There are a few real legends of our sport who’ve earned the respect of everyone around them — their contemporaries and competitors, officials, organisers, the next generations, and so on, and so forth. Among them? The perennially passionate and ever-so-clever Lucinda Green, whose own sparkling career as one of the sport’s best-ever competitors has been followed up by a considerable stint as one of our industry’s most generous educators. The doyenne of horsey cool recently made an appearance on the Jon and Rick Show to chat about the sport’s past, present, and future, her new eventing academy, and some super memories from decades at the top – and it’s well worth diving in for a good catch-up.
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Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Don’t Panic, But the French Took Their Clothes Off Today
Look, I don’t know what to tell you about my decision here. I could have shared some exciting competition footage with you; I could have picked out one of any number of educational training videos so we could all learn something together. There are some inspiring vlogs and rider interviews floating around on the World Wide Web at the moment, and yes, I could have picked any one of them. But when I opened Facebook earlier and nearly dropped by phone in shock because of all the naked chests suddenly on my screen, I knew — after WhatsApping the link directly to several of my nearest and dearest — that there was only one way we could close out this day together. Right now, we all need to just watch France’s best eventers strip off and do…whatever it is they’re doing. Switching from very cold to very hot temperatures, I think, for some reason. But do we need to know the details? Do we need to understand the conversations happening in this big vat of Frenchman soup? No. It is enough, dear reader, to observe and learn to understand the true natures of these men, like it’s a very compelling David Attenborough documentary. What does it say about Karim Laghouag that, in the face of apparently extreme human discomfort, he simply performs a little breathing exercise and then puts his feet up like he’s having a lovely time at a spa? Is the Olympian a master of mind over matter or merely a psychopath in disguise, with no actual nerve-endings and, most likely, a dastardly plan to take over the world up his (currently absent) sleeve?
Watch them. Learn from them. Fear them. Fancy them a little bit? IDK, you do you.
Fight back against colic and digestive upset.
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The horse that matters to you matters to us®.
Have you grabbed your winter running horse stickers? Check them out at KPPusa.com/winter.
Wednesday Wisdom: Buy the Horse You Need, Not the Horse You Want
One of the really fun things about being an equestrian journalist is the opportunity to pick up side hustles. For me, that’s ended up being agent work: I make the most of all my contacts within the sport to help motivated buyers find their dream horses. Today, I’m preparing for a weeklong trip around Europe with a rider and friend from the US on one of these exact trips, and it’s got me all in my feelings about my own previous experiences trying to find my dream horses (on much, much slimmer budgets – I bought my first horse with coins I’d collected in a Folgers can!). In this excerpt from his book Know Better to Do Better, horseman Denny Emerson gets frank about horse shopping with your head on straight – and I think it’s something we could all do with reminding ourselves of the next time we whip out our chequebooks.

Photo courtesy of Denny Emerson.
There are thousands of horses and ponies out there, all over the world, and many of them are for sale. There are thousands of potential buyers. There are numerous methods of putting these horse buyers in contact with the horse sellers, the internet being the big game in town. There’s also word of mouth, and there’s print advertising, but whatever the method, at some point, some of the shoppers actually find themselves in the physical presence of some of the animals that are for sale.
There are two very broad, often overlapping methods of thinking that describe the horse-shopping experience, which I will call “Rational Thinking” and “Fairy Tale Thinking”: RT and FTT. Most of us use both. Even the most hard-bitten, cynical, “been there, done that,” curmudgeonly old pessimist will find something to hope for in the occasional horse. Even the most Black Beauty-ized, dream-struck, “I love his cute little ears” fantasizer doesn’t fall in immediate love with every horse. But if you use a 1–to–10 scale on people, with 1 being the straight realist and the 10 the total dreamer, it might be a useful exercise to try to figure out where you might fit on this hypothetical scale.
Why? Because buying the right horse brings great satisfaction and joy, and buying the wrong one brings just as much dissatisfaction and distress, and even though choosing wisely can still lead to mistakes, choosing foolishly is more likely to turn out badly. If you know, deep in your heart, that you are an 8, 9, or 10, prone to gasp in delight at a glorious forelock, hiding two bright brown eyes, and overlooking the crooked left pastern, you might want to get a “3” friend to go with you. Even more important, sit down with that “3” friend, someone who knows you pretty well, and do the single best thing you can: write a list. That list can contain “wishful” items and practical ones.
One of the most important questions to struggle with before you get started on your list will also be the hardest question to face honestly: “How competent a rider and trainer am I?”
Another hard question to answer honestly is: “What are my goals with this horse?”
If you fake the answers to these two questions, God help you, because nobody else can.
Example: You are at this point in your riding (which you refuse to face) an inexperienced rider who lacks stability, hasn’t done much jumping, hasn’t spent long hours hanging around barns and warm-up rings, so doesn’t know much about horsemanship, and isn’t very physically fit. Every one of these facts about you can be remedied, but they have not been addressed yet.
But you fantasize that you want a horse that can jump 3 feet 8 inches, and allow you to compete at the Preliminary Level of eventing. He must be a splendid mover, have a great gallop, and be beautiful and “electric” in dressage. Your goals are not in sync with your riding capabilities. Not yet. And if you buy a horse that’s too far above your capabilities who won’t let you fumble around and make all kinds of mistakes while you gradually become a better rider, you may get scared or discouraged or injured, or all of the above, so that you may never become the rider that the right horse for you, at this time, might have allowed.
So make a list of the things in this new horse that you actually need, instead of the things that you want. Obviously, if you are multiple gold-medalist Michael Jung making the list, or some other great rider, the qualities you want are also those that you need, but that’s not the case for most horse shoppers. So try to list those things that you need—in reality, for this particular stage of your riding—knowing that in a few years, or less, you may need something very different.
Or not.
This excerpt from Know Better to Do Better by Denny Emerson is printed with permission from Trafalgar Square Books (www.HorseandRiderBooks.com).
Sponsorships Secured for British Grassroots Championship and Returning International Fixture

Eventing will return to Floors Castle in 2022. Photo courtesy of Floors Castle Horse Trials.
As we’re all achingly aware, the generous patronage of sponsors is truly the lifeblood of our sport – and after a couple of fallow seasons, we’re so excited to announce some major new partnerships and really exciting additions to the British eventing calendar in 2022.
The first of these is a long-awaited grassroots championship for BE80 combinations (that’s Britain’s equivalent of Beginner Novice, for anyone tuning in for this news from across the pond!). Though BE90 and BE100 (akin to US Novice and Training) riders have long been well-represented with the Science Supplements Cup championship at Badminton Horse Trials, the BE80 championships have been in something of a state of flux since their introduction in 2018. That year and the following year they were held at national venue Kelsall Hill, and although an exciting move to Burghley was planned for 2020 onwards, the pandemic meant that this never happened.
