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FEI Board of Governors Reflects on Global Dumpster Fire

Leave it to our sport’s governing bodies to hold all their Board Meetings within the same 48 hours, as though there aren’t 363 other unspoken-for days on the 2020 calendar. It’s like US Equestrian and the FEI just want me to have to start day-drinking extra-early to be in the correct psychological state to sort through approximately 5,000 pages of legalese by lunchtime so you people don’t have to.

But don’t worry, I’m just fine. Are YOU okay?

Hold my morning cocktail: Coming in hot, here’s a synopsis version of the latest from the virtual FEI board meeting. We’ve redacted all the info that you probably don’t care about (budget stuff, pony trophies, etc.) and pared down the stuff you do.

FEI Resolutions

FEI Medical Committee Chair Dr. Mark Hart, AKA “Equestrian Dr. Fauci,” reminds us to do our part. In case you’ve been living under a rock, nine million people have been infected and half a million people have died from COVID-19. Dr. Hart notes that cases are increasing in the US, Brazil and India, while other regions have flattened the curve or decreasing numbers. He laid it on National Federations to enforce smart, safe measures in our return to sport, and emphasised the importance of social distancing, face coverings and thorough hygiene. Hart = rhymes with Smart. Let’s listen to him. Read the FEI’s Return to Play Policy, effective for all FEI events held as of July 1, here. 😷

Half of 2020’s scheduled FEI competitions have been wiped out. Thus far in 2020 500 eventing competitions have been cancelled, 470 of them directly attributed to Covid-19. A grand total of 3,352 FEI competitions have been cancelled. This amounts to approximately 50% of the competitions scheduled for this year, with more cancellations expected in the future. That’s some soggy crackers. 🚫

An update on 2020 FEI Championships and MERs: MERs for categories and levels at all Eventing Championships taking place in 2021 will remain unchanged to address risk management policies. The Eventing Committee will continue to closely monitor the situation with Covid-19 related event cancellations and put forward any eventual necessary adjustments at a later date. All Championship allocation discussions and resolutions will be finalised today and announced on Friday. Stay tuned for a big announcement that could, at any moment, get burnt to the ground by a global pandemic!🔥

Global dumpster fire = on point. Onward and upward, shall we?

Links: [June 23 wrap-up] [June 24 Wrapup] [FEI Covid-19 Updates] [Important Taylor Swift Video]

Main decisions will be made available on Friday, June 26 here.

Go Eventing.

 

 

Who Jumped It Best? Stable View H.T. Training Edition

We’re celebrating the post-quarantine return of USEA recognized horse trials at Stable View Farm with a three-part “Who Jumped It Best?” series! On Monday we weighed in on the Intermediate division, on Tuesday we checked out Open Prelim, and today we’re shining the spotlight on Open Training.

The large division was won by Clayton Fredericks and FE Sweet Emotion, who were tied for 1st in dressage with Tik Maynard and Galileo then snatched the win when Tik picked up a fraction of a time penalty in show jumping. Lesley Grant-Law and Fernhill Finalist rounded out the top three. You can view final results here.

Christine Rhodes kindly sent us a cross country photo gallery of the division, and now we are putting them to a “Who Jumped It Best?” reader vote! Cast your vote in the poll at the bottom of this post for the combination who you think presents the best overall picture.

Clayton Fredericks and FE Sweet Emotion. Photo by Christine Rhodes.

Colin Gafney and Indigo D’Arville. Photo by Christine Rhodes.

Jane Jennings and Larano 5. Photo by Christine Rhodes.

Laura Douglas and Reg the Ledge. Photo by Christine Rhodes.

Tik Maynard and Privatised. Photo by Christine Rhodes.

For more information on Stable View Farm news and events, visit the website here.

Millbrook H.T. Needs Our Help (Update: Millbrook Is a GO!)

Will Faudree and Pfun, winners of the Advanced division at Millbrook H.T. in 2019. Photo by Abby Powell.

Yesterday we here at EN were studying what’s left of the 2020 eventing calendar, and in particular Advanced and FEI fixtures, plotting the course of our coverage with fingers crossed. Millbrook H.T., held in Amenia, New York at Coole Park Farm, was at the top of our list — it’s an important event and generally the first stop for many upper-level pairs ahead of their big fall events. Last year 52 horse and rider pairs contested Millbrook’s Advanced division, with Will Faudree and Pfun taking the win.

Scheduled for July 30 through Aug. 2, this year marks Millbrook’s 20th anniversary but its fate isn’t sealed in stone yet. In addition to monitoring national and local developments in relation to COVID-19, the event shared this update on Facebook yesterday:

“We are hoping to have a decision this week in regards to MHT 2020. One of the major factors is the financial support needed to run an event like MHT. As the event is now only six weeks away, we are hoping that those that are able to help, might consider helping us this year! Over the last few months, we felt it inappropriate to fundraise given the underlying financial uncertainty and the inability to know if the event could happen at all. In short, to make this happen, your support this year will be particularly crucial.

“As you might imagine, there are major challenges to overcome this year — regulatory, health, organizational, and financial — but we are hopeful that MHT will be one of the first horse trials of the year, one of the very few upper level events, and one of the first sporting events in our local community.”

For more information on how you can be a part of MHT 2020, please visit the Support Us page on Millbrook’s website. From individual and corporate sponsorships to fence sponsorships and any-amount donations, every bit helps.

In addition to the headline Advanced division, Beginner Novice through Intermediate horse trials divisions are offered. The event opens today, June 23, and closes July 14. See the USEA calendar listing here. We hope to see you out there!

Go Eventing.

Update 6/24: Millbrook shared on Facebook — “We are a GO this year!”

Who Jumped It Best? Stable View H.T. Prelim Edition

We’re celebrating the post-quarantine return of USEA recognized horse trials at Stable View Farm with a three-part “Who Jumped It Best?” series! Yesterday we weighed in on the Intermediate division, and today’s we are checking out Open Prelim.

The large division was won by Kate Brown and Victor Z,  who sailed from 2nd place after dressage into the top spot on the wings of their double-clear jumping phases to finish on a score of 26.1. Ariel Grald and Caballe finished second by a fraction of a point on 26.7, and Meghan O’Donoghue was third with Fashionable Man on 27.4. You can view final results here.

Sam Keats kindly sent us a cross country photo gallery of the division, and now we are putting them to a “Who Jumped It Best?” reader vote! Cast your vote in the poll at the bottom of this post for the combination who you think presents the best overall picture.

Laura VanderVliet and Lady Colina. Photo by Sam Keats.

Kendyl Tracy and Bobbie Burns. Photo by Sam Keats.

Kate Brown and Victor Z. Photo by Sam Keats.

Kaitlin Hartford and Bazillion Bells. Photo by Sam Keats.

Buck Davidson and Sorocaima. Photo by Sam Keats.

Adriene Singleton and Irish Rose. Photo by Sam Keats.

For more information on Stable View Farm news and events, visit the website here.

 

Halliday Sisters Cross Boston Marathon Finish Line on Horseback for #BuckOffCancer

They did it! #BostonMarathon #LetThemRun2021 #BAA #BuckOffCancer

Hoping the Boston Athletic Association will do the right thing and let them run next year.

Posted by Julia Grella on Monday, June 22, 2020

Sisters Jess and Tanya Halliday had been training for the Boston Marathon, originally scheduled for April and rescheduled to September before it was canceled completely. But Jess, an Area I/Aiken eventer who was diagnosed with Stage IV colon cancer in 2018, isn’t one to take “no” for answer. She was determined to cross the Marathon finish line one way or another, and in doing so make a statement to the Boston Athletic Association, which is not honoring charity runners’ bibs or fundraising efforts for future races. The pair trailered in a few blocks away to complete the final leg on horseback.

“On top if this all, my cancer has spread and on June 5 I had part of my lung removed,” Jess told EN. “I took matters into my own hands and today my sister and I were able to cross the finish line together with help from my horses.”

“I figure while I can’t run right now, my main career and my passion — my horses — could help me do it,” she told CBS Boston. “There’s a saying that horses give us the wings we lack and at this point I guess he’s going to give me running shoes, too.”

If you haven’t met the Halliday sisters, you probably should. Determination, strength, perseverance, caring, independent would just be the start to describe them. So many levels of adversity has been thrown their way and they once again found a way to get ahead of it. I hope that the BAA will consider other options to runners displaced by their decision for 2020. #boston #bostonstrong #bostonmarathon #sisters #run #letthemrun #2020 #buckofcancer #finishline #fucovid

Posted by Matt McHugh on Monday, June 22, 2020

Go Jess. Go Tanya. Go Eventing.

