I hope it helps my shots that I use to show cutting horses. .. so.. from my perspective, the objective is to show the judge (and illustrate in photos) how well your horse works to hold the cow away from the herd. ... the stop/the turn/how he's watching the cow... all of these things are what you're looking for. ... of course, any of those dynamic contortions they go through are visually exciting. (oh gads.. I start getting a rush just thinking about it.. LMBO.. it IS addicting!) Everyone has their personal favorite movements to see .. (my personal favorite is the horse's weight over his hocks with his toes dancing while he's nose to nose with the cow) ... but as far as shooting goes, a tough cow and a sharp working horse offer more visual excitement.. as long as those actions are not a penalty. ... ideally, working in the center of the arena are the shots you want. (but not always possible)
.. anyway... if you ever need to shoot a cutting, read the NCHA rules... or email me and I'll help you out as much as I can. .. The rider's rein hand should be down.. and their eyes on the cow. They're pushing against the horn to keep their weight/pivot point in their pelvis. It's preferred that the horse stops on his rear instead of his front (he can't roll back when he stops on his front legs.. so that slows him down/puts him behind the cow .. and you don't want to be chasing the cow.. you want them pretty much shoulder to shoulder.. or your horse's head at the cow's neck) (there I go again.. talking like I'm back in the saddle!!)
Anyway, I'm using spot focus, lens wide open (55 - 200mm 5.4) iso 250 - 400 & shutter @ 1/1200 - 1/1600.
I'll be downloading saturday's shots tomorrow .. they'll be in the NCCHA folder by noon (I hope). My new site is www.ShootMyPix.com
.. but I'm just getting it started.
You're very humble for the caliber of work you produce. .. I just thank you for showing the rest of us what consistantly good images look like!