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Course Decorator Megan Murfey Brings Flower Power to The Fork at Tryon Cross Country

Megan Murfey kicking back at the TIEC Siesta Cantina after a long day of making cross country jumps more beautiful — and jumpable. Photo by RedBayStock.com.

Decorating a cross country course is both a science and an art. The color and texture provided by shrubs and flowers makes jumps more visually appealing, of course, but it can also affect the way horses read the obstacles. Decoration can change the face of a jump, alter its shape or draw out a ground line, and color is a consideration too, as horses perceive color differently than humans.

Megan Murfey is just 26 years but already an in-demand cross country course decorator, in addition to other event management and secretarial services she offers through her business MM Events LLC. She got her start in decorating as an intern at GMHA Horse Trials, working along course designer Janine McClain. “She inspired me,” Megan says, also crediting veteran event organizer Shelley Page for helping her spread her wings.

Since then Megan has decorated at Virginia H.T., Grand Oaks and Heart of the Carolinas, and she’s going into her second year of decorating for Tryon International Equestrian Center events The Fork and the American Eventing Championships.

A pasted-hued stand of spring flowers helps define the groundlines of fence #11B and #12 on The Fork’s CIC3* course. View a complete photo gallery via EN’s course preview here. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

“I’ve never ridden at the upper levels but I take a lot of tips and knowledge from every course designer I’ve worked with,” Megan says. “Each one has different things they’re particular about, so I try to get a feel for what they like and get their feedback to improve what I’m doing.”

On Wednesday afternoon here at The Fork/WEG Test Event at TIEC, Megan went around the course with designer Capt. Mark Phillips, who checked out her handiwork. “He changed almost nothing about what I did out there, but the couple things he moved he gave me explanations as to why that makes a difference,” says Megan. “It’s a great learning experience and the hard work really pays off to get a high-five from a course designer and then sit out with cross country control to score and also watch how everything rides. It’s pretty rewarding work in the end.”

Megan, who is herself a certified course designer through Training level, says she takes a number of factors into account when deciding out to decorate a jump: “You’re looking at the fence and thinking about how you can improve the way it jumps and the way the horses see it.”

One tool Megan uses is an app called Chromatic Vision Simulator, which allows you to choose a type of colorblindness and view the world through that lens. The deuteranope mode provides a fairly accurate picture of how horses perceive color: “I think people should download it and walk around and point it at fences so you can see what the horses see.”

For instance, she says, horses see red as brown, so she steers away from using red flowers when possible. “They don’t see it as well as, say, blue,” Megan explains.

TIEC show jumps viewed via the Chromatic Vision Simulator app: 

She makes do with whatever she has to work with, which varies dramatically from event to event. “If you have a lot of flowers and greenery, you can really beef up the fences and make them look really cool. At other events, it’s more subtle,” she explains.

Course decorating means a lot of time on the road and some tough sacrifices — she’s put her current horse on the market as his temperament isn’t well suited to long breaks in training. But staying busy is Megan’s MO; in addition to her work at events she is completing her prerequisites to pursue a Master’s in nursing next fall.

“Trying to balance traveling and a heavy school load will be difficult, but it will give me a day job,” Megan says. As for decorating, she says, “It’s a lot of work, a lot of days, a lot of hours … sometimes blood, lots of sweat, and some tears. But I enjoy it.”

 

Day 1 at Tryon: Lynn Symansky, Will Coleman Lead The Fork Advanced Divisions

Lynn Symansky and Under Suspection. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

Advanced dressage took the stage on Thursday afternoon at The Fork at Tryon International Equestrian Center.

Lynn Symansky holds the top two spots in the Advanced Test A division with Under Suspection and Donner, respectively, with 2.5 points separating the horses.

