Articles Written 2,972
Article Views 1,575,399

John

Achievements

Become an Eventing Nation Blogger

About John

Latest Articles Written

Helmet Cam: Redland HT

It’s helmet-cam Monday on EN, and you know what that means!  Stay tuned for a couple of great helmet cams from the weekend around our wide world of eventing.  This helmet cam was submitted by Diane Zrimsek, who competed at the Redland horse trials in Maryland with her horse Lincoln. Hosted by the Redland Hunt and Pony Club, the Redland HT features beginner novice through training divisions.
—-

From Diane:

Here’s helmet cam footage from Redland on Saturday. What a fun Training course! There weren’t too many max sized jumps, but the combos and terrain questions kept it interesting. It was a great confidence-builder for me and Lincoln, just what we needed after a tough Morven xc a few weeks ago.

[Redland Results]

Go eventing.

Fair Hill Pics and Video

Melissa Boutin and Siamese Kat moved from 17th to 1st on Saturday with this swift XC ride. They closed the deal today with 4 show jumping penalties to take the advanced win. Caitlin Silliman and Catch a Star continued their incredible return to eventing after the True Prospect fire with a 4th place finish in the advance division. The advanced featured a number of horses entered at Rolex, all of whom of course did not run XC. Jan Byyny with Inmidair, Sharon White with Rafferty’s Rules, and Holly Payne with Madeline all tied for first in the dressage before withdrawing prior to the cross-country. I also heard quite a bit about the XC footing being firm, which led to some withdraws as well.

Canada’s Michelle Mueller and the impressive Amistad dominated the Fair Hill CIC3* division, winning by 15 points. Amistad is a horse that has always impressed me in all three phases and I definitely feel like this pair has the talent to break through at the top level.  Jon Holling and Downtown Harrison finished 2nd this weekend instead of writing their promised EN blog.  Oh yes, I just went there.  We’re not taking any prisoners today.  Kevin Keane and Fernhill Flutter finished in 3rd.

Doug Payne and Crown Talisman won the CIC2* on 50.6.  Valerie Vizcarranso and Playtime, owned by Chris Ellis, finished a great weekend in second–Playtime and Val are definitely a pair to watch in the future.  Liz Riley and It’s The Truth were the only CIC2* riders to finish on their dressage score.  I also have to give an EN shout-out to Babbette Lenna and Little Oliver for their 11th placed finish in the 2*.  They were Aiken barn neighbors with me for a couple of years.

Haley Tucker and Lion Display are leading the CIC* at Fair Hill with show jumping results still to come.

[Fair Hill Live Results]


Outfoxed SJ, ridden by Sinead, Update: This video is from The Fork, but what the heck…

 


Boyd and his new ride Trading Aces

 


The jump judges’ briefing, courtesy of Holly Covey, click here for more great photos

 


Katie Willis and Zeizos, via Holly Covey


Matt Flynn and Cheval Z looking good, photo courtesy of Holly Covey

 

I’ll leave you with this mind-bending question, sent to us from out good friend Kim Parisan: How many girls does it take to bridle an 18 yo TB?


“Eventually Dad had to step in.”

Thanks to everyone for sending in their photos and videos and, as is tradition, please send your photos and videos to [email protected].  Go Fair Hill.

VIDEO: Twin Rivers XC

Annie linked to this video in our Sunday morning links but it is definitely worth an embed. Check out the awesome XC action from Saturday at Twin Rivers courtesy of Josh Walker, Frankie Thieriot, and the USEA.

[Twin Rivers Scores]

Go California eventing.

Jacky Green — To put things in perspective…

Jacky Green returns to EN this weekend with a look at the unaffiliated Mattingley HT in the UK.  As usual, it’s a mix of brilliant insight and hilarity.  Jacky works for Team New Zealand and also runs her Maizey Manor Farm in the UK and she is a regular Eventing Nation contributor. Thanks for writing this Jacky and thank you for reading.
—-

From Jacky:

As all the grown ups and big guns prep for Badminton and Rolex and Eventing Nation is awash with news of both I think it is time we took a quick look at the other end of the scale as we went “undercover” on Saturday to an unaffiliated intro and pre novice event in the UK.  Now to be fair although Esib Power is Badminton bound with September Bliss, we did have 3 ex racehorses on the truck, one of whom never made it to the track, the second we purchased from Alan King after Burghley last year, and the third we purchased two weeks ago and actually ran in a race just three Saturdays ago.  So we were genuinely allowed to go under the British Eventing radar.

Mattingley was a hugely popular British Eventing venue and its status as “unaffiliated” has in no way demoted it… it features great dressage arenas, fabulous showjumping course and an unbelievably presented cross country.  All good so far except that our undercover mission was swiftly going wrong as we bumped into NZ International Lizzie Brown, London bound (for Jamaica) Sam Albert,  4 star stalwart Vikki Brake….. for our first venture into the unknown it seemed quite normal.  I had made the hideous error of rocking up to a horse trials in jods and chaps as I thought no one would spot me looking like a wannabee and I was running very late.  I was utterly transfixed by the amount of coloured and spotty horses on show….our beautiful  thoroughbreds looked very out of place and as I am a total horse snob in that I hate anything not of the same hue throughout I was swiftly put in my place as it transpired if you were not on either of the aforementioned you would not score under 30 in the dressage come what may.

The commentary was hysterical….one hapless girl ploughed straight through the in of the double as her horse tried to stop but slipped. She lay on the ground flat out and as her steed galloped riderless round the ring she was told “stay lying down, there is a loose horse in the arena” in what surely would have had me on my feet in nano seconds but she dutifully lay there until it was caught!  Damn these guys are brave!  Then there was “Mason”, who set out cross country in a determined tranter  (yes, Wayne Roycroft’s description of a horse that canters in front but trots behind).  We were told that the rider “was suffering from a broken foot.  In fact it was Mason that trod on her and broke it.  Bless him.”  As Mason thundered past with feet like dinner plates I felt for his rider….and I am sure she did not say Bless Him when it happened.

