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Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Simple, Serious Schooling with Colleen Loach

I often get so caught up with the busy bit of competition season, and trying to just maintain the quality of work that I’ve pulled together in the off-season that I forget to actually properly school my horse – or not in a way that really pushes us forward, anyway. Then the season ends, we have a little rest, and we crack on into the really productive bit of the year. But actually, there’s no reason why you can’t be much more sensible – and organised – than me and do some proper training all year ’round. This simple, but seriously effective, exercise from Colleen Loach is a super place to start – and the best bit of all is that you really don’t need many resources to put it together.

(In case that Insta embed is misbehaving for you, just click here to check out the video!)

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The horse that matters to you matters to us®. KPPVet.com

NEW EVENTING STICKER AVAILABLE! Visit https://kppusa.com/summer23/ to grab one for your barn.

Fancy Riding at Burghley? Here’s Your Chance!

Piggy March leaves the arena with husband Tom after taking the Burghley title. This could be you! Kind of! Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Riding at the iconic (and, okay, let’s be real, absolutely terrifying) Defender Burghley Horse Trials is on the bucket-list for no shortage of us loopy eventing lot – but getting there is no mean feat. First, you need to find yourself a horse who’ll love those endless galloping hills and mammoth fences; then, you need to produce them carefully over the years while picking up a laundry list of MERs; finally, you need to wrap them in cotton wool from the moment that long-awaited entry finally gets sent in and hope that you can actually make that trip to Lincolnshire come late-August.
Sounds like a lot, right? It is – but thanks to our friends at Burghley, there’s now a chance for you to ride on these hallowed grounds as part of this year’s event, even if you’re still a long way off five-star.
On Thursday, 31 August – that’s the first day of dressage – former British team chef d’equipe and leading trainer Yogi Breisner will be giving a masterclass in the main arena on ‘Better cross-country without hiring a course’ – and he needs a rider.
Applications are now being sought for a horse-and-rider pair competing at BE affiliated competitions at Novice and above, and will remain open for entries until Monday, 7 August.
To apply, send the following information to [email protected]:
  • Rider’s Full Name
  • Horse’s Registered Competition Name
  • Rider Age
  • Horse Age
  • Level competing at
  • Please tell us a bit about you and your horse (no more than 200 words)

Yogi himself, with help from the Burghley team, will select a winner and a reserve, who will be notified by the 14 August. You must be 18+ to enter. Good luck – and Go Eventing!

Tuesday News & Notes from Kentucky Performance Products


I’ve long followed content creator Kate Kosnoff – better known by her Insta handle, kateattheingate – first, because I loved her eye for a photo and her perspective on the hunter-jumper shows she worked at. Now, though, I’m enjoying her pivot in front of the camera, where she’s getting real about being an enthusiastic amateur with a mid-size body and a journey of her own that’s just as valid as those of the high-flyers she used to photograph. While the conversation about rider weight and fitness must continue on in order to further equine welfare considerations, it’s such a thorny subject that so often results in anyone who isn’t whippet-thin getting vilified for their bodies. In the US hunter-jumper scene, particularly, this has historically led to young girls battling with eating disorders; for all of us, it can take the joy out of riding. There’s a balance to be struck between personal responsibility and also just letting people exist in their perfectly imperfect bodies, and sometimes, you just need to know that you’re not the only person who occasionally curses the existence of show whites. Kate’s bringing the in-gate back down to earth, and I’m into it.

Events Opening Today: GMHA September H.T.The Fork at TryonAspen Farm H.T.The Event at SkylineFlying Cross Farm H.T.-Modified Pending USEF ApprovalOtter Creek Fall H.T.Marlborough H.TUSEA MDHT YEH QualifierThe Vista Spring YEH/NEH Qualifier

Events Closing Today: Caber Farm H.T.The Event at ArcherGenesee Valley Riding & Driving Club H.T.Waredaca Farm H.T.Ocala Summer H.T. II

News & Notes from Around the World:

One of the foundations of good dressage is rhythm. In fact, you’ll find it right down at the bottom of the scales of training – which means that nothing can come after it until it’s been established. Whether you’re having your first-ever rides on a young horse or warming up an Advanced campaigner, you need to make sure there’s a cadence to your horse’s movement before you even think about the fancy stuff. This piece from Eckart Meyners has some great advice on doing just that, tailored specifically to young horses and their tendency towards wiggliness. Check it out.

At this point, I’m basically just a fizzing little ball of excitement about next week’s FEI European Eventing Championships. We’ll have SO much preview content coming for you this week, and if you’re planning to follow along from home (which you totally should be, even if you’re not based in Europe, because it’ll be your first chance to check out next year’s Olympic course designer’s work!), you’ll be delighted to hear that a high-octane team of commentators has been brought in to lead the livestream, which will be broadcast via ClipMyHorse. See who’s got the job here.

The AECs are coming up fastAre you prepared for the competition of the year? This super-handy primer from USEA will help you get there, with livestream info, qualification notes, photographer links, and much, much more. Let’s do this thang.

Best of Horse Nation: When it comes to training, what’s the difference between ‘right’ and ‘competitive’? How important is natural talent, really? And how can we reward correct, horse-first foundations? All this and more is pondered in this smart piece from Gwyneth McPherson.

Sponsor Corner: Are you tearing your hair out trying to get your horse to eat low-sugar supplements? You’re not alone. Whether you’ve got a Dumper or a Drama Queen, Kentucky Performance Products has tips that might help.

Watch This: 

Eventing Weekly is quickly becoming my favorite horsey podcast. This clip, of a couple of rather well-known folks calling in while groom Kerryn Edmans is in the hot seat, is why.

 

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Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

I’m sorry, or you’re welcome.

Happy birthday to both Michael Jung and Harry Potter. I’ll leave you with this little gem to commemorate both the Chosen Ones in fine style.

National Holiday: It’s National Mutt Day! Please make my day by dropping photos of your resident barn mutt of indeterminate origin in the comments.

U.S. Weekend Action

Millbrook H.T. (Millbrook, NY) [Website] [Results]

Hunt Club Farms H.T. (Berryville, VA) [Website] [Results]

Major International Events

FEI Eventing European Championships for Ponies (Le Mans, France): [Definite Entries]

Burgham International (United Kingdom): [Website] [Results]

Your Monday Reading List:

Thinking about breeding your beloved mare? It can be a really exciting, fun experience – but it’s also prudent to be aware of the stresses and risks that come along with it. Camilla Mortensen’s latest blog on COTH details her own experience of the process in her typical humour and will once again have you rooting for quirky Cairo in her newest adventure. [Baby on board!]

A couple of weeks ago, we shared a piece on rural Australia’s shortage of farriers. Today, we’re looking closer to home, in the rural US, and shifting our focus to vets. It’s not always possible, now, to get a vet to your horse in that crucial moment in which they need to be seen — so what can we do to improve our vet’s lot in life and make it a job that more people want to come into, and stay in? This think piece raises some salient points that are well worth a read. [America’s vet crisis]

The FEI has issued a revised proposal to its social media rules for athletes and officials. Some of the revisions include this paragraph: “[Athletes] should not make derogatory, offensive, or inflammatory comments about other Athletes, Chefs d’Equipes, coaches, teams FEI Officials, Organisers, the FEI or any individuals associated with equestrian sport. Engaging in online disputes or public arguments or targeting a particular individual for specific criticism/comment is strongly discouraged.” But is this a draconian step too far – and will removing the right to criticism be the death knoll of our sport? [Read more here]

A kissing spines diagnosis doesn’t always have to mean surgery. When Kathryn Jenkins’s new OTTB First Commander began exhibiting some behavioural changes, her investigation with her vet led to the diagnosis — one that no horse owner ever wants to receive. But rather than operating, Dr Chris Newton decided to craft a tailored rehab plan and make use of injectable medication to work through the horse’s condition – with great results. [Here’s how they did it]

Morning Viewing:

Here in England, we’ve had all eyes on Hickstead over the weekend – and you can catch up on yesterday’s action with this fab video from our pals at Horse & Hound!

