Not much more to add really, here’s some of the regular Open Preliminary Divisions going cross country…
Samantha Clark
Achievements

About Samantha Clark
Latest Articles Written
Cathy Wieschoff
It’s impossible to pick a job description for Cathy this weekend because she’s fulfilling so many different roles. I caught up with her in the ten minute box of the Long Format Three Day Event where she’d spent most of the day helping anyone who’d needed it, and graciously accepting thanks from riders she’d been training all week. Earlier in the morning she’d competed her own horse, and then she told me about a very exciting development she’s in charge of for Area VIII.
Hagyard at the Hagyard Midsouth Three Day Event
Not only do Hagyard sponsor the Three Day event here at the Kentucky Horse park this weekend, they also have a huge physical presence, so I asked the main man Dr Duncan Peters, what exactly is in his job description….
Lauren Snider and Route 66
Regal Dancer
Scenes from the Ten Minute Box
The Hagyard Midsouth Long Format Classic Training Level Three Day Event (quite a mouthful!) takes place at the Kentucky Horse park this weekend, and many riders use it as an opportunity to try something new, teach their students some horsemanship and fitness lessons, or to train a young horse. Almost a thing of the past, but still much loved and fondly remembered, I give you the ten minute box…
Hagyard Midsouth Three Day Saturday
Visionaire then confirmed her status as superior eye for a horse when I saw her new project, an absolutely stunning 3 year old OTTB, and with her permission I’ll publish a picture of him in a future post; in the meantime I’ll just want him!
Happy Birthday…
Hagyard Midsouth Three Day Friday
Hagyard Midsouth Three Day Friday
The Jockey Club Thoroughbred Incentive Program (T.I.P./ G.E.N.I.U.S.)
Such is the power and reach of Eventing Nation these days, that as soon as I heard about this new incentive launched last week by the Jockey Club I knew I wanted to find out more, and Dr Laura Werner, who I’d previously interviewed for an article about stem cell therapy, happens to know someone closely connected to it rather well…
Hagyard Midsouth Three Day Trot-Up
Hagyard Midsouth Three Day Trot-Up

