Articles Written 1,945
Article Views 4,971,258

Tilly Berendt

Achievements

Become an Eventing Nation Blogger

About Tilly Berendt

Latest Articles Written

Thoresby Day Two: Laura Collett Closes the Gap Ahead of Jumping Phases

Laura Collett and London 52 pose the greatest threat to day one dressage leaders Piggy March and Brookfield Inocent, who nonetheless remained unsurpassed at the culmination of the phase. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

When Piggy March and her European silver medallist Brookfield Inocent put a slick 23.9 on the board yesterday, there were just a few horses on today’s line-up that we could feasibly eye up with a view to overtaking them – and the frontrunner, Laura Collett‘s Tokyo team gold medallist London 52, certainly gave it a jolly good go. But though he certainly gave them the old razzle dazzle, as the theatre kids say, his 24.8 wasn’t quite enough to usurp them. And so, as we look towards tomorrow’s jumping phases in the CCI4*-S at Thoresby, we’re looking at a head-to-head between two of the hot favourites to go and win Badminton in a scant few weeks.

Or are we? After all, the first CCI4*-S of the season isn’t an end goal in and of itself, and because Thoresby is effectively a brand new event – it hosted the British Six- and Seven-Year-Old classes and associated CCI2*-L and CCI3*-L ordinarily held at Osberton in 2020, but the launch of its Spring Carnival has been put on hold throughout the pandemic – there’s a strong sense that many horses will be run conservatively. It’s not just because it’s a new event and, as such, an unknown quantity to riders, either – it’s also quite an intense track, certainly when compared to the former fixture at Belton House that it replaces. There, we saw a lot of open space and galloping fences to serve as a pipe-opener at the beginning of the year; here, we’re looking at a smaller event site, and that means that the track is tighter as a matter of necessity, with plenty of technical questions.

Of course, this isn’t necessarily a bad thing. There are certainly plenty of pros to a run-and-jump four-star track at this point of the year: for many horses, a pipe-opener takes the edge off and gets them going again after a long winter of training, while riders are able to glean feedback on fitness levels and weak points ahead of their major spring run. But a track that demands focus and accuracy knocks a different kind of rust off, and while it may mean that many riders opt to ride more deliberately (and thus slowly) to avoid risking a frustrating run-out, it does allow them to make sure the power steering is all working as it ought to. Exposing a weakness in the training now might feel frustrating – but with just over a month to go before Badminton, it does allow some modicum of time to do something about it.

But before we do too deep a dive into tomorrow’s challenge, let’s take about our top two, who are both horses with plenty of experience over tight, twisty tracks: Brookfield Inocent was second at Pau in 2020, the year that London 52 won it. Both horses were debutants at the level, too, and each has since gone on to claim a gold medal on a championship team. And though we’re used to seeing London 52’s work rewarded with low-20s scores, both look on superb form after a winter out of the spotlight.

“He’s been a bit frisky in his OI runs,” laughs Laura, “but luckily he does know that when it’s a big arena, he has to behave properly! I think he just gets a bit offended by a smaller ring. But he came out really professionally today, and the main thing is that he was with me and rideable – sometimes, he looks better than he feels, but today he felt really nice.”

This is a feeling that Laura hopes to further refine out on course, where the challenges come in droves and even her excellent gelding — who’s become something of a flag-seeking missile across the country — will need to pay attention to find his way through sans penalties.

“I think everything’s going to come up thick and fast. You’re not just jumping a combination — you’re doing a turn back to the next thing and it’s all coming up fast, so you just have to be on it from the beginning. It’s going to test their — and my — reactions, really.”

Laura also sits in provisional eighth place with Aachen runner-up Dacapo, who posted a 26.6, and 61st with the former Alex Bragg ride Hester, who scored a 35.6.

Harry Meade gives Little Fire an excellent ride under the watchful eye of William Fox-Pitt, for whom he’s deputising this week. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Harry Meade is a very busy boy indeed this week, with three horses of his own in this class – plus the last-minute addition of two bonus catch-rides, one of which partnered him to podium position at the tail end of the day. Little Fire is one of William Fox-Pitt‘s two intended rides at Badminton – the other is Oratorio II, who Harry rode yesterday to a rather spicy 35.4 – but after a tumble at Cirencester last weekend in a Novice class, William has been sidelined with a mandatory 21-day competition ban, which is delivered to any rider rendered unconscious in a fall. Harry deputised for William two days later, riding both horses around the Open Intermediate, and now will give the geldings their prep run here while William works on reaching five-star fitness independently.

Though Oratorio, who William has fondly described as an occasional ‘double handful’, tested the boundaries in some moments of yesterday’s test, Little Fire stepped up as the model pupil today with his regular rider casting a watchful eye from the sidelines. As a result, he was rewarded with a very promising 25.4, which puts him in third in this hot field of of 99.

Several withdrawals have shifted the landscape of the leaderboard even before the jumping phases begin. Izzy Taylor and Monkeying Around sat fourth at the end of the day on 25.4 but have since pulled out; so, too, has Oliver Townend, who was eleventh and equal fifteenth with Swallow Springs and Ballaghmor Class, respectively, at the end of the phase. This is par for the course for Oliver, who tends to use the first four-star of the season as test prep and runs his horses at Burnham Market instead, and we’ve seen Izzy follow suit previously, too.

Ros Canter and Allstar B deliver a very sweet test that’s surprisingly undermarked. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Izzy’s withdrawal allowed reigning World Champions Ros Canter and Allstar B to step into equal tenth place, which they share with Kentucky-bound Pippa Funnell and Maybach on a score of 27.5.

“Alby’s on really great form,” says Ros, who credits a change of routine over the winter with helping him to get back to his best. This comes after an uncharacteristic end to their 2021 season, in which they had issues on course at the European Championships at Avenches, a track that the big-striding horse struggled to find the rhythm of. Prior to that, the pair had travelled to Tokyo as reserves for the British Olympic team – a trip that cut out much of the productive running time of the summer season.

“Last year was a very long year for him, and obviously it didn’t go quite to plan in lots of ways, so I was very mindful that I didn’t want to come out with a horse that wasn’t up for the job this year,” she explains. “So he predominantly hacks nowadays; if he does do any schooling, he’ll school out on a hack, rather than doing lots of arena work – and he definitely feels happy.”

For Ros, as for so many of our five-star-bound competitors, this weekend is a question of tactics: riders have to know their horses well enough to make the call on whether they’ll benefit more from trying to catch the time or trying to refine the communication basics, which can often pick up some rust over the course of a long winter. In Alby’s case, the emphasis is set to be far more on the latter than on a fast, competitive run.

“Twisty and turny’s not Alby’s ideal, but I also wouldn’t necessarily ever try to make this a winning run pre-Badminton, so a bit of twisting and turning might just help his manners a bit, and then he’ll get to run at Badminton,” she says. “I think it’s a really interesting track; it’s lovely and open at the start, and then it’s twisty for quite a long time with a lot of questions. It’s definitely more than an OI run!”

Matt Flynn and Wizzerd put their early-season prep to the test in their first major pre-Badminton outing. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We were particularly excited to catch up with Matt Flynn, who swapped 90-degree Ocala heat for April snow flurries in pursuit of his Badminton goals. After a fruitful European trip last autumn, which saw them contest Boekelo CCI4*-L and then on to Italy for Montelibretti’s CCI4*-S and Pratoni’s CCI4*-L, Matt opted to leave Wizzerd to enjoy his winter holidays at Arville, the Belgian base of Lara de Liedekerke-Meier and Kai Steffen Meier. In December, they trained for a month from there, and in mid-January, the pair relocated to Maizey Manor in Wiltshire – a long-standing hub for American eventers on tour – and began their preparations in earnest.

“It’s just ten minutes from Tim and Jonelle Price, who have been kind to enough to lend me a lot of guidance through this trip so far,” says Matt, who also has a seven-year-old and a four-year-old in the UK with him.

Today, he and Wizzerd delivered a sweet test – with one exuberant moment in the first flying change — for a respectable 34.1, which puts them into 42nd ahead of tomorrow’s jumping phases and well and truly kicks their season off.

“Wizzerd’s been great — and he’s excited to be out,” says Matt, who admits that the British season — which starts later than the Florida one, mostly because we were buried under mud and ice here until approximately yesterday, feels like a very short one in the run-up to a five-star.

“I was anxious to get going, to be honest, because it felt like everyone at home was up and going, and it’s a little bit of a different calendar – but it feels nice to have had the time and the training on the horses I have here. And this — well, it’s a beautiful setting, and it seems like it’s going to be a great run.”

Tomorrow takes us neatly into the culmination of Thoresby’s CCI4*-S, in which the prestigious Grantham Cup will be awarded – a prize that, since its inception at Belton in 2006, has been awarded to some of the top British-based combinations, including Sam Griffiths and Happy TimesOliver Townend and Ashdale CruiseVittoria Panizzon and Borough Pennyz, and Ruth Edge and Two Thyme. Showjumping for the remaining 99 combinations will begin at 10:00 a.m. BST (5.00 a.m. EST), while cross-country will begin at 12.22 BST (7.22 a.m.). You can check out the cross-country course in its entirety here – and although we’re sorry to say there’s no live-stream available this year, we’ll be back tomorrow evening to bring you a full report and analysis, plus our views on what the day’s action means for our Kentucky- and Badminton-bound entrants.

Stay safe, kick on, and Go Eventing!

The top ten going into tomorrow’s jumping phases in the Thoresby CCI4*-S.

Thoresby Spring Eventing Carnival: [Website] [Live Scoring] [EN’s Coverage] [EN’s Twitter] [EN’s Instagram]

Friday Video from SmartPak: Kentucky’s Finest Get All Up in Their Feelings

Behind the Barn 2022: Riders share their favorite Kentucky memories from Kentucky Three-Day Event on Vimeo.

Whatever your connection to Kentucky – whether you’re a competitor or aspire to be one, a groom (or aspire to be one!), an owner, a spectator, a devoted live-streamer – you know it’s the kind of special that’s hard to put into words, and the memories that you make there, or when following along from afar, are memories that’ll stick with you forever.

In a sterling attempt to get us all right in the feelings, the latest instalment in Kentucky’s Behind the Barn series focuses on these extra-special moments, shared by the riders for whom Kentucky is the pinnacle of their life’s work. And look, if you want to spend your Friday evening weeping over a bunch of event riders hanging out in a barn, I’m not going to stop you – I’m too busy recreationally happy-crying over it all myself. As the queen of the live stream (one of these days I will make it to Kentucky, damn it!), I’d also love to know your favourite memory from the Bluegrass’s crown jewel. Drop them in the comments and pass me a tissue, will ya?

Ramping back up into full work for the spring? SmartPak has everything you need to make the transition back to show season. Click here for more.

Piggy March Provides a Vintage Start to Thoresby CCI4*-S

Piggy March cuts an imposing figure on the first day of 2022’s first British four-star, taking an easy one-two with two Brookfield-owned horses [pictured, Brookfield Quality]. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

2019 was a pretty good year, in hindsight, wasn’t it? We didn’t have a global pandemic to reckon with; energy prices hadn’t skyrocketed; we weren’t yet collectively suffering from some sort of generalised weirdness as a result of being inside for too long, alone with our house plants. Oh, and Piggy March won, like, everything.

Well, colour us well and truly deja vu-ed, because the first day of dressage in the CCI4*-S at the Thoresby Spring Carnival of Eventing – the replacement for Belton Horse Trials that’s been patiently waiting for its moment since 2020 — was all about March Madness, v2.0. Amidst a few unwelcome snow flurries and in the confines of Thoresby Hall’s fairytale walled garden, she delivered a double-handed attack on the class that’s left her in first and second place going into day two.

“This was definitely one of his best tests physically and mentally — all around, really, he felt very good and grown up,” says Piggy of Brookfield Inocent, with whom she took team gold and individual silver at last year’s European Championships and who will be one of her rides at Badminton next month. His 23.9 might not be the lowest score he’s ever delivered – that accolade goes to his 2020 Burgham CCI4*-S test, which earned him a 21.8 – but it was enough to give him a nearly two-point lead in the class. And now, enthuses Piggy, the thirteen-year-old gelding really feels like he’s ready to give his best stuff.

“He’s always been a slightly spooky horse; you don’t always see it, but he’s never been one you can always go in and trust not to find a monster in there,” she says. “But he feels like he’s grown up there, and in his self carriage — he’s a blood horse, and as much as he’s lovely and moves very well, it’s always been about finding that last bit of self carriage to be able to hold himself up to the high standard and the consistency.”