Saturday Video: Get To Know Allie Sacksen

In this quickfire interview with 5* event rider Allie Sacksen, you’ll get to know what makes her tick, how she got into eventing, and what you can find her doing whenever she’s not in the saddle. For those of us who were big fans of Allie and her late superstar Sparrow’s Nio, the indomitable pony who captured the nation’s hearts, it’s a great way to find out more about the woman behind the magic. Go Eventing — and go Allie!

Rain Continues to Plague British Eventing Season as Burgham Loses Saturday National Classes

Image courtesy of Burgham Horse Trials.

An extraordinarily wet year continues to wreak havoc on the British eventing calendar, as Northumberland’s Burgham International Horse Trials announced today that, in the interest of maintaining the footing for this weekend’s international classes, they would be forced to cancel tomorrow’s national Novice classes.
“In order to preserve the best possible ground conditions for the International CCI 4*-S (Jumping & Cross-Country running Saturday 29th July) & CCI 2*-S (Jumping & Cross-Country running Sunday 30th July), we have taken the decision to cancel the BE National Classes scheduled for Saturday 29th July (Novice O, P & Open Novice Q),” reads the statement published via British Eventing. “The weather is currently drying and we are hopeful that we can run the Sunday BE National classes as planned alongside the CCI 4*-S & CCI 2*-S classes. More information on refunds will follow early next week. Thank you for your patience and understanding with the challenging weather.”
Burgham is well underway, with BE100, Novice, and Intermediate classes running yesterday, the CCI3*-S currently midway through its cross-country finale, and CCI2*-S and CCI4*-S dressage continuing on apace today.
You can follow along with the event’s live scoring here, and to tune in for cross-country, head to Horse&Country TV.

Friday News & Notes from Stable View

The FEI Eventing European Championships for Ponies is underway, and I’m loving these first glimpses at the cross-country course thanks to the CrossCountry App! Watching these intrepid ponies and kids tackle tough courses with guts and gumption is one of my highlights of my live-streaming year, and if you also fancy tuning in for the excitement, you can do so via ClipMyHorse. Kick on, everyone!

U.S. Weekend Preview

Millbrook H.T. (Millbrook, NY) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Hunt Club Farms H.T. (Berryville, VA) [Website] [Entries] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Major International Events

FEI Eventing European Championships for Ponies (Le Mans, France): [Definite Entries]

Burgham International (United Kingdom): [Website] [Entries/Timing/Scoring] [Live Stream]

News From Around the Globe:

The pandemic changed a lot about our sport – and one of those things was prizegivings. Now, in the UK at least, prizegivings for national level classes are much less likely to happen, which means that riders can arrive, compete, and leave, often without ever interacting with organisers or sponsors. But, says Piggy March, it’s well worthwhile for all of us – especially pros – to take the time to express gratitude, provide feedback, and actually foster interactions between competitors and organising teams. Read her thoughts here.

You’ve packed extra haynets, plenty of water, and a couple of different sheets in case the temperature changes – but do you have a travel first-aid kit? There’s so much that can go wrong on the road, from cuts and bruises to colic to choke, and being adequately prepared (and then keeping all that kit up-to-date!) is absolutely crucial to stop a stressful situation from escalating into a serious crisis. Pack yours with advice from an equine vet.

How devoted are you to routine? I’ll confess that this is one of my weak spots – I’m prone to disorganisation and am the queen of winging it. But taking the time to create a tailored routine that suits you and your horse is one of the keys to success, says hunter trainer Rob Jacobs. More on that here.

Watch This:

Sack off your responsibilities and rewatch all the action from last weekend’s Nations Cup cross country at Avenches instead. It’s one of my favourite venues in the most beautiful of Swiss countryside – so I can’t be held responsible if you end up planning a trip there next year!

A Continental Showdown: Your First Look at the European Championships Definite Entries

We’re just a couple of weeks away from this year’s FEI European Eventing Championships, which are set to take place from August 9–13 at Haras du Pin in Normandy, northern France – and now, we’ve finally got the full list of selected riders to get us all firmly in the mood for this serious showdown.

14 nations will be represented at the Championships across 58 horse-and-rider combinations – and ten of those countries will field teams. Those are Great Britain, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, France, Ireland, Italy, Sweden, and Switzerland, while Hungary, Poland, Denmark, and Finland will bring forward individual competitors.

There are two Olympic team qualifications up for grabs for the best-placed as-yet-unqualified teams at the Europeans, which will be chased down by Belgium, Italy, the Netherlands, and Austria – but Spain, also on the hunt for a qualification, are conspicuous only by their absence, choosing instead to focus on trying to earn valuable Nations Cup points. They’ll be hoping for series leaders Belgium to finish well at Haras du Pin, and, no doubt, for current series runners-up Italy to nab a spot, too – a turn of events that would put the Dutch at the forefront of the race for the single Nations Cup qualification on a current score of 380 and the Spanish, currently fourth on 350, into second and ready to fight for further points at Arville’s leg the week after the European Championships, when their competitors’ top horses will be expected to be on holiday after the exertions of the championships.

But enough about the Nations Cup, which will certainly get its due attention as the season’s story continues to be written – for now, let’s look at these Europeans entries.

(NB: most countries haven’t yet named which riders are on the team of four, and which are individuals – and their deadline to do so isn’t until after the first horse inspection on August 9.)

AUSTRIA

Daniel Dunst and Chevalier 97

Katrin Khoddam-Hazrati and Oklahoma 2

Lea Siegl and Van Helsing P

BELGIUM

Lara de Liedekerke-Meier and Hermione d’Arville

Karin Donckers and Fletcha van’t Verahof

Cyril Gavrilovic and Elmundo de Gasco

Tine Magnus and Champagne Pia Z

Senne Vervaecke and Google Van Alsingen

Jarno Verwimp and Mahalia

DENMARK

Hanne Wind Ramsgaard and Amequ Torino

FINLAND

Veera Manninen and Sir Greg

FRANCE

Karim Laghouag and Triton Fontaine

Stéphane Landois and Ride For Thais Chaman Dumontceau

Gireg Le Coz and Aisprit De La Loge

Héloïse Le Guern and Canakine Du Sudre Z

Gaspard Maksud and Zaragoza

Nicolas Touzaint and Absolut Gold HDC

GERMANY

Nicolai Aldinger and Timmo

Sandra Auffarth and Viamant Du Matz

Malin Hansen-Hotopp and Carlitos Quidditch K

Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH

Jérôme Robiné and Black Ice

Christoph Wahler and Carjatan S

GREAT BRITAIN

Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo

Laura Collett and London 52

Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir

Tom Jackson and Capels Hollow Drift

Kitty King and Vendredi Biats

Tom McEwen and JL Dublin

HUNGARY

Imre Toth and Zypresse 8

IRELAND

Susie Berry and Clever Trick

Ian Cassells and Woodendfarm Jack O D

Sarah Ennis and Grantstown Jackson

Jennifer Kuehnle and Polly Blue Eyes

Joseph Murphy and Calmaro

Felicity Ward and Regal Bounty

ITALY

Evelina Bertoli and Fidjy Des Melezes

Susanna Bordone and Imperial Van De Holtakkers

Fosco Girardi and Euphorie

Emiliano Portale and Scuderia 1918 Future

Federico Sacchetti and Grc Shiraz

Giovanni Ugolotti and Swirly Temptress

THE NETHERLANDS

Merel Blom-Hulsman and Vesuve D’Aveyron

Janneke Boonzaaijer and ACSI Champ De Tailleur

Andrew Heffernan and Gideon

Sanne de Jong and Enjoy

Elaine Pen and Divali (individual)