The Jockey Club Thoroughbred Incentive Program (T.I.P./ G.E.N.I.U.S.)
Such is the power and reach of Eventing Nation these days, that as soon as I heard about this new incentive launched last week by the Jockey Club I knew I wanted to find out more, and Dr Laura Werner, who I’d previously interviewed for an article about stem cell therapy, happens to know someone closely connected to it rather well…
Drumroll Please…
And the winners are….
31. Mia
“hey! You said we we were coming out here to measure the distance….”
17. CaBitt
OK Jackson, you need to raise it up one more inch.
“What do the eventers say again? Oh right! Red on right, blonde on left… and insanity in the middle.” (wink)
1. Frugalannie
“I told you your heels were shorter.”
Drum Roll Please….
And the winners are….
Lainey Ashker – One Tough Mudder?
There’s a few things you may not know about Laine Ashker, and plenty I didn’t, so I had a brief conversation with her recently and came away surprised and delighted.
Desert Island Discs
Happy Birthday Allison!
Happy Birthday, Jessie!
Debriefing the riders – literally!
The Incomparable Nico Morgan at Badminton this year
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If you haven’t got your mitts on a copy of the 2012 Riders Revealed Calendar to support Claire Lomas’ quest to walk in the London Marathon and Spinal Research, then probably all you’ve seen so far is a couple of sneak previews courtesy of EN and Nico Morgan. Be sure to enter the competition on Part 2 of our chat with Claire to be one of five winners of the Calendar, and otherwise, order one, or a couple, or four or five here!
2012 is the second calendar and features some very comely show-jumpers for a change, as well as some of the leading Event Riders in the world – this year’s Badminton and Rolex winners are amongst them.
Show-jumpers Claire Robertson, Nathalie Phillips, Vicky Young and Jackson Reed Stephenson
I spoke to Nico Morgan, who usually spends his time traipsing around all manner of horsey events in all kinds of weather, with the odd wedding and society “do” thrown in, about his special assignment….
Having been involved in the first edition, Claire asked for his support this year, and Nico immediately agreed to not only sponsor the Calendar, but also to take pictures. Claire allotted photographers to riders by region, and funnily enough, Nico somehow ended up with rather more than his fair share of pretty girls?
“Complete fluke!” he assures me, “It was noticeable when you looked at the rest of the Calendar, it has to be said, but yes I did manage that somehow!”
One of my favourites, of Piggy French, a member of the British squad here in Kentucky for WEG last year, and on the European Team in Luhmuhlen earlier this autumn, was carefully planned beforehand, and in fact Piggy had specifically requested Nico after he’d done some website and PR work for her,
“We had to do Piggy’s quite quickly; we’d discussed it in advance, how she was going to sit on the wall and things like that basically, and we decided to add Jaffa (Jakarta, 2nd at Badminton this year) as an afterthought. To start with we weren’t going to use the Union Jack because we thought it was a bit naff, but it ended up being a useful addition.”
Nico turned up at the Kyles’ yard where Lauren Shannon is based with a completely open mind, and after a quick look around, improvised with what was available,
“Lauren was all ready to go, but she didn’t realise she had to be naked so that was a bit of a shock! Her groom was actually there in that one with her because we decided that with a horse, a lunge rein and whip, a cast on one arm and clothes that she had to take off at the last minute, it was all going to be a bit of a challenge without an extra pair of hands. So Jenny had to stand in there too, and she was really embarrassed about seeing her boss naked, so she kept her eyes shut and was just groping around for the clothes! Lauren had to work out how to keep the horse going round in a circle without actually turning round herself, which she mastered pretty quickly!”
Luckily there’s been no awkwardness between him and the riders since their photo-shoots, “they’ve all been very cool about it, it was just the thing to do really. Piggy’s probably the most high-profile of all of them and she hasn’t had any issues with it at all.”
Almost unbelievably, none of the riders batted an eyelid at the prospect of disrobing, “they arrived with that in mind, they were all really gee-d up for it, the girls had a bottle of wine and Jackson had had a fake tan; they’d obviously decided between themselves that it was going to be done properly!”
Maybe he’s just being a gentleman, but I’m inclined to believe Nico, tactful as he is, when he tells me he didn’t really ‘see anything’!,
“That was the funny thing, I didn’t actually learn anything about anybody’s, er, privacy (very delicately put!) more than I did beforehand, it was all quite tastefully done. We’d get everyone in position, then I would turn around, they would sort themselves out (strip naked!), I would turn around again and start snapping away.”
One of Nico’s more serious pieces: Todd about to head out on cross country this year at Burghley on Major Milestone. Browse his galleries for more stunning shots.
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Claire Lomas, part 2


“I started about 18 months after my accident, and it was the first thing I found that I really loved since Eventing. Having said that, I didn’t love it straight away, I kept falling and falling at first, I had some crashing falls, and it was awful! Once I learnt though, it’s been so much fun; I have one normal ski with a bucket seat on it, then two outriggers. In some ways it’s harder than skiing because you’re balancing on one ski, and it takes quite a long time to learn, probably a bit more like boarding. It’s brilliant fun, and I don’t feel at any disadvantage. I have ridden a horse since my accident but I didn’t really enjoy it, it just felt so slow and boring after Eventing. It was hard for me to get excited about doing a walk/trot dressage test, and to me it just wasn’t worth the risk of injuring myself again if I wasn’t enjoying it that much. The skiing is great though – I can go really fast and it’s much more similar to Eventing for me! Of course there is risk involved, but if you’re enjoying it you don’t really mind so much, the Para-Skiers Team go like the clappers, they get up to speeds of about 80 mph!”
Show-jumpers Claire Robertson, Nathalie Phillips, Vicky Young and Jackson Reed Stephenson
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17. CaBitt | October 11, 2011 8:42 PM | Reply
1. Frugalannie | October 11, 2011 1:20 PM | Reply
But, the contest picture does draw one’s attention, so here’s my caption:
” I told you your heels were shorter.”