Now, though, all is well in championship land, and our BE80 riders will have just as much prestige and glamour to look forward to for their championship venue as their BE90 and BE100 counterparts. This year, and in 2023 and 2024, the BE80 National Championships will take place at the Equi-Trek Bramham International Horse Trials (7-12 June), with dressage to take place over the Tuesday and Wednesday, and both jumping phases will run on Thursday. This gives competitors the chance to soak up the atmosphere and mingle with some of the sport’s leading competitors, while enjoying their own dedicated competition area in the grounds.
This new home for the championship was announced at the tail end of 2021, and now, it has gained a suitably big-time sponsor in NAF, already a major supporter of British Equestrian and one of the UK’s leading supplement and horse care companies.
“We couldn’t be happier to be welcoming NAF on board as title sponsors for the championship,” says Helen West, CEO of British Eventing. “[They] have consistently been long-time supporters of equestrian sport on the whole, as well as being an official partner of the British Equestrian Federation, with whom they also assist [in delivering] the Clean Sport Message. We look forward to working alongside the team at NAF as well as the team at Bramham, who are committed to giving our members a fantastic championship event to remember.”
For this year only, there will be a direct qualification route to the event. From 2023 onwards, the system will return to qualifying classes at Area Festivals. To qualify for this year’s championship, you must meet the following criteria:
- Eligible combinations who are placed first in any BE80 section run between 3 May 2021-1 May 2022
- Riders need to be an Introductory, Standard or Premier BE Member and Horses must possess a Season Ticket to enter the Championship (Pay as You Go members are not eligible to compete at National Championships)
- In the last 20 years Riders must have not competed at either 4* level in 2018 and earlier or at 5* level in 2019 and thereafter
- For BE80 National Championship, Riders must not have competed at Intermediate or higher for the current or preceding 5 seasons
- Downgraded Horses are not permitted
- Combinations must never have gained Foundation Points at any BE100 Class or above
In other exciting sponsorship news – and, indeed, returning fixture news – Scotland’s Floors Castle International Horse Trials is making a welcome return after the sad announcement in 2020 that 2019’s renewal was its last run. Floors Castle, which is the ancestral seat of the Duke of Roxburghe, is best known in horsey circles for being the family home of 2018 Blenheim CCI4*-L winner Bella Innes Ker – and also for being the site of what’s widely considered a jolly good event. Now, with a new organising team in place, helmed by event management company Kick On Events, it’s back and planning to be better than ever. Helping it along enormously is new title sponsor The Malcolm Group, a family-run logistics, construction and maintenance company that celebrates its centennial in 2022. We can’t think of a better way to mark the occasion than a seriously good eventing knees-up, frankly.
“We are delighted to be supporting Floor Castle as it is an event which is dear to our hearts, and my wife Fiona and I have ridden there for many years,” says Andrew Malcolm, CEO of the Malcolm Group. “It is a premier event in an amazing location and we hope to see it go from strength to strength.”
The event will run from May 13-15, with classes on the roster from BE80 to CCI3*-S. Go Eventing!
Tuesday News & Notes from Legends Horse Feeds
Is it just me, or is it particularly crisp this week? I know Libby Head can’t be the only person who’s got one finger looped through a neck strap at all times right now. If your horse has also been possessed by the ghosts of raves past, future, and still to come, do please upload the footage to the ‘gram and use the #eventerproblems hashtag so we can all cheer ourselves up as we nurse our own bruises (and chilblains). Happy January!
Events Opening Today: Sporting Days Farm March H.T. II, Chattahoochee Hills H.T., Rocking Horse Winter III H.T., Twin Rivers Winter H.T., Full Gallop Farm March Wednesday H.T.
Events Closing Today: Three Lakes Winter I H.T. at Caudle Ranch, Sporting Days Farm February Trials H.T. I, Galway Downs 2022 Kickoff H.T.
Tuesday News & Notes from Around the World:
Didn’t catch the US Equestrian Annual Meeting Last Week? Here’s what you need to know about the organisation’s plans for 2022 and how they built momentum in 2021.
Ludger Beerbaum’s rapping habit – and no, not the fun kind – is the hot topic of the horse world at the moment. And rightly so; while a zero-tolerance attitude to animal cruelty is unlikely across the industry, we’ve come on in leaps and bounds over the decades. But equine osteopath Alena Jenn shares another interesting perspective: that many of Beerbaum’s detractors are equally guilty, without even realising it.
Even if you’re not a resolution maker, we’d be willing to bet you’ve got some goals in mind for 2022. Check out Daniel Stewart’s handy four-part system for turning those goals from intangible daydreams to actionable plans.
British-based readers, rejoice: Ingrid Klimke will be returning to England for a masterclass at Hampshire’s Wellington Riding, followed by an evening talk, on March 12. You can get your tickets here.
Video Break:
Elisa Wallace shares her latest Mustang desensitisation session — and we reckon this would be a great bit of work to do with any young horse.
Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack
The Christmas engagement rush is behind us, and we’re now heading into Sunny Florida Wedding Season! Starting us off for 2022 is Hannah Sue Burnett, who married Matthias Hollberg yesterday and displayed absolutely no hint of a farmer’s tan in her stunning sleeveless dress. Congratulations to the happy couple, and Hannah, let us know your secrets when you’re back from your honeymoon!
National Holiday: It’s Martin Luther King Jr Day. To celebrate, remind a bigot in your life that they’re wilfully misinterpreting the man of the hour when they say that we should stop talking about the color of people’s skin (and, in fact, if they say that MLK wouldn’t have condoned the actions of BLM, when in fact he ultimately dismissed the notion of peaceful protest as a way of ‘muzzling the voiceless’. Here’s some interesting reading for you.) Meanwhile, the fight against voter suppression rages on.
US Weekend Action:
Horse Trials at Majestic Oaks (Reddick, Fl.): [Website] [Results]
Your Monday Reading List:
Meet Canadian show jumper Anna Wilks, who began her career as a successful eventer under the watchful eye of Pippa Funnell, becoming the Junior European Champion along the way. Now, she’s globetrotting with her horses – and she’s shared her story so far and the reason she made the switch.
The former riders of 33-year-old Walnut, who launched the competitive careers of five-star riders Laura Collett, Nick Lucey, and Imogen Gloag, have paid tribute to the gelding following his passing last month. A 15.1hh cob who beat all the big guns? We’re huge fans of that.
It’s not uncommon for feelings of fear to materialize out of nowhere – particularly after the birth of a child. But learning to manage those feelings and repurpose them into something more productive is essential, and Margie Sugarman has plenty of advice to help you do just that.
Is one of your New Year’s resolutions to improve your knowledge and management skills? Then don’t miss a free, three-part webinar series hosted by Rutgers University next month, which will cover recent advances in veterinary medicine, genetics, and nutrition.
The FutureTrack Follow:
Cornelia Dorr is the latest of our US contingent to head across the pond for a season, and you’ll want to give her a follow to check out what she gets up to while basing with Aussie superstars Kevin and Emma McNab!