Lynn’s relatively new partnership with Under Suspection, a 14-year-old Holsteiner mare (Contender x Naomagic I, by Exorbitant xx) owned by Mary Ann Ghadban, is definitively clicking. Lynn first catch-rode “Pippy,” who finished in the top five at Kentucky in her first four-star last spring with Hannah Sue Burnett, in the dressage phase at Great Meadow CICO3* last July. They warmed up with one Prelim and two Intermediate horse trials this winter before finishing sixth in the CIC3* at Carolina International two weeks ago. The pair turned in their personal best dressage score to date, a 25.70, to top today’s 11-horse Advanced Test A division.

“The mare is still a newer ride for me, so I’m trying to figure her out a bit more each time I go in the ring,” Lynn says. “I thought her trot was really good. The trot and walk were great, I made a mistake in one of the changes, but I’m starting to go in and know what I’m going to have. She comes out the same horse every time.”

Lynn Symansky and Donner. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

Lynn sits second with her old partner Donner, a 15-year-old Thoroughbred gelding (Gorky Park x Smart Jane, by Smarten) owned by the Donner Syndicate. “He’s not blessed with the movement that Pippy has so he has got to go in and do a very accurate, workmanlike test, and he did, and he’s so reliable at this point in terms of knowing how I have to prepare him for the day,” Lynn says.

CIC3* dressage ran earlier today (see Jenni’s report here) in the main George H. Morris International Arena, with Advanced tests staged in one of the smaller arenas off to the side. Even without a crowd of spectators, the rings have a “busy” feel, flanked on three sides by barns, shops or pavilions.

“This kind of atmosphere is hard for Donner because there’s enough of it, but there’s not a lot of people,” Lynn says. “It’s almost better if there are a ton of people to drown out the noise.”

There were plenty of little things for an ADD horse to get hung up on, including but not limited to the Mexican cantina replete with about a dozen twirling hammocks that horses were pointed straight at in the free walk. And the hammocks were the place to be when Lynn headed into the arena on Pippy.

“There were about 15 screaming children on those things,” Lynn says. “When I was doing Pippy, she was the first one in, it sounded like a gang of monkeys were attacking each other. And thank God I was on her first because I think Donner would have bolted out of the ring.”

Lynn was heading out to have a look at cross country when we talked to her; it’s her first time at TIEC since competing here in the 2016 American Eventing Championships, and a first glimpse at the track that we’ll see come WEG in September.

Lynn and Donner contested the 2016 WEG in Normandy and have represented the U.S. on multiple teams, and it’s fun to see them in the hunt for a WEG 2.0.

“Especially with Donner being a possibility to go to the WEG, he’s been a part of team stuff for quite a while, since 2011 at the Pam Ams, and he’s still out and feeling good so it’s cool to be a part of it here,” says Lynn.

Rounding out the top three is Boyd Martin with Kyra, an 11-year-old Canadian Warmblood mare (VDL Ulando H x Wellesley, by Welstern) owned by Christine Turner. This is an exciting partnership and one to watch: At Red Hills, where Boyd and Kyra placed 2nd at Advanced in their second time out at the level, Boyd said of the mare, “She’s by far the most spectacular jumper I have in my barn.” (See our EN profile of the mare here.)

Will Coleman and OBOS O’Reilly. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

Will Coleman and Obos O’Reilly lead the Advanced Test B division on a score of 24.5, although not for long! Will’s plan for The Fork has been dressage-only from the get-go — he just stopped in to get his horses out in the atmosphere, soak it in and check out the cross country track before heading back north to contest Fair Hill next weekend. The end game: Badminton.

Obos O’Reilly, a 15-year-old Irish Sport Horse gelding (Obos Quality 004 x Omard Clover Queen, by Clover Hill) owned by Four Star Eventing Group, topped the 10-horse division. “We’ve been working really hard at his dressage for forever,” Will says. “He gets quite nervous and finding ways to keep him confident but still on the job is always the trick. He’s getting better — he keeps improving with age.”

