TheNewTopical.com - current events, politics, culture, ethics, economics discussion forum  

Go Back   TheNewTopical.com - current events, politics, culture, ethics, economics discussion forum » Main Forum » Culture

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)  
Old 19-02-10, 07:48 PM
Francois Cellier's Avatar
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: 3rd planet of Sol
Posts: 2,101
Default Galloping in a winter wonderland

From SwissInfo

Galloping in a winter wonderland

Simon Bradley in St Moritz
swissinfo.ch
Feb 19, 2010 - 14:14


Panamanian jockey Eduardo Pedroza (red) on his way to victory in the first race of the 2010 White Turf (Keystone)



Thoroughbreds thunder past kicking up clouds of ice from the manicured frozen racetrack. A gemstone’s throw away, jet-setters in ankle-length fur coats sip champagne.

This is the 103-year-old White Turf horse race meeting on St Moritz’s snow-covered lake, which reaches a climax on February 21. Some 30,000 visitors – race fans, holidaymakers and socialites – gather every year from home and abroad.

The White Turf is the most important event on the Swiss racing calendar, with trotting, flat racing and skijöring races – skiers pulled behind rider-less horses – held on courses up to 2.7 kilometres.

Surrounded by the spectacular snow-capped Engadine mountains, the exclusive event held at an altitude of 1,800m on three consecutive Sundays attracts international jockeys from all over Europe looking to win a share of the SFr400,000 ($370,300) prize money.

“It’s a little more attractive than standing at Lingfield racecourse [in Britain] on a rainy Tuesday night,” laughed Barbara Keller, who worked for ten years on the White Turf board.

Keller felt White Turf had secured its place on the international racing calendar, growing stronger over recent years, pulling in much better quality racehorses from Ireland, England, France, Italy and Germany.

“And lots of international racing people who might not have a horse running also come down to meet and exchange ideas,” she said.

Christian von der Recke, a champion trainer from Baden Baden in Germany who races all over Europe, agreed that the event was very special.

“You can have a cracking time,” he said.


Not cruel

Von der Recke dispelled the idea that racing on packed snow was a cruel or dangerous pursuit for horses.

“The main problems are that it’s high and the temperatures can get very cold,” he said. “When we went into the stables this morning, it was minus 20. Some horses don’t like it that cold. And obviously there are problems breathing up here.”

“You can never tell beforehand which horse likes it up here and which doesn’t. You can only bring them here. They are like humans: some sleep well and others have bad nights.”

Horses used to wear purpose-built steel shoes which were very heavy, but now use lighter plates with spikes on the side and front.


Strong horses

“But they don’t hurt the horse,” said Swiss jockey Miguel Lopez, who won the Grand Prix Prestige on February 14. “It’s a fast ground, the snow flies around your head. You need strong horses.”

Jockeys wear ski goggles and plastic motocross face masks as protection on the icy track.
Skijöring, which is unique to St Moritz, is much more hazardous for the rider than the horse. A skier is pulled at speeds of up to 60km/h across the snow.

“The first curve is quite dangerous, since it’s narrow and the horses could step on your skis,” said Swiss racer Franco Moro. “You have to watch out and make your space by pushing the horses away. Hopefully you get through. If not, the horse will continue on its own.”


Difficult form

On race day hundreds of four-wheel drives are parked on the lake, where the ice is reckoned to be 70cm thick, alongside 80 sumptuous marquees serving VIPs and packed stands for 3,000 people.

“All together that’s 3,500 tons on the frozen lake. But according to physics there’s absolutely no risk,” said White Turf director Rudolf Fopp.

Like every race course, visitors to the White Turf also like to have a flutter. But betting on races here is much less scientific than elsewhere, said von der Recke.

“For any other track in the world you can browse the internet by form, and you’ll see how well your horse does under a certain condition. But White Turf always has different conditions. That’s what makes it so fantastic,” he said.

Nicola Rubino, who was visiting with his girlfriend and friends from Milan, agreed that choosing a horse was more like potluck.

“We just choose the name we prefer,” he laughed.


People watching

The organisers estimate that around half of the visitors to the White Turf come for the racing. The rest are here to sample the oysters and champagne, listen to the jazz music, show off their short-legged Chihuahua with its designer Montcler jacket, or just to people watch.

“We come for the atmosphere. To have a drink and something to eat – and it’s interesting to see all these rich people,” said a British tourist.

Eighteen-year-old Branko Vidic from St Moritz had also come down “to party, watch people and have a bet”.

But with their baseball caps and baggy jeans, Vidic and his friend Paco Raps, stood out among the White Turf jet-set and their race-day uniform of fur coat, designer jeans and Davy Crockett hat.