The family exchanges were beyond encouraging to hear…. If they were eliminated it was because “that idiot at the yard told me to practice, it never works”, “ I think he got tired” and my personal favourite, “ well I asked you to get late times, he never wants to go first thing”.  Some of these horse were just amazing. They quite often jumped from impossible spots, sussed out the fence from trot, canter, steeplechase speed.  You name it they did it.  They chipped, they stood off, they bolted at them, but amazingly apart from a few rider tip offs they remained upright.  There are a whole ton of horses out there that just know their job and hats off to them as much as our 4 star heroes.  Sometimes it’s good to go watch them just being someone else’s hero and know that if a horse is honest and genuine they do have a job and a lovely life.

And for us……well, they all went well but no one could accuse us of pothunting as we won nothing!

The first Rolex horses arrived this morning at the Kentucky Horse Park


Photos via Rolex Kentucky

The Kentucky Horse Park is officially in Rolex mode with the arrival of Team New Zealand early this morning.  The arrival also signals the final word that Andrew Nicholson has settled on Calico Joe and Quanza as his Rolex rides.  He was originally entered on 4 horses but always planned on only bringing two.

The arrivals:

Calico Joe ridden by Andrew Nicholson

Kilcoltrim Ambassador ridden by Lucy Jackson

Clifton Promise ridden by Jonathan Paget

Qwanza ridden by Andrew Nucholson


[More Photos, Rolex Entries]

Go New Zealand.

EN’s first Rolex contest of 2012 — Win a trip to Ireland

It’s nearly time for Rolex and that means a few things for Eventing Nation–marriage proposals, worst videos ever, exciting cross-country action, absurd live blog commentary, 18 hour days of running around the Kentucky Horse Park, and of course tons of fun contests from our awesome sponsors.  Stay tuned to EN over the next week–we have the best line up of prizes ever.  Speaking of great prizes, we might as well start with a bang.  Win a trip for two to Ireland, home of the Dubarry Galway Boot!

The Dubarry Rolex 3 Day Event photo competition is being hosted on Dubarry’s Facebook Page www.facebook.com/DubarryOfIreland starting on Thursday April 26th.

Dubarry is offering up to 4 opportunities to enter the competition over the 4 days of Rolex.  Each morning of the competition, Dubarry will announce a daily photo theme for that day’s entries. You will submit photos that match each day’s theme by posting them to the Dubarry Facebook page.  Keep an eye out right here on Eventing Nation and Dubarry’s Facebook Page for announcements of the theme each day.  You can enter up to one photo per day – enter all 4 days or any single day.  The entrant who posts the single photo with the most votes at competition close on Monday April 30th will win a trip for 2 to Ireland, home of the Dubarry Galway Boot!  It’s as simple at that.

Terms and conditions apply. Coren is still not allowed back in Ireland after that one spring break trip so she can’t participate.  Check http://www.facebook.com/DubarryOfIreland for details.  And I don’t need to mention that Dubarrys are a must have component of your Rolex spectator (or rider) tack.  Horses make sure your riders are well prepared for the Rolex weather by hooking them up with some Dubarrys.  [Buy Dubarrys]

Go Dubarry.

OH MY GOSH IT’S ONLY 5 DAYS UNTIL ROLEX

For Rolex competitors and their support staff, this weekend means the last few rides before shipping out for Kentucky and the last few sleepless nights in their own beds.  Here’s a look at a few odds and ends from around the eventing world for those of you who aren’t madly packing and repacking your tack trunks today:

–Leslie included the above photo in this morning’s news and notes, but I think it is definitely worth another mention.  Chelan Kozak explains on her Facebook page: “This was taken at Twin Rivers Ranch. Event this weekend. To honour eventing’s hero Amy Tryon who is no longer with us. This is why I LOVE my eventing peeps. Awesome job everyone!”  Awesome job indeed and thanks for the photo Chelan, Amy will definitely be on all of our minds as Rolex draws closer.

–In some sad Rolex news, Ying Yang Yo has withdrawn from the competition today.  Thomas has had a fantastic comeback including of course the Fair Hill CCI3* win last year.   You will recall that Thomas withdrew from The Fork due to an ulcer injury to his eye during the trailer ride to NC. Unfortunately that hasn’t quite healed in time for Kentucky–the eye still has a tiny ulcer and is a bit cloudy.  On a personal note, let me just say that one thing several top vets have told me that I have really taken to heart is–never take an equine eye injury lightly, always call your vet at the first sign of eye trouble.  A little eye problem can become a big eye problem in a hurry.  Thomas is rerouting to Luhmuhlen CCI4* this summer.  Get well soon Thomas!  [Rolex Entries]

–Boyd has a new horse to add to his arsenal after the recent acquisition of Kylie Lyman’s Fair Hill 2011 CCI2* champion Trading Aces, owned by Geoff and Joan Nichols.  Trading Aces is 8 years old. Boyd told me they are targeting the Bromont CCI3* with an eye on the Normandy WEGs in 2014.  Boyd also expressed how important Dr. Mark Hart and the Event Owners Task Force was in helping put a team together to buy the horse for him.  Boyd is competing Trading Aces at Fair Hill this weekend.  Boyd still has Remington and Otis entered at Kentucky.  Although this will be Otis’ first four-star, I’m looking for a big performance from him and I think he very well could challenge his stable mate Neville at least slightly to be Boyd’s Olympic horse when all is said and done.

My last Boyd note of the day is just to say that if you missed Reid Forgrave’s article about Neville at Fox Sports this week read it now, but get some tissues first.

 ““I’m real sorry,” the fire chief told Martin. “Everything’s gone. It’s all gone.”

But Neville Bardos, the horse Martin had saved from slaughter and turned into one of the top eventing horses in the world, was inside. Firefighters told him it was dangerous, that the building was close to collapsing, that he couldn’t go in.

The firefighters’ charge was to protect human life first. But to Martin, Neville was as good as family. Martin felt clear-headed, as sober as a judge, and he knew what he had to do.