“I have a soft place in my heart for him,” Will says. “He tries really hard, he’s not really built to do dressage but he’s improved so much. He did a clean test today, it wasn’t perfect but it was a clean test, and I think that’s probably good enough for the time being.”

Will contested The Fork on several horses last year, and says this year’s track is almost identical with the exception of a few changed-up combinations.

“I wanted to come down and see the place, see if Mark [Phillips] was going to give us any clues to what he’s thinking but he’s playing it close to his chest right now. He’s a poker player. There are some good questions but I don’t think he’s showing us what he’s building for September.”

Will is galloping his horses here tomorrow, but then the lead is wide open for a take-over. Will it be 2nd placed Lauren Kieffer and Veronica (24.5) or 3rd placed Leslie Law with The Apprentice (27.0), or …?

Keep it locked here. Go Eventing!

Advanced Test A Top 10

Advanced Test B Top 10

CIC2* Top 10

The Fork: WebsiteScheduleRide TimesLive ScoresLive StreamEN’s CoverageEN’s InstagramEN’s Twitter

WEG Test Event: WebsiteScheduleThursday Dressage OrderFriday Dressage OrderLive StreamLive ScoresEN’s Coverage

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Ringside Chats with Badminton Bound Riders

Welcome to April, the homestretch to both the Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event and, one short week later, Mitsubishi Motors Badminton Horse Trials. So much to keep up with! Who are this year’s contenders? What horses are they riding? How have their preparations been going? Who has a shot at the win? Keeping track of it all is a full-time job.

In this video, #MMBHT catches up with Ireland’s Aoife Clark, New Zealander Tim Price and Emilie Chandler of Leicestershire, Great Britain at a soggy Burnham Market, one of their last stops before Badders.

NutrientWise for IR/Cushing’s (PPID)

The horse that matters to you matters to Kentucky Performance Products. That is why you can count on them to provide supplements that meet the challenges facing your horse.

Struggling to provide optimal nutrition to your insulin-resistant or PPID horse?

Ask your vet about NutrientWise vitamin and mineral supplement. NutrientWise delivers the nutrients your horse needs without excess sugar, starch or calories.

NutrientWise provides:

  • Chelated trace minerals, which are easily digested and utilized.
  • Essential natural vitamin E and other vitamins in highly bioavailable forms.
  • Yeast cultures that increase digestibility of the entire diet so your horse gets as much
    nutrition as possible from the feed he eats.

NutrientWise is a very palatable alfalfa-based pellet that horses love to eat!
For more information, visit KPPvet.com.

Settling in for The Fork at Tryon International Equestrian Center

You know that feeling you get when you walk into a posh hotel room? Everything feels clean and fresh, and part of you wants to preserve its sanctity: tuck your luggage out of sight, talk in whispered tones, leave that little triangle fold on the toilet paper intact. But if you are a 10-year-old trapped in an adult body like me, you also experience a weird compulsion to mess it all up: jump on the perfectly-made bed, raid the mini-fridge, and blast Lana Del Rey way too loud during a three-hour bubble bath. Knock-knock. “Did someone order room service?” Oh yeah! This girl! Bring me that side of black truffle pommes frites! And ketchup! “I am sorry to tell you, m’am, that your credit card did not go through.” Hmmmm. 

This is why I cannot stay in posh hotels.

There’s something similar in the air in the preamble to an event at Tryon International Equestrian Center. The rings are perfectly dragged, the fancy restaurants are nearly empty, and fit, eagle-eyed horses are all around, slinking about on hacks or grazing on bright green patches of grass. Everything is quiet, but there’s an anticipation in the air of a fast-paced, wildly-exciting competition to come.

So it is in advance of The Fork at TIEC. Let’s have a glance around at the calm before the storm! And remember to keep it locked on EN for live coverage throughout the weekend.

