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Need to Know Wednesday

Mark Phillip’s criticizes the use of Greenwich Park for the London 2012 equestrian events due to rising costs in the latest H&H. 
The FEI has warned riders that they face a 2-year ban if they are caught using banned substances.  I believe that a two year ban for a first offense is consistent with most other Olympic sports and seems like an appropriate length of time to me because anything shorter that a half-year lets offenders time the enforcement so they don’t miss any three-days, and anything much longer would be overly punitive and probably completely ruin someone’s career, although if you get caught cheating then I don’t really care. 
Courtney-King Dye is making great strides in recovery, and is fully alert and talking, according to one of Lendon Grey’s Facebook page updates.  You can see an amusing difference in coverage from this article and this article.  
*Land Rover had become the official vehicle of the USEF.  Even if you have already heard about this, you want to read this particular story.
Meningitis can’t keep Francis Whittington out of Badminton, Sara Stretton withdraws

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The FEI and USEF have initiated possible abuse charges against show jumper Michael Morrisey for beating his horse repeatedly.  A few thoughts: first, this shows the extraordinary power of video combined with members of the new media.  As Fran Jurga explains in her article, blogger Karen Robinson of the Straight Up blog was the first to write about the incident.  However, without the video, she was just a writer telling a story.  Once the Youtube video (below) started being seen by other members of the equestrian new media, we (The Carrot, Eventing Nation, and others) started writing about the incident and publishing the video.  Eventing Nation linked to the video on Monday and it had 1,000 views at the time.  Just two days later it has 17,000, and the amazing thing about those numbers is that, generally, the major members of the equestrian media completely ignored the story until the FEI sent out its press release yesterday.
My second thought is that the FEI deserves credit for making the right decision even if they were a couple of weeks late.  Policing so many horse sports at competitions across the globe is a very challenging task, and, while the FEI should have been faster to initiate charges, they ultimately made the right decision, which is the most important thing.
Third: from here on out, riders need to assume that the camera is always rolling at competitions.  Anything you say or do can and will be plastered all over the internet and used against you in the court of public opinion.

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Best of the Blogs: Laine Ashker likes her Rolex number, Steph Rhodes-Bosch is starting to believe, *what Chelan learned from watching a lesson with David.  Note: Chelan’s blog entry is one of my favorites by a rider: she uses her personality to tell about an experience that is very educational to the reader.
News of the WeirdDrunk man rides horse into Tennessee mule festival.  How did police know he was drunk?  He was asking for beer.
A giant horse as high as the Statue of Liberty is being built in England: “It has been created by Mark Wallinger, who once dressed up in a furry bear suit and wandered around a Berlin gallery in the name of art.”

Paca Poo: “The music booster club at Central Community Unit School District 301 in St. Charles isn’t bothering with bake sales and car washes this year. Instead, it’s selling bags of something promoters call ‘paca poo’.” ~ Courtesy of BC.

Perhaps more than ever, crap labeled with a cute name is still crap.  What’s wrong with bake sales?

Rolex Competitors Preview (Part 2/2) and EN’s Rolex Pick

Check out Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5Part 6Part 7 of EN’s Rolex competitor previews. 


Let’s jump right in:

Jose Ortelli and JOS Aladar (ARG): Facebook 

I met Jose and his family for the first time at The Fork because our camper hookups were next to each other, and he struck me as a very nice, very laid back guy.  Our fun fact about Jose is that his father was also a very accomplished rider.  JOS Aladar has considerable experience and took Jose to the Pan Ams in 2007, and placed 26 at Rolex last year.  I expect Jose to be in the back half of the field after dressage, but it’s all up from there because JOS Aladar looked like a XC machine at The Fork.

Kate Hicks and Belmont: Facebook

One of our wonderful readers (who asked to remain anonymous) had mercy on me for having so many horses to preview and wrote this very nice bio about Kate and Belmont:

“Kate Hicks (nee Ditchey) hails originally from Vermont where she and her sister were avid pony clubbers. At 10, her family moved to Northern California where she continued to event. After high school, Kate moved south to take a working student position with Bea and Derrick DeGrazia (sp?) with whom she remains very close. The DeGrazia’s encouraged Kate to move east to ride with Phillip Dutton. She took their advice and earned a bachelor’s degree in Animal Science at the University of Delaware while training with Phillip (and working as a working student for him in the summers). After earning her degree, Kate took a job in the Neo-natal intensive care unit at New Bolton Center but shortly realized that riding horses was her true passion. She became a full-time employee at True Prospect Farm. Roughly two years ago, Kate and her finance (now husband) purchased Cedar Springs Farm in Cochranville, PA. Kate now runs her own boarding and training business but continues to train with Phillip Dutton and Silva Martin. 

Kate purchased Belmont while a working student at True Prospect. Belmont had been sent to Phillip to be sold and Kate fell in love with him. Her own horse had just suffered an injury requiring extended rest so she purchased Belmont as a project horse (he had never gone above training when he arrived at Phillip’s). Over time, Kate and Belmont developed a deep bond as she took him up the levels. Kate made the very difficult decision to put Belmont on the market two years ago due to the financial pressures of the sport in general, buying a farm and getting married. Boyd Martin took over the ride on Belmont for about a year campaigning him. Kate kept him at home during that time, keeping Belmont fit and doing all of his training. Boyd liked Belmont so much that he tried to form a syndicate to buy Belmont so that he could keep the ride. Due to the implosion of the market, Belmont did not sell. Kate, with lots of encouragement from her family and friends, enthusiastically took back the ride on Belmont. 

Since that time, Kate and Belmont completed Fair Hill CCI3* with a clean cross country run, won the February Pine Top Intermediate division on a dressage score of 28, were 2nd in the Advanced division at Southern Pines and ran a combined test at the Fork. Belmont has completed four CIC & CCI 3* since 2008 and won the 2009 CIC*** at Jersey Fresh. Kate is an incredibly hard worker and dedicated to the welfare of her horses. She and Belmont are an excellent team who completely adore each other.”

So, obviously our fun fact about Kate is somewhere above.  Belmont is excellent on Saturdays, with zero stops in his last 14 events (7 with Boyd, 7 with Kate), so look for a quality weekend from this first-time 4* team.

