Yes, I would say so. A finished barrel horse can cost anywhere from $6000 to $12000. You need a good barrel racing saddle and boots for your horse. Not to mention headstalls and bits. Also, barrel racers need a trailer to haul their horse or horses to events. A small trailer an cost $10,000. Most people have matchy matchy boots and saddle pads and outfits too but I'm not really into that.
The hardest thing about barrel racing is the ground.
Sometimes they will sell these in horse mail-order catalogs. Usually ones that cater to western riding. Also, look in the back of horse magazines and monthly horse publications that are free at most local feed and tack stores.
The only way math could be involved in barrel racing is if you look at it using physics.
They do not have strong hind-quarters and a horse for barrel racing needs them to be able to do fast turns.
women
go to your EC's indoor arena page and click create a barrel racing competition.
One is round, and one is square.
Barrel racing got its start with the Women's Professional Rodeo Association in 1948, in Texas. The course was originally a figure-eight pattern, but was replaced with the more difficult clover leaf pattern.
For Howrse, the answer is barrel racing
It is a horse race.
In barrel racing 5 seconds is added for each nocked over barrel but in some contests if a barrel is nocked over its a dq and if u nock over all three its a dq
Barrel racing was designed for women, 8 out of 10 people that barrel race are female.