Everyone is beginning to arrive at the Tryon International Equestrian Center for the Fork Horse Trials and Tryon2018…

Posted by USA Eventing on Tuesday, April 3, 2018

https://www.instagram.com/p/BhIGaQdAS2_/

The Fork: WebsiteScheduleRide TimesLive ScoresEN’s CoverageEN’s InstagramEN’s Twitter

WEG Test Event: WebsiteScheduleOrder First Horse InspectionLive Scores

#EventerProblems Vol. 137 from Ecovet: Everett vs. the Gravel Patch

This week’s edition of #EventerProblems comes courtesy of Area II eventer Abby Foltz, who explains:  “Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you my Prelim event horse, who upon finding out that his paddock entrance was re-done with gravel while he was in Florida, cannot figure out how to get onto the grass. His paddock mate is over to the left eating and he doesn’t know how she got over there.”

When not stranded and left for dead on a few square feet of gravel, Everett (competition name: What Everett Takes) is a super brave cross country machine. Abby has owned almost 15-year-old OTTB for five years and she reports that while he will jump anything in front of him on the cross country course, “he really, really hates when the ground changes color or texture. Like, a lot.”

Leaping over brush into water … no problem! Stepping from gravel patch onto grass … impossible. Photo by Brant Gamma.

It took poor Everett a full hour to escape his gravel prison, eliciting the hashtag-able comment “Everette to Harvard” from friend Jaclyn Burke when Abby posted the video to Facebook.

Abby says that while her horse is quirky and has a LOT of opinions, she loves him dearly. Although, she notes, “Apparently we could have saved lots of money on fencing.”

Go Eventing.

Easter Weekend Results: Galway, Morven Park, Rocking Horse, Full Gallop, Texas Rose

Not unlike the Easter bunny, there was much hopping to be done in the event world this weekend! Easter weekend saw five USEA-sanctioned events around the U.S.: Galway Downs CIC & H.T. in Temecula, CA; Morven Park H.T. in Leesburg, VA; Rocking Horse Spring H.T. in Altoona, FL; Full Gallop H.T. in Aiken SC; and Texas Rose Horse Park H.T. in Tyler, TX.

Happy Easter from everyone at RHS!

Posted by Rocking Horse Stables on Sunday, April 1, 2018

It’s that time!!!

A post shared by Stephanie Martin (@nteventer) on

My little bunnies all ready to rock and roll at Texas Rose Horse Park!!!!!

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The lowest finishing score in the country of the weekend belonged to Miriam Copeland and D’Stinctive, who scored a 22.8 in the Junior Beginner Novice Rider B division at Texas Rose Horse Park H.T.  Well-done, Miriam!

Without further ado, let’s issue a shout-out to this weekend’s winners!

Galway Downs CIC & H.T. [Website] [Results] [EN Coverage]

CIC One Star: Harper Click & Rubia (28.5)
CIC Two Star: Gina Miles & Greenfort Othello (37.5)
CIC Three Star: Tamra Smith & Sunsprite Syrius (35.2)
Open Intermediate: Lauren Billys & Castle Larchfeild Purdy (36.9)
Open Preliminary: Erin Kellerhouse & Seychelles (27.2)
Preliminary Rider-A: Haley Dwight & Donna Mira (30.2)
Preliminary Rider-B: Charlotte Babbitt & 2 A.M. (29.4)
Junior Training Rider: Jordan Crabo & Black Gold (23.8)
Open Training: James Alliston & Cassio’s Picasso (29.8)
Senior Training Rider: Sarah Platshon & Live Action (24.5)
Training Amateur: Madison Langerak & Rouge Et Blanc DF (31.0)
Training Horse: James Alliston & Lilly (28.8)
Junior Novice Rider: Charlotte Zovighian & Northern Victory (28.3)
Novice Amateur: Julienne Biglin Jeffersonn (30.2)
Novice Horse: Sara Mittleider & RHF Peterzano (23.3)
Open Novice: Whitney Tucker Billeter & Bill’s Midnight Magic (25.7)
Senior Novice Rider: Deborah Doneen & Tom’s Pick (34.3)

https://www.instagram.com/p/BhDTiTCDe91/

Morven Park H.T. [Website] [Results]