Oliver Townend and ODT Master Rose (GBR): Homepage, About, Twitter, Fanpage, Horse Record

I think we all know who Oliver Townend is, but if I had to sum his eventing career up in a sentence, I would say that he is an extremely talented rider with a chance to be considered one of the best riders ever, but his reputation is marred right now by questionable horsemanship decisions and unsettling stories.  Our fun fact is that Master Rose was sired by Master Imp, and that Oliver follows Eventing Nation on Twitter.  After two 4* wins (nearly 3), Oliver has a chance at the $350,000 Rolex Grand Slam, and you can expect him to be doing everything within his considerable faculties to win at Rolex.  Master Rose will be competing in his first 4*, and has not placed higher than 3rd in 10 previous 3* events.  But, I wouldn’t want to bet against any horse that Oliver is riding. 

Karl Slezak and Charley Farley (CAN): Fanpage, Twitter, Facebook

Our fun fact about Karl is that he apparently likes Vanilla Ice.  The musician performing artist, not the food.  Rocking the Yellow and Green, Karl is an easy person to root for, and a good rider as long as he can correctly recite the 5 rein aids (inside joke).  Charley Farley (17.1 Grey ISH G) has some question marks coming into Rolex, as Karl’s Fanpage explained that he scratched from The Fork due to a sore hoof, but Charley Farley is a talented horse and the pair will be competing for a WEG spot.

 Stanislas de Zuchowicz and Quirinal De La Bastide (FRA): Facebook, French Bio

Honestly, when I started my research, I coulnd’t have told you if ‘Stanislas’ was a male or female name.  And then I realized that Stanislas (fun fact: male) was eliminated on Saturday at Rolex last year after sitting in 17th (50.3) following the dressage.  Stanislas represented France later in 2009 at the European Championships, where he and Quirinal placed 18th.  Quirinal is a very athletic and handsome bay horse, and should place well if he can get around the XC.  Stanislas will be wearing light brown in both the dressage and show jumping due to his service in the French armed forces.  Ok, I just got through an entire sentence about the French army without making a single joke, give me some credit.

Leslie Law and Fleeceworks Mystere Du Val (GBR): Homepage

Our fun fact about Leslie is that he usually pumps his hands at his horses when approaching XC combinations.  Watch: when you see him do it at Rolex, you will think of this preview.  Olympic champion Leslie Law brings a very nice horse in Mystere (17hh Chestnut Selle Francais G) to Rolex this year.  Mystere Du Val is one of the top 5 combined test horses in the field, and is a proven winner; Leslie and Mystere have won 10 of the last 16 competitions that they completed.  However, the last two XC rides have raised questions for Mystere with a fall at the Poplar Irish bank, two stops at Chattahoochee.

Bonnie Mosser and Merloch: Homepage, Blog, Bio, Facebook

Bonnie is one of our favorites here at Eventing Nation, and so is Merloch.  As a fun fact about Merloch (16.1 Grey TBX G), he won the Young Riders 2* in 2006 with his previous rider.  Our fun fact about Bonnie is that she used to be a professional downhill skier, which is probably where she gets her great balance.  Merloch has a nearly perfect XC record, with only one stop in 19 events with Bonnie.  That one stop came at Rolex ’09, but with a CCI3* (Jersey ’07) together, Bonnie and Merloch are a pair that could place well within the top 10 if they put together a good weekend.

The return of the brackets! (kinda): Between our competitors preview part 1 from yesterday and this post, we have previewed 12 riders so far.  The plan is to have an Eventing Nation Rolex pick, chosen by all of our readers, at the end of all the previews.  After every 10 previews or so, we will publish a poll to pick the top riders from that group of 10, and then we will have the winning competitors from several groups face each other, and repeat (probably 3 rounds of voting) until we have an EN pick.  In the first round, everyone gets 3 votes, and the three top combinations from each group will advance to the next round.

So, without further ado, please vote for the three combinations that you think will place highest at Rolex this year.   


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Ecogold has released their Rolex preview for Ecogold sponsored riders.  Obviously, I don’t gain anything by saying this, but top riders looking for sponsorship should give Ecogold a call.  Between the Ecogold competition videos and the blog entries, no other company in eventing better understands the importance of promoting the riders it sponsors.

The Chronicle published a piece today about riders withdrawing from Rolex and added Holly Payne’s Madeline, Barbara Crabo and Everready, Clayton Fredericks (AUS) and The Frog, Heelan Tompkins (NZL) and Sugoi, and Sandra Donnelly (CAN) and Buenos Aires to our previous list of Oliver Townend’s Carousel Quest, Woodburn, TruLuck, Connaught, Ballynoecastle, Bobby, and Vaugnted.  There are even more horses I believe, including Nicki Henley, and one of Jose Ortelli’s horses. This list will only grow as Rolex nears.

Carrie Meehan and Blue Devil: Chapter 4

     Chapter 1, 2, 3

     So I have two things to say about my run at Morven Park: sweet redemption and I love my horse!!  I must say, Duke never lets me forget what an amazing horse he is. Though the weekend left room for improvement, I couldn’t be happier with how it turned out, and I’m just so thrilled to be back running around prelim courses again.

      Dressage was alright, not our best. Duke was much calmer this time around, but I haven’t quite gotten the hang of the new tests.  I will admit I found myself following the tracks of past horses a couple times.  But hey, the first time riding a new test early in the season isn’t supposed to be perfect! Emily was pleased with our 34 but says I need to work on my position and how I ride through the test.  By improving a couple things, it will help me to ride Duke a bit better, and in turn improve our scores.

      Stadium was warm up for cross country, and the course was big with not much room for error.  I think the main focus for everyone was just to keep going and not let yourself get stuck riding backwards. It rode brilliantly and Duke was super excited that the jumps were finally bigger! We jumped clean with just two time penalties.  We headed over to cross-country and Duke was like a firecracker waiting to go off. The course was a solid prelim and it had me a bit worried, but as soon as we took the first couple jumps we were in our rhythm and it seemed to come easily. The only sticky parts we had were two training size jumps at the tail end of the course. Duke was getting a bit tired, and I should have helped him set up for the jumps a bit more.  I let my eye get a bit long, but Duke being the trooper he is, helped me out and we finished the course with only 4 seconds over optimum time!  We came in 5th place, but that was the last thing on my mind!