Sitting second on a 25.7 is stablemate Brookfield Quality – or Nervous Norris to his friends, because of his slightly anxious character. Getting to the bottom of him, and producing top quality work, has been about fine-tuning and compromising in the preparation, Piggy explains.

“He’s actually always been super consistent in his dressage,” she says. “He just always tries really hard! He’s been a bit of a slow burner to develop physically and mentally as well. Both of them are Irish horses, and as quality and as talented as they are, they’ve been slightly slow burners in various aspects. [Norris] is terrified of the warm-up with too many people in it, so I warmed him up at the top and then walked him down there and then picked him up to warm up around the test arena — any more than that and he can start to jump around a bit, but I know I can trust him to just pick him up right before the test.”

Bubby Upton and Badminton entrant Cola III get their prep under way in fine style. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s not just established British stalwarts that enjoyed their moment in the spotlight today – the young guns certainly had their time to shine too, helmed by under-25 National Champion Bubby Upton and her Badminton entrant Cola III. They sit in third place provisionally on a score of 26.1 – almost, though not quite, a personal best internationally.

“He was mega – I’m so pleased with him,” she beams, before chastising herself for a mistake in one flying change: “obviously, that was expensive, but hopefully it’ll be where it needs to be at Badminton!”

Though Cola has been an enormously consistent competitor with Bubby in the irons, maintaining his progress through the levels hasn’t always been straightforward – but the pair had a eureka moment over the winter when they finally found a bit that would suit his tricky oral conformation in the Bomber Bits Happy Tongue.

“He’s come on so much this winter. I don’t like to make excuses or anything, but we have really struggled with his mouth over the years – he’s been uncomfortable, and we’ve never been able to get a bit that fits him. He has a peculiarly shaped mouth and really fleshy lips, so we finally found a bit that doesn’t rub him – and he’s so happy, I can’t even tell you. It’s so nice knowing that he’s comfortable now.”

Bubby Upton’s Bicton under-25 CCI4*-L victor Cannavaro shows off a winter’s worth of dedicated training, which Bubby fits in around her studies. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Bubby’s second ride, her national title partner Cannavaro, also delivered an excellent test for 29.5, which sees them in 12th place at the halfway point.

“He’s come on a lot in the last couple of years, and that really shone through last year,” she says. “He always puts a big smile on my face because he makes me so proud; he keeps exceeding expectations. We never expected him to be at this level – not because he doesn’t have the ability, but because he’s not very blood. But he feels super; he’s fit and fresh and I was so pleased that he maintained it in there. I just fluffed up one change – the opposite to the one on the other horse! So I haven’t managed to nail a test yet [in this class]. But I’m delighted with him, as we’ve been working hard to consolidate the changes over the winter. He has one good one and the other one, because he was a show jumper, has just taken a while.”

Despite two errors on course, Pippa Funnell still manages a 26.4 with on-form Billy Walk On. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Spare a thought for poor Pippa Funnell, who accidentally played a blinder of an April Fool’s joke on herself by losing her way twice in her test with the leggy Billy Walk On, who’s looking arguably the best we’ve seen him in this phase. Though the navigational issues, which happened before the second flying change and in the extended trot diagonal, were expensive, such was the quality of the work produced in the test that the pair still went on to score a 26.4 and equal fourth overnight, which most of us still wouldn’t manage to get if we followed a SatNav and slipped the judge a tenner.

Billy Walk On — or Feale, as he’s known at home — has always been a remarkably elegant horse for his size, and competitive dressage tests are certainly not beyond the norm for him; he led the dressage at Bicton’s pop-up CCI5* last autumn on a 23.9, ultimately finishing second. Without access to the test sheet, it’s hard to gauge the context of today’s mark: though there were two errors of course, the bell was only run once – if Pippa has been penalised just for the second error, her score without it would have been a very good 24.4. But if both were penalised, her score without would have been a 20.4 – a significant all-time personal best for the gelding, who is set to make his return to Badminton next month.

We opted not to shove a recording device in Pippa’s face after her test for obvious reasons – Pippa, if you’re reading this, we’ll circle back on Sunday after you’ve almost certainly won a prize – but we do want to leave you with this little gem:


Never change, Pip.

Up-and-comer Yasmin Ingham pilots her Blenheim CCI4*-L winner Banzai du Loir to a respectable first-day placing. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

25-year-old Yasmin Ingham has a couple of things in common with Pippa, with whom she shares a score of 26.4 and overnight fourth place: they’re both among the elite group of leading British female riders, they’ve both got a collection of national titles under their belts, and they’re both, rather more immediately, planning a trip across the pond to contest the Kentucky CCI5*.

Yasmin’s ride for the week will be the exquisite debutant Banzai du Loir, who scooped the reallocated eight- and nine-year-old championship CCI4*-S in 2020 and then returned to its usual home to win the Blenheim CCI4*-L last year. Since Yasmin took the ride on Banzai over from France’s Axel Coutte in 2019, they’ve swiftly become one of Britain’s most exciting partnerships – no small feat in a country with such significant strength in depth. Now, they’re aiming for the horse’s five-star debut as one of Kentucky’s foremost rookie pairs – but as with any five-star entry, the lead-up is all about taking it one day, and one ride, at a time. And today’s? It certainly didn’t disappoint.

“I’m really happy with Banzai; he did a really lovely test with some really super work,” says Yasmin. “His highlights were definitely his flying changes; we’ve been trying to work on those over the winter and they were really spot on today, so I was happy with that. His extended trot was brilliant – again, we’re just trying to grab those extra marks for the accuracy, because I feel that’s where we drop a few. For example, he cantered before I asked him to in the walk-to-canter transition at A, which will have cost us a bit, but all in all, I’m delighted. He just keeps getting better, which is very exciting, and I feel like he’s really becoming developed at this level. He has a very busy brain, and keeping him on side mentally is the golden key.”

Nicola Wilson and Blenheim eight- and nine-year-old CCI4*-S winner Coolparks Sarco close out the day with a test that shows off their winter homework. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Reigning European Champion Nicola Wilson rode through some warm-up ring theatrics with her 2021 Blenheim eight- and nine-year-old winner Coolpark Sarco, who returns for his ten-year-old season looking physically stronger, no doubt helped along by his solid end-of-season run at Boekelo last year. He was rewarded with a 27.1 – incidentally, the exact score he received in his first FEI run of 2021 – and then merrily shed all notions of civility as he merrily bucked his way back to the stables.

“I thought he did some lovely work and was really expressive,” says Nicola. “He rushed through the bridle in his two changes a little bit, but I was overall pleased with his test. He feels a lot stronger this year – and he’s very happy to be back out!”

Ballaghmor Class delivers a solid showing that doesn’t yet push the barriers of his capabilities in his first international of the year. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The man who started his career as eventing’s dark horse seems to be determined to continue his legacy of top-level successes with, well, white horses; today, Oliver Townend delivered two provisional top ten tests with excellent grey horses, taking ninth overnight with Burghley and Kentucky winner Ballaghmor Class and seventh with new ride, the former Andrew Nicholson five-star mount Swallow Springs, who produced a 27.6 to take an early lead in the class and demonstrated that the partnership, which came together in the latter part of the 2021 season and netted a tenth-place finish at Blenheim, has well and truly hit its stride.

Though Ballaghmor Class performed with his usual polished professionalism, it was a touch more conservative than many of his previous efforts at the level, and the resultant score of 28.9 felt a far cry from the 20.8 he scored at Badminton in 2018. But lest the naysayers take it as a sign that the World Number One’s iron horse is losing his touch, think again: we’ve seen Ballaghmor Class deliver a similar effort, at Belton in 2019 where he scored a 30.3, and then go on to put a 21.1 on the board at Badminton. And just as Oliver used to do with Belton, it would seem he’s got a solid plan for his top horses this weekend: get a test on the board, jump a round of show jumps, and then withdraw, saving the run for Burnham Market in a couple of weeks.

Full-time supermodel and part-time eventer Edie Campbell storms into the top ten with Fireball F. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The top ten after day one is full of household names of the British eventing scene, but sitting in provision eighth place on a respectable 27.9 is a rider who’s well-known for a rather different reason.

Supermodel Edie Campbell is at her most recognisable when gracing the pages of Vogue or traversing runways at fashion weeks the world over, but in her limited free time, it turns out she’s just as much of a weird horse girl as the rest of us – and producing her top horse, Fireball F, to the upper levels has been a labour of love for the multitasking rider over the past few seasons as she balances her jet-setting career with the nomadic life of an eventer.

“The system kind of works itself out – it’s tricky, because work can be super last minute, which means you can’t plan. But everyone’s pretty used to it by now and I’m quite zen about it,” she explains. “[Groom] Becca sorts the nags and I know precisely how long it’ll take me to get from the gallops to Heathrow Airport. Basically, it’s usually workable – but you have to be happy to be flexible and I accept that the perfect prep might not be possible.”

This afternoon, though, it all fell into place.

“Today was kind of wild – I have a lot of screenshots of my name quite far up the leaderboard, which is a novelty for me,” she says. Their test, which represents a personal best for the partnership at any level, has come as the result of a sea change in Edie’s system.

“There’s been a bit of a regime change at home this winter, which has meant, firstly, that all the ponies are in a bit of a new system in terms of their management, and that I’m training with new people, which seems to be working out. Izzy Taylor’s been helping me the last couple of weeks, and she warmed me up today – and I guess she knows what she’s doing!”

What has developed, Edie explains, is a horse that feels “a whole lot more rideable, and I’m riding better. Last year I felt like dressage was something that happened to me, and now I’m a bit more taking the wheel. [Izzy has] put me in a position where I can have a bit more of a say – plus, I have her old head groom, Becca Rossi, on my team now, and she’s equal parts fantastic and terrifying. I know I’ll get such an eye roll if I don’t ride well, so that kind of holds me accountable!”

With two influential jumping phases left to come on Sunday Edie is remaining pragmatic about the job ahead of her with the 12-year-old gelding, who she’s produced through the grades after purchasing him as a seven-year-old show jumper.

“He’s the cutest little spoilt brat,” she says fondly. “He’s super classy and knows it. But we’ve had some issues across country at four-star, so I’m gonna bask in his dressage score for the next 24 hours – and then I’ve got to step up and make the jumping happen.”

Ros Canter’s Paris prospect, the exciting Lordships Graffalo, takes a first-day top-ten position in the walled garden. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Finally, Ros Canter rounds out the top ten overnight on Lordships Graffalo, the ten-year-old British-bred heir apparent to her World Champion Allstar B, who will contest this class himself tomorrow. ‘Walter’, as the young horse is known, put a polished 29.4 on the board, not quite reaching the exceptional low scores of his 2021 season, in which he finished in the top two in four of his five FEI runs, but proving once again that he’s every bit as classy as Ros has hoped.

Tomorrow will bring us another jam-packed day of dressage, with highlights including tests from Laura Collett and London 52Izzy Taylor and Monkeying AroundBen Hobday and Shadow Man IIEmily King and Valmy Biats, European Champions Nicola Wilson and JL Dublin, and our own Matt Flynn and Wizzerd and Tiana Coudray and Cancaras Girl. We’ll be back with a full report on how it all goes down, as well as a preview of what’s to come on Saturday.

Until then, folks: stay weird and Go Eventing.

 

The top ten is a showcase of British female talent (and, um, Oliver Townend) in the Grantham Cup CCI4*-S after day one of dressage.

Thoresby Spring Eventing Carnival: [Website] [Live Scoring] [EN’s Coverage] [EN’s Twitter] [EN’s Instagram]

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Start Your Season with British Eventer Ashley Harrison

Ever wondered what the start of the eventing season looks like in the UK? Spoiler: it’s less sunny than those Ocala fixtures. Join Ashley Harrison as she takes her four-star mount Zebedee IX and up-and-comer Kato as they tackle the Intermediate and Novice at Hampshire’s Tweseldown fixture.

Here’s a fun fact for you: Tweseldown was actually the sight of Britain’s very first event, because it was the facility used for the 1948 Olympics. There’s a whole lot of history in its distinctive sandy tracks, and these days, competitors at all levels get to enjoy courses there designed by Eric Winter, who designs the Badminton track.

Elevate®

Performance horses are susceptible to exercise-induced muscle damage. Vitamin E, a powerful antioxidant, limits the damage caused by everyday oxidative stress. It maintains healthy muscle and nerve functions, and supports a strong immune system in horses of all ages.