“They are so ugly. I hate these people; they just come here to show how rich they are,” he said.
Reply With Quote
  #2 (permalink)  
Old 19-02-10, 07:50 PM
Francois Cellier's Avatar
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: 3rd planet of Sol
Posts: 2,101
Default

Originally Posted by Francois Cellier View Post
The White Turf is the most important event on the Swiss racing calendar, with trotting, flat racing and skijöring races – skiers pulled behind rider-less horses – held on courses up to 2.7 kilometres.
Ben Hur, alive and well.
Reply With Quote
  #3 (permalink)  
Old 19-02-10, 11:16 PM
Zichao's Avatar
Moderator
 

Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 9,037
Default

Fur's back in in Paris too. I wonder what socio-economic conclusions can be drawn.
__________________
Standard disclaimer: the disgusting statements contained in this post are the views of the poster, and unless specified do not represent the views of the moderators or the site's owners.
Reply With Quote
  #4 (permalink)  
Old 20-02-10, 07:08 AM
Francois Cellier's Avatar
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: 3rd planet of Sol
Posts: 2,101
Default

No, this is normal.

St. Moritz is located at about 1800 m.a.s. in the upper Engiadina valley. This valley is one of the cold spots of Switzerland, and temperatures of -20 degrees centigrade are quite normal for this region. Sometimes, -20 degrees is the high for the day.

For this reason, the lake of St. Moritz, the smallest and lower-most lake of the three lakes of the upper Engiadina freezes regularly, and the ice gets so thick that it's very safe organizing horse races on the lake.

Also the other two lakes freeze regularly, and on one of them, they organize every year the Swiss (cross-country) ski marathon, in which thousands of people participate. Everybody can participate. You don't need to qualify. The marathon is quite strenuous though. The part on the lake is by far the easiest.



Here is a picture of the top-most lake, the Lej da Segl (lake of Sils). This picture was taken when FredFredson visited with my wife and myself, i.e., a bit earlier in the year, in early November, a good month before the lakes freeze.

In the summer, they organize sailboat regattas and wind surfing competitions on the lake, and in the winter, it's time for the annual Swiss ski marathon. It's very pretty indeed. The Engiadina is one of my all-time favorites.

The picture was taken from Plaun da Lej (plain of the lake), the last village on the lake that is still in the rhaeto-romanic speaking region. Already in the next village, Maloja, at the top end of the lake (2000 m.a.s.), people speak Italian.

From there, it goes precipitously down-hill into the Bregaglia valley, down the Maloja pass road.


Last edited by Francois Cellier; 20-02-10 at 07:24 AM.
Reply With Quote
  #5 (permalink)  
Old 20-02-10, 07:27 AM
Francois Cellier's Avatar
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: 3rd planet of Sol
Posts: 2,101
Default

I just noticed: the ski marathon isn't taking place always in the same region. I didn't know that. In 2010, it will take place in the Bernese Oberlands.
Reply With Quote
  #6 (permalink)  
Old 21-02-10, 09:43 PM
Francois Cellier's Avatar
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: 3rd planet of Sol
Posts: 2,101
Default

I got it. There is more than one ski marathon held here in Switzerland every year. The one starting at Maloja and ending at S-chanf is the Engiadina Ski Marathon.
Reply With Quote
  #7 (permalink)  
Old 21-02-10, 10:40 PM
Benjamin's Avatar
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: SW Ohio, USA
Posts: 1,312
Default

Of all the things I might have heard the jet set was wearing this year, Davey Crockett hats are close to the least expected.
__________________
"Neither man nor nation can exist without a sublime idea."
Fyodor Dostoyevsky, 1821 - 1881
QOTD

My BLOG: Things Have Changed
Reply With Quote
  #8 (permalink)  
Old 22-02-10, 05:16 AM
Francois Cellier's Avatar
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: 3rd planet of Sol
Posts: 2,101
Default

Originally Posted by Benjamin View Post
Of all the things I might have heard the jet set was wearing this year, Davey Crockett hats are close to the least expected.
Sorry if this thread came across as a piece of trivial pursuit. It wasn't meant to be. Winter sports is an important facet of Swiss culture. About 80% of all Swiss children ski, and many of those receive their first tiny pair of skis when they are about a year old. They learn to ski before they fully know how to walk. It's not by accident that Switzerland almost always ranks among the top nations in the winter Olympics.

One of our seven Federal Councilors is Minister of Sport (and the military). It is a federal mandate here in Switzerland that all communities must maintain hiking paths for the public, and these hiking paths are highly popular with the people. Maybe most famous among them is the Path of Switzerland, a hiking path leading all around Lake Uri, the upper-most part of the Four-Canton Lake, which in English is usually referred to as Lake Lucerne.
Reply With Quote
  #9 (permalink)  
Old 22-02-10, 05:30 AM
LiberalNation's Avatar
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: KY, USA
Posts: 1,199
Default

The US still takes home the most gold tho.
Reply With Quote
  #10 (permalink)  
Old 22-02-10, 05:42 AM
Francois Cellier's Avatar
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: 3rd planet of Sol
Posts: 2,101
Default

Originally Posted by LiberalNation View Post
The US still takes home the most gold tho.
True. As of now, the U.S. has won 7 gold medals in Vancouver, whereas Switzerland has only won 5. The U.S. is also leading by a large margin in the total number of medals (currently 24, followed by Germany with 18 - Switzerland has won "only" 7 so far). However, the US and Germany are also a bit bigger and more populous than Switzerland.
Reply With Quote
Reply


(View-All Members who have read this thread : 9
Benjamin, contracycle, Francois Cellier, FredFredson, Gilles de Rais, LiberalNation, PostmodernProphet, roadkill, Zichao
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:20 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.3.0