So Martin punched the fire chief who was blocking his way, covered his face with a T-shirt and ran into the thick, black smoke.”

[Neville Article]

–Visionaire wrote about the USEF announcing Barbury HT in England as the final mandatory outing before the Olympics.  This has been the unofficial assumed mandatory outing destination since last year and many other nations will be using Barbury as their final run as well–so many that Barbury is going to look like a mini Olympcis.  I attended Barbury last year and it is a really well hosted event with a good course.

–We have a busy weekend of eventing already underway here in the US.  *Four events have live scores–Twin Rivers, Holly Hill, and Long Leaf and *Fair Hill.  The live scoring folks do such a good job that I feel completely lost following events all around the country without them.  We will do our best to keep you updated all weekend.

Update: Fair Hill has live scores as well.

Twin Rivers CIC/CCI [Website] [Times/Scores]

Fair Hill [Website] [Entry Status] [Times]

Holly Hill [Website] [Times] [Live Scores]

Long Leaf [Website] [Times] [Live Scores]

River Glen [Website] [Times]

Redland Hunt PC [Website] [Times]

–At Twin Rivers, developing rider McKenna Shea and Landioso are leading the three pair CIC3* division on a 51.3 just ahead of James Atkinson and Gustav.  Katherine Groesbeck is leading the three horse advanced division on an impressive 24.1 with Oz The Twin Man.  [Full Twin Rivers Scores]  Check out the awesome interviews in this video from Thursday at Twin Rivers courtesy of Josh Walker, Frankie Thieriot, and the USEA.

 

–Fair Hill: Here’s a photo of our good friend Molly Rosin and Rivan riding at Fair Hill on this cool Maryland day.  Thanks to Kim Parisan for sending the photo.  Please send any event reports, tips, and ridiculousness from the weekend to [email protected].

 

John Nunn and Smilelikeyoumeanit:

 

Last, but not least, Abby is riding at Fair Hill this weekend.  She can recite every Badminton champion in alphabetical order in less than 45 seconds so if you are out and about at Fair Hill please find and ask her to do so under penalty of dumping a bucket of water on her head.  To everyone else riding this weekend–good luck, be safe, look after your horse, and have fun.  Just 5 days until the first horse inspection…Go eventing.

Bromont and Tattersalls Added as USEF Olympic Selection Trials


Bromont

Two USEF Olympic lead up announcements in one day –Christmas comes in April.  First Barbury was announced as the mandatory outing earlier today (no surprise) and now Tattersalls and Bromont have been officially added as selection trials.  I’m surprised that Bromont wasn’t originally a selection trial.  Tattersalls will give UK based US riders another nice selection trial.  Adding these two events stretches out the selection season by a couple of weeks.

Added today:

Tattersalls CCI3*, Ratoath, Ireland May 31-June 3, 2012

Bromont CCI3*, Bromont, Canada June 7-10, 2012

Other selection trials:

Rolex

Badminton

Jersey Fresh CCI3*

Saumur CCI3* (FRA)

Go eventing.

 

WANTED: Pig

This is what happens when Visionaire lets me write posts.  Eventing Nation is aiding in the quest to find a pig that went missing from North Carolina after a certain distinguished event around the time that a certain distinguished triangular logoed event team left town.  Leads continue to surface as to the whereabouts of said pig but I am sad to report we don’t have anything definite at this point.  Today’s lead is courtesy of Christina Aharoni. Please send any and all pig reports or rumors to [email protected].  Stay classy EN.
—-

From Christina:

As rumor has it, the pig really wanted to attend Kristen Schmolze’s Badminton Fundraiser but things did not go as planned. He had envisioned a night of eating, dancing and socializing but instead wound up being abducted by a bunch of gangster children and spent the evening in their tack trunk. They certainly had the last laugh. Good thing that Sinead Halpin was a lady with a mission last night and helped to save the pig. I now know how she got to where she is in this sport as she is RELENTLESS!  Everyone was subject to her interrogation.  Today Pig relaxed outside of Kristen’s farm sending her best wishes for Badminton…

Hamish Cargill — Upside Down: The dark side of the Games

EN friend and blogger, and my personal hero Hamish Cargill returns today with an article exploring the other side of the Olympics–the part nobody wants to tell you about.  Be sure to follow Hamish @hamishcargill and you can Facebook stalk him here Coren, but you already know that I’m sure. Thanks a million for writing this Hamish and thank you for reading.
—-


Hamish and Tiger, Samantha Clark photo

From Hamish:

A spot on a team for London is this year’s ultimate eventing ticket. Unfortunately there’s only a few of them to go around. In the meantime, the rest of us have to reassure ourselves that riding at the Olympics isn’t everything.

When you put your mind to it, there are so many reasons not to want to ride at the London Games that I’m surprised anyone is even putting their hand up for selection.

Team environments are notoriously unpleasant. Friends are scarce, competition is fierce and fun is a dirty word (right up there with ‘tendon’ and ‘damage’). What country are you from? It doesn’t matter. Team management can be as warm as an icy blanket, and you’d be under less pressure if you stuck a fire hose in your mouth. The word ‘intense’ doesn’t quite cover the experience of being in a team. ‘Hell’ may be going a little too far, but you get the idea.

Once you’re in a team, you can’t do anything on your own. You can bathe and dress yourself, but mess that up and your privacy’s shot. Trips to the WC (that’s English for toilet) are crowded – get used to peeing in a cup while a drug tester sizes you up. Speaking of which, the drug testing’s going to put an end to your recreational and performance enhancing habits. Drop the needle. Now.

Few people look good in team tracksuits. Originally intended for wear by children and criminals, they’re a curse on modern athletes. And official Olympic formal uniforms are always ugly. They’re designed by artistic types intent on extracting revenge on the cool, sporty kids who picked on them at school. Watch the opening ceremony – payback happens.

Hanging out with international riders is crap. You’re probably the most interesting person around, but you’ll suffer while they talk about themselves. Nothing’s more dull than listening to them drone on about their horse, and the only way you’ll survive is by imagining them falling off or having six rails down. Sportsmanship is a delightful concept in social tennis but no one’s under any illusions at the Games. It’s cutthroat.