Morning Viewing:
Refresh your braiding skills with this foxhunter-approved method that’ll last you through all three phases, if that’s what you’re into:
Friday Video from SmartPak: If Equestrians Did ASMR
These days, none of us are immune to the TikTok and YouTube recommendations for endless videos of curiously unblinking women who whisper into microphones and scratch away at their cameras, which I think is meant to make you feel like you’re getting a facial, but is probably actually the opening of a special portal directly to hell. But for all I raise an eyebrow at some of the ASMR oeuvre’s oddities, I do kind of get it. Is there anything more relaxing than watching a shoddy looking hoof get turned into a work of art by a farrier? Or that perfect first line in a clip, which cuts through inch-long fluff like a hot knife through butter, leaving a shining, rippling coat in its wake? I reckon I could watch braiding tutorials for hours, not because they make my scalp tingle (does that not feel like you’ve got lice? Please feed back and let me know), but because there’s absolutely nothing more satisfying than watching totally uniform, utterly frizzless plaits appear along a scrupulously clean neck. I’d love to take the credit for gathering all these deeply soothing notions into one video for you, but I cannot: instead, we must all thank this random person on YouTube. Random person, I appreciate you for giving us all a seven minute meditation on the finer things in life. I also appreciate that you didn’t turn your camera on and pretend to braid my forelock while whispering threateningly at me. Namaste.
Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Back to Burghley
Badminton has gotten plenty of airtime over the last few weeks, partly because we’re so wildly overexcited about its return this spring and partly because its box office opened today — but there’s another Big B returning to the calendar in 2022, and we’re equally as delighted to return to its iconic grounds. What better way to reacquaint oneself with the Cottesmore Leap and the Leaf Pit than in the company of six-time victor William Fox-Pitt, who was kind enough to take us all along for the ride back in 2015 aboard the excellent Parklane Hawk?
Heels down, eyes up, leg on — let’s jump some big fences, baby.
Fight back against colic and digestive upset.
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The horse that matters to you matters to us®.
Have you grabbed your winter running horse stickers? Check them out at KPPusa.com/winter.
Sport Horse Nation Spotlight: Imports Who May or May Not Whinny with Accents
In the market for a new four-legged partner? You may find your unicorn on our sister site, Sport Horse Nation. To help with the search, we’re going to feature a selection of current listings here on EN. We include the ad copy provided; click the links for videos, pricing and contact information.
This pandemic has been a bit of a bummer for the travel-minded, hasn’t it? Between cancelled flight routes, surprise travel bans, and curfews popping up like rampant moles in the garden of life, it’s been a lot easier — and in many cases, much more sensible — to stay at home. But if you’re pining for foreign shores, perhaps your wanderlust might be temporarily sated by the very best kind of souvenir – an imported event horse. Here’s a selection of European honeys currently advertised on Sport Horse Nation.
For those who miss the Emerald Isle and its dusky-brogued gents, try:
TOP CLASS AMATEUR WINNER
Ballybolger Anchorman
Lovely JOEY 16.3HH DARK BROWN 8 year old homebred gelding by Puissance hoping to find his forever home. He is a 90/100 winning machine having super form at this
level, he has completed 2 novices and is now ready to be a Superstar grassroots winner.
His 100 results include:
1st lisgarvan 27.3
5th Frankfort 30
6th kilguilkey 27.3
3rd Blackstairs 31.5
1st Tattersals 14.9
He has the sweetest temperament, easy to do in all ways, lives in or out, hacks in company or on his own and doesn’t have to be ridden everyday. Super on the flat, moves really
well and easy to ride , very unflappable jumping with plenty of scope. He is snaffle mouth and would suit a tall child coming off ponies or competitive amateur who wants to win.He is 100 % to clip , shoe, load and travels well, incredibly chilled to deal with . Joey has had very easy to manage very mild sweet itch under his mane which we just shampoo regularly and keep a DustBuster / sweet itch hoody on during spring and summer. Never an issue or problem just a little TLC needed.
Plenty of videos on request
Special home wanted for this lovely boy.
Based co Carlow. Ireland
00353872211041
Sybil AB- beautiful talent and temperament in this imported ISH
Sybil AB- 2017 16.3 hand gray imported ISH mare by Nazar out of a Kings Master mare. This horse is the total package of brains and talent and it doesn’t hurt she’s beautiful too. She’s ready to continue her education with a jr or AA in a program. She will go far. She’s done two A rated hunter shows with an ammie and is entered at Majestic Oaks. No soundness or health issues or any special care requirements.

Connemara super star!
🦄 ☘️ Gentry Irish Clover- (Fortrane Stuart CP x Rantis Diamond ISH ). Coming 6 year old 15.3hh imported Irish Sport Horse mare. “Trish” is a beautiful, talented and super forgiving mare that is wise beyond her years! If you’re looking for something with a packer mentality to quickly move you up the levels with confidence, Trish is your ride! She is easy, sweet, and the type of horse every trainer wants in their barn.
Have a grudge against owning a girl? She will change that. This mare is zero drama and with her adorable personality, will make you the center of her whole world! That’s right, she will whinny when she sees you. It’s like owning a little squeaky toy that lights up when you’re around. You can’t say no to that! ❤️ 🧸
Trish is so good she won her first horse trials in the USA out of a large division! She has competed in Ireland through the Novice level and schools cross country through the Training level! She is brave, scopey, and will jump anything from any distance with very little input needed from her rider. She’s quiet enough to be a hunter, but forward enough to do the jumpers. This horse could do multiple jobs for you!
Here is another unicorn. These horses don’t come by very often! Trish is UTD on everything and has zero vices. This is the first horse I’ve had in my barn that I can’t give you a single bad thing to say about her…and we have some nice horses! Trish can be ridden every day or pulled out of her stall with a week off and is the same horse. She walks off the trailer at a show as the same horse you put on, easy and quiet.
Serious inquiries only. Yes, seriously…please. Budget suits the quality of horse. Priced in the mid-five figures. Located at Gentry Sport Horses in Spring City, PA.
Contact us privately for more information and videos.
If you’re aching to pop on your dirndl and head to Germany, these options are sehr gut…
Peddersson
“Peddersson” 16.2 hand 2015 imported gelding from Germany. Ended his 2021 season at preliminary level. Always very competitive with eye catching movement and jump. Great show temperament, never buzzy or tense in the ring, fantastic galloper on cross country and careful show jumper. Ready for 2 star this spring. Available to try in Bay Area California. Lots of videos on RideOnVideo.
Top quality with an outstanding temperament
RHS Temptation 50 (Potato)
Age: 6
Breed: Westphalian
Height: 16.2
Gelding
Sire: Tangelo Van De Zuuthoeve (1.60m show jumper)
Dam: Tinette (1.55m show jumper)
Show videos available upon request
Temptation 50 is a 6 yr old, 16.2 Westphalian gelding. He has competed through 1.30 both in Europe, and the States.
He truly has an outstanding character both under saddle, and to be around in the barn. He is instantly a favorite of anyone upon first meeting with his sweet, and kind nature, and fun to ride in every way. Safe and suitable for a wide variety of riders.
Three good paces, that are comfortable to ride, with a solid education both on the flat and over jumps.
Currently competing successfully at 1.30m, with scope and ability for more.
Very easy and comfortable to ride, truly automatic lead changes, point and shoot jumping.