Open Intermediate: Allison Springer & Lord Willing (34.4)
Junior Young Riders Open Preliminary: Nicholas Beshear & It’sakatthing (44.2)
Open Preliminary: William Coleman III & Cooley Mahgeeta (27.4)
Preliminary Rider: Cali Johnson & Black Label (38.1)
Training Rider: Austin Skeens & Rocmaster (25.0)
Open Training: Alyssa Peterson & R-Perfect Storm (32.3)
Training Horse: Paul Ebersole & Waterline (29.3)
Training Rider-A: Samantha Erwin & Conquistadora (38.0)
Training Rider-B: Sara Schulman & Not for Nothing (40.7)
Training Horse: Paul Ebersole & Waterline (29.3)
Training Rider-A: Samantha Erwin & Conquistadora (38.0)
Training Rider-B: Sara Schulman & Not for Nothing (40.7)
Junior Novice Rider: Cadence Clucas & Lookover Erin (30.2)
Novice Amateur Rider: Kristin Linder Carpenter & Stiletto (23.6)
Novice Horse: Leslie Lamb & Banjo (27.1)
Novice Rider: Susan Gallagher & Chacco Chip (30.0)
Open Novice: Lindsay Kelley & Ricochete (27.1)
Beginner Novice Rider: Penny Neault & Cooley Grand Finale (27.8)
Junior Beginner Novice Rider: Madison Davis & King Congo (28.3)
Open Beginner Novice: James Moore & Marnie (27.5)

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bg_760CFueq/

Rocking Horse Spring H.T. [Website] [Results]

Intermediate Rider: Heather Jane Morris & Jos UFO De Quidam (45.0)
Open Intermediate-A: Brandon McMechan & Oscar ‘s Wild (26.4)
Open Intermediate-B: Clark Montgomery & Takine de la Barbais (35.6)
Open Preliminary-A: Natalia Neneman & Electric Lux (27.4)
Open Preliminary-B: Jonathan Holling & Dalanteretto (25.1)
Preliminary Horse-A: Robin Walker & SBT Clover Road (30.8)
Preliminary Horse-B: Holly Jacks Smither & Signature Moves (38.2)
Preliminary Rider-A: Rylee Gailey & Dukes Up (28.0)
Preliminary Rider-B: Sami Crandell & Fernhill Chaos (36.1)
Jr. Training Rider: Zoe Archer & Millridge Z Two (35.0)
Open Training-A: Victoria Garland & FE Hard Day’s Night (29.4)
Open Training-B: Madigan Murphy & Willdebrandt (23.0)
Sr. Training Rider-A: Ellen Super & Seattle’s Finest (40.0)
Sr. Training Rider-B: Maria Brazil & Pas de Panique (28.9)
Training Horse-A: Maria Brazil & Pas de Panique (28.9)
Training Horse-A: Jonathan Holling & Toxicodendron (28.3)
Training Horse-B: Holly Jacks Smither & Big Pretty (30.0)
Jr. Novice Rider: Diana Craven & Mr. Fernhill (29.8)
Novice Horse-A: Beth Murphy & It’s Me (29.3)
Novice Horse-B: Leslie Law & Bandit Boy (27.6)
Open Novice: Anna Loschiavo & Aberdeen Dream (25.5)
Sr. Novice Rider-A: Robin Barr & Tout Fini (28.6)
Novice Horse-A: Beth Murphy & It’s Me (29.3)
Novice Horse-B: Leslie Law & Bandit Boy (27.6)
Open Novice: Anna Loschiavo & Aberdeen Dream (25.5)
Sr. Novice Rider-A: Robin Barr & Tout Fini (28.6)
Sr. Novice Rider-B: Rosemarie Albrizio & Tequesteris (35.0)
Beginner Novice Rider: Rachael Whiteley & Avogadro (26.3)
Open Beginner Novice: Elizabeth Stewart & Innsbruck VDO (25.3)

https://www.instagram.com/p/BhAcv3IgAWK/

Full Gallop H.T. [Website] [Results]