Elevate was developed to provide a highly bioavailable source of natural vitamin E (d-alpha-tocopheryl acetate) to horses.

Check out this KPP article: Vitamin E and the Performance Horse – A Winning Combination.

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

FEI and European Equestrian Federation Issue Update on Ukraine

The European Equestrian Federation, associated national federations, and the FEI have released a statement following a webinar held today (March 30) to take stock of the ongoing conflict in Ukraine and how the nation’s equines can be adequately provided for.

Hosted by the Ukrainian Equestrian Federation, the UEF Charity Foundation, the EEF and the FEI, the meeting aimed to streamline the processes of providing aid, following an enormous uptick in efforts from equestrians all over Europe and beyond. Recent efforts have seen convoys of lorries full of feed leave the UK on behalf of the British Equestrian Federation, and many HGV drivers have been lending their skills to transporting further feed and bedding, as well as medical and veterinary supplies. The UEF Charity Foundation, which was established at the onset of the war, has been at the forefront of managing the logistics of aid, as well as the evacuation of horses, which has recently included noteworthy stallions Cornet Obolensky and Comme Il Faut. So far, they’ve received over 375 tonnes of material aid and in excess of €75,000 of financial aid. Further funding from the FEI Solidarity Relief Fund has allowed the Foundation to create a logistical hub near the Polish border, which acts as a holding zone for up to 40 horses, whose paperwork can then be finalised for transfer into the European Union.

During the course of the meeting, the UEF Charity Foundation stressed that the need for aid — both material and financial — remains enormous and will be ongoing. The Foundation estimates that around 2,000 horses will require their aid over the next month, which would use three times the amount of supplies currently available at the hub.

But all good charity drives must be well-organised to avoid donations of unusable goods, and FEI Solidarity Director Jean-Philippe Camboulives urged National Federations to “designate an official representative to first coordinate the offers of support and supplies nationally, and then liaise with the FEI, EEF and UEF to ensure logistical efficiency.”

He pointed out that goodwill offers of accommodation and employment must go through these representatives to ensure safeguarding.

“The FEI Solidarity Relief Fund has been able to provide great support to individual members in the Ukrainian community through neighbouring and European member federations such as the Ukrainian Vaulting team which is currently training and living in Slovakia thanks to the efforts of the host National Federation and the determination of their Secretary General Zuzana Baciak. And there are many examples like this at the moment. We must continue to work together and to coordinate our efforts and use our resources effectively.”

Further in the meeting, FEI Veterinary Director Göran Åkerström offered an update on EU administrative protocol, which has been amended this week to further facilitate transport of horses out of Ukraine. The FEI is expected to issue clear guidance to stakeholders in the coming days.

EEF President Theo Ploegmakers concluded the meeting by saying, “the situation in Ukraine is devastating, but the collaboration we have seen across Europe through our members and the FEI is incredibly encouraging. There is still a huge amount of work to be done to help both the equines and the wider equestrian community in Ukraine and I believe through our network in Europe we can continue to provide the necessary support.”

If you’d like to assist in ongoing aid efforts or make a donation to help Ukrainian refugees and their horses, check out our resource guide. For further information on aid efforts thus far, here’s a recent update.

Tuesday News & Notes from Legends Horse Feeds

 

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Paul Olima (@olima_omega)

Sorry, not sorry – this Reel has had me gently weeping into my horse’s neck (with laughter) since I first saw it last night. Is it relevant to breaking eventing news? Not really! But is it relevant to the weird ways people behave on the internet? Absolutely! Let’s all just vow to not be that person today, shall we?

#WomensHistoryMonth Bit of the Day: One of my favourite ways to treat myself is to just slide on down the rabbit hole of online content, where I usually end up learning lots about something — or someone — I hadn’t even planned to research. This piece from Horse Nation is the perfect starting point for that kind of deep dive, with snippets of juicy history on some of equestrianism’s most interesting, and largely forgotten, women.

Events Opening Today: Tryon International May 3-Day EventUSEA MDHT FEH/YEH/NEH QualifierWindRidge Farm Spring H.T.Texas Rose Horse Park H.T.Majestic Oaks Ocala H.T.Woodland Stallion Station H.T.Hitching Post Farm H.T.Unionville May H.T.Winona Horse TrialsSpokane Sport Horse Spring H.T.

Events Closing Today: Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day EventSpring Bay H.T.Longleaf Pine H.T.FENCE H.T.Fair Hill International April H.T. & CCI-STwin Rivers Spring InternationalOcala International Festival of Eventing

Tuesday News & Notes From Around the World:

We’ve not even hit April yet, and already, all I can think about is Badminton. And I suspect I’m not alone, particularly since those incredible entries came in and blew all our tiny little brains to smithereens. Anyway, to help further boost your adrenaline levels, here’s a piece from Captain Mark Phillips, who reckons this is Eric Winter‘s best course yet. Hubba hubba.

Arqueze Girdy isn’t an eventer, but damn, has she got the guts and grit to fit in with our community. As a fourth-generation cowgirl, she’s got horses in her blood – but her journey to the top hasn’t been easy. Read more about how she overcame bullying, and the fallout that followed her transition, here.

New parent? Established parent? Either way, you might be wondering how on earth everyone else seems to get everything done with a small person in tow. Here’s plenty of very good advice from some of the sport’s many multitaskers.

Video Break:

Look, we all need a bit of between-the-boards inspo at this time of year – and who better to supply it than Adrienne Lyle, who broke the Global Dressage Festival record with Salvino, posting a smoking hot 85.580% for this gorgeous freestyle on Friday.

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

It’s the rare five-star horse that enjoys a retirement career as a lead-line point-to-pointer, but Boyd Martin‘s Remington is no run-of-the-mill event horse. Check out his solid effort (but, alas, ultimate close defeat) at the Chester Hunt point-to-point with a suited and booted Nox Martin up.

National Holiday: It’s National Respect Your Cat Day. Did the cats schedule this holiday?

US Weekend Action:

Carolina International CCI & H.T. (Raeford, Nc.): [Website] [Results] [EN’s Coverage]

Full Gallop Farm March II H.T. (Aiken, Sc.): [Website] [Results]

March H.T. at Majestic Oaks (Reddick, Fl.): [Website] [Results]

Texas Rose Horse Park H.T. (Tyler, Tx.): [Website] [Results]

UK Weekend Results:

Cirencester (1): [Results and Live Scores]

Great Witchingham (1): [Results]

Munstead (1): [Results]

Northallerton (1): [Results]

Global Eventing Round-Up:

Germany’s Luhmühlen held its first international of the year, with two CCI3*-S sections that were teeming with top-level continental names and need-to-know up-and-coming talent.

There was a German 1-2-3 in Section I, which acted as something of a showcase of future stars, with Paula Reinstorf and Ilara W climbing from first-phase eleventh place to take the win with their two speedy clear jumping phases. That pushed first-phase leaders, Germany’s young rider prodigy Calvin Böckmann and Altair de la Cense, into eventual second, while Libussa Lübbeke and Darcy F rounded out the podium. Italy’s Pietro Grandis, who recently left his long-time job as Michael Jung’s second rider to set up on his own, took fourth and fifth place with Fortune III and Scuderia 1918 Future, respectively.

Section II was full of established riders and horses, and it was Germany’s Malin Hansen-Hotopp and her five-star mount Monsieur Schnabel that would take the win, adding just 0.4 time to their 28.4 dressage to climb from initial sixth. Tokyo Olympians Sandra Auffarth and Viamant du Matz took second place, losing out on the win by a small smattering of cross-country time penalties, and Belgium’s Maarten Boon and Gravin van Cantos, who made a surprise entry into Boekelo’s first-phase top-ten last season, took third place with the fastest round of the day – a promising start to the year for the pair, who lost their competitive edge due to time penalties at Boekelo. You can check out the full results from Luhmühlen here.

Over in the Netherlands, all attention turned to this year’s first running of Kronenburg, which hosts CCI1* to CCI3*-S at this early-season fixture, ahead of this week’s four-stars.

To absolutely no one’s surprise, Michael Jung took the win in the CCI3*-S aboard the preternaturally excellent fischerChipmunk FRH, who posted a first-phase score of 19.1 to lead throughout. Even with his two time penalties across the country, he still won by 2.7 penalties over stablemate Highlighter, who Michi sailed through the weekend with in consistent second place, finishing on his dressage score of 23.8. Third place went to Germany, too – this time nabbed by Elena Otto-Erley, who delivered the goods and looked on excellent form in all three phases with Finest Fellow, picking up a 25.8 in the first phase, 0.4 time penalties in the showjumping, and 2.8 across the country.

Germany was on flying form in the CCI2*-S, too, with Linus Richter snatching the win aboard Rayja, climbing from third place initially after a sparkling FOD of 26.1. Both second and third places were claimed by Sweden, and both by the same rider: Amanda Andersson relinquished her leading spot with Kokos after an unfortunate rail, but ultimately finished second on the Florencio mare and third with stablemate Jersey.

And in the CCI1*? Yep, that was a German win, too. Kari Ingrid Gunzenhäuser – the rider responsible for Sandra Auffarth’s Let’s Dance 73 – scooped it with Lustiger Laurenz, snatching the win from Liv Elin Gunzenhäuser, who ultimately finished fifth with Chanel 472.

You can catch up with all of Kronenburg’s results here.

There was plenty to get on with Down Under, too, as Australia’s Tamworth Horse Trials put on a CCI2*-S, 3*-S, and 4*-S, giving EA’s High Performance Generation Next squad members some excellent development opportunities – and indeed, both the CCI4*-S and CCI3*-S were won by squad members. Shenae Lowings and Bold Venture took the top spot in the feature class, while the three-star went the way of Olivia Barton and Henrik APH. You can find full Tamworth results here.

Finally, Colombia’s Bonza International hosted a CCI1* and CCI2*-S and -L for its developing horses and riders, though we haven’t been able to track down results for this yet. Onward!

Your Monday Reading List:

Writer Laura Lemon has found it hard to reckon with her cynical side as story after story of abuse – human and equine – in major stables around the country pops up. But she’s got a great trainer of her own that puts her feet back on solid ground and reminds her that not everyone’s bad news in the industry. Check out her ode to the good ones on COTH

We all know horses thrive with turnout and interaction – but can a horse ever truly be happy while in his stable? That was the topic on the table in a recent webinar hosted by charity World Horse Welfare, and several experts weighed in with their views on the often contentious subject.

We all spend plenty of time planning for – and fretting about — rehabilitation after an injury or procedure. But some vets are taking tips from the sports medicine playbook and introducing ‘prehabilitation’, which begins the process prior to an orthopaedic procedure and can help to minimise stress and maximise recovery.

Meet Sarah Kuhn and Mr Cash van de Start, a sales horse that wouldn’t be sold. Now, the duo are tackling the four-star level and have some big dreams to chase – and none of them involve putting the quirky gelding back on the market.

In need of some inspiration? Check out Ingrid Klimke’s words of wisdom and top tips for better performances.

Morning Viewing:

Even the stars need lessons – and Laura Collett recently got the incredible opportunity to have a session with dressage maestro Carl Hester. Check out some footage from their lesson:


 

Friday Video from SmartPak: Get the VIP View of Red Hills

Last week, we saddled up with Elisa Wallace to take a spin around the CCI3*-S at Red Hills – and this week, we’re getting the VIP view of the CCI4*-S aboard her stalwart partner Let It Be Lee. While you’re waiting on tenterhooks for the pivotal final phase to start at Carolina, give yourself a tasty little teaser of all the action that’s yet to come with this brilliant vlog summarising all three phases of the last sunny southern four-star on US soil. We’re particularly loving Elisa’s extra commentary, which sheds some light on the strategy that comes into play at this level.

Ramping back up into full work for the spring? SmartPak has everything you need to make the transition back to show season. Click here for more.

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Is This the Ultimate Stable Yard?

I’ll confess – I’m a little bit addicted to luxury living. My cottage is full of dusty stacks of back issues of Country Life, with its endless pages of stately piles for sale, and whenever I get the chance to go to the Winter Equestrian Festival, I always end up spiriting away a few local realtor brochures so I can take a peek behind the scenes of those incredible barns dotted around the showgrounds.