      So I will finish with saying that we should all give our horses an extra carrot even if we don’t come home with a blue ribbon.  It really is amazing the crazy things we ask them to do, and how willingly they do it for us.  On bad days I know it’s easy to forget how great they are.  But remember the times when they bail us out when we accidently bury them into the base of a giant oxer, or when they quietly stop for us to wriggle back into the saddle after being unseated?  Yeah, they are amazing creatures. This is in so many ways a ‘team’ sport, and we are all so blessed to be able to experience the excitement of 3-day Eventing from the back of these great horses. 

      Happy riding!

      Carrie and Duke

The Problem With the NYT Reporting About Something…

…is that everyone else decides they need to report it.  

I had a history teacher in high school who told me that the media is filled with the laziest people on the planet and that 95% of journalists just wait for a story to hit them in the face before they will cover it.  Having spent the last 6 months closely watching the media for Eventing Nation, I tend to agree.  I have tremendous respect for our friends in the equestrian media who spend all day out in the blazing sun watching and taking pictures,  then going back to their hotels to spend half the night writing for websites and magazines, but unfortunately this is just a small fraction of the media.  The story here isn’t the story, but rather that the story has officially gone mainstream.  
Update: I have heard that the NYT held off on reporting the story because they wanted to let the initial fury die down so that they could delve into the deeper HIV related issues.  I think Katie Thomas did a great job with the article, and she really developed the issue of HIV related laws thoroughly.  The unfortunate thing is that for most of the NYT’s audience this will be the only article about eventing they will read all year.  Unfortunately, in general, the mainstream media only covers our sport when bad things happen.

Rolex Competitors Preview (Part 1/7)

*As a quick bit of entry news, Oliver Townend has withdrawn Carousel Quest from Rolex, and now only has ODT Master Rose and Ashdale Cruise Master entered.
Check out Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5Part 6Part 7 of EN’s Rolex competitor previews. 
Now, here is part 1 of our Rolex competitors preview, in no particular order and with all due respect:

Laine Ashker and Anthony Patch: Blog, Twitter, Facebook, About Laine

Starting at the very top of the Rolex entry list, we have Laine Ashker with Anthony Patch.  Laine rides out of central VA, and our fun fact about Laine is that she can speak both Spanish and Arabic.  Anthony Patch, a 16hh TB gelding, brings a strong jumping resume to his first 4*, with only 20 XC penalties and 16 SJ faults in 10 advanced or higher events since the end of 2008.  Anthony Patch has never won an advanced level event, and I’m not expecting him to break his maiden at Rolex, but his record shows that he’s ready to deliver a strong weekend performance.

Kyle Carter and Madison Park (CA): Bio, Madison Park’s Record

Our fun fact about Kyle is that he is a loving father.  I have liked Madison Park (16.2 Bay Gelding) from the first time I saw Kyle riding him in Florida a few years ago.  Since then, Madison Park has become an international veteran, competing at the Pan Ams, Rolex (twice), the Olympics, and Burghley.  While Kyle got around the first three of those without any XC penalties,  he collected a stop last year at Rolex and was eliminated at Burghley, but those are the only issues in the last 10 advanced competitions for Kyle and Madison Park.  Madison Park has a lot of talent, but sometimes struggles with putting together three great phases in a row, and his dressage and show jumping often leaves me wishing for more polish.  If he does put all three phases together, look out.

Captain Geoff Curran and The Jump Jet (IRL): Interview, Profile

I must confess that before I started looking at the Rolex entries I knew absolutely nothing about Geoff Curran.  That said, I’ve pieced a few things together.  Our fun fact about Geoff is that his favorite band is Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band.  Geoff earned his title of ‘Captain’ while serving in the Irish Defense Forces for 9 years.  Geoff is 30 years old, and has considerable experience, having represented Ireland at both the 2006 WEGs and the 2008 Olympics.  Geoff and The Jump Jet (16.2 Irish Sport Horse G) finished 18th at the Pau CCI4* in 2009.  Not sure what to expect from this pair, but from reading about Geoff, he seems like a hard worker and a likable guy.

Boyd Martin and Neville Bardos: Fanpage, Homepage, Blog

Wow, so many places to go with the fun fact…I guess lets go with pointing out that Boyd purchased two 4-star horses in a package deal at a bar for less than $7,500.  Actually, lets get this out of the way right now: it’s sometimes hard for me to judge the perception of the general eventing public, but if you don’t think of Boyd as one of the best riders in the US who is going to be a perennial 4* and USET contender, if for no other reason than he gets horses around the XC, then you should probably start.  Neville Bardos, last year’s Fair Hill CCI3* champion, takes the stage at Kentucky as a savvy, veteran horse.  Neville has show jumping penalties in 6 of his last 8 events, and is not a flashy mover, but expect a clean and fast XC round to put the pair in contention come Sunday.

Chelan Kozak and Tasman Sea (CAN): Homepage, Blog, About Chelan, Facebook

You man not think black and pink are a good color combination, but you will get to see them Saturday at Rolex when Tasman Sea (16hh NZL TB G) leaves the box.  I don’t know Chelan personally, but I hear good things and her blog entries always have a lot of personality.  I don’t expect the Chelan and Tasman to be in contention on Sunday, but I’ll be rooting for them.

Feel free to continue the discussion and commentary in the comment section, but please help us uphold Eventing Nation’s standards of politeness and discretion.

Monday News and Notes

WIN: The USEA has launched a new site today called Discover Eventing, which educates eventers and prospective eventers about the sport.  A lot of the content is oriented towards people with little eventing experience who are looking to get into the sport, which makes it a great referral if you have friends who might like to start eventing.
Georgie Spence has withdrawn from Badminton due to an injury sustained in a fall last weekend.
The great Jim Wofford is giving a Rolex XC course walk open to the public 30 minutes after the last dressage ride on Friday.
Ecogold has a Rolex preview featuring the top US riders, with lots of their videos.
The Carrot writes about an interesting situation in show jumping that could apply to eventing, where a rider goes completely overboard beating his horse at a competition.  This situation demonstrates the power of video, and this rider is neither the first nor the last to be caught on youtube doing something idiotic.   From here on out, assume that cameras are always rolling at competitions.  The Carrot provides a good summary of the situation, but it’s important to always remember perspective, and The Carrot’s perspective is anti-FEI.

