Jumps racing is a misunderstood discipline, according to Hastings-born Awapuni trainer Gail Temperton.
A second-generation jumping trainer, Temperton said she and sister Cheryl Robinson learned a lot from their father, the late Norvil Temperton, on the Hastings track.
"The jumps racing fraternity are wonderful people. We have camaraderie because we all know we could all be falling over any day and we go out with high hopes some days and not realise that," said Temperton after jockey Gary Walsh rode her horse, Just Ishi, to victory in the premier 4800m race on Saturday.
The soon-to-be 69-year-old echoed the sentiments of their father, who used to say: "The thing I hate about racing is that when the horses retire they go to people who don't look after them as well as we do."
She felt the thoroughbred industry was improving on the life-after-racing aspect of horses.