Fortunately for me (and my nosy ilk), veteran vlogger and dressage rider Matt Harnacke has made it his mission to get the golden ticket to go behind the scenes at some of Europe’s most impressive stables. This time, he heads to Salzburg, Austria to tour the facilities at young dressage rider Diana Porsche‘s base. And yes, it really is that Porsche – and yes, it is also cleaner than my actual house. By a long shot.

Elevate®

Performance horses are susceptible to exercise-induced muscle damage. Vitamin E, a powerful antioxidant, limits the damage caused by everyday oxidative stress. It maintains healthy muscle and nerve functions, and supports a strong immune system in horses of all ages.

Elevate was developed to provide a highly bioavailable source of natural vitamin E (d-alpha-tocopheryl acetate) to horses.

Check out this KPP article: Vitamin E and the Performance Horse – A Winning Combination.

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

Badminton-Bound and Beaming: The Countdown Begins on the ‘Gram

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Ben Hobday (@benhobday)


Imagine the butterflies and excitement you’re feeling about heading back to Badminton Horse Trials this year – or, indeed, planning your viewing parties from afar. Now multiply that by 100 and add in some serious bum-clenching, and you’re well on your way to replicating how this year’s smoking hot field of entrants are feeling about the whole thing. The countdown is officially on, and preparations are well underway – so let’s catch up with some of this year’s field and see what they’ve been up to on their way to the world’s most prestigious event.

Padraig McCarthy and HHS Noble Call nailed the publicity push before the big day:


Tim Price took Ringwood Sky Boy and Xavier Faer out for some sunny prep:

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Jacky Green (@greenjacks)

Mike Winter made the most of the spring rays, too, taking El Mundo for some crucial canter work:

 

Harry Meade pulled out the scales for his trio of entrants (and, as it turns out, himself):

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum got some showjumping finessing done with Scott Keach:

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Tamie Smith (@tsmitheventing)

Now that competition season has started, we’re seeing some entrants log early runs – including Richard Jones and Alfies Clover, who was seventh at Burghley a couple of years ago:

And British-based Aussie Sammi Birch, who has two entries this year:

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Samantha Birch (@birchequestrian)

Reigning winners Piggy March and Vanir Kamira got some match practice in: 

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Piggy March (@piggy.march)


Three-time Adelaide CCI5* winners Hazel Shannon and Willingapark Clifford have started their year based at Kevin and Emma McNab’s yard in England, and they made their British Eventing debut at Tweseldown:

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Hazel Shannon (@hazel_shannon)

Kiwi entrants Amanda Pottinger and Just Kidding also settled into life in the UK:

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Muzi Pottinger (@amanda_pottinger_nz)


Emily King started her year well with the micro-syndicate owned Valmy Biats, whose many owners will be following his progress on tenterhooks:

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Ē M KĮNG (@emilykingofficial)


The youngest entrant in this year’s field, 19-year-old Alice Casburn, took the win in the OIu21 at Oasby with her homebred entrant, Topspin:

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Alice Casburn (@alice_casburn)

Phillip Dutton and Z stormed around Ocala:

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Phillip Dutton (@duttoneventing)


Olympic team gold medallists and Pau five-star winners Laura Collett and London 52 took an early-season second: 

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Laura Collett MBE (@laura_collett)


Reigning World Champions Ros Canter and Allstar B dusted off the cobwebs at Poplar Park, scoring an impressive 17.5 in the first phase:

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Ros Canter (@ros_canter_eventing)

Pippa Funnell celebrated a good start to the season with a goldfish bowl full of gin:


All around the world, members of the media have been preparing, too – starting with some spring cleaning:

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by mhphotos (@mhphotos)

‘We Owe Him Countless Moments of Happiness:’ Double Olympic Gold Medallist Butts Abraxxas Dies at 25

We’re sad to share the news that Ingrid Klimke‘s exceptional Butt’s Abraxxas, who helped contribute to Germany’s Olympic team gold medals in 2008 and 2012, has died at the age of 25 due to a heart condition.

“He was still fit and alert, but an acute age-related heart failure made us not let him suffer. We owe countless moments of happiness to the little fighter with his huge heart,” says Ingrid in a translated post from her social media.

The Hanoverian gelding (Heraldik xx x Kira-Annabell, by Kronenkranich xx) retired from international competition in 2013, after a successful final run at Burghley saw him take fourth place and cap off an exceptional career.

“At 16, Braxxi once again showed his courage and stamina in Burghley one of the 5* classics of eventing. After that I decided to say goodbye to him from the big sport,” says Ingrid. Together, the pair had contested the level four times, picking up a second place finish at Luhmühlen in 2010 as their best result, and were great stalwarts of the German squad. They competed at three European championships, winning team gold at Luhmühlen in 2011 and finishing tenth individually at Pratoni del Vivaro in 2007, and they were part of the team for the World Equestrian Games in Kentucky in 2010, where they finished thirteenth. The highlight of their career was, undoubtedly, those two Olympic gold medals – but as Ingrid explains, ‘Braxxi’ was more than just a competitive partner.

“Fresh and motivated [after his retirement at 16], he enabled Greta [Busacker, Ingrid’s daughter and the current Young Rider European Champion] to switch from a pony to a big horse and was a great teacher. Braxxi spent another 7 wonderful years with us in the stable in his box number 1 and on the pasture with his best friend Weisse Düne. We are very sad and miss him! Braxxi, you will always have a special place in our hearts.”

Ingrid Klimpke and FRH Butts Abraxxas. Photo courtesy of Nico Morgan Photograph.

We could wax lyrical about this special horse all day, because for so many of us on the team here at EN, he was part of our own formative golden age of horses that inspired us and propelled us into careers at the heart of the sport. But nothing we can write will hold more power than the stories Ingrid herself tells about her journey with Braxxi, and we particularly wanted to share the tribute she penned after his retirement, which you can read in full on her website.

“Dear Braxxi!

It was as I was searching for my next horse to follow in the footsteps of Sleep Late that Hans [Melzer] and Chris [Bartle] discovered you. Carmen and I saw you for the first time at Luhmühlen; a tiny black horse with little pony hooves and movement that gave away your thoroughbred breeding. From a dressage point of view I was not exactly jumping for joy. The first cross country jump however showed how fast and confident you were. The first time jumping over colourful poles on this hot and sunny day was not so impressive but with the hopes that it would improve, you came to our stable in 2005.

Carmen still remembers your first few days and weeks with us: small and unremarkable but you showed us very quickly just what an amazing character you were.

I was still very unsure if you would be talented enough however your pony-like self-assured way impressed me from the start. It was clear fairly fast — you wanted to stay. You tried your little heart out, had stamina, willpower, you were tough as nails and mastered each step of your training with flying colours.

Carmen, who would become your best and most trusted friend, was always behind you, and supported you in the best possible way. You thanked us with your incredible soundness.

From 2007 you were on the German Team for 6 years in a row. We won Team Gold at the 2008 Olympics in Hong Kong and then at the London games in 2012 you fought to help me win Gold again for the Team. This is an incredible achievement, the only other horse to do this was Charisma with Mark Todd (1984 and 1988).

After Hong Kong you were meant to be sold but luckily Madeleine Winter Schulze stepped in and bought you and we were able to stay together. After winning our second Team Gold I was asked about retiring you after such a sensational result. I started you in Badminton to see how fit and motivated you still felt — you were super. As Escada showed us what she was capable of in Malmö you fought back only one week later at Burghley to remain as Number 1 in the stable. Burghley was our most difficult cross country course together and you once again, with your typical heart and fighting spirit, more gave me everything you had.

I often asked myself when the right time would be to retire you. I was hoping you would give me a sign as Sleep Late had done. You were so fresh and motivated as always in this season; there was no German combination that had finished in the British 4 star-classic Burghley in the top 5. There were only 6 four star courses in the world, 4 of which you had successfully completed,with a trip to Australia now being out of the question. It simply could not get any better!!!

[…]

My dear Braxxi, the time is right for a change, for the next chapter in your life. Carmen, with whom you are so close, and I, will continue to train and keep you fit, you will remain our favourite; whether hunting, riding out or teaching the children,who can learn so much from you, you will not be bored. We will enjoy seeing your spirit when playing in the field with your buddies Nemo and Barney. Carmen says you can read and write, you are always in a good mood and willing to have fun. When Carmen rides you in nothing but a neck rope this is pure joy and shows the trust and incredible friendship between you.

My dear Braxxi, I thank you for the countless and unforgettable moments of absolute happiness. To shine in the dressage arena — you made it so easy for me. Riding the most difficult cross country courses in the world you were always “as fast as a hare” (to quote Chris Bartle) and brave as a lion. You touched my heart so often. You gave me the gift of trusting me absolutely and never questioned that I would choose the correct path for us. We are a wonderful team and could always rely on one another. Often I was disappointed after show jumping — not one of your strengths! However, every horse in my life has taught me something important. From you I learnt that one must sometimes simply accept things as they are and learn to live with them.

Braxxi, for this I thank you, that what I have learnt from you I will take with me on my journey, both as a person and a rider. The words of my Father are always with me: “we want to understand the nature of the horse, respect his personality and never suppress it with our training”

You have such an amazing personality, dear Braxxi,  and will always remain this way for me!”

All of us at Team EN send our condolences to Ingrid, and to everyone connected with this wonderful horse. Thanks for the memories, Braxxi.

 

Tuesday News & Notes from Legends Horse Feed

I am an equine photographer so being asked to do a wedding was quite different than my usual but them having it at…

Posted by Jj Jayhawk Sillman on Sunday, March 20, 2022

We’ve left engagement season in the dust and now wedding season is well and truly upon us – and how gorgeous are these photos, snapped by eventing tog JJ Silliman, of Diego and Jean Farje‘s nuptials at Rocking Horse the other day? Peruvian eventer Diego is Boyd Martin’s assistant rider, and the big man himself has gatecrashed some of these lovely shots – so we truly hope Diego and Jean made him step into flower girl duties as penance.

#WomensHistoryMonth Bit of the Day: Our industry is full of women who have paved the way and helped lay solid foundations for all riders. In this piece, you’ll meet Mandy McCutcheon, the first woman to ride on the US reining team; Dr M. Phyllis Lose, the one of the first women to hold a trainer’s licence; Octavia Brown, who was one of the pioneers of riding-for-the-disabled initiatives; Debbie Stephens, the US ladies’ high jump record holder; and Mary Mairs Chabot and Kathy Kusner, who were the first women to ride on the US showjumping team internationally.

Events Opening Today: Riga Meadow at Coole Park Combined TestWaredaca H.T.Poplar Place May H.T.Miami Valley H.T. at Twin TowersCatalpa Corner May Madness Horse TrialsApple Knoll Farm H.T.The Event at Skyline

Events Closing Today: USEA MDHT FEH/YEH/NEH QualifierCDCTA Spring H.T.Pine Hill Spring H.T.The Fork at TIECChattahoochee Hills International

Tuesday News & Notes From Around the World:

Tributes have been pouring in across social media for Rachel Watts, who tragically died in a car accident on Sunday. Rachel was one of the industry’s most prolific and best-loved grooms, and was a lynchpin of the team at Shane Rose Eventing. She’s remembered, and celebrated, as being a real get-up-and-go sort of person who always took great pride and joy in her work. Our thoughts are with her family and friends during this extraordinarily sad time.

Spring is in the air, the horses are enjoying their first naked rolls in the fields, and oh god, the barn is a messReady to embark on some serious spring-cleaning but overwhelmed by the job? Horse Nation has put together a handy checklist to help you get the ball rolling. All you need now is a good playlist and a cooler full of beers.

Struggling to engage your spooky horse’s brain? Try these top tips from Tik Maynard, who’s been exploring different equine personality types as part of his latest Noelle Floyd training series.

And finally, if you’re an equestrian business owner, you might be feeling the pinch with rising prices at the moment. Check out these tips to boost your business and maximise your profits – and, with any luck, beat the stress of inflation.

Video Break:

Tune in and catch up with amateur eventer Lucy Robinson as she takes her new ex-racehorse cross-country schooling for the first time.

Ultra-Spicy Badminton Entries Go Live with 91 Accepted and 33 Waitlisted

Piggy French takes Badminton. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Is this deja-vu, or are we actually looking at a real-life entry list for Badminton Horse Trials once again? Actually, scratch that – it can’t be deja-vu, because we can’t remember the last time an entry list was this smoking hot: with 91 entries and 33 waitlisted, the 2022 Badminton roster features a 12-nation strong line-up that’s jam-packed with eleven previous five-star winners and the podiums, in their entirety, of Burghley 2019 and Luhmühlen 2021, plus the top two each of Kentucky 2021, Badminton 2019, and Pau 2020. We’ve also got the entirety of the victorious British Olympic and Europeans teams, plus every member of the individual Europeans podium, and a whole host of four-star victors from the last year or so.