Who Jumped It Best? Stable View H.T. Intermediate Edition

Stable View Farm has been inspiring us all year with their bugger-on attitude in the face of all manner of disaster, from tornados to a largely canceled spring competition season. Hats off to Stable View owner Barry Olliff and his hard-working team for their positivity, community mindedness and forward-thinking innovation in the face of adversity. What a reminder that when in doubt, we must always keep kicking!

This weekend at Stable View was a celebratory one: the first USEA event post-quarantine. It was a busy weekend, with 270 rides across divisions ranging from Beginner Novice to Advanced — you can view final results here. Christine Rhodes kindly sent us a cross country photo gallery from the Training through Intermediate divisions, and as per tradition (ah, doesn’t tradition feel so good right now?) we are putting them to a “Who Jumped It Best?” reader vote!

The Open Intermediate division was won by Leslie Law and First Class on a final score of 27.2. Leslie also took second with Lady Chatterley, with Nilson Da Silva and Rock Phantom rounding out the top three.

Cast your vote in the poll at the bottom of this post for the combination who you think presents the best overall picture.

Liz Halliday-Sharp and Cooley Stormwater. Photo by Christine Rhodes.

Kyle Carter and Reddy or Not. Photo by Christine Rhodes.

Joe Meyer and Clip Clop. Photo by Christine Rhodes.

Buck Davidson and Cooley Candyman. Photo by Christine Rhodes.

Meaghan Marinovich Burdick and Riviera Lu. Photo by Christine Rhodes.

For more information on Stable View Farm news and events, visit the website here.

Jollybo Is ‘Preggo’ + A Warm Welcome to This Year’s Jumbo Grandfoals

Andrew Nicholson and Jumbo. Photo courtesy of Grafham Stud.

The legacy of deceased legendary sport horse stallion Jumbo, who sired more than 40 Advanced level eventers, lives on. He has had a number of “relations” hitting the ground this spring or in foal for 2021, some of them here in the United States.

Bred in Worcestershire, England, by Archie Smith-Maxwell, the Irish Draught (Skippy x Betty, by the Thoroughbred stallion Seven Bells) was purchased as a weanling by Carolyn Bates. He went on to have a very successful career as an event horse with Andrew Nicholson in the irons. Jumbo won the 7-year-old championship at Le Lions D’Angers in 1991 and finished 15th at Boekelo the following year, after which he retired from eventing.

Jumbo then competed in show jumping with William Funnell and dressage with Lizzie Murray before fully retiring from competing in 1997 to take up full-time duties in the breeding shed. He whipped-in with the Bicester Hunt in his later years.

His contribution as an eventing stallion is enormous — he sired numerous great horses, from three-time Burghley winner Avebury to Headley Britannia, the only mare in history to win Kentucky, Badminton and Burghley, to Padraig McCarthy’s Mr Chunky, who secured team and individual silver for Ireland at the 2018 WEG in Tryon. His best-known stateside progeny may be five-star horses Jumbo’s Jake (Jumbo x Lake Princess) and Jollybo (Jumbo x Polly Coldunnell, by Danzig Connection). Jumbo also sired numerous Grand Prix show jumpers and dressage horses.

Hawley Bennett-Awad and Jollybo at the 2018 World Equestrian Games in Tryon. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Speaking of which, Jollybo is expecting! With nothing really happening competition-wise this spring, Hawley hatched an idea: What about breeding her beloved five-star partner Jollybo via embryo transfer? The 16-year-old daughter of Jumbo, owned by Hawley and the Jollybo Syndicate, has twice finished in the top 20 at Kentucky and was Hawley’s 2018 WEG mount. Now, she may have a chance to produce Hawley’s next superstar.

Breeding is a new frontier for Hawley — Jollybo’s foal will be her first crack at the venture. “I just had no idea how to do it,” she says, giving credit to veterinarian Dr. Chris Huth — “the most patient human” — as well as fellow California five-star eventer Jen McFall of Dragonfire Sport Horses, whom she describes as “a genius when it comes to breeding.”

Jen pointed to Diarado, a Holsteiner stallion (Diamant de Semilly x Roxette I, by Corrado I) regarded as one of the the world’s best jumping sires, as a potential suitor. “I didn’t want to breed Jolly to just anybody,” Hawley says. “Diarado is honestly perfect. Jolly has the biggest heart and tries harder than anybody. If I could have a horse that was just a little bigger and a better show jumper that would be a dream come true.”

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EXCTING NEWS 💙💖💙💖 WIll it be a boy or a girl April 15th for Ms Jollybo!!??!! 🎉🎉🎉 A big thank you to Dr @chrisjhuth for being very patient with me as this was my first time doing this!! And, @dragonfirefarm for guiding me in the right direction on deciding who was the right baby daddy!! DF Farm are geniuses when matching mares with stallions. I just didn’t want to pick anyone. Proof is in their breeding program!! The baby daddy is Diarado😍😍 To say I am excited is an understatement!!!! Fingers crossed for an easy pregnancy for the surrogate mare!!! We had frozen semen, a first time mare, and one shot of making this work!!! #nailedit https://schockemoehle.com/eng/service-station-stud/breeding-stallions/diarado.html Thank you @gamalfawad for always supporting me in my crazy adventures!! #babyontheway

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Diarado stands at Paul Schockemöhle’s stud in Germany. With the pandemic, no frozen semen could be shipped from Europe, but they were able to locate a single dose stateside in Texas. Hawley was awed by the precision and timing of the breeding process — from the ovulation window to insemination to flushing for an embryo the size of a pinhead, all with the potential to be undermined by a botched delivery by FedEx — and they had a one-shot chance of making it work — and with a first-time surrogate mare. “It was all about if this mare took,” Hawley says. “It was a wait-and-see, and the surrogate mare ended up getting pregnant.”

The due date is April 15, 2021. Will it be a boy or a girl? (Here at EN, we’re on record as “any sex, so long as it’s healthy,” but of course we’re secretly rooting for a filly, in keeping with Hawley’s girl power track record!)

Top shelf breeding + top shelf training = anything is possible. “In eight years, maybe I can take [Jolly’s baby] to the Olympics in L.A.!” Hawley says.

Congrats are also in order for Nikki Merle-Smith of Merle-Smith Sporthorses and Cabin Society (Jumbo x Bluejean Society, by Imp Society), who recently put a filly on the ground by the young stallion Raven Sky xx, a 2016 Thoroughbred stallion (Dance With Ravens x Skyler’s Rainbow, by Exploit).

A coming-full-circle twist! The Cabin Society filly, named Sky Society, has been purchased by Gayle Davis for Daryl Kinney to produce. Daryl produced and competed Cabin Society, who was owned by Denny/Tamarack at that time.

Contendro I x Jumbo x Kings Lake colt at a week old. Photo by Pippa Woodall.

There are some very exciting developments abroad as well. British breeder Pippa Woodall has had tremendous success with the Jumbo line, including Jumbo’s Jake who twice completed Kentucky and had multiple four-star wins with James Alliston. She, as well as Carolyn Bates of Grafham Stud, who stood Jumbo, both have Contendro I foals on the ground. Pippa’s Jumbo mare also just had a Herald III foal.

“Mine is an embryo transfer from Contendro I out of my homebred full sister to Jumbo’s Jake,” Pippa says. “They are all Jumbo out of a lovely Thoroughbred mare called Lake Princess, who was by Kings Lake x Luthier. She had 13 foals all by Jumbo and all like peas in a pod! There is Simpson II, who went Advanced and is retired here at home, several who went Intermediate, and several Novices. I have several young Jumbos here still and will be putting a small multiple winning point-to-point mare in foal to him imminently.”

Carolyn Bates and Jumbo. Photo courtesy of Grafham Stud.

We look forward to following all of their careers. Rest in peace, Jumbo — your grandfoals are in good hands.

Go Eventing!

Many thanks to Steve Joyce, who contributed to this report.

Share Your Video Birthday Wishes for Kailey Giancola!

The eventing community continues to support Kailey Giancola, the 25-year-old eventer who suffered a severe brain stem injury on Dec. 16, with our whole hearts. Kailey has been in rehabilitation since mid-January, bravely fighting each and every day to strengthen herself physically and mentally — a battle made all the more difficult, and lonely, by quarantine during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Wednesday, June 17, is Kailey’s 26th birthday — let’s rally around her and let her know that we’re still cheering her on. Please send a video message to Laura Welsh ([email protected]) to be shared with Kailey tomorrow. Happy birthday, Kailey! Keep kicking. We know you will.