His Sire was a successful 1.60m jumper, and has been a prolific sire of highly successful elite sport horses. His dam herself competed successfully through 1.55m.
Ready to don your clogs and get down with the freaky-deaky Dutch? Meet…
Top quality 4 year old
Lots of video available upon request!
RHS Mandiamo.
4 yrs old, KWPN 17.0 gelding.
The best 4 yr old I have ever sat on! Has competed 1.0m to 1.05m prior to import. We have done xc on a line with him, and he does all the things without batting an eye. Brave, has incredible movement, and is extremely easy on the ground, and to ride. He has all the star quality for upper level for a pro, but also has an A/A or YR friendly disposition.
And finally, missed flag-watching outside Buckingham Palace and kilt-shopping in the Highlands? You’ll have plenty to chat about with…
ULTIMATE EVENTING SCHOOLMASTER/JNR/YR DREAM
16.2hh 13 year old mare by Warrant. Ridden by small girl and placed in all her novice events last season in the UK.
She has beautiful paces & is an absolute double clear machine. She has jumped round intermediates clear with ease and has scope to go on further.
Only for sale due to university commitments.
Can be seen on professional yard where other eventers are available. Edinburgh airport is under an hour away.
Videos available via WhatsApp
17.1 2013 Irish Gelding
The Nobleman a.k.a. Norman, was imported from the U.K. In May of 2021. He loves cross country and fox hunting, and is in a dressage program 4-5 days a week. He has a wonderful attitude, and very nice work ethic. He hacks out alone or in company, and is happy living out or in.
Norman is the whole package, he has beautiful uphill gaits, not spooky or silly, and has the cutest personality. He is wonderful with hounds and stands quietly at meets. He prefers first or second field, but can be easily managed hill topping.
Norman is patient for vet, farrier, dentist. Easy to ship and clip.
He passed a 5 stage vetting in May and has had no soundness issues. Radiographs available.
Listings included in this article are randomly selected and not confirmed to be current and active before inclusion. Sport Horse Nation features user-generated content and therefore cannot verify or make any warranty as to the validity or reliability of information.
Badminton’s BACK, Baby, and the Box Office is Open for Business

Piggy French and Vanir Kamira win Badminton 2019. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.
Think back to the last time the Badminton box office opened. Who were you back then, in early 2019? A baby-faced, bright-eyed cherub, unencumbered by the emotional burden of two years of lockdowns and cancellations and border closures? Yeah, us too. But the fantastic news? The box office has finally reopened once again, like a jollier version of Pandora’s box that releases our jollier and more youthful selves back out into the world. Or something like that, anyway.
Enough about what we’ve all been through, anyway — let’s talk about what you’ve got to do if you want to catch the action at Badminton this spring (May 4-8). The box office opened for general sales today after a week of priority access, and there are plenty of options: you can book daily passes for any of the days, or a weeklong season pass that’ll get you in on all three days. You’ll also be able to prebook your parking, campsite spot, and members’ passes, lunches and boozy brunches as needed, plus get your hands on a Badminton radio access voucher – highly recommended if you want extra insights from expert commentators and interviews with the riders, too.
One major change that’s been brought in this year is the lack of on-the-gate ticket sales. That means that you’ll need to book your tickets in advance – but on the plus side, it should speed up the notorious queues through Little Badminton village, which means more time perusing the trade stands and scoffing pheasant goujons. A win-win, really.
Until March 31, Badminton’s box office will be offering Early Bird prices, which can notch you up some decent savings – for example, a weeklong parking pass is £10 cheaper. You can check out all the options and book all your passes here (and yeah, we really do recommend a Bellini breakfast on cross-country day. You’re worth it.)
Not going to make it to the Cotswolds in person this year? You can also purchase access to Badminton’s own livestream service, Badminton TV, which will produce top-quality coverage throughout the event in a pay-per-view package. Currently, the package is priced at just £14.99, which will increase to £19.99 from April 1. Both horse inspections will be included. More information can be found here.
Are you planning a Badminton trip — or a top-notch viewing party — this year? Let us know what you’re most excited for in the comments. Go Eventing, and Go Badminton!
Tuesday News & Notes from Legends Horse Feeds
It’s a jolly good week to be British eventer Bubby Upton! The talented young rider, who made her five-star debut at Pau and is currently finishing her final year of university, has been given three exciting new rides. Two of them come from the string of Australia’s Chris Burton, who she shares a yard with at the Chedington Estate, owned by the Guy family. Their horses Jefferson and Clever Louis, the latter of which won the 2019 Blenheim eight- and nine-year-old CCI4*-S in 2019, will now be campaigned by Bubby, as will the former Sam Griffiths ride Billy Liffy, who was produced to the upper levels by Liv Craddock. Expect big things to come from Team Upton this season!
Events Opening Today: Three Lakes Winter II H.T. at Caudle Ranch, Pine Top Advanced H.T.
Events Closing Today: Full Gallop Farm January H.T, Rocking Horse Winter I H.T.
Tuesday News & Notes from Around the World:
A tack trunk injury, a comically misplaced marching band, and perhaps the most fortuitous auction win ever – these are just some of the plot points that form the incredible story of Beth Perkins, who finished sixth in the 1974 World Championships with Furtive. Read all about her adventures at Burghley here.
If you’re anything like me, you spend the winter months guzzling iron supplements, hoping for a little bit more get-up-and-go as a result. But can feeding iron have similarly beneficial effects for your horse, or is it a potentially harmful minefield? Horse Sport explains it all.
Kiwi superstar Clarke Johnstone is heading to the UK for the 2022 season. This adds a formidable string to the Kiwi squad’s bow ahead of this year’s World Championships, though the team currently remains without a chef d’equipe after Graeme Thom stepped down at the end of 2021.
OTTB fans in the south-east, rejoice: New Vocations is officially opening an Ocala base, which will be located at Trillium Sport Horses in Anthony, and spearheaded by eventer Erin MacDonald.
And now, over to you: what’s your best advice for heading south for a winter of training? What do you wish you’d known the first time you went sun-chasing? Let us know, and your words of wisdom could be featured in a forthcoming article.
Video Break:
Relive 25 years of Pony Club Championships in Great Britain– and some fences that are a real throwback to another era! — with Total Recall.
Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack
Okay, okay, so we try not to use this top spot in our News & Notes for advertising – but when I saw this post on my Insta feed, I actually audibly gasped, and I know a lot of you will be just as excited as I am about it. Lucinda Green and Ingrid Klimke on one webinar? Explaining to me why dressage schooling directly impacts cross-country performance? Oh my god, sign me up! The webinar will be tomorrow evening at 3.30 p.m. Eastern time, and I’d be willing to bet it’ll be one of the most valuable things you do this off-season.
National Holiday: Put your hand up if you’ve ever felt personally attacked by National Clean Your Desk Day.
Your Monday Reading List:
There was some hot debate on social media among some of the sport’s biggest names after EquiRatings released its list of 2021’s top event horses, ranked by their Elo rating. Now, in an effort to shed further light on the Elo and how it works – and why our current European champion and the Tokyo gold medallist don’t even feature on the list – they’ve teamed up with Horse&Hound to delve into the science behind the list.