Universal sports is broadcasting Rolex online for $20 for the whole weekend.

Events This Weekend Results


Ram Tap (CA): Results

The Fork HT (NC): Results
Plantation Field (PA): Results

Notes: Sarah Cousins stole the show at Plantation, taking the top three spots in the Open Intermediate on Troy, Tsunami III, and Yukon Denali respectively, adding just 6.4 total jumping penalties for all three horses combined.

Chattahoochee Hills (GA): Results

Notes: The Chattahoochee Hills advanced only had 6 starters on XC, but two of those didn’t finish the course, and two others had issues along the way, leaving only two clean rounds with Michele Mueller and Amistad of Canada winning by a margin of 49 points.  

Notably, Rolex entrant Fleeceworks Mystere Du Val had two stops on the XC.  After a fall at the Poplar Place Irish bank in their last outing, Mystere and Leslie Law have anything but good momentum leading them up to Kentucky.  Mystere Du Val is a super nice horse with the potential to win the combined test at Rolex, and perhaps even the entire event with a great XC round.

Elizabeth Barron and The Graduate led the Open Intermediate after the dressage, added 13 XC time penalties to drop to 5th, and then jumped back to win after a double clear show jumping round.  Chattahoochee owner and founder, Carl Bouckaert won in the Open Preliminary with Cyrano.

Spring Bay: Homepage, Schedule


Results have not been posted for Spring Bay as of early Monday morning, but Visionaire was kind enough to provide this write up from the weekend’s festivities.


From Visionaire:


Residents of Area VIII enjoyed a beautiful weekend at Spring Bay. The weather couldn’t have been better: sunny, 70s, with a light breeze. It was a little cool in the mornings, but it made wearing your hunt coat desirable! Due to work and time commitments, I wasn’t able to spectate much outside of the Prelim division. But dressage judging seemed rather fair, at least from most people I spoke with. The show jumping courses seemed to ride well with decent flow. Cross-country was straightforward and inviting, perfect for this time of year, and the footing was great. 

Many people might say cross-country was “too easy,” having little effect on final placings. However, I thought the courses were excellent for most horses’ first time out, especially considering the awful winter weather left many of us a little behind. The Prelim course had relatively simple questions, of smaller size; however, it was a good gallopy course with lots of big tables and fences you could “ride at.” Good to set a confident, FORWARD tone to begin the year. Training also looked a bit on the small side at times, but also encouraged a good rhythm and balance. The novice course seemed quite long (6+ min optimum time?) but was mostly a fun jaunt around the park; a couple fences caused some horses to back off a bit, but there were plenty of other friendly jumps to get the confidence back. 
Spring Bay usually carries the reputation as a “soft” event, and you could say that again this year. However, that doesn’t degrade the event’s quality at all. The organizers, officials, and volunteers did a fantastic job. Some people forget that we NEED “easy” courses– let’s not perpetuate the mini-Rolex phenomenon at every event. Horses have to start somewhere, and find some place to move up, and these gallopy, less-technical courses are important for that.  
I hope everyone who attended Spring Bay had a good time… I know I did! 
Also, a brief Rolex update: the KHP is looking fabulous, the construction is finally (FINALLY!) coming to an end, though there’s still lots to be done before WEG. The trade fair tents are up already, as are the sponsor and member tents around the big dressage/SJ stadium. I could see a few of the cross-country fences, and it looks like fun! Spring is already here in Kentucky…the bluegrass is growing, the trees are budding, flowers in bloom, Rolex and Derby right around the corner… are you ready yet?!

Rolex Entries: Buck and Phillip Withdraw 5 Horses

The past few days have seen some significant withdraws from the Rolex entry list and, with a couple of additions, the official number of Rolex entries sits at 59.

(1) Phillip’s list of entered horses has shrunk from 6 to 3, with Woodburn, TruLuck, and Connaught all being removed from the entry list.  Phillip’s three remaining horses are The Foreman, Kheops, and Jan’s Waterfront.  Woodburn is still on the list of accepted entries at Badminton.  
(2) Buck’s entered horses have shrunk from 3 to 1, with Ballynoecastle RM and My Boy Bobby withdrawing their names.  Buck still has the beautiful Titanium set to go.
What all of this means:
-I won’t get into dealing with each of these withdraws specifically, but we have discussed before that the USET has a history of giving proven pairs a pass at Spring three-days to save them for the international competitions (think WEGs), sometimes particularly in cases where soundness is a concern.  My Boy Bobby (3rd Rolex ’09), Ballynoecastle (clear Rolex ’09, Burghley ’09), Connaught (1st Rolex ’08), and TruLuck (4th Burghley ’09) all fit the profile of proven horses with proven riders.  
-This also means that 5 of the top 10 horses in the field have withdrawn, really opening things up for other hopefuls, and making a Grand Slam (no we are not talking about the Denny’s breakfast platter) for Ollie all the more likely.
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As an additional note, Ashley Adams has withdrawn Vaunted from Rolex due to soundness concerns, and you can read about the decision on Ashley’s blog.  In this period right before four-stars quite a few entrants are typically going through issues with staying sound.  Many riders are having lots of long conversations with the vets followed by sleepless nights.  We applaud Ashley for making a good horsemanship decision in the lovely Vaunted’s best interest, and I appreciate that Ashley has given a public glimpse into one of the toughest decisions a rider will ever have to make.  We wish Ashley and Vaugn, and all of the remaining Rolex entrants the best of luck moving forward.

Saturday Reader

We have been writing about Rolex on and off for the past couple of months, but Eventing Nation’s Rolex coverage is really going to kick into gear over the next couple of days.  Our friends in Lexington have no doubt noticed the Rolex publicity already, especially the radio commercial. 