Kailey Giancola and Saturday Night Clive in the Virginia Horse Trials International CCI2*-L in October 2019, where they finished 11th. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

A message from Laura:

 

Hey everybody,

I want to begin by reiterating absolute appreciation for the outpouring of support for Kailey Giancola following her tragic fall in December that resulted in a severe traumatic brain injury and her subsequent coma.

Today marks six months since Kailey’s accident.

Tomorrow is Kailey’s 26th birthday.

Kailey is currently still residing at the Shepherd Center in Atlanta, Georgia, a rehabilitation hospital specialized in traumatic brain and spinal cord injuries.

It would be the most amazing gesture if each and every one of you that feel moved to action could make a video message that she could watch tomorrow on her birthday to know she has an entire world of support behind her.

COVID has created unprecedented difficulties in all of our lives, and for Kailey it meant a long period of time where she was alone without even family allowed inside the hospital. Thank goodness she now has her mother living in the hospital by her bedside again, but she is not allowed any other visitors because of the associated risks. This has undoubtedly been a very lonely time.

Kailey’s journey has been a long and arduous uphill climb, but in true Kailey fashion she has continued to defy the odds and make progress towards recovery.

Kailey has been able to answer yes and no questions with red and green buttons and also with a yes/no protocol the therapists have established, she has demonstrated functional object use, and she has moved both sides of her body on command among many other amazing feats — including on one occasion the most triumphant thumbs up I have ever witnessed.

Kailey is here.

Her fight continues.

Hope is ever present.

Please let Kailey know we are all here cheering for her recovery.

Please send videos to my inbox and I will make sure that Kailey’s mother receives them so that she can spend her entire birthday tomorrow wrapped in love.

Let’s make sure Kailey knows she is not alone.

With much gratitude 🙏

#prayersup
#RideForKailey

Carolina Horse Park’s War Horse Event Series Steps Up to the Plate With Recognized Divisions

Usually a schooling series, in the wake of so many canceled 2020 events Carolina Horse Park’s popular War Horse Event Series (WHES) applied for USEA licensure to offer more opportunities for riders to compete at recognized competitions. New USEA divisions, offered at Beginner Novice/Novice/Training/Modified/Prelim levels, provide riders additional opportunities to gain qualifying scores for the AEC, USEA/USEF year-end awards and WHES November Championship qualification points.

WHES, whose title sponsor is Southern Pines Equine Associates, is continuing to offer its signature schooling show opportunities alongside the USEA recognized divisions, including a schooling horse trials (Maiden – Prelim), dressage ride-a-test (any level) and combined tests (Maiden – Advanced).

The first WHES in the 2020 series takes place this weekend in Raeford, North Carolina. Saturday is earmarked as schooling day; open to anyone, show jumping courses will be set in the Overly and Meadow Arenas that are different from that of Sunday’s competition. Likewise, cross Country schooling will allow access to water complex and other jumps but not in the same sequence as the competition. What an awesome opportunity to knock off the rust and build confidence.

The recognized competition follows on Sunday. Five dressage arenas will come to life at 7:30 a.m., with judges Sue Smithson (r/Eventing), Jan Jacobson (R-Dressage), Janie Malone (R-Dressage), Heather Hamilton Boyer (L) and Kris Hamilton (L) officiating. Riders will head off to tackle show jumping and cross country from there. If you’re a fan of one-day events, 2020 is your year!

Looking over the entry list, it looks like a lot of riders are looking to WHEAS to get back in the show ring. The first rider up the centerline today is local Will Faudree with Pfun, riding the 5*B test, followed by Ariel Grald with Leamore Master Plan, who was minted a five-star horse last year with 12th and 10th place finishes at Kentucky and Burghley respectively — they’re doing the Advanced combined test. Next in for an Intermediate combined test we’ve got Canadian team rider Dana Cooke with her 2019 Pan Am Games mount FE Mississippi, among several more we’d be excited to watch!

Sitting this weekend’s WHES out? The series continues through this summer:

Upcoming dates with links to USEA calendar listings include:

You can find info about the accompanying schooling horse trials, etc. at the Carolina Horse Park website. There’s plenty more on the Park’s calendar for this summer, too, including Dressage at the Park I & II at the end of June.

Helpful links for this weekend’s WHES Show:

Welcome back, everyone. Best of luck to all, and have fun! Go Eventing.

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Let’s go schooling!!!!!

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Happy to be back at it 🙂

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What’s Happening This Summer? Your Weekly Guide to Clinics, Shows & More [Updated 6/5]

Featured Event of the Week: The Show Must Go On Socially Distanced Jumper Show, June 1-7 in Sutton, MA. More info here.

“What’s Happening This Summer,” presented in partnership with Strider (formerly Event Clinics), is your complete guide to clinics, schooling shows and other riding and educational opportunities.

Want your activity listed? Register it with Strider, a mobile friendly, user-controlled services platform that connects organizers with riders. It’s easy and free to post your listing — click here to get started.

Here is what’s happening in your USEA Area this summer.

Location Quick Links: Area I | Area II | Area III | Area IV | Area V | Area VIArea VII | Area VIII | Area IX | Area X

Area I

Area II

Area III

Area IV

Area V

Area VI

Area VII

Area VIII

Area IX

Area X

Go Eventing.

A Pane of Glass: The Problem of Diversity in Equestrian Sport, Part I

Photo by Dr. Shekina Moore.

It’s a damp, slate-skied October day at Tryon International Equestrian Center. I’m sitting at a table with six other panelists, hailing from around the world, for the 2019 Tom Bass Seminar for Diversity in Equestrian Sport. We’re here to discuss an issue that has long troubled me, and many other otherwise die-hard devotees of our sport: its overwhelming whiteness.

I look out the window into the big jumper ring, flanked by Adirondack style buildings and a jumbotron. There’s a sushi restaurant and a steakhouse across the way, and a promenade of boutiques with designer sunglasses and custom shadbellies in their display windows. Glossy, six-figure horses canter into the arena, one after the next, to have a crack at the labyrinth of colored poles.

Seminar attendees file into the small wood-paneled room. A few curious locals have shown up; others have traveled great distances to be a part of this discussion. It’s an unprecedented moment: Incredulously, it’s the first time an industry-wide representation of experts have sat down together, in one room, to address diversity — or rather, the lack thereof — head-on. And it’s long overdue.

I’m no expert, but I do have a platform and a voice that isn’t afraid to ask hard questions. I’m one of few journalists who have dared poke a stick at the subject of diversity, which is the low-bar reasoning behind my invitation here today. As one of three non-black panelists, I can’t speak to the experience of being the minority in a majority white sport. But what I can do is listen. I can show up.

The other panelists include moderator Melvin H. Cox, Managing Director of SportsQuest International, LLC and a Lecturer at the University of California, Santa Cruz; Julian Hyde, a show jumper representing the Equestrian Federation of JamaicaStanford Moore, Publisher of Black Reins MagazineJulian Seaman, Media Director of the Badminton Horse Trials; and Hillary Tucker, Equine Services Specialist & Territory Sales Manager at McCauley Brothers, an Alltech company. Together, our varying experiences cover a lot of ground. One thing we all have in common, Julian Seaman notes, is that none of us were born into the horse world. We charted our own courses to where we stand today, upstream or downstream, and more likely a mixture of both.

After some polite introductions, we dive right into heated discussion about the “problem” — which is more like an everlasting gobstopper of layers upon layers of problems, plural. (I dig into a few of them here: “Where Is the Diversity in Eventing?“)

On the surface there is lack of access, lack of inclusiveness, lack of resources, lack of representation, lack of interest. Underpinning that are vestigial socio-economic barriers, i.e. not everyone is in a financial position to invest in the training, equipment and competition costs required to participate, much less excel, in certain sports — particularly equipment sports like archery, canoe/kayak, cycling, rowing, modern pentathlon, sailing, shooting and triathlon (which are, not surprisingly, the least diverse Olympic sports). And yet another frustratingly impenetrable layer below is rooted in a deeper structural racism of who has access to what, entrenched in years<decades<centuries of racial inequality.

It’s a lot to unravel, much less dismantle. I understand systemic racism logically, but it’s a whole different thing to come eye to eye with it, in person. Enter David Staley, who arrives at the seminar with a crew of black youth.

David raises his hand between panel questions and stands up, his frame tall, his brow furrowed. “I was afraid to speak, because I was afraid I would get emotional,” he begins. He says he is from the non-profit organization Unity in the Community of the Foothills, located right down the road from TIEC, dedicated to a mission statement of “empowering people to recognize their potential and use the power that exists within each of them to reach their potential.”