Jordy Wilken and Wilbert Bo (individual)

POLAND

Joanna Pawlak and Fantastic Frieda

SWEDEN

Frida Andersen and Box Leo

Sara Algotsson-Ostholt and Dynamite Jack

Sofia Sjöborg and Bryjamolga Van Het Marienshof Z

Amanda Staam and Corpoubet AT

Lina Forsberg and Kaizen (individual)

SWITZERLAND

Robin Godel and Grandeur De Lully CH

Mélody Johner and Toubleu De Rueire

Nadja Minder and Toblerone

Felix Vogg and Colero

#Euros2023: WebsiteBox Office | Entries | EN’s Coverage

EN’s coverage of the FEI European Championships for Eventing is brought to you with support from Kentucky Performance Products.

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Get Ready to Event with Ashley Harrison

The week before you compete, what do you do with your horse? Do you drill that dressage test until it’s perfect? Squeeze in a jump and some final fitness work? Or keep it low key and let your horse hack out? Or is it a bit of all of the above? These essential last few days have always felt a bit like a no man’s land to me – which is why I found it so helpful to get some sage advice on tailoring my plan to my horse and learning to work with the natural ebb and flow of her workload for optimal results and the happiest horse possible. This vlog from the FEI, in conjunction with 4* eventer Ashley Harrison, will give you all sorts of similarly helpful insights and help you make a plan of action that you can rely on, all season long. Happy eventing!

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The horse that matters to you matters to us®. KPPVet.com 

NEW EVENTING STICKER AVAILABLE.  Visit https://kppusa.com/spring2023/ to grab one for your barn.

Tuesday News & Notes from Kentucky Performance Products

I haven’t even entered a horse show in over a year and I still relate so hard to this that it’s actually painful – I’m just currently subbing in Queen B’s physio appointments, shiny new fly rugs, expensive hoof conditioners, and, of courses, endless camera equipment for myself for the essential business of Taking Nice Photos of Horses, in place of entry fees. Adult responsibilities? I don’t know her. Hand me my credit card and I’ll happily make some more problems for Tomorrow Tilly to deal with.

Events Opening Today: Applewood Farm YEH & Mini EventCDCTA Fall H.T.Flora Lea Fall H.T.Five Points H.T.

Events Closing Today: Woodside Summer H.TFair Hill International Recognized H.T.Full Gallop Farm August HT-Pending USEF ApprovalWindRidge Farm Summer H.T.Otter Creek Summer H.T.GMHA Festival of Eventing August H.T.

News & Notes from Around the World:

Researchers behind three of the most significant safety studies in the sport have released a review of their findings. Now, they hope that the work they’ve done – and the recommendations they’ve pulled from what they’ve discovered — could be taken on board by British Eventing and, in time, the FEI to improve safety across eventing. Read more here.

Rescue horse Perfect Storm had already experienced the bad side of the horse world by the time he was four. But that’s when his story really began: at an auction house in 2014, where the underweight, dejected Saddlebred-Trakehner cross was given a second chance at life. Now, he’s out and about with SEE grant recipient Mia Valdez, who’s produced him to Preliminary level so far. Meet the dynamic duo.

Horse ownership is on the up in Australia — but there’s no way to meet the rising demand for farriers. Training opportunities are few and far between in the country, and often geographically impossible for many aspiring farriers to attend — which can either drive them away from the job or encourage folks to take a DIY approach to learning how to do it. Read some farriers’ thoughts here.

Do you believe in the lore of whorls? Mark Deesing certainly does – so much so, that he enlisted Temple Grandin to help him research how the position or direction of a horse’s whorls might dictate their basic nature. It might sound a bit mad, but this is a really interesting read on how they delved into a topic that was otherwise being roundly dismissed. Check it out.

Are you an Area I young rider? Then you should definitely check out these brilliant team competition opportunities coming up over the next few weeks — including the chance to ride alongside a pro as your team chases glory at the GMHA Festival and Millbrook! Find out more here.

Sponsor Corner: Did you miss the Rebecca Farm livestream? Catch up on all the action last weekend with Allie’s Reporter’s Notebook. Coverage sponsored by Kentucky Performance Products.

Watch This:

Get to know Brazilian rising star Rafa Losano and his wife, Sweden’s Amanda Brieditis, in the latest episode of the Eventing Weekly podcast!

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack


Hold up — you’re telling me I might stand a chance of learning to actually see a stride AND getting paid for it?! I’ll admit that on first glance, I might not have believed this offer from Lucinda Green was legit — but her daughter Lissa has confirmed that that 10k bonus is totally real, and now I reckon we’ll be seeing frighteningly huge improvements in riders across the world as everyone competes to get their paws on the purse. Check out the details here and find out how you can win 10k for 28 days of improvement!

National Holiday: It’s National Tequila Day! Nothing goes better with summer schooling sessions than a marg, IMO.

U.S. Weekend Action

The Event at Rebecca Farm (Kalispell, MT) [Website] [Results] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

Applewood Farm YEH & Mini Event (Califon, NJ) [Website] [YEH Ride Times] [Mini Ride Times]

Course Brook Farm Summer H.T. (Sherborn, MA) [Website] [Results]

Full Moon Farms H.T. (Finksburg, MD) [Website] [Results]

Horse Park of New Jersey Horse Trials II (Allentown, NJ) [Website] [Results]

Silverwood Farm Summer H.T. (Trevor, WI) [Website] [Results]

Your Monday Reading List:

If handling human-sized lizards is your day job, eventing probably doesn’t actually seem that scary in comparison. That certainly seems to be the case for veterinary specialist Katie Malensek, who “unwinds” from her busy career by jumping colossal fences — and has just been given the call-up for Canada’s team at the Nations Cup at Arville next month in Belgium. Meet this very cool rider here.

If you read one thing today, read this. It’s an op-ed from Carrie Kehring, whose teenage daughter, Maggie, was sexually abused by her coach, Rich Fellers. Now, after a long and extraordinarily tough fight for justice, they’ve seen Fellers sentenced — but the healing process is more complicated than simply closing the book now. Carrie reflects on how we all respond to allegations against high-profile men and what we all need to do to make the system better. Read her thoughts here.

The Thoroughbred Makeover is creeping ever closer, and if your training and competition plan hasn’t quite gone to schedule, it’s easy to feel disheartened — but adapting and shifting the goal posts is all part of the process. Catch up with participant Rosie Napravnik to find out why and see what she’s been up to on her own journey.

Got Barbie fever? Then you’ll definitely want to check out this very pink, very flamboyant ride from a very YOLO rider!