The media are annoying. Be prepared to answer at least ten dumb questions per day. Go well – and god-forbid you win a gold medal – and you’re going to have to endure a round of studio interviews with people who think you can milk a horse and ride a cow. By the millionth time you get asked what eventing is and how it works, you’ll wish you competed in a simple sport. Like running.

It’s even more annoying if the media aren’t asking questions. That means you’re not going very well. This will become annoying for a whole lot of other reasons. If you do struggle to perform, no one’s going to write nice things about you. People expect a medal. Have a run-out or a fall and you’d better take a long trip home via Siberia. The equestrian media will feed your carcass to the lions before they move onto the next target – your team coach springs to mind.

The Greenwich course is built on the side of a mountain. That’s fine for the horses, but it’s going to mean a lot of walking uphill for riders. Sounds tiring. Isn’t there any flat ground in England?

The stables are temporary, so there’s no guarantee they’ll be in a good spot – or near a tap. With stabling in alphabetical country order, if you’re Australian chances are you’ll get stuck next to some humourless Austrian who looks like Rolfe from The Sound of Music. Don’t rely on him to lighten the mood on cross-country morning. He’ll have already scared your groom and your horse. I hope he doesn’t sing.

Just getting in to see your horse will be hard enough. Half the British military used in Northern Ireland will be defending the stables from terrorist attacks. Prepare to undress every day to get through security – you already know there’s no privacy. Depending on how trustworthy you look, they might snap on a rubber glove. Get there early before cross-country – things could get messy.

It rains a lot in England. And while London has lots of things to see and do, you’ll have to book a holiday and go back next year. With your focus on horse riding, all those cosy pubs, trendy restaurants and famous landmarks will be off limits.

There are a few things you can do. You could set your watch to Greenwich Mean Time at the Royal Observatory next door to the stables. Just remember, this isn’t the actual time at Greenwich, just the time in the Observatory – which means it’s not actually the time anywhere. You can occupy a day or two getting your head around this. Miss your dressage because you forget to adjust Greenwich-time for daylight-saving and you’ll feel like a right idiot.

You could visit the National Maritime Museum. It’s in the park at Greenwich. Shame it’s dead boring – you’d be better watching dressage, which is only half-dead boring.

If you’re lucky the Olympic Committee might give you some tickets to other sports. Enjoy your night at the synchronised swimming – I’ll catch it on TV.

The athlete’s village is boarding school – for fit people. The average age of an Olympic athlete is 25, so while the village isn’t quite a crèche for the physically gifted, it’s not far off. Some of those gymnasts were still breast-feeding when the Olympics were in Sydney. You remember the Sydney Olympics well don’t you? That’s because you’re old. As one of the oldest around, get used to being mistaken for the team physiotherapist. You’re an athlete? Really? At your age? They’ll assume you’re a sailor – most of them don’t even know they have horses in the Olympics.

Don’t think you’ll be getting much sleep – those athletes go all night. And even if that doesn’t distract you, sharing a room with a person who isn’t your partner will. Can’t stand snoring? You should have stayed at home.

English food is notoriously heavy – it’s possible you’ll return from the Olympics in worse shape than you left. Prepare for a diet of pork – if you don’t like bacon you’re going to be hungry.

English beer is sometimes served warm – they’re catching on to refrigeration but it takes time to undo over a thousand years of tepid culture. The beer might be chilled, but the soft drinks and water never will be. You’ll be so dehydrated by the end of the event they’ll have to put you on a drip – also served at room temperature.

The event is next to the river, but you won’t be taking any refreshing dips. I’d rather fall down a portaloo than jump in the Thames. Mind you, swimming down the river might be faster than battling the London traffic. Greenwich is wedged in a corner between the park and the river, so when you get back to the village it’ll be time to turn around and go back – for the next day.

When it all finishes, if you’ve done well you’d better get busy promoting the sport to the world. Photo shoots, press conferences, ticker tape parades – you’ll barely have time to scratch yourself. Actually, you should avoid scratching yourself – photos of you working that itch will go straight on the back page of the paper.

They say success is a two edged sword. It will be for you. Win a medal and you’re not going to be able to get out of bed without being hassled for your autograph. You’d better start thinking of some nice things to write on hats and program covers – those pesky kids are going to swarm you like ants on a toffee apple.

See your dentist before you go. A thousand photos of your coffee stained teeth biting into that medal and you’ll regret not doing it sooner. If you even live to regret it that is – you’ll probably die from a toxic poisoning from having that medal in your mouth so often.

Didn’t win a medal? Bugger. If you’ve come fourth you’d better lock yourself away in a room and plan your apology to the taxpayers who funded your trip.

Which makes me wonder, why do we all want to ride at the Olympics?

I guess you’ve just got to experience it for yourself.

See you somewhere out there.

Hamish

A version of this article first appeared in The Eventer magazine, March 2012

EN Server Update

This is just a quick post to say that we are performing a quick update on the new EN servers tonight.  Abby’s Monday news and notes will be published early in the morning and there might be a brief server disruption between 10pm and 6am.  As we are going through this server transition please email any service issues you might have to [email protected].  We apologize in advance for any issues that might result and please know that the computer savvy chinchillas are working incredibly hard to make this go well.  Go eventing.

Nicole Parkin’s Weekend Reader


An Ocala XC update from our friends at RNS

Nicole Parkin and Lexus moved up one spot on each of the two jumping phases to win the CCI2* at Ocala this weekend.  Callie Judy and Call On Me dropped to second with 8 show jumping penalties.  Eliza Farren and Bantry Bays Dublin moved up from 8th after dressage to finish in 3rd even with 4 penalties in show jumping.  There were only three clear show jumping rides out of 19 CCI2* show jumpers today.  Fourth placed Sable Giesler and Evil Munchkin won the weekend phases by adding just 5 XC seconds to their dressage score.