Their summer camp has 45 to 50 kids, he says, nodding toward those he’s brought along today: “This one lives not even a mile from here. This one lives two miles from here. This one, two miles. We’ve had the opening of our summer camp right over there for the past three years.”

Outside the window, it looks like rain. A snow-white horse is gliding around the course, its rider a picture of singular focus, one jump to the next. They’ll leave the ring, and the rider will hand his mount off to a groom, who statistically speaking is of Hispanic or Latinx ethnicity. And then another horse will canter into the ring, take its turn, and get handed off to a groom. The cycle continues.

“I have tried to get these kids access to a horse, up close and personal. I could not do that until I met Mr. Cox,” David continues. “I didn’t know how to … there was a missing link to the equestrian world, even though we were close. You’ve heard the phrase, so close yet so far away. That’s what we’re dealing with.”

So close yet so far away. I glance out the window again. Another horse, another rider. Depending on your perspective, a pane of glass can feel shatterable or as wide and gaping as an ocean.

TIEC, to its credit, has taken community involvement seriously. The venue’s popular Saturday Night Lights series is free and open to the public, attracting a diverse crowd of spectators during its May-October season. There are carousel rides, fire twirlers, acrobats, magicians, mechanical bull riding, sand-castle building and craft beer, all set against the backdrop of a Grand Prix show jumping competition. It doesn’t get an underserved black kid on a horse, or even anywhere near a horse, but it’s a start. As I said, the bar is low.

Storms are on their way in, so tonight’s Grand Prix has been bumped up to the afternoon. Outside, the jump crew is hurriedly raising fences to dizzying heights. Riders walk their courses, counting strides and memorizing lines, focused on the daunting test ahead. They aren’t paying attention to the discussion in this wood-paneled room. Maybe they don’t realize it exists. Maybe they don’t think it concerns them. After all, when it comes to matters like racial inequality, it’s easier — certainly, more comfortable — to just stay in your lane. Or maybe they just don’t care.

There are hundreds of riders on the TIEC grounds this weekend, taking their turns in the ring. Despite being well publicized, and despite being the first meeting of its kind in our sport’s history, and despite being an issue upon which the fate of our sport as an Olympic discipline arguably hinges, not one competing rider is in attendance for the 2019 Tom Bass Seminar.

David himself jokes that he had to “drag” some of his Unity kids to the seminar. Not all of them are into horses. Some are. Some might be, but they don’t know it yet because they haven’t ever been in the physical presence of a horse before. He’s “dragging them” to two more meetings out in the community today. “We made an effort to get these kids out here so they could, and so I could, hear it. I don’t know if they took it in and they heard it, but at least they were here.”

At least they were here.

“We need a dialogue,” David says. “I think you need to start right here, and work your way out.”

You can listen to a complete recording of the 2019 Tom Bass Seminar for Diversity in Equestrian Sport here

 

What’s Still Standing on the June USEA Event Calendar? (And Should You Enter?) [Updated 6/7]

Stable View Summer H.T. in Aiken, SC, is offering a full refund in the event of competition cancellation. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

With a solid USEF Action Plan in place and USEF/USEA competition bans lifting at the end of the month, several events scheduled or rescheduled for June are gearing up to run — some more tentatively than others, due to the restrictions of their individual states. With their opening dates in the rear view and some closing dates fast approaching, many eventers are left wondering whether to send their entries in now or sit tight until the last possible moment, or even whether to enter at all.

Competition organizers, of course, want us to get those entries in as soon as possible so that they can move forward with preparations. Competitors, on the other hand, want some assurance that they’re not going to be out an entry fee if the event gets canceled. Event cancellation refund policies vary from event to event, ranging from a very generous full refund (Stable View Summer H.T.) to no refund at all (most events). Which is understandable, as competitions have to put a lot of money forward on the front end that they would not be able to recoup, but not confidence boosting for potential competitors.

We’ve listed out a current (as of May 20) schedule of the 16 USEA events in June along with opening/closing dates and refund policies. Please refer to the USEA Competitions Calendar, as well as the individual events’ websites and social media pages, for updates — as we all know too well, anything can change at any moment.

Some events have used the calendar to share their own Covid-19 protocols (in addition to the USEF’s) for running a safe competition, which also goes a long way toward reassuring competitors, many of whom are rightly wary. Many have shifted to a one-day format (Beginner Novice and Novice, for instance, might run all three phases on Saturday, followed by Training and Prelim on Sunday). Others have eliminated food and tack vendors, or come up with creative strategies — Golden Spike H.T., for instance, has enlisted local Pony Club volunteers to act as “social distance officers.” And all required to be compliant with the USEF Action Plan.

If you HAVE already submitted an entry: Please note that pending changes to the USEF Entry Agreement and Waiver and Release form will require that any signature page submitted after April 30th, 2020 be re-signed prior to the competition. Esign has been turned off in Xentry. Entrants shall be alerted when the new forms are in place for re-signing through Xentry.

To enter or not to enter … that’s a question that you’ll have to answer for yourself. And when you do submit that first entry back, do so conscientiously, taking into consideration your horse’s preparation and fitness levels — there’s no shame in dropping down a level until you’re back in the groove. (USEF President Max Corcoran shared some pearls of wisdom on this topic in last week’s “A Safe Return to Competition” USEF/USEA joint webinar.) Most importantly: Once we do get out there, let’s all work together to keep everyone safe!

AREA I

June 27 – 28: GMHA June H.T. (VT)

  • Opens May 12
  • Closes June 9
  • Divisions: BN, N, T, P
  • Event cancellation refund policy: No refund
  • Update 6/3: Canceled

AREA II

June 6-7: The Middleburg H.T. (VA)

  • Opens Apr 21
  • Closes May 19
  • Divisions: BN, N, T, P
  • Notes: Will announce decision about whether to run on Friday, May 22, pending word from the Virginia governor
  • Event cancellation refund policy:  Accepting entries but not collecting payment unless the event runs
  • Update 5/22: Canceled

June 6: Plantation Field H.T. (PA)

  • Opens Apr 21
  • Closes May 19
  • Divisions: BN, N, T, P, I
  • Event cancellation refund policy: No refund

June 13 – 14: Waredaca H.T. (MD)

  • Opens Apr 28
  • Closes May 26
  • Divisions: BN, N, T, M, P, I

Notes: rescheduled from original date. 6/7: “Having gotten the official approval from the Montgomery County Health Officer just this morning, we are a GO!! Waredaca is running a one day on June 13, levels BN thru Preliminary. Current entries received are ALL ACCEPTED.  If you still wish to enter, please contact Secretary Cindy directly at [email protected]  Payment is to be completed by END OF DAY SUNDAY; no one will be scheduled if not complete and PAPERLESS– all of the USEF and USEA required entry paperwork.   Payment can be made by Xentry, event entries or PayPal  [email protected] (PLEASE USE FRIENDS AND FAMILY OPTION) Also required from everyone planning to be on the property Saturday,–whoever else is coming with you–  a completed and ELECTRONICALLY FILED Waredaca Waiver of Liability.”

  • Event cancellation refund policy: No refund

June 13-14: War Horse Event Series June H.T.

  • Opens May 19
  • Closes June 6
  • Divisions: BN, N, T, M, P
  • Notes: Usually a schooling series, WHES applied for USEA licensure to offer more opportunities for riders to compete at recognized competitions (schooling horse trial, dressage and CT divisions are also available)
  • Event cancellation refund policy: Not specified

June 19-21: Surefire Farm H.T. (VA)

  • Opens May 5
  • Closes June 2
  • Divisions: YEH-4, YEH-5, BN, N, T, P, I
  • Event cancellation refund policy: No refund

June 27 – 28: Loudoun Hunt Pony Club Summer H.T. (VA)

  • Opens May 12
  • Closes June 9
  • Divisions: BN, N, T, P, I
  • Notes: The event will announce on or before June 10 if it will run.
  • Event cancellation refund policy: Accepting entries with no payment

June 27 – 28: Horse Park of New Jersey H.T. I (NJ)

  • Opens May 12
  • Closes June 9
  • Divisions: BN, N, T, P, I, A
  • Notes: Status of event pending Covid-19 restrictions in New Jersey. A final decision will be announced on June 5. Entries are being accepted through EventEntries only; no payment is required until June 5.
  • Event cancellation refund policy: Stabling only

AREA III

June 6 – 7: River Glen June H.T. (TN)

  • Opens Apr 21
  • Closes May 19
  • Divisions: Starter, BN, N, TN, T, PT, P, IP, I
  • Event cancellation refund policy: No refund

June 13 – 14: Full Gallop Farm June H.T. (SC)

  • Opens Apr 28
  • Closes May 26
  • Divisions: NEH, Starter, YEH-4, YEH-5, BN, N, TN, T, PT, P, IP
  • Event cancellation refund policy: No refund. Free cross-country school in future.