Rolex (this time I’m talking about the company) has a fantastic marketing department, which, perhaps more than any other company, recognizes that sponsoring equestrian competition is a great way to link their brand to elegance, strength, and tremendous excitement within one of the wealthiest markets on Earth.  And they capture all of those elements perfectly with their commercials:

This year’s radio commercial features the great Tom Leach, the voice of the Wildcats, and is apparently far superior to the absurd soundtracks of previous years.
This traditional preview press release has been making the rounds on many sites.
Visionaire found this fantastic video from Rolex last year.

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And now for several completely unrelated notes:
Zenyatta is now 16-0 while Rachel’s owners run and hide.  

AP McCoy won the Grand National.  

Lets hope spectators at Rolex aren’t nearly as bad dressers as the people at the Grand National.  That link was kindly (or not so much) sent to us by BC.
As if we don’t have enough videos up already, check out this great video of Briar’s Berrima International One Day Event 2010, sent to us by Buzzterbrown.

Description: Set in the beautiful southern highlands the Briar’s Berrima International One Day Event plays host to over 360 competitors. Ranging from juniors to Australia’s and New Zealand’s elite they compete at this exciting event over some very challenging courses.
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Finally, check out how your friends are doing at today’s events:

Ram Tap (CA): Homepage, Ride Times

Spring Bay (KY): Homepage, Ride Times, Schedule
The Fork HT (NC): Homepage, Ride Times, Live Scores
Plantation Field (PA): Homepage, Ride Times, Live Scores
Chattahoochee Hills (GA): Homepage, Ride Times, Live Scores

ER Episode 71: Buck, Lucinda, and Jim Wolf

Buck Davidson reflects on a successful Easter weekend at The Fork as The Chronicle’s Sara Leiser brings us a full report from this influential event which is used as a final preparation for Rolex. Plus, Jim Wolf offers a tribute to Mrs. John B. (Nancy) Hannum. Listen in. Eventing Radio Episode 71 – Buck Davidson and Lucinda Fredericks:

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Grassroots Eventing in the UK

One of Eventing Nation’s most prolific and knowledgeable commenters, ‘lec‘ hails from the UK and was kind enough to send us a description of the grassroots levels and issues in British Eventing. Thanks for writing lec, and thank you for reading.

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From lec:

 

I have read a lot of the posts on Eventing Nation and thought it might be interesting for people to learn about the UK classes below Preliminary.

 

In the UK over 80% of the membership participates in what is called grassroots competitions these range from BE80T which starts at 80cm and goes up to Preliminary (US) which is called Novice in the UK.

 

BE80T was introduced two years ago by BE. Part of the reason was a lot of members wanted safe and professionally run competition at this level. We have large numbers of unaffiliated competition in this country but a lot of it is run by Pony Club or Riding Club and I have been to competitions on a green horse looking for a confidence boosting time and discovered a really odd fence. Unaffiliated can be a bit hit or miss depending on who is building the course. The main part of the BE80T is the training aspect. You have a BE accredited trainer there who takes you through every aspect from walking the courses, warming you up and answering any questions. The main participants in BE80T are aged 40-60 years old. They have maybe had a family and are looking to get back into riding competitively again. They really like the training aspect of the class and they have been well received.


Longleat Horse trials which runs BE100 – CIC2*


(It’s run next to the safari park so you get to warm up next to sea lions!) 


BE90 is a 90cm class. This was introduced about 6 years ago as it was felt that BE100 was getting too technical and many amateurs wanted a class which fed naturally into BE100. BE90 has got more technical as the higher levels have increased. You now find mini versions of everything you would find at Novice and Intermediate but on a softer scale. If you come 1st to 3rd in a BE90 you qualify for a BE90 regional final. These take place throughout the country and the top 25% qualify for the grassroots championships which take place at Badminton during the 4*. Anyone who has competed at CIC2* and above has to compete HC in an intro. Horses are not allowed any points (points can only be achieved at Novice and above). This year I have seen more and more pros starting their young horses at BE90 where as in the past they would start at BE100. We do not have pro or amateur sections in the UK so BE90 and BE80T are the only specific amateur classes.

 

BE100 is 100cm (do you see a theme here!) and is the last real level of grassroots. Like the BE90 the 1st to 3rd in a class qualifies for a regional final with the top 25% qualifying for the championship at Badminton. Only those who have not competed at CIC2* and above are eligible for the championship. At BE100 this is the first time you can compete against pros as an equal. Anyone can ride in BE100 as long as the horse has no points. Two years ago in order to make the jump to Novice easier a class called BE100+ was introduced. This was a novice level dressage test and show jumping which was 1.05m to 1.10m with BE100 cross country. They have been pretty popular as they narrow the gap between BE100 and Novice. There is a BE100 three day event but so far only one event – Aldon has made a success of this. In the UK riders are just not that interested in long format but the end of season three day at Aldon is often used as a fun event at the end of a season as its more technical than a regular BE100.

 

Novice (UK) – I have been doing Novice since 2007 and it has got harder! In the 3 years I have been doing it the course have become more technical and the show jumping much harder with lots of related distances, dog legs and tight use of corners. It’s no longer possible to enter having gone well at BE100 and expect it to be ok. There used to be courses with an easy reputation but slowly they are either downgrading to BE100 or they have been beefed up. At Novice if you are placed or you get a double clear you get points. These mean you are then not eligible for the classes below or you have to enter an open section. Points stay with a horse for life.

 

This year BE have introduced downgrading which is a big contentious issue but BE says they take it on a case by case scenario and some horses have been refused. Downgraded horses are not eligible for the grassroots championships. If a horse has points and the rider wants to learn the ropes then providing the horse has not won any points within 2 years then it will be considered.

 

Finally the other thing that has been introduced this year is foundation points. These are points handed out to BE90 and BE100 competitors for being placed or for getting a double clear. There is currently an updated list on the BE website which lists the top 20 horses and riders for foundation points and I believe the aim is to have regional points competitions and prizes. Personally I am not sure of the benefits but I can understand that if you are competing at BE90 its great to have a double clear recognised.

 

The figures and statistics

 

Last year there were 180 events run throughout the UK.

 

21,213 took part at BE90

 

33,996 took part at BE100

 

24,995 took part at Novice.

 

The typical cost of being a member of BE is £120 and to register the horse its £80.

 

To enter a BE90 or BE100 will cost between £55-70 depending on the event. We also have to pay £10 start fee which normally covers medical costs.

