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HomeDressageTitle: Waregem Drops Dressage and Eventing from 2027 FEI European Championship Bid Just...

Title: Waregem Drops Dressage and Eventing from 2027 FEI European Championship Bid

Just days after publicly announcing that Waregem launched a bid to host a multi-discipline 2027 FEI European Championship, dressage, para-dressage, and eventing have been dropped from the bidding process.

Big Plans
At the 2025 Belgian Equestrian Federation’s riders gala – "Equigala" – KBRSF chair Stephan Detry proudly announced that Waregem aimed to host the 2027 Europeans for dressage, para-dressage, show jumping, and eventing. The project was going to be supported by the Flemish government, in partnership with sports consultancy company Golazo (Bob Verbeeck), Horse Sport Flanders, and the Belgian equestrian federation.

Into Thin Air
Three months later, the news became known that already shortly after the Equigala, the disciplines dressage, para-dressage, and eventing were discarded from the planning. Eurodressage inquired with Detry about the reasons for dropping dressage. "KBRSF submitted a bid to FEI in late 2024," Detry replied via the KBRSF press officer. "At that time, final government support had not yet been confirmed. Meanwhile, there is more clarity on the funds made available by the Flemish government. Although this support is still substantial, the amount is lower than originally communicated. As a result, choices have been made. Eventing was already excluded when the bid was submitted. Since FEI does not separate the organisation of the European Dressage and Para-dressage Championships in 2027, it was finally decided to nominate only the European Championships Jumping in Waregem." As jumping is known to be the most profitable equestrian discipline to organize, the OC is fully committing to hosting the Jumping Euros. "The allocation of the European Championships Jumping by the FEI is still ongoing. We expect a decision in early May," Detry added.

Who Will Organize Dressage?
The FEI Bidding chart says the bidding process has been "closed," yet no alternatives for dressage and para-dressage are officially posted. Eurodressage has received confirmation that three other venues are now in the running for the 2027 Dressage Euros: Neustadt/Dosse (GER) and Randbol (DEN), who also applied in 2025, and Stadl Paura (AUT) is now the third candidate in the mix. Detry tried to soothe the wound that Waregem will still put a focus on other disciplines. "2027 will in any case be a thematic year around the horse, a unique opportunity to highlight the richness and diversity of equestrian sport in Flanders," he said. "Within that framework, there will be plenty of room to actively involve other disciplines and introduce the public to all facets of the sport. That is part of the broader vision and preparation for 2027."

Waregem recently announced its bid to host the 2027 FEI European Championships, initially including dressage, para-dressage, show jumping, and eventing. However, just three months later, it was revealed that dressage, para-dressage, and eventing had been removed from the bid. The decision stemmed from a reassessment of financial support from the Flemish government, which turned out to be lower than expected, leading to the exclusion of these disciplines.

KBRSF chair Stephan Detry explained that eventing was already excluded when the bid was submitted, and since the FEI does not separate the organization of the European dressage and Para-dressage Championships, the focus shifted solely to show jumping. This discipline is considered the most profitable, prompting the organizing committee to fully commit to hosting the Jumping Euros, with a decision from the FEI expected in early May.

Meanwhile, the bidding process for dressage and para-dressage has closed, but three other venues—Neustadt/Dosse (Germany), Randbol (Denmark), and Stadl Paura (Austria)—are now competing to host the 2027 dressage Euros. Despite the setbacks, Detry emphasized that Waregem will still promote equestrian diversity and engage the public in various disciplines during the thematic year of 2027.

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Title: "The Art of Horse Training: Insights from Reitmeister Martin Plewa"


Martin Plewa has held countless roles in the equestrian world throughout his career, but above all, he is a passionate trainer devoted to the welfare of the horse.

Following numerous requests, we are pleased to present the English version of our interview with Reitmeister Martin Plewa:

Let’s start with the basics of horse training. What are the absolutely essential principles you believe cannot be compromised?

I believe we have a very strong foundation in classical riding theory. For me, the most important thing is always to tailor the training to the horse. To do that, I need to understand: How does a horse move? How does it learn? Training must be adapted to the horse’s stage of maturity, age, and later, its level of education. The horse must be able to easily understand what the rider is asking. That means building everything logically and following clear principles—for example, progressing from simple to complex, from familiar to unfamiliar. This ensures the horse never feels overwhelmed.