Have you got your sites set on the top? Then you’ll want to read these nuggets of wisdom, collected through the year from the stars of equestrian sport.
If you followed Ireland’s Goresbridge Go For Gold sale this year, you’ll have noticed something – an awful lot of horses with an MBF prefix. Not only did an MBF horse become the top seller of the sale, they also dominated the catalogue – and the Irish Farmers Journal sat down with MBF’s Meabh Bolger to find out how they did it and why she loves a great Thoroughbred dam line.
Get to know Favian, Valerie Vizcarrondo Pride’s top-level partner-in-crime. He has an emotional support mini, and that’s pretty much all I needed to start crying this morning.
One can’t help but feel we’re heading closer to a major reckoning and the implementation of a SafeSport system in the UK. Certainly something needs to change, and the recent rape charges against showjumping coach John Sillett prove that point in spades.
The FutureTrack Follow:
Follow the Ebony Horse Club and see what life is like at a riding school in the heart of London – plus, you can check out the adventures of the resident riders, several of whom are pivoting into the racing industry after the success of Ebony rider Khadijah Mellah, who won the Magnolia Cup in 2019!
Morning Viewing:
Join Elisa Wallace as she heads across the pond in search of a superstar.
Friday Video from SmartPak: Behind the Scenes with Padraig McCarthy
One of my favourite success stories is that of British-based Irish eventer Padraig McCarthy, who you likely know as our 2018 double silver medalist at the World Equestrian Games. But did you know that that extraordinary performance came after only a handful of years in the sport? And did you know that Padraig actually has a PhD? The former show jumper and all-round clever clogs is my vote for president of the world, frankly, and in this in-depth video — the latest in Horse Sport Ireland’s Meet the Riders series — you’ll find out exactly why. From dealing horses around the world to the dizzying heights of academia, Padraig’s a top-notch bloke with a lot of medals yet to be won.
Plus, if you click play, you can cancel your Calm app subscription and let his Irish lilt soothe you to sleep instead. A bonus!
#WaybackWednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Big, Bold Badminton (and Some Perms)
Sometimes, you’ve got to look back to fully grasp how monumental the things yet to come will be — and that’s certainly how I feel about the return of Badminton this year, which must be the eventing world’s most discussed topic this week. That’s because priority booking opened up this morning for 2022’s event — the first since that magical running in 2019, when we saw Piggy March take top honours — and from what we hear, camping spots are going like hotcakes and the team behind the scenes are getting ready for the biggest Badminton ever.
But then again, when has Badminton ever been small, either dimensionally or in status and feel? Today’s video takes us back nearly three decades to 1993, a year jam-packed with familiar faces and familiar fences — and all that indescribable magic that comes as part of the package with this iconic event. Tune in and get excited for May (oh, and if you haven’t bought your tickets yet, head to the priority link now or set an alarm for next Wednesday, when the box office will open for general sales!).
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It’s a New Year – What’s Your ‘Oh Crap!’ Plan? An Excerpt from ‘Fit & Focused in 52’
What can you do when you’ve done everything right but it still goes wrong? In his new book “Fit & Focused in 52,” Coach Daniel Stewart gives us a few tools to use when your totally tubular ride suddenly feels like it is totally going down the tubes.

Photo by Cindy Lawler.
You’re having an amazing ride but your super handy horse uncharacteristically refuses a fence, causing you to end up on his neck, lose a stirrup, and drop your crop! Pick yourself up (and your crop) because it’s time for Plan D.
Your Plan D is known as your “Oh crap!” Plan. This is the plan you put into action every time you get yourself into trouble and hear yourself say something like, “Oh no,” “Oh my gosh,” or “Oh crap!” You’ve only got a split second to figure out how to recover, so you’re going to need to have this plan committed to memory. Repeating a mantra like, “Shake it off,” while shaking your shoulders might be all you have time for and might be all you need to keep your train of thought on the correct track.
Try One of These on for Size…
You only have a short period of time to complete your oh crap plan so you might want to consider some of the following:
– Use a thought-stopper and thought-replacement. With thought-stopping, you teach yourself to disrupt the flow of those bad thoughts by yelling a thought-stopper word at yourself, like “Whoa!” or “Halt!” Once you’ve stopped the bad thought, you replace it with a good one. Here’s an example. The next time you recognize yourself saying,
“She’s better than me,” stop the flow of that negative thought by yelling the word “Halt!” at yourself (inside or outside voice), take a deep breath, and replace it with, “Do your best, forget the rest.”
– Whisper a calming cadence like, “Breathe, believe, bedazzle;” or “Keep calm, breathe on.”
– Briefly recall a memory when you successfully coped with a similar situation.
Blower Breathing
A few deep breaths are an important part of your Oh Crap! Plan. Use something called blower-breathing—that is, take in a deep breath and force it out while making the blowing sound of a horse. By the way, horses do this by fluttering their nostrils but you don’t have to. Just fluttering your lips will be fine.
The Numbers Don’t Lie
You’re going to breathe about 20,000 times today. Make sure you don’t skip any, especially when the pressure goes up.
Weekly Homework
This week, come up with one or two split-second techniques you can use to keep your head in the game after an unexpected problem. Memorize them and practice them as much as you can.
This excerpt from Fit & Focused in 52 by Coach Daniel Stewart is reprinted with permission from Trafalgar Square Books (www.horseandriderbooks.com).
Tuesday News & Notes from Legends Horse Feeds
Need something to cheer up the prospect of heading back to work this week? How about a BIG SALE KLAXON: Our pals at SmartPak are currently hosting their major winter clearance event, and the deals are plenty spicy. You can save up to 40% on tack and gear, and there are some super prices to be found on iconic products such as the Piper breeches and, yes, saddle pads to suit every variety of matchy-matchy. Click here to shop now!
Events Opening Today: Rocking Horse Winter II Advanced H.T., Jumping Branch Farm H.T.
Events Closing Today: Stable View Aiken Opener H.T., Grand Oaks H.T.
Tuesday News & Notes from Around the World:
Still confused about the tumult surrounding the FEI’s one country, one vote drama? Pippa Cuckson is back in the fray with all the details you need to understand the hot button drama of the moment — and the huge impact it could have on global equestrian sport and horse welfare.
Are you a high school or college student with an interest in equestrian photography? Don’t miss your chance to apply for the Andrew Ryback Photography Scholarship, which awards grants to help fund your education. Applications close on 3/31.
Take a look around the home of Swedish show jumper (and former eventer!) Peder Fredricson. I’ll be thinking about his fireplace all day – and the fact that both he and his wife are actually also artists! We love an equestrian with hidden talents.
Listen to This:
We’re all beside ourselves with excitement over the return of Badminton this spring, and there’s plenty of excitement behind the scenes, too, with a new event director at the helm and plenty of fresh ideas on the table. EquiRatings’s Nicole Brown headed to the Cotswolds to find out more about what’s coming.