 

Most riders have at least 20 events within a 2 hour radius. I am very lucky and have about 40 due to my location.

Friday Notes and News

Kentuckians will get to purchase Ground Passes (tickets to get into the Horse Park) for the WEGs at the discounted price of $15 on April 15th, but XC day is excluded.  Ahhh, the joys of extracting consumer surplus.
Courtney King-Dye has spoken her first words, and said “thank you for your hard work” to one of her nurses.  Courtesy of Horesetalk.co.nz
The field is set for the Grand National Chase in GBR.  I spoke with a gentleman from the UK several months ago who explained to me that the Grand National is a truly incredible test of the horse and is a very big deal in Great Britain.
The Tennessee horse slaughter bill passed a subcommittee by a slim margin, and moves onward in the legislative gauntlet.  
The Melbourne Cup is seeking to reunite the remains of the incredible racehorse Phar Lap, whose hide is in Melbourne, heart is in Canberra, and skeleton is in New Zealand.
TJR: FEI to release clarification of difference between rollkur vs LDR and explain “aggressive riding”
Unsurprisingly, the mass polo pony deaths in Florida have led to a huge law suit.
In a joking text conversation, the Chattahoochee course designer says “April easy May carnage is the plan,” so get your May entries in now.
*Check out this incredible video of the real 2009 Grand National, and then the Pony Grand Nationals…

Best of the Blogs: Alex Hua Tian

The Long Format Club and Future

With the discussion that Katie’s article has generated about the long format, I thought it would be a good time to give some publicity to a good cause.  The Long Format Club is dedicated to preserving the training and preliminary classic series events, which are both great educational opportunities and tremendously fun.  I don’t have any personal experience with the Long Format Club, but please visit longformatclub.com for more information.
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One thing that is clear about the long format is that there are many riders who enjoy and benefit immensely from the T3DE and P3D events.  One thing that someone brought to my attention is that the Virginia Three-day Event and HT in May has a P3D that is both cheaper that the CCI* and is offering prize money ($1,000) while the CCI* does not.  Putting on a long format event requires extra energy, extra work, and extra volunteer support, but finding ways to make it cheaper and pay more prize money should really help the long format prosper.  The long format has many strong supporters, but none as important or dedicated as Brian and Penny Ross, who organize the Virginia 3D & HT and tirelessly serve the eventing community in countless ways.

Events This Weekend

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in the bleachers at The Fork show jumping
This weekend is a pretty slow weekend at the upper levels, despite the fact that the beautiful Chattahoochee hills is running an advanced, because most UL horses are taking a break after The Fork, and almost all of the Rolex horses will not compete again until Kentucky.  However, this is a strong weekend for the lower levels, with 5 very nice events.  You can see the progression of events to the north, and many northern eventers are getting their first runs this weekend after the long cold winter.  Happy eventing everyone.

Ram Tap (CA): Homepage, Ride Times
Spring Bay (KY): Homepage, Ride Times, Schedule
The Fork HT (NC): Homepage, Ride Times, Live Scores
Plantation Field (PA): Homepage, Ride Times, Live Scores
Chattahoochee Hills (GA): Homepage, Ride Times, Live Scores

Where Eventing Went and How to Get It Back: Some Guy’s Take

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Katie’s article “Where Have All The Good Times Gone” has generated a great deal of discussion here on Eventing Nation and elsewhere.  In our very first post ever, I explained that I wanted Eventing Nation to be a forum for eventing’s great thinkers and ideas, and I want to thank Katie and everyone who has participated in this ongoing discussion for helping EN to be just that.
Eventers everywhere seem frustrated and concerned, even angry.  This frustration doesn’t have one origin or cause, but it has built up gradually over time as people have watched novice riders wheeling their courses, as we have seen professionals running their top horses at as many four-stars as possible until they break down (and then at two more), and as some imported super-mover is ridden in near hyperflexion and extended trot around a training test and scores a 15.  
As I read Katie’s article, and the comments here and on the COTH thread (which the great Denny started), I noticed that a lot of the frustration comes from situations where eventing has been turned against itself through forces well beyond the control of us eventers. Consider some of the conflicts and resulting choices that have made eventing what it is today:
(1) One such conflict arises from the sacrifice of the upper-level long format to appease the Olympics.  As Katie noted, there are multiple opinions and explanations as for how the long format CCI’s faded, and some reasons are certainly better than others, but according to several people very high on the food chain, the ultimate reality was either lose the long format or lose the Olympics.  
(2) Once the long format departed, our sport was once again faced with a conflict.  Without the extreme endurance component to XC, we had to choose between losing XC as a competitive factor, essentially making eventing a combined test, or dramatically cranking up the technicality of the cross-country.
(3) Then, since the upper level courses became more technical, we were faced with yet another tough choice between ratcheting up the technicality of the lower level courses or allowing a massive disconnect to form between the levels.
As a result of these conflicts, eventing stayed in the Olympics, made four-stars more technical, and then started putting corners on novice courses.  I’m not sure that I disagree with any of those choices made at each of the above conflicts, but I’m uneasy when I look at where we ended up.
Another such line of conflicts is leading to a similarly unsettling result:
(1) It starts with the notion that we want to grow eventing and spread our beloved sport, and we’d like to see better mainstream media coverage and recognition.  I’m the kind of person who would like to see a great XC ride in the SportsCenter Top 10 someday.  The professional riders want better prize money at competitions, and better sponsorships, and, considering that Kobe makes more in about 3 preseason games than the Rolex Grand Slam pays, who can blame them?  Heck, with entry fees as high as they are these days, who can blame anyone for wanting prize money at events?
(2) But, as prize money, media coverage, and sponsorship money grows, the incentive to win increases and horsemanship starts to become costly.  Riders start blasting around horse trials at Mach 10 to score year-end award points.  Furthermore, as I watched them hand out checks to the top 10 riders at The Fork, I wondered briefly if $1,000 dollars was enough to make anyone run faster this weekend than they should have to prepare for Rolex.  We offer $350,000 for winning three four-stars in a row and then get appalled when a rider does everything possible to win, including run his amazing horse off its legs.  The dark secret of our sport is that horsemanship and winning sometimes conflict, and for every $1 more in incentives you offer to win, you occasionally make good horsemanship that much more expensive. 
So, as we look back on the choices we have made, we see a vibrant, growing, more popular than ever, more profitable than ever sport, and yet we also see people making absurdly stupid decisions for their horses, and we watch those decisions trickle down to their students.  Perhaps I should have mentioned at the beginning that this is not a happy article.
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After looking back on how our sport has been turned against itself, at how several incremental and possibly correct decisions have led us to frustrating places, we are left with wondering what can be done?  It’s easy to present a long list of complaints , but it’s harder to propose solutions.
Should we run backwards?  Should we return four-stars to that lovely true test over miles and miles of four phases with gallopy and flowing courses, despite the fact that we would probably lose the Olympics?  Should we run the sponsors off and reduce the already paltry prize money in the hope of making horsemanship less expensive?  Even if going back to the good old days was practically possible (it isn’t), I still wouldn’t settle for backtracking because I don’t think we need to.  Now, onto the solutions.
Three changes in our sport that are both practical and pretty simple to implement are:
(1) Increased transparency in the form of better communication of governance and other major issues to the eventing public.  Eventing is an intelligent, tightly-knit community of forward thinkers, and most of our leaders are lifetime horsepeople.   This makes transparency a much more realistic possibility in our sport than, say, between the Congress and the American people.  The eventing “powers that be,” so to speak, should understand that making the public more aware of how major issues are debated and decided upon might be uncomfortable but will ultimately make the public feel more invested in the outcome and less ‘in the dark.’  The next time our sport fundamentally changes, I hope I won’t be writing about it several years later and saying “there are multiple opinions and explanations for how this happened...”
Note: I’m not singling out any particular organization, and I’m not even singling out equine governing bodies in general.  I am saying that any time our sport starts to change, there is value in helping the public to understand what changes are happening and why.
(2) Increased leadership by eventing professionals both by getting involved in the governance of eventing and by communicating their insights to the eventing public.  By ‘professional,’ I don’t just mean professional riders, but anyone deeply involved in our sport, including organizers, officials, vets, farriers, etc.  These professionals need to be as involved as possible in our governing organizations, and in the dialogue of eventing.  Three years ago, the professionals might have been able to complain about not having a voice, but not any more.  Almost every professional has a website, certainly everyone has a Facebook, every third professional has a blog, and many pros are starting to write for major websites or magazines.
As an aside, since not everyone has a blog, and because not every media outlet wants to deal with the tough issues, consider this a standing invitation that any professional who wants to write a well-informed and insightful article about a meaningful eventing issue, I will gladly publish it here on Eventing Nation.  With 2,000 visits a day, and over 3,500 unique visitors a week, and our network of friends in the media, close to half the US eventing public will read what you write.  Professionals no longer have any excuse whatsoever for not being heard.