Ocala CCI2* Results:
1. Nicole Parkin and Lexus +4 47.7
2. Callie Judy and Call on Me +8 49.6
3. Eliza Farren and Bantry Bays Dublin +4 57.0
4. Sable Giesler and Evil Munchkin +0 57.3
5. Laramie Maxwell and Hunterville +4 63.5
[Full Ocala Results]

–Sunday came just in time for Robin Walker in the Ocala CCI*.  Robin won the Ocala CCI* with Someday Never Comes, using the rail they had in hand and winning by 1.3 points.  I’m really glad to see Robin take the win–I have know him since my early days of eventing in Michigan and I have always had a ton of respect for his sportsmanship and for riding a ton of horses week after week.  Two other EN friends took 2nd and 3rd, with Leslie Law and Kool Aldo finishing in the silver spot with 48.4 and Lauren Kieffer with Ron Reagan finishing just a cross-country second behind on 48.8.  Samantha St. Jacques and Jaeda moved up 9 places by finishing on their dressage score of 52.5, which was good enough for 4th. Leslie’s former ride Fleeceworks Mystere Du Val finished in 5th with Victoria New after moving up 9 places over the weekend. The Ocala CCI* boasted an impressive 54 starters this year.

–5 Rolex entrants are competing in the Ocala HT advanced combined test. Michael Pollard and Driving Ambition led after the dressage on a 45.5.  I’m not 100% sure, but usually everyone headed to Rolex does the 4* test in the combined test.  The show jumping scores have not been posted for the field yet.  Clark Montgomery and Loughan Glen led the Rolex entrants on a 46.5.  Of course, the emphasis for these competitors will be not getting the best score possible but delivering the best test to prepare them for two weeks from now.

In other Florida eventing news, Full Gallop Farm wraps up their spring schedule with a horse trials. [Live Scores]

The preliminary division at St. John’s Horse Trials in Arizona was won by Tom Angle and Viking 2 on a 47.2.  Claire Jan and Artistic Flaire won the Junior Training, Manuela Propfe won the open training with Brewer’s Bay, and Christine Murphy won the senior training on Red Hawk’s Remington.  [St. John’s Scores]

Ruth Bley and Silver Sage won the open prelim rider division at Ram Tap in California on 52.9.  [Ram Tap Scores]

Sally Cousins stole the show at Plantation, as she often does in the northeast eventing community.  Sally won the intermediate on Kestrel Key, finishing second and fourth in that division as well.  Timothy Bourke and Luckaun Quality were the only pair to keep Sally from sweeping the intermediate medals.  Carol Kozlowski and Good Earth Bit O Honey won the open prelim division on top of a very nice 25.9 in the dressage.  Sally took the next three spots on Double Dare, Oliver, and Rustic Design respectively.  [Plantation Scores]

–The draw list for Rolex has been released this weekend. The comeback veteran Ying Yang Yo stars things off, followed by Buck Davidson and Sharon Will’s Absolute Liberty and then Andrew Nicholson with Caligo Joe or Shady Grey. I’m a big believer that draw order matters–as much as the judges try to judge every ride equally, I still believe that judges tend to be a bit conservative with the first rides of a three-day. [Rolex draw list]

–The Rolex field overall can boast the best North American assortment of horses and riders that I can remember. The field always shrinks a bit in the last two weeks before a 4* but Rolex looks poised to have a big jump in the number of starters this year with 69 horses on the entry list.

–Annie mentioned on Saturday that Pippa will not be competing in London because her top horse Redesigned is injured.  JER linked to an article on the COTH forums about Pippa that quoted British coach Yogi Breisner as saying that he is now considering US based British rider James Alliston for the Olympic team.   James has surged forward as a rider over the past two years and after emerging as a dominant force on the west coast it’s time for him to improve on a great 2011 Rolex performance with Jumbo’s Jake and Parker entered again this year.  Tina Cook, Oliver Townend, Lucy Wiegersma and Zara Phillips are other candidates for the 5th British spot. William Fox-Pitt, Mary King, Piggy French and Nicola Wilson look in great shape to make the British team at this point.  [Telegraph Article]

–Last but not least, please note that today is the last day to enter the FLAIR Rolex contest.  Click here for details.

Go eventing.

Meg Kep: In response to Rebecca Howard’s blog

From Meg:

This is a public statement from head spokesperson at Sinead Halpin Eventing.

“In light of recent events at the Fork, Sinead Halpin Eventing is pledging its commitment to the safe return of the Pig. We will ensure that no stone left unturned until the Pig is returned to its rightful home and receives the proper care it deserves. Shame on you, thieves, shame on you.

That being said, we have not seen the Pig.”

JER: How to watch a pentathlon

Our part time status as Pentathlon Nation continues today with an article about watching the 2012 Modern Pentathlon World Cup #3 finals online this weekend. As always, thanks a million for writing this JER and thank you for reading.
—-

 

From JER:

The Rolex live stream is still two weeks away, which gives you have two weekends to practice sitting up in bed and getting online first thing on Saturday morning.  We know that’s not always easy.

This weekend, however, offers a unique motivational wake-up training opportunity.   The 2012 Modern Pentathlon World Cup #3 finals are on in Szazhalombatta*, Hungary, and YouTube and ESPN3 will be live-streaming the competition.

The women’s final is on Saturday; men go on Sunday.

Direct links:   Women (Sat) — HERE

Men (Sun) — HERE

 

Schedule:

Fencing Highlights:  8.15 – 8.55 (EDT, do the math for CDT and PDT)

Swimming Highlights**: 8.55 – 9.15

Riding LIVE: 9.15 – 10.35

Fencing, Swimming & Riding Highlights: 10.35 – 11.20***

Combined Event LIVE: 11.20 – 11.50

 

ESPN3 is US-only, and has a shorter schedule beginning at 10.35 EDT.  The direct link for Saturday is here; the schedule – with 40 minutes of riding highlights – is posted at the link.

If you’ve never seen a pentathlon before – and of course you haven’t – here’s my advice: go outside and feed the horses during the swimming.  Everything else makes for great watching, especially the riding and the combined run/shoot.

