Throughout the year, Springbank Pony Club members have the opportunity to earn Pony Club badges.
Thank you to Greenhawk Cochrane for donating saddlepads for the badge program!
Here are the newest badges SPC members can earn:

OPTION 1:
Colours & Markings Beginner Badge
Objectives
Horses and ponies come in many different colours. According to our pony club materials, three of the most common colours are:
- Bay: a light brown or reddish-brown horse with a black mane and tail, black legs below the knees and hocks, black tips on his ears and black on his muzzle.
- Chestnut: a reddish-brown horse whose legs are the same colour as his body. His mane and tail are either the same colour or a little lighter.
- Grey: a grey horse has a mixture of black and white hairs. Greys can be light, dark or nearly white.
Project
Members will create a booklet or poster using cut outs from old horse magazines or online images. The project should contain at least 5 different colours, 4 face markings (ie. blaze, start, snip, stripe etc.) and 3 leg markings (ie. sock, stocking, etc.). Please present your booklet/poster at a future education session so everyone can learn from you.

OPTION 2: Horse Colour Specialty Badge
Objectives
Recognize more complex horse colours. Understand that all horse colours are built out of variations on black, bay and chestnut. Discuss colour breeds and primitive colour marks. This is an extension of the beginner badge on horse colours.
- Understanding colour: Members are expected to describe the base colour of more complex colour descriptions (e.g. flaxen chestnut, blue roan, red dun, palomino, buckskin) and know what they look like. Members understand the greying process and can distinguish the different phases in the greying process, such as steel or rose grey to dappled, fleabitten and finally white.
- Primitive markings: describe primitive markings and breeds that still display these markings (zebra stripes, webbing, frosting).
- Uncommon markings: discuss some uncommon markings such as birdcatcher spots, ben d’or spots, galustra plume, medicine hat.
- Colour breeds and breeds with certain colour requirements: discuss the difference between paint and pinto. Describe other colour breeds such as appaloosa and paint. What are colour requirements for Fjord, Haflinger and Friesian?
Project
All horse colours can be described as a combination of the basic black, bay or chestnut combined with colour modifiers (grey, flaxen), dilutions (cream, dun) and white patterns (roan, appaloosa). Some modifiers are recessive, and some are dominant. Make a poster display or digital presentation including 3 uncommon markings and 1 colour breed or breed with strict colour characteristics. Describe the markings and breeds in some detail. Older members should be able to discuss the following questions:
- How can two black horses (a colour requirement in Friesians) still produce a chestnut horse. What can be done to prevent this?
- What possible colours can the offspring of two flaxen chestnut horses have?
- Describe the difference between overo and tobiano and 3 different overo patterns.
- Describe 3 different dilution genes and how they change the base colours black, bay and chestnut.
- Describe 3 different coat colour modifiers find pictures of these modifiers.
Please present your presentation/poster at a future education session so everyone can learn from you. Your work can also be posted on our website to share in the resources section.

MARCH BADGE:
WORKING EQUITATION
Objectives
To learn about the sport of Working Equitation and participate in Working Equitation clinics and/or competitions.
First recognized as a sport in 1996 and hosting its first European Championship that same year in Italy, Working Equitation has quickly grown in popularity as an all-inclusive equestrian sport driven from the grass roots. The discipline encourages participation from any and all breeds and disciplines (dressage, jumping, western riding, and Spanish riding). There are 4 phases of a WE competition: dressage, ease of handling (EOH), speed, and cattle maneuverability; however, at the introductory level, participants focus on dressage and EOH.
Through introducing members to the discipline of Working Equitation (WE), this badge focuses on knowledge growth of the history of Working Equitation as it relates to the ancestry of the working horse breeds. Further, the badge signifies that they have participated in the WE clinic.
Project
Members can attend the Working Equitation clinic on March 8 to earn this badge.

FEBRUARY BADGE:
BARN SAFETY
Objectives
Members should learn about safety features in barns, pastures, arenas and riding rings. Safe trailing can also be included, as well as basic rules in the warmup ring or in group lessons.
Review the barn safety learning materials and then take the quiz to check your knowledge.
Please send me an email if you have questions about completing this badge.

JANUARY BADGE:
MUSICAL RIDE
In January, members who attended the musical ride clinic earned their musical ride badge.