Video Break:
At last month’s USEA Annual Meeting and Convention, Ashley Johnson presented her fascinating research into the ‘flow state’ of elite event riders — that is, the psychological state of total immersion in an activity. For event riders, she looked specifically at resilience levels and performance strategies. You can watch the whole talk and find out her conclusions here!
Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack
Now that we’ve made it through the holidays, emerged from our cheese coma, and kicked our way through to a new year like the Kool-Aid man, it’s roughly the sort of time that I start getting really excited about the season to come. That feeling is fed, of course, by the hard-working event social media managers around the world, all of whom are making a jolly good effort to remind us all that they exist as box offices begin to reopen for the year ahead. But this pensive picture of a sleepy Kentucky Horse Park didn’t just get me daydreaming about the event to come — one that I hope I’ll get the chance to see in person for the first time! It also made me think back to the extraordinary effort the eventing community made to ensure it happened in 2021, and it’s exactly that can’t-hold-us-down communal spirit that encapsulates the vibe I want to bring into 2022. Screw resolutions; let’s just keep on changing the world the only way we know how — by rolling up our sleeves and getting our hands dirty.
National Holiday: It’s Women Rock! Day, which celebrates gals who are just a little bit rock & roll. I’ll be listening to Hole while I muck out, but that’s not really a change from the norm, if I’m honest.
Your Monday Reading List:
At just 19, Alice Casburn is basically the embodiment of a pony novel heroine. Riding a second-generation homebred, she finished second at Blair Castle CCI4*-L in 2021, then made her five-star debut at Pau, jumping two excellent clear rounds and continuing to be a generally excellent person. Learn more about her here.
We all talk a lot about the downsides of Covid — and truly, there have been many. But in the grand spirit of making the best of a bad situation, how about the unexpected good things that have come out of this pandemic? Horse&Hound ponders the positive in this piece, and I have to say, I’m totally with them on the improved state of warm-up rings at British Eventing competitions.
In terms of celebrity deaths, I’m not sure any have been as universally rued as that of legendary comic actress Betty White. But she doesn’t just leave behind her a legacy of unproblematic wit — she also made an impact on the horse world that you probably haven’t heard about. Here’s more from EQUUS.
A lot has changed for equestrian sport in the last year. COTH is looking at the year ahead with a neat little summary of what’s in, and what’s out, for 2022.
16-year-old Zoie Brogdon is making a name for herself on the West Coast jumper circuit – and she’s inspiring plenty of other young riders along the way. Find out more about the Compton Junior Posse rider, who sat down for a chat with Sports Illustrated.
The FutureTrack Follow:
The OYES Equestrian Scholarship is committed to supporting diverse talent in the horse industry — and there’s no better time to follow them than right now, as they head closer to their January 15th deadline for the next round of awards.
Morning Viewing:
Meet 18hh(!) Hillcrest, who’s taking the world of jumps racing one enormous stride at a time.
Friday Video from SmartPak: No, Really, This Time It’s Actually Called Horse Ballet
Good evening, fine folks, and a happy tail-end to 2021, another thoroughly weird trip around the sun. I suspect I’m writing to a diminished audience right now as many of you head out into the real world to usher in 2022 (2020…too?) with a bit of pomp and circumstance. But if you’re giving going out-out a miss this year, you might fancy something to watch that allows you to steadily slip deeper and deeper into a cozy red wine torpor, all while feeling a bit cultured at the same time.
Enter this delightful ‘horse ballet’, set to the Mozart cantata “David Penitente” and performed in the most remarkable venue in Salzburg, Austria. I’m not sure what I find more captivating — the grace and precision of these highly-trained horses, or the fact that the orchestra is on display like a candy store window, but what I do know if that the whole thing is so hypnotic I might miss the big countdown. In case I do, I’ll say it now: a very happy New Year to you all. I can’t wait for the adventures we’ll go on together next season.
Best of 2021 Video Countdown: #1 – Here’s What a 5.5 Dressage Score Looks Like
Each day between now and the New Year we’re counting down the top 20 most popular videos shared on EN in 2021. The #1 spot goes to “Carrie Skelton Sets British Eventing Dressage Record of 5.5 (Yes, Really),’” which garnered 28,834 views when it was originally posted on April 10, 2021.
It’s not often that an early-season one-day event becomes the stage for a history-making ride, but that’s exactly what Norton Disney Horse Trials in Lincolnshire was transformed into in April , as one of its competitors set a new British Eventing dressage record under the critical eye of judge Christine Pappa.
“I thought it was a typo at first and kept waiting for them to change it to a 25.5,” admits Carrie Skelton, who scored an eye-watering 5.5 (no, still not a typo) in the BE100 Open [Training level] section aboard the Lancer Stud’s Ramesses B. “I usually get a 24 dressage, which I’m always over the moon with!”
Though British Eventing’s database of all-time scores isn’t wholly comprehensive, a quick text to EquiRatings’ Diarm Byrne put the score into context: it’s the best score since the database was conclusively pulled together, and with the progressive increase in quality in this phase over the last number of years, it’s highly unlikely that this has been bested. Carrie overtakes previous record-holder Rosie Bates, who scored a 6.3 aboard Forrest Dot Com in a BE80(T) [Beginner Novice] section at the same event last year and Michael Owen and Direct Galaxy, who posted a 7.3 in a BE80(T) at Kelsall Hill in 2019.
“Just make sure you tell everyone I was enjoying a Campari Soda in my white socks watching Messi when the call came,” says a mildly harangued Diarm.

Here it is, folks: the most framable test sheet anyone has ever received. To put it into quite startling context, it bests Charlotte Dujardin and Valegro‘s world record 94.3% by two-tenths of a percentage point. Courtesy of Carrie Skelton.
Carrie took over the ride on Cairo, as he’s known at home, in 2020. Prior to their union, the eleven-year-old Irish Sport Horse (Ramiro B x Wannabe G) was produced by India Thompson, then competed for two seasons by five-star rider Richard Jones, before Martha Craggs, daughter of owners Emma and Marcus, took the reins for the 2019 season.
Though Carrie’s intentions for a full debut season were thwarted by the national lockdown, they still managed four events last year, forming a swift and successful partnership to end the year with a clear round at Novice under their belts as well as two placings and a win, which they notched up in a BE100 Open section at Little Downham Horse Trials.
“Cairo has a wicked sense of humour and will definitely let you know if you’re not on your game, but he gives me 110% every time and is an absolute joy to train and ride,” says Carrie, who has adapted her training regime to suit the horse’s unique needs. “I don’t school him much at home as he’s better fresh, so he does loads of schooling on hacks instead. He finds the dressage so easy and is so correct that it means I can concentrate on being super accurate.”
It’s always tempting to look at an achievement like this under a microscope to try to find out how it was done – and in this case, it probably doesn’t take much searching. Carrie, who worked as an event groom from the age of 16 until she was 24, also worked at a dressage stud, which allowed her to hone her flair for the flatwork.