Nicola Wilson and JL Dublin. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Among the notable entries are our reigning champions, Piggy March and Vanir Kamira, who lifted the trophy at the event’s last running in 2019. Piggy’s bringing forward a notable double-hander this year; also entered is her European individual silver and team gold medallist, Brookfield Inocent, who finished second on his five-star debut at Pau in 2020. In fact, we’ll get to see the entire roster of 2021 European Championships British medallists – team members Ros Canter and Allstar B return to the hallowed grounds of Badminton, while double gold medallist JL Dublin will make his five-star debut with Nicola Wilson, as will Sarah Bullimore‘s bronze medallist, the diminutive homebred Corouet and team member Kitty King and Vendredi Biats.

All three members of the victorious British Olympic team are also entered: Laura Collett‘s 2020 Pau victor London 52 will come forward for his second five-star, while Oliver Townend‘s 2017 Burghley winner and 2021 Kentucky winner Ballaghmor Class will look to add a second Grand Slam leg to the World Number One’s tally as one of his five (!) current entries. Olympic individual silver medallists and 2019 Pau winners Tom McEwen and Toledo de Kerser will also come forward as one of the hot favourites to take a victory – though you wouldn’t want to be a betting type with this field to choose from!

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The US is enormously well-represented this spring, with seven entrants accepted so far. Phillip Dutton will make the trip with Z, joined by Will Faudree and the delicious Mama’s Magic WayAriel Grald and her globetrotting Leamore Master Plan, who was third at Luhmühlen last year, Lauren Nicholson and VermiculusSharon White and Cooley On Show, and Tamie Smith and Mai Baum, who we predict will go head to head with Ballaghmor Class and London 52 for the first-phase lead. We’ll also be cheering on Matt Flynn and Wizzerd, who’ve spent the early part of the year based in the UK in preparation.

A further three US riders are currently waitlisted: Lillian Heard and LCC Barnaby sit fourth at the moment, giving them an almost certain accepted entry, while Emily Hamel and Corvett also stand a fine chance in ninth. Slightly further down is British-based Olympian Tiana Coudray, making her return to the top level with Cancaras Girl. They’re holding down the fort in 18th place on the waitlist, which will probably cause a bit of finger-biting at her Wiltshire base – but we do ordinarily see around 20 taken from the waitlist, and there have certainly been years in which every entrant has made it into the final 85 starters.

It’s not just about the USA, of course – our neighbours to the north have one entrant in the accepted entries in Karl Slezak and Fernhill Wishes, while British-based Mike Winter and El Mundo currently sit 16th on the waitlist.

Maxime Livio and Vitorio du Montet. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The French entry looks particularly good this year, with eight accepted and a further three on the waitlist. Our picks of the bunch? We’re beyond excited to finally see Tom Carlile make his five-star debut; he’ll ride Zanzibar Villa Rose Z in good company with Sidney Dufresne, whose Swing de Perdriat impressed us at Pau last season. Maxime Livio will bring forward Vitorio du Montet, who has finished in the top ten in both his previous five-star starts, and Gireg le Coz will put up a strong fight with the excellent Aisprit de la LogeLuc Chateau and Troubadour Camphoux shouldn’t be overlooked either – they were fourth at Luhmühlen last year and finished just outside the top ten at the European Championships.

Christoph Wahler and Carjatan S. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Speaking of Luhmühlen, we’ve got 2021’s podium entered in full: joining aforementioned Ariel Grald is winner Mollie Summerland and Charly van ter Heiden, who will no doubt be grateful for a slightly easier journey this time, and second-placed Christoph Wahler and Carjatan S, who are Germany’s only entrants this year and are wholly capable of winning the whole thing. We’ll look to Mollie and Christoph to both fight for a top-five position after dressage, and neither have ever added time faults across the country at the level.

Lauren Innes and Global Fision M. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

New Zealand’s strong entry is headed by 2018 Badminton champions Jonelle Price and Classic Moet, who also comes forward with her Tokyo mount Grovine de Reve, third at Kentucky last spring. Joining her is husband Tim Price, who will ride 2018 Burghley winner Ringwood Sky Boy and Kentucky runner-up (and Maryland podium finisher!) Xavier Faer. We’re looking forward to seeing the likes of Amanda Pottinger and Bundy Philpott make the trip over, while British-based debutante Lauren Innes and Global Fision M will step up to the level under new nationality.

Speaking of coming over from the Southern Hemisphere, we’ve got the special treat of welcoming Hazel Shannon and Willingapark Clifford, three-time winners of Adelaide CCI5*, who’ve been based with fellow Aussies Kevin and Emma McNab through the winter. They’re at the forefront of an Australian entry that includes US-based Dom Schramm and Bolytair B, making their return to England after tackling Burghley in 2019.

Padraig McCarthy and Fallulah. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

There’s also a great show from the Irish, who have double-handed entries from Padraig McCarthy with up-and-comers Fallulah and HHS Noble Call, and Joseph Murphy, who will ride Cesar and the former Laura Collett mount Calmaro. We’ll also see Cathal Daniels‘s ride Barrichello step up alongside Susie Berry and Johnt he Bull, who she inherited from Jonty Evans.

To check out the entries in full, click here – and keep it locked onto EN for form guides, field analyses, and at-a-glance updates of what this incredible field has to offer.

Go Eventing, and Go Badminton!

 

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

 

It’s all happening! Badminton entries have just gone live and we’re FREAKING. OUT. Form guide coming soon, folks: hold onto your hats!
National Holiday: It’s International Day of Forests! Plant a tree, cut out palm oil, or brush up on your knowledge of deforestation via the UN.

US Weekend Action:

Ocala Winter II H.T. (Ocala, Fl.): [Website] [Results]

Pine Top Spring H.T. (Thomson, Ga.): [Website] [Results]

UK Weekend Results:

Lincolnshire: [Results]

Moreton (1): [Results]

Global Eventing Round-Up:

 

Wandin Horse Trials in Victoria, Australia, hosted divisions from CCI2*-S through to CCI4*-S, with long-format offerings at two- and three-star – and how cool is their course decoration?! I’ve got a new bucket list goal, and that’s to get a photo jumping through the wine bottle fence – so if anyone fancies offering an EN journo a catch-ride down under, give me a bell!

Up-and-coming superstar Sam Jeffree took yet another international win, scooping the CCI4*-S feature class for the second year in a row with Woodmount Lolita after producing one of just two clear showjumping rounds in the class to move up from an initial third place. He also won the CCI2*-S class with Equus Helenik, the CCI3*-S with Kenlock Cadillac, and took second place in the CCI3*-L and another CCI2*-S section for good measure. Watch out for this former student of Boyd Martin’s – he’s not messing about!

Murray Lamperd took the win in the CCI3*-L riding Secret Mojo, while the CCI2*-L went the way of Edward Darby and Dawn of the Day. CCI2*-S section 5 went to Teegan Ashby and Magic Mushroom Tae.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by K.SAMRAN (@korntawat_tha)

France’s Le Mans might bring to mind car racing, not eventing, but for the first time, we saw international eventing held there over the weekend. The new fixture featured CCI1*, CCI2*-S and -L, and CCI3*-S classes, with one rider boldly demolishing the French whitewash on the results sheet: Thailand’s Korntawat Samran took the top honours in the CCI2*-S with his Tokyo mount Bonero K, whose preparation for this summer’s Asian Games looks promising after a win in the CCI2*-L at Saint Quentin, too. They continue to train under the watchful eye of Maxime Livio.

French stalwart Regis Prud Hon claimed the CCI2*-L at Le Mans aboard Comte Ligniere Z, while Benoit Parent took the CCI3*-S with Dragibus d’Olympe AA.

Events with classes up to CCI3*-S were also held at Dolcoet Equestrian in South Africa and up to CCI3*-L at Quintilla in Chile, which is a potential host of the equestrian events at next year’s Pan American Games.

Your Monday Reading List:

In the wake of Groton House’s grand finale, Carol Kozlowski is wondering: where have all the Area I events gone? She’s taking a deep-dive look at the history of this once-flourishing area to try to find the cause of the great migration southward.

As the horse market continues to escalate into the upper echelons of insanity, Zach Brandt and Audrie Stanka are working to break the mold. Their Ocala pipeline specialises in sourcing and producing smart horses for the amateur market, a corner of the industry that they could see was getting neglected in the rush for professional prospects.

Ever wonder what happens to the hat silks that disappear on course? Italian Olympian Vittoria Panizzon certainly did at the London Games, when she had to scramble to outfit her skull cap for the final phase – and years later, she found out where it had gone.

British eventer Gemma Tattersall is sharing a warning with fellow UK-based riders who hope to go abroad post-Brexit. After an unpleasant kerfuffle on the French side of the border, she found herself in the tricky position of having to get another driver and lorry out to collect a young horse and go back home again — all due to a tiny administrative oversight in the carnet offices.

In 1976, a 3,500 mile horse race was organised to help celebrate the USA’s bicentennial. In the end, though, the winner wasn’t technically a horse at all.

The FutureTrack Follow:

Follow Louis Hall as he rides across Europe to raise funds for Refugee Trauma, a mental health charity for displaced persons.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Louis Hall (@louis.d.hall)


Morning Viewing:

Hamilton, horses, and a good cause to boot? Sign us up!

Friday Video from SmartPak: UK Equestrians on the Road to Ukraine

It’s hard not to feel a bit helpless in the face of a major global crisis – particularly when that crisis involves warfare and civilian suffering in another country, and we as individuals are relatively powerless to change the course of what’s going on. But there are always ways to make an enormous difference to the people (and animals!) affected by conflict.

Up-and-coming broadcaster journalist Ruth Gregory spotted the extraordinary efforts of Cheshire-based eventer Caroline Basnett, who has mobilised a convoy of horseboxes to take humanitarian aid from the UK to Ukraine, and put together this brilliant news piece on her team’s relief efforts.

Whatever you’re able to do to help – whether that’s joining in an aid convoy, donating to a relief fund, housing a refugee, lobbying politicians for more humane asylum processes, or spreading sensible, unpropagandised news – your contribution does have value. And while none of us may be able to change the world individually, when we come together and put our collective weight behind a push for the greater good, we truly can move mountains.

For more information on the Ukraine Equestrian Relief convoy, which set off today, and to support and follow their journey, give them a follow on Facebook.

Go Eventing – and more importantly, Go Humanitarian Equestrians.

Ramping back up into full work for the spring? SmartPak has everything you need to make the transition back to show season. Click here for more.

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Ride Around Red Hills CCI3*-S

I’ve never been to Red Hills, but it’s one of those events I love to watch from afar from my (ordinarily drizzly and cold) perch in the UK. Relative warmth, sun-scorched ground, Spanish moss gently floating in the breeze and catching the sunlight? Absolute bliss, and no matter how many of my Floridian friends try to tell me that the moss is actually heaving with insect infestations, I will merrily plug my ears and keep enjoying how nice it all looks on a livestream.

Or, indeed, on a GoPro round-up. Queen of the hatcam Elisa Wallace is back, and this time, she’s taking us around the CCI3*-S at Red Hills aboard Sharp Decision. Heels down, eyes up, and watch out for the bugs!

Elevate®

Performance horses are susceptible to exercise-induced muscle damage. Vitamin E, a powerful antioxidant, limits the damage caused by everyday oxidative stress. It maintains healthy muscle and nerve functions, and supports a strong immune system in horses of all ages.

Elevate was developed to provide a highly bioavailable source of natural vitamin E (d-alpha-tocopheryl acetate) to horses.

Check out this KPP article: Vitamin E and the Performance Horse – A Winning Combination.

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

Equestrian Australia Names High-Performance Eventing Squad for 2022

Australia wins silver: Kevin McNab, Shane Rose and Andrew Hoy. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

It’s that time again: with the Tokyo Olympic cycle well and truly – and finally – put to bed, we begin again with our sights set on Paris 2024. As such, governing bodies around the world are busy putting together their tiered squad lists, which feature their country’s biggest stars and brightest up-and-comers, whose performances can be honed and developed with a view to selection over the next couple of years.