What’s so encouraging is that if you speak with them in private, many professionals are well informed about the current eventing issues and they have great ideas about improving our sport.  We just need to get them talking to everyone, which will ultimately take more motivation to reach out than most professionals have displayed thus far, but two things that would help professionals in this endeavor are:

Better questions and support from us in the media.  If we just keep asking about how awesome the XC course rode or how many dogs they have, then we are part of the problem and not part of the solution.  

Understanding from the fans, and an appreciation that they are willing to take the risk of making their voice heard, whether or not we agree with their conclusions.  Whether right or wrong, there is a perception among professionals that the few times they have tried to stick their necks out, they have gotten shot down and torn apart.  Dialogue should be intellectually honest and disagree whenever necessary, but it should always be polite and respectful.

(3) A better link between the will of the eventing public and the changes that occur in eventing.  Do you see the progression?  First we need transparency to tell us what is going on, then we need leadership from the professionals to help us decide on the best course of action, and then we need the ability to help that happen. Eventing is a wonderful sport because if you don’t know an influential person (which almost everyone does), you certainly know someone who does, and you will see at least 30 influential people at every competition.  Furthermore, local Area organizations, and even the national governing organizations have relatively straightforward steps for joining boards or getting involved in other ways.  Going to a governing convention (the USEA’s is in AZ this year) is yet another fantastic way to be immersed in the decision making of eventing.  
On the flip side, the “powers that be” should do everything possible to enfranchise the public and therefore invest them in the resulting change.  A lot of the frustrations and anxieties people are expressing about the changes in our sport would be mitigated if they felt like they had been more involved in the decision making.
In summary, I’m asking the most influential people in eventing to keep us better informed about changes in our sport, I’m asking the professionals to give us their honest and straightforward insights, and I’m asking all of us to make an effort to be more involved in the process of reaching decisions.  These ideas are far from perfect, but the best I can ever hope for is that they stimulate thought and conversation.  I understand that working for positive change is always harder than watching things go wrong and then complaining about them.  But, hope remains if you, like me, are filled with the belief that eventers are an inherently special type of people who can, by toughness, mental instability, and a little luck accomplish great things.  I hope that, as you read this, you sense the many other eventers who are also reading this, and that we all, together, appreciate the great responsibility that lies before us as stewards of our great sport.  Go eventing.

For Anyone Who Says Riders Are Wimps…

…they need to meet Amy Tryon.

We mentioned a few weeks ago that Stephen Bradley rode Leyland and Coal Creek at Southern Pines II because Amy had a minor medical procedure that would sideline her for a couple of weeks.  This weekend, Amy rode both horses in the Advanced at The Fork, and had excellent rides all weekend.  Coal Creek finished 6th, and Leyland 11th, and both had the right amount of XC time penalties to get a feel for the speed while saving them for Kentucky.  
The only thing is that Amy’s knee (which had a microscopic procedure) hadn’t healed as quickly as the doctors anticipated.  I won’t get into the grizzly medical details, but suffice it to say that the knee was enough of an issue that Amy was bleeding though the knee of her britches during the show jumping.  
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Amy show jumping at The Fork with Leyland
Despite what can only have been a very painful experience riding two horses around advanced dressage, XC, and show jumping (not to mention all the coursewalks, etc.), I never once heard about Amy complaining or saw her wince.  
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Important: This isn’t a story to start speculation about Amy’s knee for Kentucky.  Amy answered any possible questions about the knee being ready for Rolex by riding two horses around the advanced this weekend, just a few weeks after surgery.
Amy is known as one of the toughest people in eventing, and she lived up to and well beyond that reputation this weekend.  This is Curt Schilling pitching in the World Series with a bloody ankle, Tiger winning the US Open on one knee type of toughness, and exactly the type of intestinal fortitude that the US Team needs this fall.  Let’s be ready to give Amy an extra loud cheer around Rolex.