June 19 – 21: Stable View Summer H.T.

  • Opens May 5
  • Closes June 2
  • Divisions: BN, N, T, M, P, I, A
  • Notes: View Stable View Farm’s social distancing guidelines here
  • Event cancellation refund policy: Full refund

June 27 – 28: Chattahoochee Hills H.T. (GA)

  • Opens May 12
  • Closes June 9
  • Divisions: BN, N, T, M, P, I
  • Event cancellation refund policy: partial refund
  • Event cancellation refund policy: No refund

AREA IV

June 13: Silverwood Farm Spring H.T. (WI)

  • Opens Apr 28
  • Closes May 26
  • Divisions: Starter, BN, N, T, PT
  • Event cancellation refund policy: No refund

AREA V

June 6: Feather Creek Farm H.T. (OK)

  • Opens Apr 21
  • Closes May 19 (accepting post-entries through Monday, June 1, with no late fee)
  • Divisions: Intro, Starter, BN, N, T, P
  • Notes: The horse trials will run over-one day; haul-in fees are waived.
  • Event cancellation refund policy: No refund

June 20 – 21: Texas Rose Horse Park H.T. (TX)

  • Opens May 5
  • Closes June 2
  • Divisions: FEH-2, FEH-3, FEH-4, FEH-YEAR, NEH, Intro, YEH-4, YEH-5, BN, N, T, PT, P, IP, I
  • Notes: rescheduled from original date
  • Event cancellation refund policy: No refund

AREA VI

No events in June

AREA VII

No events in June

AREA VIII

June 27 – 28: Cobblestone Farms H.T. I (MI)

  • Opens May 12
  • Closes June 9
  • Divisions: Starter, BN, N, T, P
  • Notes: Pending status of Covid-19 restrictions
  • Event cancellation refund policy: No refund

AREA IX

June 13 – 14: Golden Spike H.T. (UT)

  • Opens Apr 28
  • Closes May 26
  • Divisions: Intro, BN, N, T, PT, P
  • Event cancellation refund policy: No refund

AREA X

No events in June

Important Links:

Inaugural Maryland 5 Star at Fair Hill Postponed to 2021

We’ll be sitting tight another year for the inaugural Maryland 5 Star at Fair Hill, as the event has been postponed to 2021. The Fair Hill Organizing Committee (FHOC), an affiliate of the Sport and Entertainment Corporation of Maryland (The Sport Corp.), announced this morning that health and safety factors, in addition to other challenges resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic, led to a final decision to postpone the competition which was originally scheduled for Oct. 15-18, 2020.

Maryland has been hard-hit by the pandemic, ranking #10 in the country by caseload despite its relatively small size. Event organizers and partners are now focused on producing a maiden event next year that will welcome a field of international competitors, as well as spectators traveling to the event from around the world.

A statement from the event explains their decision-making process:

“The FHOC made their decision after a thorough consultation with the Maryland 5 Star at Fair Hill planning committee, its Competition Management Partner, Fair Hill International (FHI), as well as other key constituents including the State of Maryland and Cecil County. The consensus was made that not being able to guarantee the health and safety of everyone and producing the event in a limited capacity was not favorable for the Maryland 5 Star at Fair Hill’s inaugural year.

“‘It was a very difficult decision and we are very disappointed for the competitors, fans and eventing community,’ said FHOC President Jeff Newman. ‘The Fair Hill Organizing Committee was created and tasked to plan and produce the inaugural Maryland 5 Star at Fair Hill as a world-class, international sporting event that includes an abundance of fan offerings drawing spectators from around the world to Cecil County and surrounding region.’

“Newman added, ‘From the start of the pandemic until now, like many sports and entertainment properties, we’ve fully vetted out different scenarios ranging from a scaled back event with some fans, a competition-only event without spectators, or postponing the event to 2021. Ultimately, we felt that the uncertainties and risks that will remain throughout the year are too great to overcome. As a result, with the support of our sponsors and key constituents, postponing the inaugural event to 2021 best enables us to achieve our original goals and set the foundation for a tradition that will continue for many years.'”

We know that Jeff and his team have turned every possible option inside out, looking for a way to make a go of it, and postponement is clearly the only feasible option for the best interest of health and safety for riders, officials, volunteers, spectators and the community at large. Thank you, Maryland 5 Star at Fair Hill, for all your hard work and we look forward to supporting you 100% in 2021!

The FEI, USEF and USEA have expressed their support of the decision and confirmed new dates for the event: Oct. 14-17, 2021. 

US Equestrian CEO Bill Moroney commented, “We recognize the difficulty of the decision to cancel the 2020 Maryland 5 Star at Fair Hill considering the excitement and positive momentum building towards the inaugural event in October. We look forward to working with the Organizing Committee to support a successful event in 2021. The 2020 USEF CCI3*-L National Championship will be reallocated to a new venue and details will be announced in the coming weeks.” The reallocation of the YEH Championships will also be announced in coming weeks.

USEA CEO Rob Burk applauded Fair Hill’s developments, including a newly designed Special Event Zone featuring a Ian Stark-designed cross country course as well as new dressage and show jumping areas constructed in the infield of the historic turf track. “Earlier this year I was lucky to see many of the improvements made to the park and all of those involved should be incredibly proud of the direction that the facility is headed,” Rob said. “This will be an event we can all be proud of that will stand amongst the best in the world. We have also been pleased with the work that the organizing committee has done with the Young Event Horse East Coast Championships and we can’t wait to see their continued growth and improvement at Fair Hill in 2021.”

Maryland 5 Star’s partners and sponsors have been notified about the postponement, and we thank them along with the state of Maryland, Cecil County and Fair Hill International (FHI) for their continued support.

“There are too many challenges to overcome this year related to the pandemic,” said FHI President Trish Gilbert. “With this decision, we can move forward with the planning for 2021 and work together to create the best event possible, building upon the legacy FHI has established at Fair Hill over the last few decades.”

Mike Gill and Michael Hankin will remain as the Maryland 5 Star at Fair Hill’s Co-Chairs. “Ultimately, postponing the event to 2021 was the right move for the first year because health and safety must come first,” they said. “Our goal from the start was to showcase Maryland Pride to attending fans from around the world while also delivering a top-class competition for the riders and horses. However, due to the incredible challenges and uncertainty resulting from the pandemic, that’s just not possible this year. We look forward to producing an incredible event in 2021 and providing an economic stimulus.”

With Maryland off the table, Pau (Oct. 21–25 in France) is the only five-star event left standing for this year. On Tuesday, Pau expressed its intent to run. Kentucky, Badminton, Luhmühlen, Burghley and Adelaide have all been canceled due to the pandemic.

FHOC President Jeff Newman generously took the time to speak to EN about the postponement. Knowing that, for many elite U.S. eventers Maryland was their brightest hope for contesting a five-star in 2020, we asked him to share a message to those riders.

His empathy for the athletes is clear, and a reason that the event took the time to thoroughly vet every possible alternative. Ultimately, the decision came down to safety, but when our sport is back up and running in earnest no doubt the excitement levels will be through the roof — from the athletes to the fans. “I think that every five-star next year is going to come back strong,” Jeff said. “All the events are going to be incredible, and that’s something to look forward to.”

As for his team, who have been working so tirelessly, and the future of the Maryland 5 Star: “This gives a clear direction of where we’re heading.” Like eventers themselves, the Maryland 5 Star at Fair Hill has a focus and a goal, and they want to come out swinging at the highest level possible. “We’re all excited about what 2021 can provide with an ample runway. We’re all excited in the sport, and we’re also excited to attract the casual sports fan. If we can attract more fans who are not the typical eventing fans, that’s good for everybody.”

Go Eventing, soon!

[The Fair Hill Organizing Committee Postpones Inaugural Maryland 5 Star at Fair Hill Due to COVID-19]

The Maryland 5 Star at Fair Hill: Website, FacebookTwitterInstagram

 

 

 

GMHA June H.T. Is Canceled

Alexander Conrad and Malibu Preacher at GMHA H.T. in May 2019. Photo by Joan Davis/Flatlandsfoto.