The latest country to release their squad list is Australia, who emerged from a tricky and contentious couple of years to take team silver at last year’s Olympics. Their three-part squad system features an elite tier, called the Gold (Podium) tier, a Green tier, for Podium Ready and Podium Potential athletes, and a Generation Next tier for Developing and Emerging athletes.

It’s particularly exciting to see some friends of EN feature in the line-up as Australia’s eventing squad enters a crucial developmental period following the departure of Sam Griffiths, who will now serve as coach to the New Zealand eventing team, and Chris Burton, who is focusing his attentions on showjumping instead.

Here are the riders named to each tier:

GOLD (PODIUM)

  • Andrew Hoy
  • Kevin McNab
  • Shane Rose

GREEN (PODIUM READY AND PODIUM POTENTIAL)

  • Sammi Birch
  • Sonja Johnson
  • Bill Levett
  • Sam Lyle
  • Hazel Shannon

GENERATION NEXT (DEVELOPING AND EMERGING)

  • Olivia Barton
  • Emma Bishop
  • Lauren Browne
  • Catherine Burrell
  • Annabel Cargill
  • Andrew Cooper
  • Isabel English
  • Jade Findlay
  • Thea Horsley
  • Ema Klugman
  • Shenae Lowings
  • Emma Mason
  • Jessica Rae
  • Dominic Schramm
  • Katie Taliana
  • Gemma Tinney

 

 

Tuesday News & Notes from Legends Horse Feed

I’m not sure I could possibly be any more excited about the return of head cams from European climes as we inch closer and closer to the start of the season – and EN’s first far-flung international fixture at Thoresby International CCI4*-S in England. With Badminton entries due to be released in the next couple of weeks and a smoking hot slew of top-level horses already logging their first run, I think we can expect a truly vintage season. And to start it off in fine style? It’s Cheltenham week, which tends to draw all the UK’s eventers out of their lairs to watch the very best in jumps racing. It really does feel like another time: the last time I went to Cheltenham, I didn’t quite realise that just days later, we’d all be plunged into our first lockdown. Weird notion, in hindsight.

Events Opening Today: Horse Park of New Jersey Spring H.T.Loudoun Hunt Pony Club Spring H.T.Ram Tap Horse Park H.T.University of New Hampshire Spring H.T.Stable View Spring H.T.

Events Closing Today: Morven Park Spring H.T.Rocking Horse Spring H.T.Stable View Spring 2/3/4*Galway Downs International H.T.

#WomensHistoryMonth Bit of the Day: Instead of the past, I want to use this spot to look to the future – and more specifically, the shocking revelation that in 2022, we still haven’t benefited from any truly significant research into the effects of menopause on sporting performance. Horse&Hound‘s Lucy Elder investigates.

Tuesday News & Notes from Around the World:

Paul Schockemöhle is one of the biggest names in the sport horse industry. His empire spans breeding, competition production, elite sales and performance, and, of course, a popular tack and clothing brand that bears his moniker. Now, he and his team are using his resources and leverage to provide aid and help evacuate refugees from Ukraine.

The Open Intermediate at Oasby Horse Trials in England was a who’s-who of top-level talent, featuring major names including all three members of the gold medal winning Tokyo team, our reigning World Champions, reigning Blenheim winners, current European Champions and individual medallist, and a slew of five-star winners. Check out some photos from H&H’s Peter Nixon here.

Take a closer look at the Haller Education Scholarship for Eventing Officials in the latest of US Eventing’s series on their spectrum of super grants and bursaries available for riders, coaches, officials, and more.

New research into lipid production could improve lead to improved reproductive performance. The study, which is being undertaken in Australia, may well prove to be a boon to breeders around the world.

LEARNING OPPORTUNITY OF THE DAY: Want to brush up on your feeding knowledge and learn how to keep your horse’s complex digestive system healthy, happy, and full functional? If an apple a day keeps the doctor away, when it comes to horses, a well-balanced and regularly scheduled meal can do much the same – and Legends Horse Feed is hosting an informative webinar today at 1.00 p.m. ET to help you get to grips with nutritional tailoring. Plus, all attendees will receive a voucher for a free bag of feed! Click here for more information and to join in.

Video Break:

Chatsworth is one of the iconic events returning to the calendar this year, and it never disappoints – in fact, its stunning house and grounds were used as Pemberley House in the 2005 adaptation of Pride and Prejudice. We can’t promise a rich hunk will appear through the mist, but we can definitely guarantee some red-hot action like this:

Friday Video from SmartPak: Rock and Roll(-tops)

Let’s be real: most of us don’t have the luxury of working with horses full-time, and so our own eventing exploits have to fit in with a busy career – and that’s not always the easiest of asks. And when your career likes to fit into odd hours itself? It’s even more of a challenge.

This week, we’re checking out a new blogger on the scene from Down Under, and following her through a hectic weekend in which she attempts to do both: be an eventer, and be a gigging musician. We’re definitely impressed by Tracey Bennett’s time management skills (and with a double life like hers, no one could ever possibly accuse her of being uncool, which we reckon is some consolation when things get really manic)!

Go double-life-livers, and Go Eventing!

Ramping back up into full work for the spring? SmartPak has everything you need to make the transition back to show season. Click here for more.

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Eventing Prep Down Under with Shane Rose

My favourite thing about our sport is its limitless opportunities for learning. Every time you climb aboard a horse, or watch someone else ride, you can learn something – and likewise, any chance you get to watch a seasoned horse person manage their yard, care for their equine charges, or prepare for competitions will give you plenty of new ideas and tips to steal for your own routine.

Today, we’re checking out what life is like in the run-up to an event at Olympic eventer Shane Rose‘s Australian base. Don’t forgot the stud kit!

Elevate®

Performance horses are susceptible to exercise-induced muscle damage. Vitamin E, a powerful antioxidant, limits the damage caused by everyday oxidative stress. It maintains healthy muscle and nerve functions, and supports a strong immune system in horses of all ages.

Elevate was developed to provide a highly bioavailable source of natural vitamin E (d-alpha-tocopheryl acetate) to horses.

Check out this KPP article: Vitamin E and the Performance Horse – A Winning Combination.

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

#IWD2022: Eight Fearless Women Who Changed the Face of Eventing

Celebrating International Women’s Day may seem incongruous in a rare sport that allows women to compete as equals against men, but we’re all about girlpower here at EN. So to celebrate, we’re taking a look back at some of the remarkable women, both past and present, who have helped to shape the sport of eventing into what it is, and through their own incredible efforts, have given all of us the chance to fly vicariously with them.

Lana duPont Wright

Though equestrian sports are celebrated for their gender equality these days, eventing’s military roots meant that women weren’t always welcome on the competitive battlefield. From 1912 — when eventing first appeared at the Olympics — until 1924, only military officers could contest this topmost echelon of the sport. From 1924, the door was widened to allow male civilians to compete — but it would be another four decades before Olympic eventing would become a level playing field.

All this was to change at the 1964 Tokyo Games, where the sport of eventing would see its first female Olympian.

The daughter of Olympic trapshooter and prolific racehorse owner Allaire duPont, a young Lana duPont was raised in a household that was — possibly unwittingly — fiercely feminist for the era. But it wasn’t just an innate toughness and competitive spirit that Lana would inherit from her mother — a love of horses and the countryside, too, passed from one generation to the next. Lana would spend her formative years in thrall to fox hunting, learning how to cover the Maryland terrain on a collection of Thoroughbreds.

In 1964, she was named to the US equestrian team and travelled to the Tokyo Olympics with her Maryland-bred Mr Wister. Though their competition wasn’t to be without its dramas, they would finish the Games on the podium, having helped the USA to a team silver medal.

Recalling her cross-country round, Lana said: “We fell hard, Wister breaking several bones in his jaw. We were badly disheveled and shaken, but Wister was nonetheless eager to continue. We fell a second time near the end of the course, tripping over another spread. When we finished, we were a collection of bruises, broken bones and mud. Anyway, we proved that a woman could get around an Olympic cross-country course, and nobody could have said that we looked feminine at the finish.”

Lana would go on to help found the US Combined Training Association (now US Eventing), and would compete at World Championship level in combined driving, as well as fostering an interest in competitive endurance riding.

Anneli Drummond-Hay

Anneli Drummond-Hay and Merely-a-Monarch – perhaps the world’s first truly remarkable event horse. Photo courtesy of Badminton Horse Trial.

Nearly twenty years after the birth of Badminton Horse Trials – and, really, the birth of the sport in the United Kingdom – a second top-level international event would appear on the scene. The year was 1961, and the extraordinary Burghley estate in Lincolnshire was opening its gates to the best horses and riders in the country, and the people who loved to watch them, too. The pressure to compete — and to compete well — was on.

But for all this, a 24-year-old Anneli Drummond-Hay hadn’t actually had much match practice with her remarkable six-year-old, Merely-a-Monarch, before she put in her entry to the new and prestigious event. Though she had plenty of experience herself, having previously won the Pony European Championships and topping the annual leaderboard of British riders three times, this would be an altogether different challenge. Undeterred, she and the horse — with whom she’d largely contested showjumping, and who hadn’t experienced any water more taxing than a puddle in the lane — set out with one goal in mind: simply come home safely. After all, she hadn’t even intended to enter Monarch, but her intended mount was out of action, and so he would have to do.

They would lead the dressage by 30 marks and, drawn last to go on cross-country, they were greeted by the news that everyone else in the field had had at least one fall, many of them at the Trout Hatchery, where a hole had formed in the footing on the landing side of the jump into the water. With this in mind, Anneli nursed her young horse around the course, choosing the less popular log option into the water and coming home with the only clear round of the day. An unsurprising clear round over the poles the next day meant that victory was theirs by an astonishing margin of nearly 34 points. The next year, they would also take top honours at Badminton — this time, by 42 points.

Afterwards, conscious that her beloved horse was now worth an enormous sum of money, and buoyed on by the fact that women were now allowed onto the Olympic showjumping team, Anneli turned her attention back to jumping coloured poles with considerable success.

Sheila Willcox

Despite her incredible legacy, the late Sheila Willcox wasn’t born into a remotely horsey family. Instead, she once described her household as being “entirely suburban, based on business and academic careers and given to rugger, tennis, and bridge-playing.” Nonetheless, she was inexplicably bitten by the horsey bug, and spent her formative years saving up her pocket money so she could afford pony rides along the beach on holidays. Her parents eventually defected, and she was allowed to join the Pony Club. This, of course, swiftly became the primary focus of her life – so much so that her unwitting father bought her an unbroken pony in order to persuade her to head back to school without a fuss. Sheila was only ten years old at the time but nevertheless, she set about the great new challenge of training the two-year-old ‘Folly’.

Not long after, Sheila discovered the joys of competing – and moreover, the joys of victory. After being awarded her first rosette at a local fair, she vowed to be the very best at riding, saying: “to wear a number, to be called by name into the ring and walk, trot, and canter around with the other ponies – this was halcyon bliss…at the same time I determined that no matter which branch of equestrianism I should eventually take up, I should strive to emulate the leaders.”

A successful junior career riding show hacks followed, after Sheila’s parents deemed showjumping rather too unladylike to be proper. But Sheila wanted more of a challenge and, at the age of seventeen, she came across the sport of eventing. Like many profoundly bonkers teenage girls thereafter, she was instantly committed, and set about on the hunt for a horse that she might be able to turn into an eventing star.

Eventually she found that horse in the form of High and Mighty, or ‘Chips’, a seven-year-old dun by a Thoroughbred stallion and out of a Highland pony/Arab-cross mare. Though neither horse nor girl had any real formal training, Sheila undertook the job with aplomb, consulting a well-worn copy of Dressage by Henry Wynmalen for guidance. They won on their first attempt at eventing, in a Novice (Prelim) class at the now-defunct Hovingham Hall Horse Trials, and the British Horse Society got in touch to suggest that, down the line, Sheila might consider lending the horse to the British team for use at the Olympics.

And here we get to the crux of what really makes Sheila’s legacy so remarkable: she paved the way for women when the sport, though still refreshingly genderless in most spheres, only catered to men for Olympic berths. Impossibly glamorous and relentlessly fierce, Sheila refused to bow down to the whims of the BHS, and she rode as though she had a point to prove – perhaps because she did. As one of eventing’s suffragettes, she made it clear that the ‘lady riders’ could play with the big boys – and she did so by setting a remarkable Badminton record that no one has yet beaten.