Morning Viewing:

Prepare your green bean for years of cross country fun with these exercises:

Sweden Reveals Team for 2023 Europeans

Sweden’s Frida Andersen and Box Leo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Sweden has revealed its team for the forthcoming European Championships at Haras du Pin, France (August 9–13). The Swedes, who qualified for next year’s Paris Olympics at the World Championships in Pratoni last year, have won team medals at each of the last three Europeans: in 2017 at Strzegom, they took the silver, and in 2019 at Luhmühlen and 2021 at Avenches, they took bronze. At each of those, they came in to the Championships with plenty of pressure to earn one of the two available tickets for Paris, which are awarded to the two best-placed as-yet-unqualified nations — and this year, without that pressure, they’re able to use the competition to truly develop their horses and riders ahead of next year.

Unlike many other nations, who will decide their team of four closer to the event or, indeed, at the deadline after the first horse inspection, Sweden’s chef d’equipe Fredrik Bergendorff has already revealed his team and individuals.

The team horses and riders are as follows:

  • Frida Andersen and Box Leo
  • Sara Algotsson-Ostholt and Dynamite Jack
  • Sofia Sjöborg and Bryjamolga van het Marienshof Z
  • Amanda Staam and Corpoubet AT

The individual competitors will be:

  • Lina Forsberg and Kaizen
  • Niklas Lindbäck and Focus Filiocus

The line-up mixes experience with new faces: both Sopot CCI4*-L winner Amanda Staam and Lina Forsberg make their Senior Championship debuts at Haras du Pin, while 25-year-old Sofia Sjöborg, who was best of the Swedes in 13th place with Bryjamolga van het Marienshof Z at Avenches, where she competed as an individual, makes her second team call-up with the mare after helping Sweden to that Olympic qualification at Pratoni. They’re joined by Olympian Frida Anderson and Box Leo, recently eighth at Aachen and top-twenty finishers at Pratoni last year, four-time Olympian and six-time Senior Europeans competitor Sara Algotsson-Ostholt, who won this spring’s CCI4*-L at Kronenburg with ten-year-old Dynamite Jack, and Olympian and five-time Europeans competitor Niklas Lindbäck, who competed in medal-winning teams in both 2017 and 2019 with Focus Filiocus.

“It can be an advantage, as for Amanda and Lina, to do just one EC as their first senior championship,” says Bergendorff. “Giving them the chance to experience a championship feels like a plus for the whole team, because if any of them were to take the next step and be ready for an Olympics or World Championship, it would be an incredible asset.”

That development for the future, he explains, is the primary goal of the Championship.

“We will have a good championship so we can learn lessons that will make us stronger for the Olympics. Of course, a good final position also gives a lot of positive spirit in the team. Considering the level of the other teams, it might be difficult to come home with a medal, even if it would have been fantastic. But we want to be close with good performances.”

EN’s coverage of the FEI European Championships for Eventing is brought to you with support from Kentucky Performance Products.

Tuesday News & Notes from Kentucky Performance Products

How cool is this? This year’s Breyerfest, which was held over the weekend at the Kentucky Horse Park, saw a seriously special new model debut: that of jockey Cheryl White, who was the first Black woman to hold a jockey’s license in the US back in the 70s. I love that we’re now moving towards a point where any young rider can see someone who looks like them succeeding, and we’re highlighting increasingly diverse role models. There’s still a whole lot of work to be done, but it’s a positive step in the right direction. Read more about Cheryl – and her new Breyer model set – here.

Events Opening Today: Seneca Valley PC H.T.Chattahoochee Hills H.T.Silverwood Farm Fall H.T.USEA AEC, $60,000 Adequan Advanced Final, and ATC Finals

Events Closing Today: Area VII Young Rider Benefit H.T. at Caber Farm-Pending USEF Approval, Cobblestone Farms H.T. IIHoosier Horse TrialsRiver Glen Summer H.T.Catalpa Corner Charity Horse TrialsOlney Farm H.T.Huntington Farm H.T.Spring Gulch H.T.Early Bird Summer Event at Galway Downs

News & Notes from Around the World:

Great news for the Dubarry Young Event Horse series,  which culminates in a finale at Burghley: both Nicola Wilson and Andrew Nicholson have been signed on as judges for the final. Between them, they have an extraordinary wealth of experience in spotting talented young horses — and exacting standards, too. I can’t wait to see which horses they pick out as their best in show.

We’ve all had an experience with a particularly spooky horse, right? It’s not always fun — but where’s the line between managing a flighty personality and suppressing a horse’s base instincts? This op-ed from a show barn picks a side, and I’m inclined to agree.

She’s not an eventer,but I reckon most of us have watched McLain Ward’s HH Azur jump and felt no shortage of emotion when the Grand Slam contender was retired from the sport at Aachen. The Chronicle of the Horse sat down with the rider to reflect on his journey with the plucky mare and some of the highlights of their career together. Check it out.

Here’s a great listen for your morning muck-out: the latest episode of the US Eventing podcast takes stock on the pathway to Paris, what the team has been up to lately, and how it all shapes the training and planning over the next year. Give it a spin.

Sponsor Corner: All signs point West! Eventing Nation’s coverage of the legendary Event at Rebecca Farm will be sponsored by Kentucky Performance Products. First up: A total of 19 riders will receive financial support to assist with travel costs for competition in the 3* or 4* divisions. Read more here!

Watch This:

Head down a 90s rabbithole with this compilation video from Badminton in 1997:

 

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

 
How cool is this?! Faerie Usain and Faerie Good Golly, both by Upsilon and out of Classic Moet (by embryo transfer), are full sisters and turned five this year — and they’ve been enjoying their first eventing outings. With exactly the same genes, one looks just like dad and the other is very like mum. We can’t wait to see more of these two little rockets!

National Holiday: It’s World Emoji Day! Sum up your horse in emojis; mine’s 🦄💩😈🥰

U.S. Weekend Action:

Champagne Run at the Park H.T. (Lexington, KY): Website | Results

The Maryland Horse Trials at Loch Moy Farm (Adamstown, MD): Website | Results

Your Monday Reading List:

There are some wins that just feel bigger than others. For British eventer Enid Grant, it’s a BE80(T) (US Beginner Novice) victory that stands out, because it came with a horse who was so tricky to gel with that she tells H&H she spent the first year falling off him. Now, they’re on a roll, thanks to some great help, plenty of compromise, and some smart changes at home. [Read their story here and restore your faith in your own tricky bugger]

And another cool win for you, this time in a 2*, for America’s Most Wanted Thoroughbred. OTTB Reloaded took the CCI2*-S class at Maryland under Will Faudree, proving why he was such a success a few years back at the Thoroughbred Makeover, and completing a cycle that’s seen him succeed with a number of riders in the irons. [Go Thoroughbreds!]

Researchers in the UK have developed a new back-mapping system, which could be a massive step forward for horses. It’s estimated that 35% of ridden horses suffer from back pain, with many of those coming as a direct result of poor saddle fit — and now, we could be much closer to accurately locating and treating issues. [Here’s what they’re working on]

In need of a holiday, but can’t stand the idea of a horse-free few days? Then check out these hotels around the world — some just have nods to horses through their architecture and decor, while others offer horses for gorgeous hacks, schoolmaster lessons, and more. [Spice up your Pinterest travel board]

Morning Viewing:

Relive Emily Hamel’s big UK adventure in this interview clip published this week by An Eventful Life:

Saturday Video: Would You Jump It? (The Truly Mad 1930s Edition)

What was in kids’ breakfast cereals back in the ’30s? Obviously some kind of supervitamin I’m not finding in my Cheerios, because this display of ‘trick jumping’ from a Cotswold Hunt kiddos suggests that preteens were a heck of a lot ballsier back then than I’ve ever been. This archival footage might be less than a minute long, but it’s jam-packed with insanity, from burning fillers to ruined meals — all thanks to some seriously game ponies and gutsy kids. I, for one, am also a big fan of the VERY POSH and not at all shocked presenter. Hooligans, the lot of ’em!