“I got some amazing experience on seriously top dressage horses with top trainers, which I think has really helped,” she explains. Now, with her grooming days behind her, she’s focusing on her own riding career. Without abundant funding behind her, she’s relied on that finely-tuned work ethic to make it happen, gaining teaching qualifications along the way to help make the financials work. A dream alliance with The Lancer Stud, based in Suffolk, has helped make her dream a reality.
“I ride solely for them now, and they have some seriously special homebreds coming through which is very exciting,” says Carrie, whose role includes backing, bringing on, and competing a selection of the stud’s youngsters. She’s in good company there, too – among the Lancer Stud’s roster of riders is another British record-breaker, Piggy March.
Though Carrie and Cairo’s day at Norton Disney didn’t end quite how they’d have liked – they incurred a frustrating technical elimination on cross-country for missing out a fence in what was otherwise a classy clear round – the pair have their sights set on bigger things to come.
“I would love to go 2* later this year with him as he’s more than capable – I’ll definitely walk the xc a lot for that,” laughs Carrie, who regrouped to compete at the event after a crashing fall while riding at home two days ago. “I’m hugely grateful to Lancer Stud for letting me have the ride on him as it’s such a treat to ride a more experienced horse after doing youngsters for so long and I hope I can do him justice!”
Carrie has very kindly shared a video of her test with EN – though she admits wryly that “the funny thing is I can still pull the test to pieces when I watch it and see a million things I could have done better!” Here’s how they made it happen:
Go Carrie and Cairo, and Go Eventing!
Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Scnobia Stewart Drops the Skincare Routine
There’s a little part of me that’s always wanted to start an Instagram story with a faintly sarcastic “so you’ve all been asking me about my skincare routine…”, except for the fact that literally nobody has ever asked me for my skincare routine, so it would all be a filthy lie. But Allure Magazine found someone much more interesting to share not just the lotions and potions she uses to keep her pores so remarkably nonexistent, but the entirety of her daily routine. Meet Scnobia Stewart, dressage rider and multitasker extraordinaire, and find out how she fits in training, a full-time job in the pharmaceuticals industry, and a bit of self-care, too. If you love looking behind the curtain and seeing how other riders get sh*t done, this’ll tick a big box for you. Oh, and there’s skincare for horses in there, too.
Leave your horse a 5-star review to win!
2021 is coming to an end. It is time to take a look back at how the year has gone. If you had to leave your horse a review, would it be 5 stars? Leave us a review about your horse for a chance to win custom stickers with your horse’s name on them. Be creative!
Submit your review at KPPusa.com/5-star. All entries must be submitted by 12/31/21.
Winners will be drawn in early January.
The horse that matters to you matters to us®. Call 859-873-2974 or visit KPPusa.com.
The Nine New Year’s Resolutions All Eventers Make (Just to Break)
With just a couple of days left until we tumble headlong into another year of whatever the hell this has been, you’re probably breaking up your post-Christmas cheese coma with the noble task of making your New Year’s resolutions. I won’t stop you, of course, but do consider allowing me to save you some effort by crossing off the ones I know none of us are managing in the year to come…
9. “This is the season in which I actually leave enough time to warm up.”
At home, you’re a consistent 25-er, aren’t you? But it all falls apart, doesn’t it, somewhere between putting your foot in the stirrup and entering at A when you’re out competing. I can’t think why that would be; it’s unlikely that it’s got anything to do with that leisurely 10 minutes you spend working your horse in a loose and relaxed outline at home, before gently picking up the contact and riding approximately 10,001 transitions until your horse is sitting on his backside and dancing around the arena. There’s no way that careening into the warm-up 45 seconds before your test is due to start and frantically riding five transitions in and out of canter with one boot totally unzipped won’t yield the same end result. And anyway, even if that was the cause, you’re definitely going to be more punctual in the season to come, and you’re never going to lose your horse in the lorry park after he buggers off while you’re attempting to get the bridle on, and as such, you’ll definitely always have time to find a quiet space and do all that very zen stretching. Of course.
8. “In 2022, I’ll spend more time schooling the walk.”
Like hell you will. You’ll go into January with the best of intentions: you’ll plan to work lateral movements into your walk, keeping your horse working into a contact and engaging his hind end. You’ll pepper this most boring of paces with transitions into free or extended walk and back again, and in those headiest, most ambitious early days of the new year, you might even vow to nail walk pirouettes, a movement surely thought up by the devil himself. But by mid-January, you’ll be just like the rest of us schmucks, and walk will mean one thing: a loose-reined opportunity for a breather. Oh, maybe another thing, too: a reliable 5 in every test you ever ride. But you know what? Nothing’s more comforting than consistency. Nothing, that is, except pootling around on the buckle, thinking about anything in the world other than trying to make a decent walk happen.
7. “This year, I’m going to take my fitness as seriously as my horse’s.”
Look at me. Look deep in my eyes. Don’t be frightened. I know you. I am you. We are the same, you and me, sitting here in our kitchens, poring over the year’s competition calendar. And that’s how I know you’re lying.
“My horse is back from her holiday and trotting for 30 minutes now,” we think to ourselves, marking the date with a red pen, “so by this date” — another quick scribble — “I want her to start jumping and by this date” — can you smell the Sharpie fumes? — “she should be ready to compete.” The path from A to B to C? Weeks of interval training, as prescribed by our universal fairy godmother, Lucinda Green. And there’ll be no cutting corners, oh no: that same Sharpie will be used to jot those intervals onto our bare arms, so we can easily glance at the timings as we set our watches. Our horses won’t take a single step more or less than what we’ve painstakingly decided they need, and by March, they’ll emerge hard and muscled and rippling with power and barely-suppressed insanity. Meanwhile, we’ll nearly tip over a porta-loo at our first event back, so robust will be our struggle to do up last season’s breeches, now a full size too small.
Now, there’s nothing at all wrong with changes in your shape or size, all of which are natural and normal and should be embraced as signs we’re alive and thriving against all the odds that modern life throws our way. But maybe we do owe it to ourselves — and our horses — to at least give ourselves a bit more cardiovascular stamina, right?
6. “No matter how many rosettes they win, I will not fancy an event rider in the year of our lord 2022.”
Can you hear that? It’s the sound of the deepest sigh I have ever sighed. Pour yourself a glass of wine, love, and prepare yourself — because in 2022, I’m afraid you’re going to make the same mistakes you always have.
There’s a little game my friends and I like to play called “Do I Fancy Him, or Is He Just Wearing Breeches?” The premise is very simple: imagine the object of your lust in ordinary clothes, on some ordinary street somewhere. Stripped of his tall boots and spurs (steady on, Jilly Cooper), he’s probably just another chap with an ego that’s convinced him he deserves a harem of blonde Young Rider candidates doting on him, despite the fact that he truly believes that wearing loafers sans socks is the hautest of couture. Remove the skull cap and you’ll likely find a fierce receder. Look a little deeper, truly analyse his chat and game, and you might be devastated to discover he has none. You want to host a dinner with your clever university friends and discuss Dostoevsky? Eventing Boy’s got one topic of conversation per letter of the alphabet and D’s taken by Ditches, I’m afraid. But god, does he look good going over them, and so we are all doomed to repeat the mistakes of the past.