 In 1955, she began training with Colonel Edy Goldmann, who was one of the first British trainers to promote a German-style focus on dressage. Paired with Sheila’s single-minded competitiveness, the result was formidable, and after a good showing at Harewood Horse Trials, Sheila and Chips were offered a place on the British team at that year’s Turin International. Sheila was the only female rider in the competition…and she won it.

In 1956, after just a year and a half of eventing, she and Chips headed to Badminton. They were placed second after the dressage, and accumulated the maximum number of bonus points in the speed and endurance phases, but even their clear showjumping on the final day couldn’t push them ahead of the legendary Frank Weldon and Kilbarry. They retained that second place all the way through until the bitter end – and overnight, British selector Ted Marsh had bought the horse on behalf of the team. As consolation, Marsh promised that if Chips returned from that year’s Stockholm Olympics in one piece, Sheila would be allowed to take him to Badminton the next year.

As it turned out, Chips didn’t even make it to Stockholm – instead, he went lame whilst in training at Windsor. But Sheila attended the Games herself – not as a competitor, which wasn’t allowed, but as a member of the media, commenting on the action for l’Année Hippique. The British team took gold, but Sheila felt she’d been hard done by: “Harking back to the controversy over allowing women competitors in the three-day event, and without wanting to appear a militant feminist, I still think the element of danger is in ratio to intelligent riding, and that should an unlucky accident happen to a woman instead of a man, she will show equal fortitude and endurance, as well as possibly less sustained shock due to the relief of feminine tears. No one would be surprised to see me passing the finishing post crying bitterly and feeling much better for it, but it would cause something of a furore if [Laurence] Rook or [Frank] Weldon came home dripping tears over Sissi or Kilbarry!”

After the Games, Sheila was able to buy her ‘lame’ horse back from the team. He promptly came sound again, and they won their ’57 Badminton prep run. Then it was time to head to the main event, made doubly special by the fact that Sheila’s 21st birthday fell on cross-country day. Fortunately for her festive spirit, she and Chips found themselves in the lead after dressage and, with a fast clear under their belts, still at the top of the pack by the time her party began at a nearby hotel. The crowning glory of the party was her colossal birthday cake – it was made to look like an elaborate cross-country course, with 21 fences artfully constructed along the top. Around them was a castle, some streams, and some carefully constructed terrain – and, of course, a tiny replica of Sheila and Chips popping over the final fence.

By all accounts, the party was a roaring success. At 3am, Sheila had to forcibly remove the revellers so she could get some sleep – but in true eventing fashion, she was able to get the job done the next day. The Badminton title was hers.

The next year, the remarkable pair took the crown again. This time, they would do it by the widest margin ever seen to date or since – they led the dressage by 22 points and ultimately won an astonishing 47 points clear of the next competitor. That autumn, Sheila and Chips headed to the European Championships in Copenhagen, and won both team and individual gold – this made Sheila the first woman ever to win the Europeans. Afterwards, Sheila gave High and Mighty to Ted Marsh to ‘retire’ into the Heythrop hunting field, but nevertheless, she was able to continue her quest to be the very best. The seven-year-old Airs and Graces had only been eventing for six months by the time he headed to Badminton in ’59, but he won it easily, giving Sheila the last of her unrivalled three consecutive wins. In 1964, she took a fourth title, winning ‘Little Badminton’ – a separate class run over the same course but for horses with minimal winnings – with Glenamoy.

In 1971, Sheila suffered a catastrophic fall at Tidworth Horse Trials, and was left partially paralysed. Determined not to give up riding, she swapped her focus to pure dressage and went on to compete successfully at the Grand Prix level. But she was also an enormously influential figure to the next generation of event riders: one of her rare and notable students was Mary King, who worked her way up to being Sheila’s head girl.

As it turned out, the ferocity of spirit and determination that made Sheila such a formidable competitor made her a notoriously tough employer and trainer, too.

In her 2009 autobiography, Mary King reflected: “my days would begin at 5.30am and, before I even got on a horse, I realised that the stable management was extraordinarily thorough. Mucking out was a very strict procedure; the floor had to be ‘clean enough to eat from’ and you had to move the straw back completely…no more than one pile of poo was allowed in a stable at any one time. Windows were Windolened inside and out once a week and there mustn’t be a cobweb in sight. Sheila Willcox was a perfectionist who left no stone unturned.”

In lessons, too, Sheila demanded the highest standards from her staff: “Sheila would say, ‘don’t you dare fall off!’ and the fact that I was much more scared of her than I was of a rearing and bucking horse made me stick on. It was very educational.” But, says Mary, “my two and a half years there turned out to be fantastic training and the broad base on which I have built my career.”

Lucinda Green

Killaire and Lucinda Green. Photo by Kit Houghton/Mitsubishi Motors Badminton Horse Trials.

The Queen of Badminton? Absolutely. The Queen of Eventing? Many would argue so, and quite compellingly too. Lucinda was just nineteen when she took her first Badminton title in 1973 riding Be Fair, her Pony Club eventer who had taken her to team gold at the ’71 Junior European Championships. Be Fair was out of a mare called Happy Reunion, but he wasn’t planned progeny – in fact, he was borne out of an illicit liaison between the supposedly barren Happy and her field companion. The guilty colt in question would go on to contest Badminton himself – he was Fair and Square, ridden by Sheila Willcox.

Lucinda – then Prior-Palmer – had her first ride around Badminton with Be Fair in ’72. She later recalled in an interview with Debbie Sly, “I walked the course with Mark Phillips, who just kept saying ‘You want to kick here…I should keep kicking here…’ It didn’t seem to matter what type of fence we were looking at, the advice seemed to remain the same: just keep kicking! By the time we got to the end of our course-walk I had a streaming nosebleed from the stress of it all.”

Despite the nosebleed – and a runout at the walls as a result of her slippery leather gloves – Lucinda finished fifth. The following year she and Be Fair would return, and this time, they’d produce a nearly foot-perfect round – just one minor reroute due to an erroneous lack of martingale marred their cross-country, but they escaped penalty and took the title.

In an interview with Country Life, Lucinda said: “It was ridiculous: I was 19, it was my second attempt and the horse, Be Fair, had been my 15th-birthday present. Winning Badminton happens to other people, doesn’t it, but, as I drove home, in my little converted ice-cream van, with Be Fair’s ears just inches behind my own and my dog, Oliver Plum, beside me, I heard on the six o’clock news: ‘Today, Badminton Horse Trials was won by…’”

In 1976, Lucinda took her second Badminton title, but her victory was arguably superseded by the tragic death of her mount, Wideawake. The 16hh gelding (Hereward the Wake x Serenade) had been a tricky character, and Lucinda had poured all her energy into building a partnership with him.

She recounted to Debbie Sly, “Wakey really did not like me very much when our partnership began; he once even squashed me against the partition of the lorry with great purpose to the extent that I had to shout for help, and he seemed to take great delight in being as annoying and unhelpful as possible. He would back you into the corner of the stable and leave you there, he would wait until the mucking out bin was full and then tip it all over the clean floor, and when you tried to put his boots on he would wave his leg around until it connected with your knee or your toe. He was an extraordinary horse; sensitive without being highly strung. Once he galloped loose up the drive; a van was coming down the road and the two collided, sending Wakey flying over the bonnet and onto the other side of the road. He escaped with a few scrapes and bruises but his fear of traffic – the only fear he knew – remained with him always.”

In winning Badminton, it seemed as though all the hard work had come good – as Lucinda put it, “I had finally learnt to ride him as he needed to be ridden.” That required doing as little as possible – Wakey didn’t like to feel even the slightest nudge of his rider’s legs, but instead wanted to be left alone to work things out for himself. As the pair waited to begin their lap of honour, Lucinda leant down to hug her mount’s neck. While she did so, the rest of the top-placed horses and riders duly filed out of the arena in order to allow Lucinda to begin the victory gallop alone, as was customary. Just as the final horses were leaving the arena, Wideawake reared up without warning, staggered a few paces, and fell to the floor. He was pronounced dead shortly thereafter, and the cause was never ascertained.

The following year, Lucinda was back with a bang riding George, the 16.2hh grandson of 1948 Grand National winner Sheila’s Cottage. Though he looked the perfect stamp of an event horse, his competition record was so peppered with falls that Lucinda nearly turned down the ride. But her father had reached the terminal stages of his cancer diagnosis, and life in the Prior-Palmer household was a pretty morose affair, so her parents encouraged her to take the horse on as a welcome distraction. He arrived just a matter of weeks before Badminton and promptly went lame.

Lucinda managed to get him back on the straight and narrow with just enough time to run at a one-day event as practice. To her own great surprise, they won it – and Lucinda began to wonder if she should aspire to more than just survival at their big outing.

She changed her mind swiftly upon starting the second phase. Although George had performed well in the dressage to sit fourth, he set against her hand in the steeplechase and ploughed through most of the fences. But while Lucinda was losing faith, her support team wasn’t – her father even insisted on leading the horse around in the ten-minute box.

“It was their optimism and belief that finally shook me out of my own depths of despondency,” Lucinda recalled.

George responded in kind. As they set out onto cross country proper, he came into his own, jumping around faultlessly to finish within the optimum time and go into the lead. That Sunday was St George’s Day and, as though in recognition of the fact, he jumped yet another foot-perfect clear to secure a third victory for his rider. That autumn, he contested the Open European Championships at Burghley, winning both team and individual gold, and was retired to the hunt field shortly thereafter. Lucinda’s father passed away in the months following her Badminton victory.

Lucinda’s fourth victory came aboard another horse she considered an unlikely champion. Killaire wasn’t naturally fast, and he tended to be a long and low type of horse. But he had managed to finish second at Burghley in 1976, third at Badminton and Ledyard in 1977 and, as Lucinda had been pipped at the post and ‘only’ finished second at Badminton ’78 with Village Gossip, it was felt that it was high time for another triumphant effort. In ’79, Killaire offered just that, digging exceptionally deep to make up the seconds across the country and just beating Sue Hatherley and Monocle, a defeat that Sue never quite got over.

Lucinda, for her part, went on to write a book called Four Square, which chronicled her four wins and four remarkable horses. Quite understandably, she assumed she’d put a cap on her winning by now, and described her ’79 victory as “drawing the fourth and final side, and thereby closing an unbelievable square.” Joke’s on YOU, Lucinda.

“He had an incredible jump, but did everything with his head in the air – he was so ewe-necked that when he galloped along his ears were in your mouth,” said Lucinda of her ’83 victor, Regal Realm, who I’m sure many of us know best as ‘the horse with the really good stats in Equestriad 2001’.

It was fitting, really, that Lucinda should triumph again in this of all years – after all, it was director and designer Frank Weldon’s 70th birthday, and he had created a track that would truly test the mettle of the most experienced and savvy cross country riders. Despite a proliferation of alternative routes for less experienced competitors, who wouldn’t mind adding on a fair chunk of time in exchange for surviving their round, only nineteen pairs recorded clears. Weldon was stumped, and Lucinda laughed her way to the top of the podium once again. After an illustrious career as a team stalwart and medal-winner, he was sent home to Australia to enjoy a sunny retirement, and died at the age of 21.

Lucinda’s final victory came in 1984 aboard the great grey Beagle Bay, the part-bred Welsh pony with whom she’d won Burghley in 1981. Beagle Bay’s great weakness was his intermittent unsoundness, and Lucinda had been disappointed several times at three-days when she’d found herself forced to withdraw on Sunday morning. He also had a bit of pony brain about him, which meant that he could occasionally stop or duck out of a fence purely, it seemed, for the laugh. His “fat pony tummy,” as Lucinda called it, “must have housed a huge pair of lungs as he had tremendous stamina.”

Though Lucinda harboured some hope that she might notch up one more win – “seven is my lucky number,” she laughed – she never quite managed it. Now, she remains a familiar face on the circuit as a trainer, media mainstay, mother of five-star rider Lissa, and as a competitor herself. Long may the Queen of Badminton reign on!

Ginny Leng

Ginny Leng and Priceless take the European Championships.

Ginny Leng – nee Elliott – possesses a laundry list of victories that’s among the most impressive the sport has ever seen. Twice the World Champion, the lucky owner of four Olympic medals, and the first person to win the individual European Championship three times consecutively, she walked so that a certain Mr Jung could run. She was also one of the two first female eventers to win an individual medal at the Olympics, taking home bronze at the 1984 Los Angeles Games, while Karen Stives took silver. But her journey to the top wasn’t without its hardships: she suffered severe anorexia while at boarding school, which she overcame through her determination to be strong enough to ride, and she also came back from a horrific injury that nearly ended her career.