“I Have to Put Last Year Behind Me”: Checking in with Lara de Liedekerke-Meier at Aachen

Lara de Liedekerke-Meier and Ducati d’Arville brave the elements at Aachen. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Aachen is always a crucial event in the global calendar for a few reasons: first of all, that it’s an invitational, and nations must first be given the go-ahead by the competition to enter teams, based on strict performance guidelines, and then each nation is in charge of selecting its own team – and so the field of entries, horses and riders alike, tends to be the very best of the best. Secondly, it’s blessed with an extraordinary atmosphere that comes hand in hand with its multidisciplinary model – as the self-styled ‘World Equestrian Festival’, it features the biggest and most prestigious classes across jumping, dressage, combined driving, and vaulting, too, alongside the eventing – and urban location. Its main stadium, which is so often packed to the brim with spectators, seats 40,000; its cross-country day yields upwards of 30,000 scattered around the tight track; at any given point, the cheers from across the venue are deafening.

Both of those primary factors work together to create a pressure-cooker of an atmosphere and, as a result, the best simulation for a major championship that any team could possibly hope for – and the results of an Aachen showdown are telling ahead of a ‘real’ team competition, even though it’s run as a CCIO4*-S, rather than the long format favoured at championships. Teams that go well here can be safely considered on-form ahead of, say, next month’s European Championships; teams that mar their copybooks with avoidable blunders, conversely, leave with a blueprint of what they need to work on in the month or year to come.

For the casual spectator, it’s always great fun to see the battle at the top – one that, this time, saw home nation and inarguable powerhouse Germany take the spoils, followed by the USA, who continue on their spectacular upward trajectory, and the Brits, the most formidable team in the world at the moment, in a surprising third. For the true eventing nerd, there’s more to uncover beyond the podium – especially if spotting nations and horses on the rise takes your fancy.

There’s plenty that could be written about, say, Switzerland – the swiftest-rising nation of this Olympic cycle – who fielded a team for the first time at Aachen this month, logging an educational, rather than competitive, week. Or we could talk about Sweden, who sent just one individual in Frida Andersen and Box Leo, and still managed to nab a top ten finish on the leaderboard, proving that when the going gets tough, the Swedes more than capable of overcoming their current national tendency towards middling dressage marks. But the real story, if you ask me, is that of the Belgians.

Like Sweden, Belgium didn’t qualify to send a team to Aachen this year. What they did do, though, is earn themselves a couple of individual spots, which they used wisely: one went to 22-year-old Jarno Verwimp and his eleven-year-old World Championships partner Mahalia, and the other, to Belgian powerhouse Lara de Liedekerke-Meier, riding the excellent thirteen-year-old Hanoverian Ducati d’Arville.

Perhaps you skim-read past those names when the Aachen line-up was first revealed. That’s fair enough; without a team, it’s easy to get lost in the shuffle, to be overshadowed by the likes of Will Coleman and Tom McEwen and not one, but two Prices. But in the end? They beat them all. Jarno finished fourteenth, adding just 9.2 time penalties across the country to his first-phase score of 34.4, while Lara and Ducati finished tenth, securing their spot at the business end of the leaderboard after delivering one of the fastest rounds of the day in the influential cross-country finale.

 

Lara de Liederkerke-Meier and Ducati d’Arville. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though many of Lara’s horses with the ‘d’Arville’ suffix, a nod to her home base, Arville Castle in Belgium, are homebreds, Ducati isn’t – and his entry into her string ticks all the boxes of a classic horse girl shopping spree.

“I found him at an auction when I was pregnant, so I couldn’t ride him, and my husband, Kai [Steffen Meier], tried him for me instead,” she remembers. “He was called Ducati just like my previous horse, who I’d ridden at Badminton, and just like that Ducati, he couldn’t make the flying changes! So it was a bit that he reminded me of him and I wanted another similar to him, but also that I loved his Diarado breeding, so I bought him.”

While Kai offered to produce and compete the horse at the beginning of his career, Lara was so excited about her new prospect that she used him as motivation to get straight back in the saddle after giving birth – and before long, they’d logged the results required for him to make his Six-Year-Old World Championships debut at Le Lion d’Angers. He finished sixth – his first FEI top ten. That’s been followed by placings at every level through CCI4*-L and, in 2021, a senior championship debut at the European Championships, where he performed competitively in the first two phases but sadly had to be withdrawn at the final horse inspection.

“I thought from the beginning he would be a good horse, but he’s not just the easiest  to manage health-wise,” says Lara. But with her team at home at Arville, she says, “we’ve found the tricks to managing him – and now he’s so consistent. I think he’s now a much stronger horse thanks to my team at home, and the vet who really tries to understand him and is dealing with him really well.”

Though Lara was disappointed to tip two rails in the showjumping phase at Aachen, which is set in that busy, bustling main arena, she was the first rider of the day in the final phase to really give the optimum time – which no one would catch – a proper run for its money. She and Ducati executed a classy clear, adding just 2.8 time penalties, which helped them close the book on a weekend that had seen them go from first-phase 11th all the way down to 28th, and then back up to tenth.

“He was clear here last year so it was a disappointment to have two rails. He felt really stressed against the bridle, which is a shame, but if I had to sign again for the top ten at the beginning of the week, I think I would! So yes, it’s just really special,” says Lara with a smile. “He’s a fantastic horse — he’s really looking for the flags and he really makes my life easy. Unfortunately, I lost a shoe at fence three, and then later on after the two skinnies I lost another on the line and I thought okay, now the two corners without  shoes in front is going to be tricky! I had to have an extra pull here and there to really ensure that he would stay in between the flag and not have a slip. So maybe it’s saved me a place in the top ten, but I do have a little frustration, because I could have kicked here and there maybe a bit more! But on the other hand, he was just so focused and tried so hard for me, and I think Aachen is one of those tracks where you have to be 100% concentrated from start to finish, and he gave me just the best feeling.”

Lara and Ducati. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Ducati, who’ll be aimed for an end-of-season run at Boekelo to help qualify him for Paris, is just one part of a string of horses that’s looking particularly strong for the rider: there’s Formidable 62, an “incredible little horse” who overcame a cancer of the eye to win her first CCI3*-L at Kronenburg this year; homebred Hooney d’Arville, a daughter of Lara’s Young Riders-to-World Championships mount Nooney Blue, who finished tenth in Luhmühlen’s tough CCI4*-S last month; and Hermione d’Arville, who went to last year’s World Championships as just a nine-year-old and was seventh in Luhmühlen’s CCI4*-S. Both Hooney and Hermione are just ten year olds this year; Formidable, for her part, is only nine, as is the impressive Origi, who was ninth in the Seven-Year-Old World Championship in 2021 and has now returned after a year out. Not only does Lara look set to have horses in droves for Paris, but for Los Angeles, too, all being well.