The sole June event left standing on the Area I USEA calendar, GMHA June H.T. (scheduled for June 27-28 in South Woodstock, VT), has been canceled. The event was postponed from its original date of May 30-31.

Vermont’s stay-at-home order expired on May 15; however, other restrictions on out-of-state visitation and a prohibition of sporting events rule out the possibility of hosting an event.

“With so many GMHA competitors coming from out of state, even if competitions were allowed, it wouldn’t work,” says Green Mountain Horse Association (GMHA) Executive Director Bruce Perry. “For example, with our June Horse Trials, out of the 180 entries received only 29 would be able to compete.”

“We waited as long as we could before canceling, but we could not see our way through to hold these competitions successfully under the current restrictions,” he says.

GMHA issued the following statement this afternoon:

Hi everybody,

We miss you.

We wish we could greet you and your horses to South Woodstock.

But we can’t, at least not yet.

The State of Vermont continues to prohibit organized competitive sporting events. Furthermore, even for educational events, out of state visitors would need to quarantine in Vermont for 14 days. Access to lodging is effectively prohibited to out of state visitors until the quarantine period expires. These restrictions will continue until the “regional benchmarks” improve.

So, at a minimum, we’ll have to cancel the Spring Hunter Jumper Show (June 20-21) and the June Horse Trials (June 27-28).

We are working on alternatives to make GMHA accessible to our community as we go forward: educational events and a new configuration of Members Days that will work with State rules and social distancing guidance (we hope to include additional offerings and access to non-members). More details to come shortly.

As far as July and the rest of the summer, we have chosen to see what is possible rather than decide to cancel at this point. We will take entries, but not money, for July competitions so we can get a straw poll for interest. We are cancelling Junior Horsemanship Camp in August, there really is no way to make that work with social distancing, even if travel prohibitions loosen up.

We would love to hear from you. If you have ideas, send them our way. We have explored video with “GMHA Comes To You!” virtual learning and will expand that next winter, we’d love your input for smaller scale educational opportunities that would be workable during the COVID pandemic.

You are the heart of GMHA, and we hope that you keep us in mind if you can’t be here. Come visit when you can. Of course, you can imagine that this is tremendously challenging financially, and we would deeply appreciate if you would consider donating, maybe a portion of your entry fees, some of what you might have spent on gas coming up here … all of it will go to keeping our wonderful staff here for you when we finally can greet you here in person.

We’ll see you on the other side, GMHA. Learn more about GMHA here, and please consider making a donation here.

 

2020 USEA Annual Meeting & Convention Postponed to 2021

Photo courtesy of the Hyatt Regency Albuquerque Hotel.

The USEA Board has voted to postponed the USEA Annual Meeting & Convention, scheduled for Dec. 10-13 in Albuquerque, New Mexico, to 2021. Dangit, coronavirus! Guess I’ll have to wait another year to drink prickly pear margaritas with buddies on EN’s tab geek out about our sport with fellow eventing enthusiasts via seminars, committee meetings and open forums.

From the USEA:

 

“The USEA Board of Governors decided, after much deliberation and a survey of the membership, that it would be in our members’ best interest to postpone the 2020 Annual Meeting & Convention,” said Jennifer Hardwick, Senior Director of Membership Services & Meeting Planner. “This decision was not made lightly, but based on all that is happening in our world and with the safety of our members a top priority, it was the best decision for us to postpone this year’s convention.”

“The USEA staff and Board of Governors are exploring all possible options for hosting the 2020 USEA Annual Meeting & Convention. The USEA By-Laws state that the Annual Meeting of Members must be held each year at the conclusion of the competition season, either at the USEA office or elsewhere in the country. The Board will be examining a number of possible solutions and select a course of action that will suit the greatest possible number of our members.

“One of the most anticipated parts of the USEA Annual Meeting & Convention each year is the Year End Awards Ceremony, where the eventing community comes together to celebrate the hard work and accomplishments of its members. While the Year End Awards Ceremony will not take place in its traditional format this year, the USEA still intends to devise a special way to honor the year end award winners at the conclusion of the 2020 competition season. At this time, the USEA has not made any decisions to adjust the way in which leaderboard points are tabulated for 2020.

““’Our members’ safety is of the utmost importance, and I could not wholeheartedly say, ‘Come to Albuquerque and enjoy the sights!’ while this is looming over all our heads,” Hardwick stated. “However wonderful it would be to see each of you, we do not want to put anyone in harm’s way.'”

Thanks for Click here to learn more about the USEA Annual Meeting & Convention.

[2020 USEA Annual Meeting & Convention Postponed]

Three USEA Events Are Set to Run This Weekend: Let’s Be Smart About It, M’kay?

Plantation Field H.T. is fielding over 260 USEA H.T. and 190 Starter H.T. entries this weekend. Photo courtesy of AK Dragoo Photo.

Three USEA recognized horse trials are revving their engines to run this weekend following a months’ long suspension of events due to coronavirus: Plantation Field H.T. in Unionville, PA; Feather Creek H.T. in Norman, Oklahoma; and River Glen H.T. in New Market, Tennessee.

It might be easy, when you’re back in your happy place with the sun shining and the birds singing and the startbox beckoning, to revert to a business-as-usual mindset. It’s easy to forget, when you are surrounded by the familiar, that the out-of-body experience of the past three months even happened. But the reality is: We’re still living in a fragile moment, and you’ve got more responsibility than ever to yourself, to your community and to your horse.

As several hundred horses and riders countdown to events this weekend and the weekends following, let’s take the time for a reality check.

Reality Check #1: HEALTH

We’re just now poking our heads out from a global pandemic that has claimed 106,000 American lives and has sickened 1.8 million Americans, and four times that globally. Chester County, site of Plantation Field, has had 284 coronavirus deaths. Cleveland County, site of Feather Creek, ranks #3 out of 77 counties in Oklahoma for coronavirus caseload. Jefferson County, home of River Glen, is as out-in-the-sticks as it gets but has still seen dozens of cases. So don’t think that just because you’re at an event you aren’t capable of contracting or spreading the virus, or taking it home with you to the people you love. We may have flattened the curve but we’re far from being out of the woods.

We’ve got to police ourselves here. All USEA events are require to adhere to the USEF COVID-19 Action Plan, which can be found in the USEF COVID-19 toolkit. If an event isn’t complying with protocol, report it. If the people around you aren’t complying with protocol, report it. You can view Plantation Field’s protocol here and Feather Creek’s protocol here. I’ll be out at my local event River Glen this weekend, taking notes (in a mask, from a safe distance), and I’ll be reporting back to you on Monday morning about what I saw. Please don’t let me down.

It’s great that our sport is back up and running, but coronavirus took us down once and it can take us down again, all the way back to square one, if we don’t all do our part and stay vigilant.

Reality Check #2: SAFETY

Way back before a deadly novel virus and nationwide protests were consuming our bandwidth, the event world was facing another crisis: safety. On Feb. 29, at one of the last events before our show season went dark, Katharine Morel died in a rotational fall at Rocking Horse Winter III H.T. She was the fifth rider in eight months we lost to cross-country related accidents in North America alone.

I’m done writing obituaries.

The next time you head for the startbox, be it this weekend or a month from now or three months from now, remember that this is your horse’s first outing in some time. Take into account his physical and mental readiness, and yours as well. Nobody expects you to go for broke out there. Don’t gallop faster than your angels can fly, as a coach once told me. Your life is worth much more than a blue ribbon, and trust me: in a week or two from now, nobody will even remember who won Plantation Field, or Feather Creek, or River Glen June H.T.

If your horse doesn’t feel 100% in the warm-up, call it a day. If you get out on course and feel rusty, call it a day. If you’re entering an event and it’s been a hot minute, bump down a level. This checklist from the USEA is a great tool for self-evaluation. Can you tick ALL the boxes?

Reality Check #3: GRATITUDE

If anything, I hope the trials we have faced over the past three months — the trials we CONTINUE to face — have served as a reminder of just how fortunate we are: for our health, for our family’s health, for our horses, for the opportunity to be part of a sport and a community that welcomes us with open arms. What a privilege, which we too often take for granted. Whether you are eventing or not this weekend, take a quiet moment to let that sink in.

Feel gratitude, and express it. Thank your event organizer for going out of their way to create a space for you to do the thing you love, despite all the hurdles and uncertainty. Thank every volunteer you see — they are there by choice, and calculated risk. (Bonnie Kibbie, Chair of the USEA Volunteer Committee, suggests PATIENCE as Reality Check#4: “Please bear with event officials, volunteers, and organizers as they navigate a change to pretty much every aspect of how events are run. Scores will be slower to post because we are trying to limit passing papers around.”)