Just six weeks after her 21st birthday in 1976, Ginny was competing at a one-day event at Ermington, which was meant to serve as one of her final prep runs for Badminton that year. Near the end of the course, her horse tiring beneath her, she approached a one-stride double. As she jumped the first element, someone ran across the track ahead of her. Her mount’s attention was diverted and he left a leg at the second element, catapulting Ginny out of the saddle. She put her arm out to break her fall, her elbow locked into place — and as her horse smashed down on top of her, her arm shattered into 23 pieces, from wrist to shoulder.

After some deliberation over cups of tea in the medic’s van, Ginny was taken to the Royal Naval Hospital. A preliminary examination offered little hope, and she was solemnly told that the nerves in her arm had been damaged so badly that amputation was likely and, if not removed, the arm would be paralysed. But the head surgeon, Commander Bertram, decided to give surgery a go anyway. Five operations later, Ginny had an arm that bent at the correct angle — but it didn’t unbend, it couldn’t complete simple tasks, and it didn’t have any feeling.

Still, remarked Ginny, “I learnt to count my blessing through encountering a young girl with Parkinson’s disease and a poor old lady, who had broken both her legs a year earlier and was still in hospital with both limbs encased in plaster. My problems seemed miniscule in comparison and, after taking to them, I used to think to myself: you don’t appreciate how lucky you are.”

With her release papers and no follow-ups or physiotherapy booked in, Ginny set herself a target: she would ride at Burghley just a few months later. She started small, challenging herself to lift a toothbrush, or undo a button, but while she was slowly regaining dexterity and some small, tingling feelings, her arm still wouldn’t straighten. She mentioned her struggle to the vet, Don Attenburrow, and he quite simply yanked it straight. Ginny would go on to compete at Burghley that year after all.

Tough, tenacious, and glamorous, Ginny — who once finished third at Badminton with a broken ankle after Murphy Himself hurled her from the top of the ski jump — helped bring the sport of eventing into the public eye. She continues to give back to the sport, acting as a high-profile trainer, working with the media, and always, indubitably, being rather cooler than anyone else.

Pippa Funnell

Pippa Funnell and MGH Grafton Street take top honours at Burghley 2019. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Pippa Funnell made sporting history when she became the first-ever winner of the Rolex Grand Slam — and the only person to win it at the long-format — in 2003. But her profound influence on the sport is more human than that.

Pippa struck a chord with the British public when she launched onto the scene. She was young, and scrappy, and she’d made it to the top level on her Pony Club mount — a tick in the box for the nation that invented pony novels. Before too long, she became a poster girl for sport, and in taking the Grand Slam, she proved that she was one of the best the world had ever seen. So when she was brave enough to be candid about her internalised struggles, the world sat up and took notice.

Never afraid of a hard truth, Pippa has been candid about her ongoing struggles with her confidence, which have affected her in myriad ways throughout her career. When she won the Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials in 2019, fourteen years after her last top-level win, she admitted how close she’d been to giving up in the years previous. Though she’s an almost universal heroine, she also treads an enormous amount of common ground with her fan base, many of whom have dealt with the same issues in some way.

Time and time again, Pippa proved that toughness and emotional vulnerability aren’t mutually exclusive: she’s quick to point out that she ‘isn’t brave’, and when she became one of the first equestrians to use a sports psychologist, she didn’t shy away from admitting it. Now, sports psychologists are as commonplace as gym memberships in our sport.

These days, the conversation around mental health is free-flowing and constructive, and the stigma around dark days, confidence crises, and crippling insecurities has diminished enormously. In a sport where being as hard as nails is often valued above all else, this was never going to be an easy progression — but we have Pippa to thank for bringing the conversation to the table. She’s also a great proponent of female friendship — and we’re a great fan of that.

Ingrid Klimke

“This necklace the reason all of my dates been blind dates…” Ingrid Klimke channels Jay-Z with some podium bling. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

For so long, eventing has seemed like the ultimate one-note sport: although it’s made up of three disparate phases, to be truly successful, a rider must commit all their time and attention to eventing, right? Wrong. Ingrid Klimke certainly isn’t the first person to dabble in multiple disciplines, but in this highly specialised modern era, she’s one of the most successful.

The daughter of late dressage supremo Reiner Klimke, it was perhaps inevitable that Ingrid would inherit an almost preternatural feel for a horse. Though her discipline of choice is eventing — at which she’s a five-time Olympian and a back-to-back European champion — she’s also followed in her father’s footsteps, demonstrating a formidable ability in the sandpit. In 2002, she finished second in the dressage World Cup final and this year, she was named to the potential squad list for the German dressage team at this summer’s Olympics. She’s also one of only two women to be named a ‘reitmaster’ — a special honour within the German Equestrian Federation.

Though Ingrid often feels like she’s attained an untouchable level of celebrity, she remains committed to sharing her training philosophies with anyone who’s interested — and as it turns out, that’s a lot of people. She travels the world giving masterclasses and demonstrations, has written several books and has her own magazine, and she even offers monthly open days at her yard, in which 50 people enjoy a barn tour, the chance to watch two training sessions, and then a coffee break and discussion session with Ingrid. The gospel of thoughtful horsemanship is spreading fast.

Piggy March

Piggy March takes Badminton. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Has a Badminton winner ever been quite as popular as Piggy March in 2019? It would mark the start of an incredible year for the rider, who had never won a five-star before but who would finish 2019 holding the record for the most international wins in a year. But her journey to superstardom hasn’t been straightforward — a spate of terrible luck before the 2012 Olympics nearly bottomed out her business and sent her spiralling into a black hole that she didn’t believe she’d ever come out of. But the eternal grafter persevered, ditching the detritus of a bad break-up and replacing those who hadn’t believed in her with a circle of supporters and friends who always would, and after a while, everything began to put itself back together again.

The rags-to-riches story isn’t a new one, but what makes Piggy so special is the person she’s remained — or even become — through it all. She could be forgiven for having sharp edges these days, but there remains a very relatable softness to her, a sense of humour and a simple love for the horses that translates to every woman in every stable yard across the world. She’s also one of several top-level riders to succeed as a young mum, proving that it really is possible to have it all (but that trophy shelves should probably be built high, lest a sticky-fingered toddler get his paws on a certain bit of silverware!).

We could fill many thousands of words with women who’ve helped to shape this sport — the riders, grooms, coaches, owners, journalists, event organisers, and even the mares who steal our hearts have innumerable stories of their own to tell. We hope that, in time, we can unearth as many of them as possible for you, archiving their achievements in our digital annals. But for now, we raise a glass to these eight women and thank them for what they’ve given us.

Go women, and Go Eventing.

#IWD Tuesday News & Notes from Legends Horse Feed

 

Happy International Women’s Day! I’m forever grateful to be part of a sport in which women and men are on equal footing competitively – though there’s still plenty of work to be done to ensure that female riders are genuinely treated as equals outside of the competition ring. So while I’m overawed as always by the tough, clever, kind, and talented women who have helped to shape our sport, my greatest admiration and gratitude is with the women and girls who’ve been so brave in recent years, stepping forward to denounce abusers despite considerable backlash for doing so. Together, we can make our sport a safe and inclusive place in which no one has to suffer abuse of any kind to participate – and you, the whistleblowers, are the greatest driving force for change that we have. Speaking as a woman, as an eventer, and as a survivor of sexual assault in the industry – thank you.

Events Opening Today: UnionvilleSporting Days Farm April H.T. IIIRiver Glen Spring H.T.

Events Closing Today: Full Gallop Farm March II H.T.Texas Rose Horse Park H.T.March Horse Trials at Majestic OaksCarolina International CCI & H.T.

Women’s History Month Bit of the Day: Empress Elizabeth of Austria wasn’t just a horse-lover – she was also the proto-equestrian influencer, way back in the mid-19th century.

Tuesday News & Notes from Around the World: 

To celebrate International Women’s Day last year, the FEI put together this tribute. Consider this evergreen content: these strong, smart, brilliant women keep on showing up, day in and day out, for the industry.

The founder of one of Britain’s inner-city riding schools has received the prestigious Sir Colin Spedding Award. The award, which is given out at the annual National Equine Forum, honours unsung heroes of the equestrian world, and Imran Atcha, founder of Gloucester’s St James City Farm Riding School, has proven a worthy recipient with his tireless efforts to bring horses to underrepresented demographics.

Speaking of inner-city riding schools, a teenager from Brixton’s Ebony Horse Club has become the first Riding A Dream scholarship recipient to graduate from the British Racing School’s Foundation course. The Riding a Dream Academy was set up after Khadijah Mellah’s historic win in the Magnolia Cup charity race, and is designed to help young people from underserved communities get into racing. Oshane’s success is proof that the system is working.

Barn drama – we’ve all experienced it. But have you ever experienced it to this degree?

Want to improve your relationship with your horse? Great groundwork is the way forward – and it’ll make life easier for everyone who has to deal with him, too.

HOT ON EN: Want to help the people and horses of Ukraine? Here are some excellent resources to make sure your donation of aid, supplies, or funds gets to the right place.

Listen to This:

Get inspired with The Eventing Podcast‘s compilation show featuring the insights and accomplishments of some of the sport’s leading ladies.

Video Break:

Learn more about one of eventing’s brightest stars in this conversation between producing powerhouse Jenny Rudall and Olympic gold medallist Laura Collett:

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

 

Eventing has officially returned to the UK, though it hasn’t been the most straightforward of opening weekends. Aston-le-Walls, which is ordinarily the event that manages to run even when the rest of the country is 20,000 leagues under the sea, had to turn its BE season opener into a combined test after extreme storms drowned the site, so Poplar Park held the only three-phase affiliated competition of the weekend.

But what a competition that was! Riders and horses from BE80 to Intermediate were out in their droves, and the OI classes read like a who’s who of elite partnerships. Both of those classes went to Olympic gold medallist Oliver Townend aboard his great greys Ballaghmor Class and new ride Swallow Springs, formerly piloted by Andrew Nicholson. Reigning World Champs Ros Canter and Allstar B impressed with a 17.5 dressage, and we were delighted to see the return of Gemma Tattersall‘s Arctic Soul, who looked on super form with a 22.1 dressage and a cross-country run that Gemma laughingly admits nearly pulled her arms out. We feel as enthusiastic about being back as you do, Spike.

National Holiday: It’s National Be Heard Day. Take a stand for something you believe in to mark the occasion.

US Weekend Action:

$50,000 Grand-Prix Eventing at Bruce’s Field: [Website] [Final Scores] [Ride for Charity Fan Vote] [Live Stream Replay] [EN’s Coverage]

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

Rocking Horse Winter III H.T. (Altoona, Fl.): [Website] [Results]

Sporting Days Farm March H.T. (Aiken, Sc.): [Website] [Results]

UK Weekend Action: 

Poplar Park: [Results]

Aston-le-Walls (1): [Results]

Your Monday Reading List:

A top eventing groom has come forward to anonymously share her experiences – which include plenty of 70+ hour weeks for barely any pay. It’s an achingly familiar scenario for many grooms and working students, but as this groom points out, it’s the cause of all the staff shortages plaguing the sport. Unsurprisingly, this groom has now left eventing to work in an industry in which she can afford to eat.

Happy birthday (yesterday!) to India’s Fouaad Mirza! The German-based eventer dazzled us all in Tokyo with the former Bettina Hoy ride Seigneur Medicott – and he’s only just entering his thirties now. A child prodigy, tbqh.

Meet Justine Dutton, former four-star eventer, Grand Prix show jumper, pony-dealing impresario, and all around badass babe. She’s the focus of the new WEC Ocala Spotlight after winning the $75,000 CaptiveOne Advisors Grand Prix with Everse W. We love to see it.

Want to help the University of Kentucky conduct game changing research into horse transport? Fill out their survey by April 1 to help them find out how horses across America get from point A to point B.

The FutureTrack Follow:

 

I’d consider this incredible, emotive shot by Chelsea Spear the photo of the weekend from Bruce’s Field, and this talented tog — who has worked under industry hotshot Erin Gilmore, so you know she’s good! — has lots more where that came from. Give her a follow to add some more eventing (and hunter-jumper!) imagery to your feed.

Morning Viewing:

Get the inside look at a day in the life of a talented junior eventer in the UK – and Ellie Fredericks is the daughter of Lucinda and Clayton Fredericks, no less!