But this year’s successes aren’t just an exciting boon for Belgium in their own right – they’re also a long-awaited uptick of fortunes after a 2022 that Lara would love to leave well behind her. Though there were some great results, with placings at numerous internationals, there were also colossal disappointments – none worse than the World Championships at Pratoni, where Lara suffered a shock fall at the first fence on the cross-country course. That blow came just one year after she made her Olympic debut at Tokyo — a long-awaited one, after having missed out on previous call-ups due to pregnancy — but had to make the correct, but heartbreaking, decision to withdraw before cross-country as her horse wasn’t quite right.

“I think I have to put what happened in the past behind me,” she says sagely. “Falling at fence one at Pratoni was quite something. When I felt my head on the ground, I was like, ‘no way, I’ve got to wake up, there’s no way – it’s a nightmare’. But no, I never woke up. It was reality. I mean, everything happens for a reason — you don’t always know why, but I’m confident it will come along, and considering that the horses I have are good, I just need to keep producing them the right way.”

Part of Lara’s rebuilding process was in finding herself as a rider again – a process that had been complicated by the fact that her husband and confidante, German eventer Kai Steffen Meier, has stepped into the chef d’equipe role for the Belgian team, changing a dynamic that has so long functioned as the two of them working together. To help her regain her mojo, and to give the rest of her teammates, and her husband, the chance to work on solidifying as a unit, she opted to step back and sit out two of the early-season Nations Cup competitions.

“I  have to say I put myself a bit behind the team, because I needed to find myself as a rider again — because it was difficult to share my husband as the team manager and everything,” she explains. “So I let them go to Chatsworth and Millstreet, while I focused on the horses and getting the ten-year-olds to Luhmühlen.”

That plan paid off with that double of top-ten finishes – and great results for the Belgian team, too. Bolstered by their win at the first Nations Cup of the season at Montelibretti, where Lara finished fourth individually with Ducati, the team logged podium finishes at both Chatsworth and Millstreet, cementing the feeling that everything was beginning to go in the right direction for the Belgian efforts.

“Luhmühlen was really something for me – being that close to the top three, and at Aachen, as well, to be top ten… I’m feeling like I’m getting back in shape,” says Lara. “It takes a village – the trainers, but also my grooms. I’m so thankful to to have all these people who kept believing in me despite what happened last year, which was not really helpful.”

Team Belgium winners of the FEI Eventing Nations Cup™ 2022 Arville (BEL). From left to right: Jarno Verwimp; Julien Wergifosse; Maarten Boon; Lara de Liedekerke-Meier; Kai-Steffan Meier (Chef d’Equipe). (FEI/Libby Law)

So what does this mean for Belgium, who are one of several teams fighting tooth and nail for their first Olympic team qualification since London 2012? It’s a heartening step in the right direction, certainly, for a team that — like its lynchpin rider — is on the up and up in 2023. While gaining that team ticket is hot on their minds – as the eighth-placed team out of sixteen at Pratoni, they missed gaining qualification there by one frustrating place – they’re in a strong position at the midpoint of the season, and results like these will only bolster their resolve. Right now, they have two remaining opportunities to gain qualification: the first could come at next month’s European Championships, at which there’ll be two team tickets up for grabs for the highest-placed as-yet-unqualified nations, while the second – and, actually, the very last ticket of them all – would be the team qualification awarded to the highest-placed unqualified nation in the overall season standings of the 2023 FEI Nations Cup series, which Belgium leads after four legs by 65 points.

And right now, while we’re one day into leg five at Jardy? They sit third with just Lara left to deliver her test with Hermione d’Arville – and the best of those unqualified nations. The job is far from done; the Dutch, Italian, and Spanish teams certainly won’t be letting those team spots go without a fight over the next few months, but something is shifting in the Belgian eventing stratosphere, and there’s a quiet confidence beginning to crystallise around each of the riders within its orbit, from Lara, who hopes to have four or five horses qualified for Paris, to Jarno, who has put himself on the global map while still barely out of Young Riders, to national champion Tine Magnus, who has a horse I’ll put forward now as one of the most exciting in the world in Dia Van Het Lichterveld Z, to longtime leading rider Karin Donckers, who continues to throw down top ten placings on the world stage – and beyond, too, to up-and-comers such as Sanne Vervaecke, Wouter de Cleene, and more beyond. Belgium has always been a particularly competent equestrian nation: after all, a third of the horses who took part in the Tokyo Olympics across the disciplines were bred in the country, and it has long been one of the great exporters of top-class sport prospects. Now, if they can retain some of that horsepower, they’re starting to get on the right track to make best use of it.

For those of us who backed the Swiss team and reaped the rewards (mostly in bragging rights and great vibes) when they stepped up to the plate on the world stage over the last few years, the Belgians look a particularly sweet prospect. Ignore them at your peril.

EN’s Coverage of CHIO Aachen is brought to you with support from Kentucky Performance Products and Ocala Horse Properties.

CHIO Aachen: [Website] [Entries] [Schedule] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

Thursday Video: At Home with the Lipizzaners

There’s something very special about Lipizzaners, and it’s not even really got anything to do with the high school classical dressage movements, the Hapsburg-era palace they perform in in Vienna (very cool, though, if you’ve not been), nor the incredible story of how they very nearly perished in the Second World War but were saved in a remarkable rescue mission. Instead, I’m talking about their universality for horse-crazy kids. They’re the ubiquitous pony magazine centrefold – like Akhal Tekes, they were one of those breeds none of us would ever actually encounter but we all knew so much about. Horse breed encyclopaedias highlighted them, VHS tapes on the beauty of the horse showed them in all their glory, and model horse companies shilled many a white horse into the clutches of a little girl. That’s why, at the age of 32, I think I still find myself transfixed by them – and why I was so excited to see that the FEI’s RIDE magazine put out a new episode focussing on their true home, the Lipica Stud in Slovenia. I’m already SkyScanner-ing my next holiday, frankly.

Write (or Video!) Your Way to Free Training from Great Meadow International with the Jimmy Wofford Essay Contest

Kristen Bond and Enough Already at Great Meadow. Photo by Jenni Autry.

One of the things that I always most loved about Jimmy Wofford was that all his (extensive!) equine knowledge and wisdom was so eloquently imparted: he was as good a writer as he was a rider and trainer, and I learned as much about the art and craftsmanship of creating brilliant sentences as I did about riding positively to a fence when reading his books and columns over the years.

Now, his extraordinary legacy is being honoured in a way that reflects his love for sharing knowledge, with the Jim Wofford Essay Contest, presented by Davis Equine. There will be two prizes on offer at this year’s MARS Great Meadow International (August 24–27): the Scholarship Prize “will be awarded to a GMI competitor based on their submission and their sportsmanship and horsemanship demonstrated throughout the weekend”, while the Development Prize is open to “all spectators, competition staff, volunteers, grooms, and participants of GMI for the current year.”

So what are those submissions? Well, although this is ostensibly an essay competition, it’s actually broader in scope than that – you can enter an essay, a video submission, or a quote concerning Jimmy’s training techniques. (If I were to be eligible to enter, I reckon I’d go down the route of a Woff-inspired cross-country day preview and predictions piece, which used to be the highlight of my horse-magazine-guzzling year. You’re welcome to take that idea and run with it, writers and vlogger types.)

Jim Wofford and Chinch share a moment.