In Thursday’s women’s qualifications rounds, Canadian Melanie McCann advanced to the final while teammates Donna Vakalis and Mathea Stevens finished just outside (so close!) of the top 12 cut-off.

Go pentathloning.

—-
*Szazhalombatta means ‘one hundred tumuli.’  A tumulus is a burial mound.  Those Magyars are a cheery lot when it comes to competition venues.
**There is no such thing as swimming highlights.  People in pain swimming laps in a pool is people in pain swimming laps in a pool.
***Don’t forget the post time for the Grand National is 11.15a EDT.  TVG will be airing in the US.  Can Synchronised pull off the Gold Cup-Grand National double?  Will Nina Carberry or Katie Walsh become the first woman to win the big race?

Amy Tryon has passed away in her sleep

 

Eventing has lost a great rider, a great person, and a tremendous competitor today.  We have confirmed from multiple sources that former Olympian Amy Tryon passed away in her sleep earlier today. This news is a tragedy well beyond what words can convey for Amy’s family, her friends, and the entire eventing community. My understanding is that the cause of death is unknown and that a statement is being prepared, but there are no further details at this point.

Amy, of Duvall, Wash., most recently competed at the Galway Downs International Horse Trials two weeks ago. With Poggio II, a former race and Cascade Mountain trail horse, Amy represented the United States on two Olympic and two World Equestrian Games teams, bringing home a team gold medal from the World Games in Jerez in 2002 and a team bronze medal from the Athens Olympics in 2004. Amy was the Chronicle of the Horse’s Eventing Horseman of the Year in 2006. In addition to representing her country at the top levels of eventing and devoting countless hours to the development of talented horses and students, Tryon was a professional firefighter for many years.

Amy was hands down the toughest evener I have ever known and she was incredibly well respected in the eventing community. Eventing Nation’s thought’s and prayers are with Amy’s family and connections tonight.

This news follows the show jumping world being rocked today with news that George Morris will be undergoing treatment for prostate cancer–he is expected to to return to the show circuit early this summer.  Go Amy.

Video Break: Colleen and Shiraz Show Jumping at The Fork

EN Tipster MB explains “Jimmy was kind enough to let me stand on the back of his Gator, caught the full round…”

Bonus: Dunlavin’s Token in the CIC3*, listed as “For Sale” on the video’s description

Go eventing.

Watch Rolex from Home Online and on TV: An Early Guide

There’s nothing like attending Rolex in person, but thanks to a great partnership between NBC, the USEF Network, and the event, viewers at home will experience the next best thing this year.  Rolex continues to take big steps forward in terms of a live nationally televised eventing presence.  Portions of the Rolex cross-country and show jumping will be broadcast to your TV on NBC and their cable partners.

Universal Sports on Saturday, April 28th from 10:00am – 12:00pm ET

NBC Sports Network on Saturday, April 28th from 1:30pm – 3:30pm ET

NBC on Sunday, April 29th from 2:00pm –  3:00pm ET

The brilliant USEF Network has us covered for the rest of the entire competition with free live online video of the entire event in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico.  [via USEF Network]

International viewers will be able to watch through the FEI TV paid online streaming service.  We’ll of course have full coverage right here on EN all weekend including a live blog/conversation presence for some if not all of the phases.  Go eventing.

‘Rolex Changed my Life’ Part 2: Hick to Hacker

It was 2000, I was 11 years old, I used at least seven rolls of film and one of the greatest memories of my life to this day is sneaking into the Sunday competitors party and getting a ton of autographs including one from my idol, Mark Todd.  It was my first taste of eventing at the highest level and it has been a privilege to get to know many of the great people I met for the first time that day.   Amy Wells took the eventing world by storm with part 1 of her Rolex Change My Life series and today she returns with part 2.  Thanks for writing this Amy, and thank you for reading.  Go Rolex!  www.rk3de.org [Entries]
—-

rolex-kentucky-event.jpg

From Amy Wells:

In my previous post I ended it by explaining how I’ve become an internet eventing stalker, an Eventing Nation regular, and an ‘eventing wanna-be rider, but allow me explain why the riding part is a bit of a challenge.  I wish that I could call myself an eventer by just being an skilled Eventer stalker researcher via the internet.  My vocabulary alone has changed, which reminds me of the time I told my western trail rider friends that I was taking my horse out for a “hack” – hoping that they might think my new ‘English’ vocabulary was cool. They looked at me, and I kid you not, said, “Does that mean you’re going to go spit off the back of your horse?’  I just sighed.  This was going to be a long, long road.

 

Before Rolex my riding consisted of rides around the block, rides around the nearby fields, occasional holiday parades (with one year my horse adorning Christmas lights), and of course the party-heavy organized trail rides.   If you’ve never gone on a Midwestern organized trail ride, here’s a few things that might paint a clearer picture:

–Horses and people camp in fields overnight, with either make-shift corrals, or tying their horses to anything that doesn’t move (horse trailers, truck bumpers, trailer hitches, random logs in the woods, ground stakes, car mirrors, tent poles. – yes, I saw some jackass tie his horse to a tent. (and the result was not good) Ugh.  You get the idea.

–A nightly country band conjures up false romances.  I remember a cowboy asked me, “Hey pretty lady, want to shine my belt buckle?”  Every 5 or 6 songs the event coordinator cowboy dude takes over the band’s mic and announces, “We have a loose horse in Corral #2, if you are camping in Corral #2, and your horse is chestnut color with a hot pink halter on, please go get your horse.”

–You learn how much beer and mini-shots fit in your saddle bag.

–You literally ride for hours and hours, and there’s lovely volunteer EMT’s around every bend. There hasn’t been a ride yet where someone hasn’t been seriously injured.  (How can someone not get injured though, really?  1300 horses, lots of alcohol, and a gamut of experienced and inexperienced riders = mayhem.

–You and your friends adorn the cutest western outfits you can find – sometimes coordinated, sometimes not. Big, bling-bling belts, pointy boots, button up shirts with a bling bling tank underneath, and of course tight jeans are on every cowgirl wanting to look like Miranda Lambert, or Tanya Tucker – depending on your era.