Intermediate: Shannon Riley & Sunrise Surprise (68.1)
Intermediate/Preliminary: Colin Gaffney & Timaru (44.1)
Preliminary: Adriana Nannini & Tall Tale (37.7)
Preliminary/Training: Kate Coleman & Calloway (30.7)
Training-A: Bonnie Mosser & Love Like Crazy (26.7)
Training-B: Corinne Ashton & Call Calvin (41.0)
Novice-A: Laura Rietveld & Red Sky AT Morning (31.9)
Novice-B: Hayden Lytton & Barbossa (26.2)
Training/Novice: Megan Martin-Salvo & Victory (41.2)
Beginner Novice-A: Sharon Ofenstein & Polar Express (28.3)
Beginner Novice-B: Sydney Bolton & High Cotton (27.5)
Starter: Kristin Sweeney & Fawn Creek Sonya (34.7)

https://www.instagram.com/p/BhCvB3TF-9X/

Texas Rose Horse Park H.T. [Website] [Results]

Open Intermediate: Ryleigh Leavitt & MoonLight Crush (35.0)
Open Preliminary: Kadi Eykamp & Ole Boy (31.7)
Preliminary Rider: Georgia Dillard & Galileo WP (25.9)
Junior Training Rider: Harper Petty & Obi-Wan Kenobi (29.1)
Open Training: LeeAnn McQuade & Corp Trip (35.5)
Senior Training Rider: Rebecca Hunt & Snowflake Lane (26.7)
Training Horse: Angela Bowles & Rocktop Dreamer (29.1)
Junior Novice Rider: Vienna Allport & Caramel Macchiato (31.0)
Novice Horse: Tayler Owen & Joint Ventures Remy Martin (27.6)
Open Novice: Nicole Hatley & Fernhill Fearless des Terdrix (27.6)
Senior Novice Rider-A: Angie Mitchell & Smiling’s My Favorite (34.0)
Senior Novice Rider-B: Katie Grace Bond & High Class (32.9)
Junior Beginner Novice Rider-A: Makenzie Lowe & Addie Okie (36.4)
Junior Beginner Novice Rider-B: Miriam Copeland & D’Stinctive (22.8)
Open Beginner Novice: Angela Bowles & Woodstock Classic Rock (28.6)
Senior Beginner Novice Rider: Janet Taylor & Zarpazo (26.4)
Starter: Elle Snyder & You Have A Friend In Me (26.1)

#areav #ponychallenge #eventing #eventerproblems

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Go Eventing!

Friday Video from World Equestrian Brands: Horse + Dolphin Happy Hour

#Goals

Nevermind "bomb-proof", if my horse isn't "dolphin-proof", I don't even want it! 😀

Edit: Most popular question seems to be where is this. It's Australia 🙂

Credit:Newsflare

Posted by Fal Turro's River on Friday, March 16, 2018

I don’t know about you guys, but this is exactly how I want to peace out of my workweek: a little horse-meets-dolphin magic. Bless this big, beautiful, blue planet and all the majestic creatures that inhabit it. Now go forth and enjoy this beautiful spring weekend!

Morven Park Competitors Look Forward to First-Class Footing in New Arenas

Morven Park’s Grand Prix arena. Photo courtesy of the Morven Park archive.

Exciting stuff is afoot, literally, at Morven Park International Equestrian Center in Leesburg, Va.! The 250 competitors contesting this weekend’s Morven Park Spring H.T. will be among the first to leave hoofprints in three new arenas furbished with footing from Attwood Equestrian Surfaces.