Need to Know Wednesday

Evening Update: Paddock Vac sponsors dressage rider Betsy Steiner.  A few weeks ago, AH sent me a funny link to Pasture Vac, but I forgot to do something with it for the site until now.  Pasture Vac is a vacuum for horse crap, and ranks right up there with the vibrating Shake’n Fork as perhaps the laziest product in the horse world.  Why go through the trouble of scooping poop into a wheelbarrow when you can buy a $4,000 machine to vacuum poo from the luxury of the sitting position (tractor not included).  Visit pasturevacuums.com for more information, including the fun fact “A horse weighing 1000 lbs. produces an average of 9 tons of manure every year.
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Another Fork photo: Buck and Bobby leaving after a clean round, Allison and Arthur entering
It’s a pretty slow news day in eventing, as everyone is still recovering from The Fork, but here are a few stories for your reading pleasure:

Amanda Atkins won the first T3DE of 2010.
EN guest writer Lindsay Pierce’s coach, Lucy Wiegersma lost a horse at Burnham Market.
The USEF Training Three-Day dressage tests are now available.

The Horse and Hound talks about the new FEI doping regulations.
TC has an amusing article about the Google search terms people use to get to their site (explicit language warning).  Google is awesome, and has been very kind in their rankings of EN considering we are so young, but we also get some traffic from pretty amusing searches.  One of my all time favorites is someone in Sri Lanka who arrived from Google after searching “live sults” after our Kelly Sult live blog.
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And now for something completely different: I’m getting a little frustrated with several (4ish) other sites finding news and content on EN and putting that content right onto their sites without reference to Eventing Nation.  Our policy on Eventing Nation is to always link to the original story and give credit to anyone who we found the story through if we didn’t find it at the original source.  I’m glad we are so fast at finding news, and of course I’m more than happy for other sites to share that news, but when someone clearly finds something through us and then uses it  without referencing us, it bothers me.
Our analytics program shows the company names of commercial IP addresses, and it’s fairly common to see site X visit EN, and then 10 minutes later a video or a news story we just posted shows up on their site without any reference to EN.  This kind of thing is completely legal, but violates common courtesy and I think it’s against the camaraderie and principles of working together fundamental to eventing.  I’m not annoyed enough to time-stamp screenshot the analytics page when they visit, and then their site when they post it, and then post it, but that’s entirely possible.  Of course, we have gotten tremendous support, especially early on, from sites linking to us, and we protect our friends at EN.  Go eventing together.

(Other) Events This Weekend Results and Rain in the UK

We are spending a lot of time covering The Fork because it is such a big prep event, but, of course there were other important events in the US and around the World this weekend.
FENCE (NC) Results: Tucker XIV and Shannon Quigley won the OP at the FENCE horse trials in Tryon, NC this weekend.  The 3 month stretch of events within 1 hour of Aiken every weekend is winding down as the snowbirds start to head home or prepare to head home via Kentucky in a few weeks.
The Pine Hill (TX) results have not been posted as of Monday morning, but will be posted here soon. 
CDCTA (VA) Results: US eventing’s migration up the east coast continued this weekend at CDCTA, where Tiffany Catledge and Allforit added just 4.4 XC time to their dressage score of 29.6 to win the OP-A, and Wendy Masemer jumped from 2nd to 1st to win the OP-B.
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In England, bad weather is destroying the Spring competition season.  Pipps Cuckson writes that 7 out of 8 events this weekend were canceled due to bad weather in the UK.  British Eventing’s website is announcing cancellations left and right, and the cancellations are starting to interfere with Spring three-day preparations.  Fortunately the Burnham Market CIC3* was able to run this weekend.
Burnham Market CIC3* Results: Oliver Townend and Rolex entrant Ashdale Cruise Master won the CIC3*.
In New Zealand, Megan Jones (AUS), last years FEI World Cup eventing champion won the second leg of this years WC at Kihikihi (Red Hills was the first) and will take her lead in the standings home to Sydney next month for the third leg.  FEI press release

Monday News an Notes

Happy day after Easter Eventing Nation!  It’s a big news day throughout the equestrian world, so lets jump right into it:
–First and most importantly, because today is the day after Easter, marshmallow Peeps go on sale throughout the World.  Are Peeps candy, are they dessert, are they dinner, or are they post-armageddon survival food?  I have no idea, but they are just as tasty today as they were 24 hours ago, so take your truck and trailer to Wal Mart and stock up for the year.  Peep Research, Peeps diorama contest, 100 ways to kill a Peep
–Secondly, *drumroll* the FEI’s new anti-doping regulations go into effect today.  The new lingo is that “Prohibited Substances” are substances that are not allowed at competitions, “Banned Substances” are substances that “have no place in equestrian sport,” while substances commonly used in equine medication but that are prohibited in competition are “Controlled Medication Substances.”  Easy squeezey lemon peasey, right?  FEI Press Release, Prohibited Substances Database, Prohibited Substances List, Rules

As an interesting test of your vet’s sports medicine orientation, you could ask them what they think of the FEI’s new anti-doping regulations.  If they enter into a long talk about the nuances of Bute’s time levels in the bloodstream and the effects of mixing drugs, then that’s great.  If they seem surprised that things have changed, you might want to get ahold of another vet to help you before three-days.  If they ask “what’s the FEI?” then you might want to move out of North Dakota.

–If you missed this last Friday, Shelby French had an interesting article about the different intercollegiate riding programs for the COTH.
Barn politics are the number one reason people change barns.
Happy belated 150th anniversary to the Pony Express.
Best of the Blogs: Laine Ashker’s Fork recap, Chelan Kozac.  Note: if you write great blog entries and want them to be featured as part of our Best of the Blogs, shoot me an email with a link to the blog and I’ll have a look.