Thank your barn help, your trainer, and the family and friends who have anchored you through these tough times. And social distancing be damned, go give that horse of yours a big hug.

 

Now, more than ever, Go Eventing.

 

Plantation Field H.T. [Website] [USEA H.T. Entry Status] [Starter H.T. Entry Status] [USEA H.T. Schedule] [Starter H.T. Schedule] [Ride Times]

River Glen Summer H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times]

Feather Creek H.T. [Website] [Entry Status]

 

2020 MARS Essex Horse Trials Is Canceled

Ryan Wood and Ruby, winners of the $20,000 Preliminary division at the 2018 Mars Essex Horse Trials. Photo by i{mpack}t studio courtesy of Mars Essex Horse Trials.

The coronavirus outbreak has forced the cancellation of this year’s MARS Essex Horse Trials Country Weekend.

Scheduled for July 18-19 at historic Moorland Farm in Far Hills, New Jersey, the MARS Essex Horse Trials features Beginner Novice through Advanced divisions. Benefiting the Greater Newark LifeCamp in Pottersville, New Jersey, the event offers a variety of family friendly activities including a classic car show, farm stand, demonstrations, vendors and the Willow school Children’s Activity Center.

“This is disappointing for all of us” said Ralph Jones, President of the MARS Essex Horse Trials. “We considered various ways where we might be able to proceed but none with which we felt completely comfortable. In the end, nothing is more important than the safety and wellbeing of our 300 competitors, 182 volunteers and nearly 5,000 spectators and that is the overriding factor.”

“We want to thank MARS Equestrian™, our title sponsor as well as AIG, Peapack Private Wealth Management, Running S Equine Veterinary Services, RWJ Barnabas Health, Open Road Auto Group for the continued support and we look forward to welcoming everyone back for a great event at Moorland Farm in 2021!”

For additional information, please visit www.essexhorsetrials.org.

CHIO Aachen to Go Virtual in 2020

This year, the “O” in CHIO Aachen stands for “Online.” After being canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic,  the “Concours Hippique International Officiel” is now being staged as the “Concours Hippique International Online” this year, scheduled to take place Aug. 4-9 in Aachen, Germany.

“Of course, nothing excels the real CHIO Aachen,” said Frank Kemperman, Chairman of the Aachen-Laurensberger Rennverein e.V. (ALRV). But in the absence of the live event, cutting-edge technology will keep the spirit of the event alive.

The event was intended to host a Nations Cup CCIO4*-S, CCI3*S and CCI2*S. Now, “CHIO Aachen Digital” will feature a combination of virtual experiences, social media, sport and entertainment. In addition to a virtual eventing competition, there will be dressage and show jumping challenges with international top riders, plenty of fan involvement, a mobile phone game and a German vs. Dutch National Cup for four-in-hand driving. Competition highlights from past years will also be shown plus new commentary from athletes.

“We have been relying on state-of-the-art technology and innovations for many years already to present our unique sport in the best light and to also make it more transparent and thus more easily comprehensible, of course,” said Michael Mronz, General Manager of Aachener Reitturnier GmbH. In this way, together with the official technology partner SAP, the organizers developed the judging app for the dressage competitions, a technology that has since been implemented worldwide and will be adapted for implementation during the CHIO Aachen Digital.

“Of course, we would have all preferred a live event at our traditional showgrounds,” said Carl Meulenbergh, President of the ALRV. “However I am convinced that we will be able to bring a great deal of the legendary CHIO Aachen atmosphere to the people’s homes in the scope of this digital event.”

Over the coming days and weeks, details about the CHIO Aachen Digital will be announced on its social media platforms and on the website at chioaachen.de.

 

Full-Steam Ahead: Why Top Eventers Choose Haygain – Team USA Edition

Top riders leave nothing to chance when it comes to their equine athletes’ well-being. It’s no surprise that respiratory and digestive health rank among their top concerns, and many have adopted Haygain hay steamers into their management programs.

U.S. eventers Buck Davidson, Will Coleman, Liz Halliday-Sharp, Sinead Halpin, Caroline Martin, Lauren Nichols, Kristin Schmolze, Tamie Smith and Frankie Thieriot-Stutes all swear by the steamers for improved health and performance.

Learn more about the benefits of steaming here. In these videos, some Team USA riders share in their own words why they steam.

Haygain is a science driven company with the horse’s health as the primary focus.

We are committed to improving equine health through scientific research, product innovation and consumer education in respiratory and digestive health. Developed by riders, for riders, we understand the importance of clean forage and a healthy stable environment in maintaining the overall well-being of the horse.

Our Haygain hay steamers are recommended by the world’s leading riders, trainers and equine vets and ComfortStall® Sealed Orthopedic Flooring System is used and recommended by leading Veterinary Hospitals, including Cornell University.

USEF Covid-19 Rule Modification Extends Validity of Earned MERS from 12 to 18 Months

Confused about what level you’re now qualified to compete at, having missed the spring season?

The latest round of USEF rule modifications in response to COVID-19 includes a key one for eventing Minimum Eligibility Requirements (MERs): the extension of the validity of MERs already earned from 12 months to 18 months through the remainder of the 2020 competition season. 

The Presidential Modification, approved last week, allows horses that were qualified for a certain level prior to the suspension from competition to still compete at that level once competition resumes. If horses do not achieve another MER at that height level in 2020, they will have to drop back a level in 2021 to requalify before moving back up.

Essentially, horses that would have had their 12-month qualifier expire during the suspension can now still compete at the same level as originally intended for the spring.

Here is the modification, which starts at the bottom of page 17 on this document, in its entirety:

Minimum Eligibility Requirements (MERs) – Eventing
USEF COVID-19 Rule Modifications – updated 5/21/20 18

Extends the validity of Minimum Eligibility Requirements (MERs) already earned from twelve months to eighteen months.

EV105 – Loss of Qualifications
For certain levels of competition, horses and riders must meet qualifying requirements. Those requirements are detailed in Appendix 3. Loss of these requirements (qualifications) is outlined below and pertains to any combination of USEF and FEI Events.

1. ESTABLISHMENT OF QUALIFICATION. When a horse and/or rider obtains a Minimum Eligibility Requirement (MER) at a level, then they are “established” (qualified to compete) at that level. This “establishment” does not expire; however, it is important to remember that in all cases, when entering an Event at the CCI1* level or above, at least one MER must be obtained in the twelve eighteen month period prior to the competition.

APPENDIX 3 – PARTICIPATION IN HORSE TRIALS – (Eventing)

A competitor and/or a horse may be entered in a Horse Trial without having fulfilled the qualifications noted below, provided the qualifications have been fulfilled at least 10 days before the Cross-Country Test of the competition for which it is needed if the MER has been achieved at a Horse Trial or CCI-S or at least 24 days if the MER has been achieved at a CCI-L. For Preliminary and Training Classic Three-Day Events, qualifying competitions must be completed within a 24-month period of the start of the competition. At the CCI* level and above, at least one MER must be obtained in the twelve eighteen-month period prior to the competition. e.g. a horse and/or rider who have achieved a MER at a CCI4* level of competition and who have not competed for over twelve eighteen months must first achieve a MER at the next lowest height level

4. LEVELS OF INTERNATIONAL HORSE TRIALS AND EVENTS

4.1 UNCATEGORIZED RIDERS Listed below are the USEF requirements to compete in an FEI Competition. Additionally, all horses and riders must meet the minimum eligibility requirements (MER) published by the FEI which must be achieved by competitor and horse as a combination. Where FEI requirements refer to a “CCI” this may be satisfied by achieving an MER at a CCI-L or CCI-S of the level stated. When multiple MERs are required, one of the Minimum Eligibility Requirements can be achieved incurring 20 penalties at the obstacles of the Cross Country Test. All USEF requirements do not need to be achieved as a combination. At the CCI1* level and above, at least one MER must be obtained in the twelve eighteen-month period prior to the competition (e.g., a horse and/or rider who have achieved a MER at a CCI4* level of competition and who have not competed for over twelve eighteen months must first achieve a MER at the next lowest height level).

4.2 CATEGORIZED RIDERS Listed below are the USEF requirements to compete in an FEI Competition. Additionally, all horses and riders must meet the minimum eligibility requirements (MER) published by the FEI. When multiple Minimum Eligibility Requirements are required, one of the Minimum Eligibility Requirements can be achieved incurring 20 penalties at the obstacles of the Cross Country Test. All USEF requirements do not need to be achieved as a combination.