(Before I get cancelled in the comments section, I adore a great many male event riders, many of whom are excellent people. But I’m British, and so I reserve the right to affectionately bully the people I like. Thank you and goodnight.)
5. “I’m going to ride without stirrups once a week this year.”
Alright, Mr Stickability, steady on. You’ll suffer through a total of two (2) lunge lessons, pull so many muscles that you consider reviewing your last will and testament, and then read a scathing comment on a Facebook group that points out that no-stirrup work is detrimental to your horse’s spinal health. That will be good enough reason for you to staple your stirrups to your saddle for now and evermore.
4. “I will absolutely not continue to haemorrhage money on gear I don’t actually need.”
Look, perhaps you will manage this. Perhaps you’re better than me, a person with no impulse control, who wouldn’t know a budget if it shat in her kettle and who has to start all her Hinge dates with an embarrassing confession about the state of my credit score. Maybe you won’t be influenced by targeted advertisements, which won’t at all convince you that a special £35 pair of knickers will help you finally sit the trot, or a £750 bridle will cure your horse of being a terminal idiot. Maybe. Or maybe you’ve already ordered your January supply of turmeric, and there’s no hope for you either.
3. “This is the season in which I give up drinking. “
Is it? Is it really? Because you and I both know that the cooler you’re keeping your horse’s ice boots in is also perfectly formed for a post-cross-country gin in a tin or five.
That said, if you found yourself doing pre-dressage shots at 8am in 2021, maybe this is a good resolution to stick to.
2. “I will no longer do horsey laundry in the house machine.”
If you’re happily married, you may actually stand a chance of sticking to this one, purely because you know that the good ones are hard to find and divorces are pretty paperwork heavy. If your washing machine is yours and yours alone, though, you’re as stuffed as its wheezing filter. Just don’t come crying to us when you realise that all that errant horsehair has become one with the cups of your bras, leaving you trying to subtly itch your way through your working day as half a horse trit-trots its way across your areolas. This could have been avoided! You could have secured yourself a lifetime ban from the local laundromat instead! Do you ever learn?
1. “From now on, I will wash my hands before I snack at the yard.”
Objectively, you’re a filthy little gremlin: you muck out your horse’s biohazard zone of a stable and then merely wipe off the excess slimy bits onto your breeches before popping the kettle on and grabbing a couple of custard creams out of the shared biscuit tin. You, of course, think nothing of it — there’s a bit of a pooey whiff if you really linger with your fingertips by your nose, of course, but you’re not much of a lingerer. Instead, you fling your snack somewhere in the direction of your tonsils and crack on with your day, blissfully unaware that your entire existence is one long flirtation with cholera. You might be committed to changing this horrible habit in 2022 — much as you might have convinced yourself you’ll stop wandering into the supermarket stinking of a urinal — but you know it’s not true. Anyway, your immune system is probably an ironclad beast of a thing these days, and in these trying times, that’s exactly what you need. Crack on; you’re nailing it.
Tuesday News & Notes from Legends Horse Feeds
I know I need to wind down the festive content, and I will, but only after I’ve shared these naughty little elves with you. This is the only kind of content my cheese-brain can process at the moment, and I suspect you’re all feeling much the same, so you’re welcome.
Events Opening Today: Pine Top Intermediate H.T., Ocala Winter I Horse Trials, Full Gallop Farm February I H.T.
Events Closing Today: Fresno County Horse Park Combined Test, Horse Trials at Majestic Oaks
Tuesday News and Notes from Around the World:
The points have been tallied, the honours have been distributed, and these are your 2021 USEA Intercollegiate Riders of the Year! This super program continues to grow and gain in strength and popularity, and we can’t wait to see what’s on the cards for 2022.
A partially-sighted teenager hopes to inspire others to jump and compete after taking 11th place at a Pony Club regional championship. Even more impressively, he did so without the aid of a guide rider, which he ordinarily uses to find his way to the next fence, because his guide’s horse pulled up lame partway around the course.
A contentious rule-change in the UK now means that many drivers can legally tow a trailer without additional training and qualifications. The British Horse Society has provided some useful advice to motorists to help prepare them to do so safely and sensibly.
Sick of throwing marks away in your reinback? Steal some tips from the dressage world with this guide for laying the foundations for success from the ground first. Let 2022 be the year of straight lines and diagonal pairs of legs taking clear, confident steps, you dressage diva, you.
Video Break:
Relive one of the rounds of the year, as Great Britain’s Nicola Wilson and JL Dublin made a major move towards taking the European Championship back in September.
Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack
Happy Monday (I think? Right??) folks! I don’t know about you, but I’ve fully disintegrated into a blob of a human being now. I’m 90% cheese; I’ve just eaten panettone in bed and got marmalade on the sheets, and I feel like I’m relearning the alphabet while typing this desperate little missive. But isn’t that what this time of year is all about? I know us horsey people aren’t very good at the whole ‘time off’ thing, and truly, it’s taken me my entire life to learn how to just relax without guilt, but I really do recommend leaning into your ‘you-time’ as much as you can over the next couple of days. Spend some quality time with your horse, just having a bit of no-pressure fun, and then head home to complete Netflix in your pajamas. Soon, we’ll all be soldiering on through a bleak January, wondering how on earth to get into selling feet pics on the dark web, but for now, we can give ourselves a bit of room to flourish. And by flourish, I mostly mean ‘scroll through Instagram marvelling at the fact that it’s suddenly entirely positive Covid tests and engagement announcements.’
National Holiday: It’s National Fruitcake Day! I’m all for snacking, but I’m over fruitcake, if I’m honest.
Your Monday Reading List:
Former FEI President Princess Haya is on the receiving end of the highest-ever divorce settlement awarded in a British court. The settlement — which could wind up at over half a billion pounds — will help to protect Princess Haya and her children from the ongoing threat posed by her soon-to-be ex-husband, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, who has previously abducted both children and tapped Princess Haya’s phones.
British eventer Imogen Murray and her top horse Ivar Gooden are preparing for their return to competition, after an injury picked up at Bicton CCI4*-L early in the summer looked as though it could rule the superstar gelding out of upper-level eventing permanently. Now, the lanky chap is back under saddle and making great progress, so expect to see him storming around the big Bs before you know it.
Further research has been done into the effects of leg protection on tendon health. The findings add further support to the idea that wrapping and booting increases heat, which in turn has a detrimental effect on tendons — so before you boot your horse up on autopilot, ask yourself if the day’s activities really require a full arsenal of protective gear.
Fancy a little cry this morning to break up all that snacking and television? Cookie McClung’s story of a fox, a fulfilled Christmas wish, and the magic of the hunt will melt even the most hardened of hearts today.
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Want to feel consistently outperformed by the under-10s? These kiddos will entertain, inspire…and maybe make you feel a bit old and wimpy. It’s fine
Morning Viewing:
This fascinating footage of police horses undergoing training in the ’60s has completely inspired me to try some new desensitisation tricks — and give long-reining a go for the first time.