Beyond that, I must always pay close attention to the horse’s reactions, constantly sensing how it understands my aids. If the horse doesn’t respond the way I expect, I have to question myself: What might I be doing wrong? It’s essential to always listen to the horse and allow it to influence the pace of the training to some extent. Of course, you have a system in mind, but every horse reacts a little differently.

You also need to allow enough time and maintain a sense of calm. There was a famous 19th-century equestrian scholar, Gustav Steinbrecht, who said, "Ride with benevolent composure." That perfectly captures the mindset: approach the horse with positivity, remain relaxed and unemotional, but always stay consistent.

In your view, are today’s riders different when it comes to patience, consistency, and sensitivity toward the horse?

Yes, I believe there’s been a shift. My generation learned from instructors who mostly came from military backgrounds—cavalry officers who taught in a very structured, prescriptive way. As students, we were eager to follow these clear guidelines, and it worked.

Today, trainers tend to adapt more to the individual needs of the rider. However, some riders fail to recognize that their own seat and aids aren’t yet sufficiently developed. They really need more training themselves before they can fairly and correctly educate a horse. I often see the focus placed more on "training" the horse than on improving the rider—things like seat corrections are often neglected. We now tend to be more considerate of the rider than the horse, and that can lead to riders developing the wrong mindset, blaming the horse when things go wrong. I absolutely do not tolerate that in my teaching. If something isn’t working, the first step is always self-reflection.

There are many efforts underway to make riding instruction more accessible and didactically refined. Do you think that’s useful?

Absolutely. It’s crucial for riders to engage with their own sense of movement and physical strengths or limitations—things like suppleness, elasticity, and so forth. But in the end, the key for me is always the rider’s feeling. Riding is a sport of coordination, and coordination requires mobility and a highly developed sense of body awareness.

Was there much focus on body awareness in the old military-style training?

Yes, definitely. A fine hand was especially emphasized. One of my instructors used to say, "The horse’s mouth is sacred." We always rode without auxiliary aids like side reins. Great patience was given to achieving correct contact.

In the first youth rider exams, all horses went without any auxiliary reins. I rode my first test at seven years old—horse changes included—and that was completely normal. And woe to anyone who pulled on the reins—they were immediately corrected. The foundation was always the correct use of aids, learning to properly connect the horse to the aids, to allow the reins to "chew out of the hand" correctly. We practiced that endlessly, and even if we didn’t fully grasp it as children, it ingrained the correct feeling so thoroughly that later, we could ride any horse properly.

There’s a lot of criticism of modern dressage. In your opinion, is the sport still justifiable?

Of course it is—provided we ride correctly. Our training system is based on the horse’s natural movement. But we’ve seen some serious deviations, and these weren’t addressed soon enough. That’s true nationally in Germany as well as internationally.

When incorrect riding is rewarded at competitions, it’s no surprise that riders start copying it. I’ve followed international sport for decades—World Championships, Olympics, and so on. There was a clear shift: suddenly, horses were dramatically overflexed, yet still winning.

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Title: Horses Learn Feeding Strategies by Eavesdropping on Human Interactions

Horses may learn socially by “eavesdropping” on human behaviour, a study has found. A team of researchers from universities in Germany and Scotland concluded that horses may change their feeding strategies having witnessed human-to-human demonstrations, even if the demonstrators are not present.

The pilot study, led by zoologist and behaviour researcher Konstanze Krueger, involved 17 horses, aged four to 28, at five private yards. The horses were allowed to watch a human participant take pieces of carrot from two buckets; when taking it from one, another human would convey approval as they would to a horse, using body language and a firm “no” or similar. When they took it from the other bucket, the other human would convey disapproval, also via stance and tone of voice. The horses watched this six times, then were allowed back in to choose which bucket to feed from. They had previously become used to eating from both buckets in the test area.

“In this study, 12 of 17 horses significantly changed their preference for a feeding location after observing approval in a human-human interaction there,” the researchers said.

The horses involved were kept differently; 14 lived in “social housing,” in open stabling, three in individual housing, two in “paddock boxes” and one in a single box with turnout.

The team found that those kept in social housing adapted in a higher percentage of trials to human-human demonstrations than those in individual housing.

“This indicates, for the first time, that some animals change their feeding strategies after eavesdropping on human-human demonstrations and that this adaptation may be dependent on social experience,” the team said. Some of the demonstrators were more familiar to the horses than others, and some had more impact on the horses’ performance than others.

“Future research should further investigate the durability of this preference change in the absence of repeated demonstrations, and establish whether long-term social learning sets in. This would have important implications for unintentional long-term impacts of human interactions on interspecies communication.”

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