–You see ALL species of horsemanship or lack thereof.  Some things really break your heart (aka tent pole dude).

 

I sound like a hillbilly.  (Insert the Larry the Cable Guy accent here, and I’m all set.) Westerners out there – do NOT get offended – I still have my cowboy hats and my bling belts – it will always have a place in my heart.  A little bit of trivia for you regarding the trail ride of 2010 – out of 1350 riders, I asked the trail counter volunteer to count helmets being worn – just for fun.  I later found him in the giant party tent and he actually did count. Only 36 helmets – mostly on young little girls – 36 smart people in my opinion.  That was the first year I ever wore a helmet – and the looks I received could have knocked me off my horse.

 

Anyway, over the years I grew from a person that knew nothing about horses other than the fact that I loved them, to a pretty cool western trail rider. Then I went to Rolex, and it changed everything.  This gives you a closer look into how hard it is to change from western to eventer wannabe once the bug bites you.  And bite me it did.  After coming back from four Rolex’s, I wanted something more….

 

 

Equipment.

“Pre-Rolex” – I had one saddle, two bridles, a couple decorative saddle pads, and the other basic equipment.  I would obsess more about my outfit I was going to wear to the dance/trail ride than I would about what my horse would wear – although he did look fantastic I must say. I didn’t worry about blanketing, clipping, special shoes, turnout, stalls, saddles, bits, bridles, wraps, splints, side reins, lunging rope, shipping halters, coolers, knits, helmets, protective vests, gloves,…oh the list of crap goes on and on. Granted, I had a lot of equipment, but I can seriously say not even a fraction of what I have now .

NEVER have I put so much thought, money and planning into horses and my riding as I do now.  Ever.  At my second Rolex, thinking that if I bought an English saddle I’d be all set, I bought a ThornHill Germania II Phase saddle – I didn’t know ANYTHING about knee rolls, twist, seat size, panels, etc.  However, the call to my husband went something like this…. “Hi honey, it’s me, I’m at the Trade Fair at Rolex again, I found this GREAT saddle…..”  Silence fell over the phone…….and more silence…….then a cough…….then a, “How much?” My husband gave in, and I bought this saddle and brought it home and just assumed it would fit one of the three boys, (It didn’t, by the way) plus I came home with a bridle.  It should fit, right? It didn’t.  Cob?  Horse? What?  This saddle is STILL for sale by the way.  So yes, the shopping bug bit me the second time around.

 

Learning to “Ride.”- the early years

Before Rolex I had been riding western for a few years. I thought that learning to ride English wouldn’t be that hard.  WRONG. But let me back up a bit….  I didn’t grow up with horses, I just knew that I loved them.  You all know the classic pleading with your father, “Dad,  PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE can I have a horse? I promise I will use my allowance to feed him, and he can eat the grass from our lawn, and the neighbors won’t mind because we’re friendly neighbors, and he can live in the garage, etc….”  Aren’t we just cute and naïve when we’re 6?  I tried everything to convince my dad that we needed a horse in our little central WI neighborhood, but to no avail.  My Junior Year of college was the first turning point.  As a complete surprise to my parents, I ventured out to Colorado during my summer break to work on a Dude Ranch.  Dream job?  Sort of. They hired me as a housekeeper – because I had no riding experience, just the occasional horseback riding stable when our family headed ‘up north’ for vacation.  Anyway, I cleaned the main lodge and guest cabins from 6am -3pm every day.  When I was off, I headed down to the corral to see if anyone needed my help. Actually, I should rephrase that.  I headed down there stalk, watch, learn, smell the horses, shovel poop, whatever. I was there until I had five minutes to ‘wash up for dinner.’ After two days of watching through the fence, I made deals with all seven wranglers – I’d do their laundry and clean their cabins if they would teach me everything there is to know about horses, riding, care, etc. It worked.   Every waking moment if I wasn’t making beds or doing dishes, I was saddling, brushing, feeding, riding, shoveling, cleaning saddles, and yes, doing stinky wrangler laundry. I returned for a second season, and this time they hired me as a kid’s wrangler….ie, I took kids out on horseback with another wrangler while singing songs, playing riding games, and picnicing.  Better than cleaning toilets and doing dishes.

Western riding was what I learned and what was engrained in my brain.  I returned home in the fall and finished my last semester of college, and did what any sensible person would do.  I moved back in with my parents to save money – in order to purchase my first horse, Gunner.  $100 bucks a month for board.  Nice. Jeez do I wish that was a reality again.  Was everything roses? No.  So apparently I didn’t get the memo that the horses on the dude ranch were so incredibly trained/bored/half-dead, that when I bought my horse (the ex-barrel racer who was supposed to be so quiet) I had a little project on my hands. My little bay quarter horse Gunner was my little pistol.  Pun intended.  It took me several bucks, kicks, falls, bites, pats, neighs, nickers, two broken fingers, and a cracked femur to learn what the hell I was doing. Through the course of the next 11 years, he taught me everything, and helped me make it through boyfriend break-ups, hook-ups, job rejections, career changes, deaths in the family, moving out on my own, my marriage to my awesome husband,  – you name it, he was there for me.

Learning to Ride – Present Day

Fast forward to October, 2010.  My husband are faced with a career change for him and move to MN – 75% of the move was because of his job (we could have turned it down, but…) the other 25% was because there is an amazing eventing community here, and I desperately wanted to learn how to ride and “jump over stuff” as my husband puts it.  I was VERY hard-pressed to find an eventing instructor in Central WI prior to the move – I found dressage, some hunter instructors, but no Eventing.  People would say, “Venting? Enting? What?”  I wish I was kidding.  So the thought of selling our newly built hobby farm, and buying a new place in MN and starting over actually sounded appealing – because the eventing bug had bit me hard.  Thanks Rolex.