The prizes, which are generously sponsored by Davis Equine, Ride Safe, the Virginia Equine Rehab Center, and the GMI organising committee, are fittingly educational: the winning contestant of the Scholarship Prize will receive a training stipend of $2500 to train with one of the trainers from a pool of trainers who previously trained with Jimmy, who will be selected by the organising committee, and will also receive a perpetual trophy. The Development Prize winner will receive a collection of Jimmy’s “most influential books about training techniques”, to be provided by Davis Equine, and an award certificate.

“Jim Wofford was a horseperson beloved by the local equestrian community and beyond,” says Dr. Chad Davis of Davis Equine. “Many of the riders at GMI have been influenced by Wofford. We wanted to honor his contributions to the sport, not only in this year, but for many years to come with the support of the community and this local event.”

Ready to enter? Click here and give it your best shot. Submissions are due on August 15, 2023 and winners will be awarded at Great Meadow International (August 24-27). And, as always, Go Eventing!

Thursday News & Notes

 

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With limited context to work with, I’m going to give you this gem of a photo to start your Thursday off right: it’s Mariah Carey, babyyyy, and her daughter Monroe, who appears to be a newly-confirmed horse girl and I am HERE FOR IT. Now we just need to get the Elusive Chanteuse on a horse.

US Weekend Preview:

Champagne Run at the Park H.T. (Lexington, KY): Website | Scoring | Entry Status & Ride Times

The Maryland Horse Trials at Loch Moy Farm (Adamstown, MD): Website | ScoringRide Times | Entry Status

Larkin Hill H.T. (NY): Website | Scoring

News From Around the Globe:

So often, simplicity is the key to great riding. Simplicity and – you guessed it! – great basics. That was the name of the game on day two of the EA21 West clinic, which took place in Washington state and focussed much of its attentions on the quality of the canter. Here’s what the participants learned, and some great inspiration for your weekend jump school.

We’re not the only people obsessed with Aachen. In Andrew Nicholson’s latest op-ed for Horse & Hound, the former winner espouses the event as the ideal showcase of our sport to a wider audience, and we couldn’t agree more. As an aside, it’s always a funny little thrill of sorts to bump into this absolute legend of the sport at the media centre coffee machine in the morning before he heads off on coaching duties. We’ll let it slide that he nicks our beverages, because he does write rather well.

Rich Fellers has pleaded guilty to being Not A Great Dude, Actually, and will likely serve four years in prisonWhile that seems like a pretty short sentence for a sexual abuse charge, it’s still heartening to see a case of this kind actually yielding some kind of punishment. Unrelatedly, this week, disgraced US Gymnastics ‘doctor’ Larry Nassar had a very bad time in prison after telling his fellow inmates that he wished the women’s tennis match at Wimbledon, which they were watching together, was being played by girls. Oh dear.

Watch This:

Time for a classic rewatch – this time, from 2009, where a baby-faced Michi Jung made his 5* debut at Luhmühlen with La Biosthetique Sam…and won it.

Zut Alors! Serious Home-Side Team Announced for European Eventing Championships + Nominated Entries Revealed in Full

Gaspard Maksud and Zaragoza at Haras du Pin in 2022. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

What a week for Europeans team-spotters! Not only do we have the full list of nominated entries for each country, but another nation – and this time, the home one – has revealed its final squad of six for next month’s FEI European Championships, which will be held at Haras du Pin in Normandy from August 9–13.

The Championships will be used as “a full-scale rehearsal” for the French for next year’s Olympic Games, which are also set to be held in France and will also feature a cross-country course designed by next month’s designer, Pierre le Goupil.

The six selected horses and riders, in alphabetical order by surname, are as follows:

  • Karim Laghouag and Triton Fontaine, owned by Philippe Lemoine, Guy Bessat, S.A.R.L. Ecurie Karim Laghouag and Camille Laffite
  • Stéphane Landois and Chaman Dumontceau* Ride for Thaïs, owned by S.C.E.A. Ecurie du Cerisier Bleu
  • Gireg Le Coz and Aisprit de la Loge, owned by Frédérique Grand and Augustin Grand
  • Héloïse Le Guern and Canakine du Sudre Z, owned by Bénédicte Le Guern and Philippe Le Guern
  • Gaspard Maksud and Zaragoza, owned by Jane Young and Martin Thurlow
  • Nicolas Touzaint and Absolut Gold*HDC, owned by Haras des Coudrettes
    OR
    Diabolo Menthe, owned by Mézard Sports and Françoise Niclaus

Chatsworth winners Stephane Landois and Chaman Dumontceau. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The French Equestrian Federation (FFE) sat down for a chat with team chef d’equipe Thierry Touzaint upon the reveal of his squad, which features seasoned Olympians such as Nicolas Touzaint and Karim Florent Laghouag, as well as exciting up-and-comers, such as 2022 Bramham Under-25s CCI4*-L victors Héloïse Le Guern and Canakine du Sudre, World Champs top-ten finishers Gaspard Maksud and Zaragoza, and Chatsworth CCI4*-S winners Stéphane Landois and Chaman Dumontceau* Ride for Thaïs, who has been poignantly renamed to honour the young rider by whom he was produced and loved before her tragic death at Haras du Pin.

“My choice was, above all, focused on couples who have been successful for two years,” he explains. “If we take them one by one, they all shone at a very high level. This selection is therefore quite logical when you look at what they have shown. These are couples who present well on dressage and who are reliable on cross country.”

That, he hopes, will help them to clinch a podium finish and put valuable mileage on the clock ahead of next year.

“The objective is to bring back a medal above all, and why not to win? For that, you will have to be good from training. We will have nations like Germany and England to watch closely. We have a very good team, I am quite optimistic, I hope we will do something good,” he says, explaining that he will make his decision on which four will ride on the team itself, and which will compete as individuals, after the first horse inspection on the Wednesday of the event. “I like to see the terrain first, walk the cross country, see the quality of the ground… it can influence my choices. The team line-up and running order will be announced as usual after the first horse inspection on Wednesday August 9th.”

All the horses and riders named are, crucially, part of the ‘A’ list development squad for next year’s Olympics, and it’s telling that Thierry is choosing to put them forth for this challenge – but with a year yet to go before the Olympics, their names are not set in stone for that selection process, nor should riders who are conspicuous only by their absence here, such as Astier Nicolas, currently sidelined due to horse injury, or Tom Carlile, be considered out of the hunt for Paris.

“It is obviously an important step before Paris. Now we know that the Olympic format is very different, with only three pairs and a profile of the cross course that is generally not very difficult. Dressage will be really decisive next year. There are still couples who can join the group for selection. There will be 4 and 5 star international events at the end of the season which will give me a lot of information.”

European Championships team announcements:

 

Tuesday News & Notes from Kentucky Performance Products

 

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I love seeing long-standing, hardworking venues get their chance at upper-level fixtures, and the weekend was such a showcase of that: in the UK, we saw Aston-le-Walls — a venue that feels like it puts something on for us all practically every week — get its own 4*, and in the US, we saw the same for Loch Moy in Maryland. I’m particularly fond of Loch Moy, as it was the venue at which I did my first event while working for Phyllis Dawson about fifteen years ago — and it’s great to know it’s every bit as friendly and well-run as it ever was. (Even better, of course, is seeing one of our EN team do so well there — well done, Ema!)

Events Opening Today: Great Meadow InternationalShepherd Ranch Pony Club H.T. II

Events Closing Today: Millbrook H.T.Hunt Club Farms H.T.Town Hill Farm H.T.

