Burros in the Pines
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Rules & Safety

Pack burro racing has a century of tradition and one non-negotiable: the burro's welfare beats your finish time. The official rulebook and waiver are being finalized — here's what will definitely be in it.

Nobody rides. Ever.

This is a footrace for both of you. You may lead, drive, or follow your burro, but your feet stay on the ground the whole course.

The burro carries a pack saddle

Each burro runs with a regulation pack saddle. Required contents and minimum weight follow pack-burro racing tradition — final specs will be published with the official rules.

Stay connected

Runner and burro are attached by a lead rope (maximum length to be specified — around 15 feet is the sport's norm). No retractable leashes, no chaining multiple burros.

Finish together

A team finishes when the burro's nose crosses the line with the runner in contact. No burro, no finish.

Burro welfare comes first

Whips, prods, and any rough handling are grounds for immediate disqualification. Race officials and vets can pull any team at any time for the animal's wellbeing — their word is final.

Right of way & passing

Call your passes early and give space. Burros have opinions about being crowded, and the trail is shared.

Draft rules — the official rulebook, required gear list, and waiver will be published before registration opens.

Safety on course

  • • Every burro passes a welfare check before the start; vets are on site all day.
  • • Aid stations stock water for burros first, runners second (you'll be fine).
  • • Emergency procedures, sweep protocol, and cutoffs will be covered at the pre-race briefing.
  • • First-time handlers must attend the handler orientation — see the Burros page.