So we did it.  It was heart-breaking.  I LOVED my little hobby farm that we built ourselves. My husband, son, and I moved to MN, with only Gunner in tow. We decided NOT to purchase another hobby farm –for reasons that could be an entirely different blog post (boarding vs. owning – the forever debate). I found awesome board at an amazing facility called Jaqcurei Oaks, in Maple Plain, MN, where there is a fantastic cross-country course, two huge arenas, and a great indoor, great footing, and most of all, great people, and great horses (endorsement intended).  I was one of maybe three riders there that owned a genuine western saddle.  (Australian saddles don’t count )  And let’s be clear, I’m not dishing Western riding, or the bling, or the saddle, or any of it.  I just wanted to come to the dark side.

Seven months went by, and I was out at the barn every chance I could get. I watched lessons, observed the grooming barns, tried to meet new people, but I was incredibly intimidated. I took lessons with Gunner trying to make him get “on the bit” and make him into a dressage horse. My 18-year old barrel racer turned trail horse wanted nothing of the affair. After 7 months of him refusing every element of arena riding and dressage, he was like, “You’re kidding me right?  Where’s %&*# the trail?”  So hard to write this part without bursting into a completely hysterical flow of tears. I made the gut-wrenching decision to sell him to a wonderful lady that wanted to continue to trail ride and use him as a therapy horse for at-risk youth. BY FAR, one of the hardest things I ever had to do. I was devastated, but I didn’t feel it was fair to him to keep trying to make him into something he wasn’t, and I still had this ‘dream’ that I conjured up since setting foot on the Kentucky Horse Park.  I had a dilemma.  Again, thanks Rolex, for putting the eventing bug in me so bad that I would sell my 11 year partner, because I just couldn’t afford two horses (I know it’s not Rolex’s fault, it didn’t put Gunner up for sale, but it makes me feel better at least).

Stop crying Amy.  Let’s talk about my new horse.  I don’t buy just any horse, I go and buy a Thoroughbred. Nope. NOT a “packer,” NOT a schooling horse, NOT a ‘dead-head’ that I was advised to buy. That’s right….an off the track thoroughbred who most non-horsey people automatically think of “crazy horse.” My dad asks, “If a bell goes off, will he take off into the sunset?  “Are we talking Churchill Downs here?” Is this the kind of horse Calvin Borel rides? “Can you ride him?”  “Is he safe?” “Don’t those horses just know how to run?”

I drove to North Dakota against all sane advice, in a snow storm nonetheless, to look at this little 15.2 horse (I wanted him little because I’m not even 5 feet tall), and I instantly loved him.  He was rather thin and scraggly, but he had the sweetest eyes filled with innocent curiosity and genuine willingness as the owner tacked him up. After a vet check and one more hair-raising icy road disaster trip out there, I bought him and trailered him home.  Now keep in mind that I’m used to riding big, sturdy quarter horses that would walk through fire for me, so needless to say we had an “adjustment period” for the first couple of weeks.  For me, not him.  He did everything right, and I was an epic FAIL.  Leg on constantly? What? Light, easy tension in the reins at all times? What? Sit-up straight? WHAT?!?!?!  I was so frustrated, but so excited – I had a new horse that was going to take me over the moon, er….ah… um… okay, a ground poll……but it didn’t matter, I was going to go over something. My four-year-old son named him “Beans” because “He looks like the color of daddy’s coffee beans, Mom.”  It stuck.

I’m a Clown, Because Juggling is All I Do:

Since last April when Beans arrived, life has been a major balancing act. Sure, I’ve owned horses for 11+ years now, but trail riding when I feel like it vs. actually trying to accomplish something foreign to me is a whole new ballgame. Perhaps I should have called this section “’The William Tell Overature’, the Story of My New Horse Life” (for those of you who don’t know, it’s a song, google it and you’ll know what I’m talking about).   THINGS WERE FINE, before I went to Rolex.  I was a happy hick riding my trusty trail steed.  I never had to worry about a lesson budget, schooling show fees, time away from family to practice riding, two saddles, new tack (and let’s face it, you need a lot of crap), or the gajillion other things I now need to juggle.  “Pre-Rolex” as my husband refers to my past life, did not have the horse/timing/finance issues that I have today.  Not. Even. Close.

Does it sound like I’m whining?  My apologies, I’m not whining. I love my new passion for eventing. It’s just different.  (Here’s the plug for my incredibly patient and understanding husband). He’s unbelievably  supportive – so that helps. Plus, I’m blessed with the cutest little boy on the planet who knows that I love him very much, but I after I put him to bed, I do jaunt off to the barn for a late-night ride.  It’s just a little hard sometimes to finagle swim lessons, t-ball, date-nights, house-cleaning, oh and that darn full-time job, the hour commute, reading a bed-time story, training a puppy, oh yes, and that non-money tree checkbook.  I don’t have one of those ocean-deep checkbooks that allows me to just keep digging. Most of us don’t.   But, the lesson I’ve learned this week?  Buy Suave shampoo and conditioner instead of Aveda for the month and you can afford one more lesson!  (Part three is about lessons.  Lots and Lots of lessons – ugh.)

Some of you may be faced with the same dilemma I’m facing in the next two weeks.  Do I…..a) drop several hundred bucks to attend Rolex which I know will be phenomenal even though I’ve been there four times or….. b)Save those several hundred dollars on tack that I need, lessons that I need, schooling/showing fees that will hopefully come up this summer, etc.  It’s a tough decision, isn’t it?  Do I spend money watching professionals go around or do I spend money getting me to a place where I can without hesitation call myself an eventer?  I’ll sleep in a horse stall if I have to in order to get to Rolex this year on my slim budget.

Rolex is an addiction, but a good one.  For those of you who are heading out to Rolex for the first time….I’m so happy for you, and a little jealous probably.  Be careful, because it could change your life.

Spring Bay Horse Trials Helmet Cam

Check out this preliminary helmet cam video from Spring Bay Horse Trials over the weekend. The event was held at Masterson Station Park in Lexinton, KY. It is a clear cross-country round and I want to give a tip of the hat to Carolyn Drover for sending us the video. Go eventing.