News & Notes from Around the World:

It’s never too late to pick up an eventing habit. That’s what Jeanette Lussi discovered when, in her fifties, she decided to add eventing to an athletic roster that already included Ironmans and marathons. Now, she’s found her “heart horse” — a plucky pony of indeterminate breeding — and is having arguably the MOST fun. Read her story here.

Every couple of months, I like to brush up on emergency protocol, so it’s fresh in my mind if my horse decides to have a little whoopsie. This piece from veterinarian Jeff Hall, DVM is a really handy way to do just that, with an outline of four of the most common ‘little whoopsies’ and how to deal with them. Dive in and get prepared.

If you’ve been following British Eventing over the last few years, you may have noticed one very lanky chestnut working his way up to 5*. That’s Solo, the Badminton, Burghley, and Luhmühlen mount of British-based Kiwi Hollie Swain, and you can get to know him — and his intrepid rider — in this profile from the FEI.

For the first time in ten years (!!), Horses Inside Out is coming to the US. Using painted horses, the lecture-demo will teach you all about musculoskeletal anatomy, posture, and the effects of saddlery and riders on our horses. It’s perfect for equine pros and amateurs alike, and it starts tomorrow at Morven Park. Don’t miss out.

Sponsor Corner: Summer is in full swing and for many in the US, that means hot days are becoming the norm. Is your horse at risk for dehydration this summer? Find out with this infographic from Kentucky Performance Products.

Watch This:

Take a podium placing in the OI at Ocala with Elisa Wallace and Lissavorra Quality:

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

How great is it to see some events taking on absolutely colossal entry numbers, and managing to squeeze them all in, no less? We’ve really struggled in the UK with the loss of events – many from tricky weather conditions, some from logistical difficulties arising due to limitations on unaffiliated competition, some because of the rising cost of putting on competitions and handling abandonment insurance, and several, sadly, because of a scarcity of entries. So when I see posts like this one, from the great northern international fixture at Burgham, it’s heartening – and I do hope plenty of people take up their call for volunteers, as it’s a seriously lovely place to spend a day or two, with a super team who’ll look after you well. Plus, you’ll get to see horses and riders such as Away Cruising and Harry Meade, Izilot DHI and Ros Canter, Valmy Biats and Emily King, Liberty and Glory and Tom Crisp, and many, many more in that 156 (!!) strong CCI4*-S. What are you waiting for?!

National Holiday: It’s both National Kitten Day AND National Pina Colada Day. My boyfriend has just asked me if it’s okay to celebrate both or if you have to pick one, and after some consideration, I think it’s mostly just important to follow your own set of beliefs and priorities. If that means finding a kitten bar and getting absolutely flattened on the Coladas, you do you, boo.

U.S. Weekend Action

The Maryland International + Horse Trials (Adamstown, MD) [Website] [Results]

Arrowhead H.T. (Billings, MT) [Website] [Results]

Chattahoochee Hills H.T. (Fairburn, GA) [Website] [Results]

Huntington Farm H.T. (South Strafford, VT) [Website] [Results]

Genesee Valley Hunt H.T. (Geneseo, NY) [Website] [Results]

Masterson Equestrian Trust YEH/NEH Qualifier (Lexington, KY) [Website] [Results]

Redefined Equestrian Horse Trials (Fort Collins, CO) [Website] [Results]

Summer Coconino HT and Western Underground, Inc. TR,N,BN 3 Day Event (Flagstaff, AZ) [Website] [Results]

Your Monday Reading List:

Imagine the satisfaction that comes with getting a grey horse seriously sparkling clean – and now multiply it by 100. That’s how I imagine the good folks over in Wiltshire are feeling at the moment as they give their iconic White Horse of Westbury – the oldest of the county’s 13 carved hillside horses – a belated spring clean. It’s never an easy undertaking to clean up what is effectively a reasonably fragile historic monument (just like it’s never particularly easy to get the poo stains off a ticklish grey, because they always seem to be the ticklish ones in the barn), but these guys have a seriously well-thought-out process, which involves a special kind of pressure washer, segmented cleaning areas, and an eight-week turnaround time. Honestly, I’ll be daydreaming about the sheer joy of pressure-washing that thing white again. [Here’s how operation Show-Ready Whites is going]

This one’s worth a share just for that truly adorable and insane final photo. When dressage rider and breeder Cara Klothe put her beloved mare Lhegally Blonde in foal, she did everything right: all the routine visits, all the ultrasounds, all the checks to ensure she and her foal were ticking along in good order, with no surprises to come. But even with all that, they all definitely got a big old surprise when Blondie popped out not one, but two healthy babies. Of course, twin foals are rare, and the odds of both being healthy enough to survive is slim, so the trio were immediately put into round-the-clock care to ensure they’d all thrive in their surprise circumstances. Now, they’re doing really well, and I promise you, you want to click through and check out the pics of these teeny-weeny little darlings. [Go on, treat yourself]

In a bid to improve teaching standards across the country, Equestrian Canada is bringing in the big guns. As of July 1, they’ve introduced a temporary fee for non-licensed coaches – they’ll need to pay $100 per show they teach at. Those fees collected will go towards bolstering the coaching programme, and, EC hopes, all coaches will get on board with joining in, getting licensed, and helping to better the state of riding education across Canada. [Read more here]

Morning Viewing:

Head to Nicola Wilson’s Yorkshire base for a bootcamp like none other in this training vlog:

Who Jumped It Best? The Rolex Water at CHIO Aachen

Who Jumped It Best?

We’ve just about dried out from — and emotionally recovered from — the wet and wild cross-country finale at CHIO Aachen CCIO4*-S last Saturday, and that means there’s just one thing for it: a seriously tough game of Who Jumped It Best. This week, we’re focusing our attentions on the first water complex, the Rolex Water at 8AB, 9, and 10AB, to pick the best of the bunch at this influential question.

After jumping a hefty log-drop into the water at 8A — a drop that came quickly after a MIM-clipped oxer at 7 — our competitors had very little space to regain their composure before they met the fence in question today, a brush-topped arrowhead on a right-handed turn at 8B. But that wasn’t the last fence they had to tackle in the tough Rolex Water complex — after jumping the skinny we’ll be judging in this session of Who Jumped It Best, they continued on that right-handed trajectory, jumped a big, wide brush at 9, which was effectively a half-circle away, and then completed that circle by cantering back under the bridge and jumping a double of skinny brush pimples.

That means that your job while voting is a multifaceted one: not only are you looking to judge which horse and rider recovered best from the drop in, and met the skinny arrowhead in the most balanced fashion — you’re also looking to see which ones look to have set up their right-handed turn the best, maintaining the positivity and trajectory they need to navigate the rest of the complex.

Reckon you’re up to the challenge? Let’s take a look at our contenders…

Benjamin Massie and Edition Fonroy. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Bill Levett and Sligo Candy Cane. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Cathal Daniels and Rioghan Rua. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Gireg le Coz and Aisprit de la Loge. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Kevin McNab and Miss Pepperpot. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Lara de Liedekerke-Meier and Ducati d’Arville. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Maxime Livio and Carouzo Bois Marotin. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Nadja Minder and Aquila B. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Phillip Dutton and Z. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Robin Godel and Grandeur de Lully CH. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Shenae Lowings and Bold Venture. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Will Coleman and Off the Record. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

EN’s Coverage of CHIO Aachen is brought to you with support from Kentucky Performance Products and Ocala Horse Properties.

CHIO Aachen: [Website] [Entries] [Schedule] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [EN’s Form Guide] [EN’s Coverage]