At the CCI1* level and above, at least one Qualifying Result must be obtained in the twelve eighteen-month period prior to the competition (e.g., a horse and/or rider who have achieved a QR at a CCI4* level of competition and who have not competed for over twelve eighteen months must first achieve a QR at the next lowest height level).

The above rules require U.S. Athletes, competing at the CCI1* level and above, to achieve one of the required Minimum Eligibility Requirements (MERs) to compete within the twelve eighteen month period prior to the competition in question. This is a requirement in addition to those USEF COVID-19 Rule Modifications – updated 5/21/20 19 prescribed by the FEI; due to the COVID-19 outbreak, it will, in some cases, put U.S. Athletes, otherwise qualified and prepared to compete at a certain level, at a disadvantage.

The full listing of rule modifications related to COVID-19 impacts can be viewed by clicking here. Additional rule modifications continue to be reviewed and will be published when approved.

Visit the USEF Eventing Homepage and Eventing News & Updates for the latest COVID-19 updates. Visit the USEF General COVID-19 Resource Center and High Performance COVID-19 Resource Center​​ for the latest general updates. Visit the USEA COVID-19 Resources & Updates for important calendar updates, news and more. 

Athletux #TakeHomeTuesday: HG One Hay Steamer from Haygain ($999 Value)

Get your game face on, because Equestrian Marketing Firm Athletux has partnered with EN’s awesome sponsor Haygain to give away a HG One Hay Steamer for this week’s edition of #TakeHomeTuesday.

Why We Love It

The steaming process rids hay of up to 99% of the mold, dust, bacteria and allergens found in hay — even in hay that looks beautiful and is top quality in terms of nutrient content. These inhalable irritants lead to respiratory issues that affect over 80% of active sport horses, often without obvious symptoms.

Many vets consider respiratory challenges to be the top cause of otherwise unexplained poor performance. Which is not surprising. As anyone with even mild asthma or allergies knows — especially this time of year — easy breathing is critical whether you’re galloping a 5* cross-country course or taking a leisurely trail ride.

Steaming also adds water to the diet for better digestion and hydration. Unlike soaking hay, it does not leach nutrients and it’s easy to incorporate into the horse keeping routine. Horses love its great taste and smell, helping hard keepers keep weight on and get the energy and nutrients they need.

Athletux is giving away a HG One Hay Steamer, the smallest of Haygain’s three models. It’s perfect for feeding one or two horses and traveling with it is a breeze.

How To Win It

1) Follow both @athletux and @haygainusa on Instagram.
2) Like this post.
3) Tag a friend who might like to enter (one person per comment to maximize your chances).
For an extra entry, enter your email here.

Hurry! Tuesday giveaways only run for 48 hours. Entering takes less than 1 minute so what are you waiting for?

This giveaway closes on Thursday, May 28th at 7 a.m. EST. Winner to be contacted that afternoon!⁠

Bonus of following Athletux on Instagram: #TakeHomeTuesday giveaways for items from top industry brands — we are talking big items like horse blankets, riding boots, helmets, clothing and more. You don’t want to miss it!

Go Eventing.

Equestrian Marketing Firm Athletux is proud to be one of the longest running agencies in the business, working exclusively with equestrian brands, athletes and events. Athletux understands your audience, utilizing innovative and creative ideas to build your brand and image. By integrating a passion for all things equine with drive and knowledge, you will achieve unparalleled results. Think of Athletux as an extension of your team, providing highly specialized tools to take your business to the next level. Learn more about how Athletux can help you revolutionize your business today. Visit athletux.com for more information, or follow along via social @athletux. 

2020 Calendar Is Looking Bright for Morven Park

Photo by Valerie Durbon Photography.

Like so many venues, Morven Park International Equestrian Center in Leesburg, VA, had an eerily quiet spring. Its Spring Horse Trials, scheduled for March 28-29, was canceled — for the first time in 46 years.

We’re glad to hear that the horse trials’ rescheduling request has been approved. The formerly “Spring” but now “Winter” H.T. will take place Nov. 14-15, 2020, and feature Beginner Novice through Preliminary levels.

“We appreciate all of your continued support,” the event reports. “As we receive updates from the local, state and federal governments and the USEF and USEA we will keep you all updated as well.”

In the coming months, Morven Park International Equestrian Center is looking forward to welcoming riders and spectators at horse trials, Summer Show Series for hunter/jumpers, the fourth season of Polo in the Park, and more. Here’s an overview of what we have to look forward to this year:

EVENTING

Loudoun Hunt Pony Club Summer H.T.June 27 – 28, 2020

  • Open Date: May 12
  • Close Date: June 9
  • Divisions: BN, N, T, P, I

Hopes are high that the event will run; a decision will be announced on or before June 10 based on local and state restrictions. Entries are being accepted, but kindly refrain from submitting payment until a decision has been made about running.

Morven Park Fall International Horse Trials & CCI: Oct. 1-4, 2020

  • Open Date: Aug. 18
  • Close Date: Sep. 15
  • Divisions: N, N-JR, T,T-JR,P,P-JY, I, A, CCI2-S, CCI2-SYH, CCI3-S, CCI3-SYH, CCI4-S, CCI4-L

This year’s event features the addition of a CCI4*-L, a response to the loss of Fair Hill’s CCI4*-L, which will no longer run starting in 2020 due to the addition of the CCI5*-L.

The 6- and 7-year-old classes are another exciting addition, giving talented young horses the opportunity to compete against the peers in their age group. These classes are common in the UK and Europe but haven’t yet gained a foothold in the U.S.

Open Cross Country Schooling Day: Oct. 6, 2020, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Come school the Morven Park cross country courses as they were set for the Horse Trials! The cost is $50 per horse/rider; register upon arrival. Must have current Coggins and 2020 Hold Harmless form. Contact [email protected] with questions.

Morven Park Winter H.T. – Nov. 14-15 (rescheduled from March 28-29)

  • Open Date: Sept. 29 
  • Close Date: Oct. 27
  • Divisions: P, T, T-JR, N, N-JR, BN, BN-JR

 HUNTER/JUMPER

Southern States Purcellville Summer Show Series:

Two hunter rings as well as a jumper ring will be offered for each of the seven dates in the series.

  • June 21
  • July 12
  • July 18
  • July 25
  • August 8
  • August 15
  • September 5

Eventers, this is a great opportunity to hone those show jumping skills after a spring off from competition. Each show is VHSA, BHSA and TIP rated and will be held in Morven Park’s three beautiful new outdoor arenas with Attwood Equestrian Surfaces EuroTex footing. Learn more about the series and download the prize list here.

… AND MORE! 

The fourth season of Polo in the Park at the Morven Park International Equestrian Center is scheduled to begin July 11, 2020! Click here for more info.

For more information on Morven Park International Equestrian Center,  visit the website here.

Waredaca H.T. Rescheduled to June 13-14 + Important Entry Info

Waredaca Horse Trials (rescheduled from May for June 13-14 in Gaithersburg, Maryland) has issued the following statement about their upcoming event:

While hoping to run our event, much depends on the status of Covid restrictions in the state and our county of Maryland. We will announce a decision on June 5. 

Until we are confirmed to run…

1. Please enter WITH ALL REQUIRED PAPERWORK but DO NOT INCLUDE PAYMENT.

2. Once/If we are confirmed to run, this will be announced and PAYMENT SHOULD BE DONE TO COMPLETE EACH ENTRY.

3.  NO ENTRY will be scheduled until it is complete-paperwork and full payment

4.  NO ENTRY REFUNDS after the POST ENTRY/CLOSING DATE OF JUNE 5.

PLEASE CAREFULLY REVIEW OUR CURRENT OMNIBUS LISTING. THE ENTRY PROCESS ALL PAPERLESS, ALL COMPLETED IN ADVANCE OF THE EVENT/YOUR ARRIVAL. 

NEW this year… DRESSAGE TEST OF CHOICE!! Now, have the opportunity to ‘practice’ a test before doing your competition ride! Riders can perform whatever test they wish, in a different arena and under a different judge before riding their competition test! Get exposure to the dressage area and a chance to do your own test ride first! Sign up under ‘other,’ identifying your test of choice and including your fee with the total! Easy!! Also NEW… warm ups and performance arenas with improved attention to cross country footing too!

Any other questions, please contact either [email protected] OR [email protected].

Thanks for your patience and support. Gretchen, Robert, Steph and the Waredaca Crew

Waredaca’s opening date is April 28 and its closing date is May 26.

View a calendar of rescheduled events here. Go Eventing (Soon!)