: Addison and Superman, North Star Champions. Main image: Addison and Cherrys Duplicat at the Victorian Futurity with (L to R) owner Natasha Wrigley, mum Jackie Graham and little brother Aiden. (All images courtesy of Liz Speed Photography).

One of the advantages of western riding is that includes sports that can be enjoyed by the whole family – and the Dudleys are no exception. Both mum Jackie and stepdad Todd are well-known in the cutting world.

Addison’s riding career began with Comet the Shetland pony. “Mum first held me on a horse when I was two weeks old, but when I was three, some family friends gave me Comet. I was so excited,” she remembers.

Addison usually rides Superman, her 15-year-old bay Quarter Horse, but on other occasions she is not averse to ‘stealing’ her mum’s Quarter Horses. “I really like

She got into cutting because her parents always had cutting horses of their own. “I used to go and watch them compete, which was pretty cool. I think I like it so much

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Tapt Choice, who’s five years old, and One Stylish Turpentine, a nine-year-old bay,” she confesses.

HORSEVIBES MAGAZINE - NOVEMBER 2019

because it’s a great bonding experience with friends as well as with the horses,” she says. Addison, who starts high school next year, also enjoys boxing and swimming and rides as much as possible. “Because I go to school and do other sports as well, I can’t ride every day. But a week before I compete I practice really hard. Sometimes my mum or my stepdad Todd will try and help out by riding the horses before I get on them to settle them down,” she explains. Remarkably mature for her age, Addison already has a great take on life: “I want to


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Equestrian Hub Magazine November 2019 by equestrianhub.com.au - Issuu