Horsing around for a good cause
Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Knights in shining armor, competitors and
performers will ride at the Huntington Central Park Equestrian Center on
Saturday to raise funds for a local riding school.
The Therapeutic Riding Center of Huntington Beach, an organization
dedicated to teaching people with mental and physical disabilities how to
ride horses, is holding the second annual January Joyride fund-raiser.
First opened in 1992, the center serves 28 students with various
disabilities hailing from across Orange and Los Angeles counties.
Faith Grimm, the center’s program director, said horse riding provides
a practical setting for children and adults with disabilities to work on
muscle skills and speech. The desire to ride the horse provides a
motivation, and there is extra therapy in working with animals, she
added.
The riding center is raising money to build a new arena and classrooms
to expand class availability on Saturdays and during bad weather.
Spokeswoman Kim Miller said classes are typically held Mondays, Tuesdays
and Saturdays in an arena reserved for private boarders at the equestrian
center.
Last year, the fund-raiser earned about $2,250 for the riding center,
an amount that has already been matched by sponsors such as Kinko’s
Copies, Benihana’s restaurants, Riding Magazine and Medieval Times. The
event itself is free for spectators, center officials said, but tends to
draw in personal donations and interest from individuals who want to
help.
“I was worried at first about my daughter taking classes and still am
sometimes,” said Westminster resident Loretta Whitelock, whose
developmentally delayed daughter, Lindsay, 22, has been riding since the
therapeutic school opened. “But it’s given her a lot of self-confidence
in life.”
Lindsay Whitelock agreed.
“I’ve been able to participate in competitions, and the confidence
helps in my job too,” she said, adding that she’s also a volunteer for
the center as well as a student.
Resident Ann Lozada, a four-month volunteer who sells equestrian
property professionally, said the riders draw her to the center.
“I can never have a bad day after volunteering during a lesson and
seeing the effort and joy of the students here,” said Lozada, who leads
horses while riders learn. The center “is a nice thing to have in the
community, and I only wish I’d found out about it sooner so I could have
been volunteering longer.”
FYI
The January Joyride will start at 10 a.m. for competition, with a
halftime show at 12:30 p.m., in the Huntington Central Park Equestrian
Center, 18381 Goldenwest St.
The halftime show will feature a jousting exhibit by Medieval Times, a
one-man cowboy jug band and more.
Admission is free, and parking may be found at the corner of
Goldenwest Street and Ellis Avenue. Information: (949) 644-2165.
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