Nick Attwood, President of Attwood Equestrian Surfaces, personally oversaw the arena revitalization project, which was completed over the course of several months.

“It’s so rewarding to be here now, having been involved from the actual planning stages, to see the arenas beginning to take shape,” Nick told us last October. At that time the arena base had been established, with the next major steps being the installment of the drainage system and then the footing. “We will be hands on until the first horses come to compete, and will continue to maintain these arenas for years to come. Partnering with Morven Park means a great deal to us.”

Photo courtesy of the Morven Park archive.

State-of-the-art footing means a great deal to competitors as well. Four-star eventer Caitlin Silliman was among the first riders to experience the new Attwood footing at Caroline Horse Park when she competed at Southern Pines H.T. earlier this month, placing first and second in the Intermediate combined test with Vagabon de Champdoux and Ally KGO respectively.

“It was fantastic,” Caitlin says of the new footing. “It’s already a beautiful event and the footing changes the look quite a bit.”

In addition to the new arenas, a new jog strip was installed beside the Grand Prix arena. The strip is dedicated to Margaret Wood, made possible thanks to the generosity of the Major family and the Loudoun Hunt Pony Club.

Morven Park will host 16 divisions of Beginner Novice through Intermediate on Saturday and Sunday. With no rain in the forecast and temps hovering around 60, all systems are a go for a beautiful weekend of sport.

“We are excited to be hosting the Morven Park Spring H.T. in our brand new outdoor riding arenas this year,” says Sheryl Williams, Morven Park’s executive director. “We are thankful for the equestrian community’s continued support of the arena project and the International Equestrian Center and wish our competitors a great ride over the weekend.”

Morven Park will be hosting an open cross country schooling day on Tuesday, April 3, with courses still set from the horse trial. Cost is $50 per horse/rider; see the website for details.

Morven Park H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Results]

The Brooke Announced as Official Charity of 2018 WEG in Tryon

Image courtesy of Brooke.

The Brooke, the world’s largest international equine welfare charity, has been chosen as the official charity of the 2018 FEI World Equestrian Games in Tryon, NC.

Headquartered in the UK, The Brooke is an international charity that protects and improves the lives of working horses, donkeys and mules, whose labor keeps millions of poor families in developing countries around the world out of poverty.

Emily Dulin, Executive Director of sister charity Brooke USA, says, “One-hundred million horses, donkeys and mules around the world are doing the hardest jobs in extreme environments, from the brick kilns of Nepal to the coal mines of Pakistan and the small farms of Ethiopia and Nicaragua, and they are paying the price for their labor with injuries, exhaustion, dehydration and malnutrition. Brooke works to make long lasting improvements to their lives.”

The theme for the 2018 WEG is “Celebrate the Horse, Celebrate the Sport: #Together,” commemorating the deep connection and interdependencies that have existed between humankind and equines for millennia. For much of the developed world, this relationship has become one of leisure and sport, but for more than 600 million people, the relationship is still one of survival.

The Brooke’s staff includes vets, animal welfare experts and advocacy and development specialists, who work with owners, health services, governments and the animals themselves to improve their qualify of life. The global organization’s work reaches horses, donkeys and mules across Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Middle East.

The charity designation is courtesy of Katherine Bellissimo, who serves on the board of Brooke USA.  “I am pleased to have Brooke named as the official charity of the FEI World Equestrian Games Tryon 2018,” she says. “The work that Brooke and Brooke USA do for both horses and humans around the world is incredibly admirable and embodies our organization’s goal of celebrating the ways we depend on this beautiful creature through this event. It is only natural that the world’s largest working equine welfare charity be chosen as a beneficiary of the world’s largest equestrian competition.”

As official charity, The Brooke will build a commemorative walkway, The Brooke Breezeway, at Tryon International Equestrian Center featuring bricks honoring WEG and the important service of working equines around the world. Bricks can be purchased and installed in dedication of a person, horse or organization. The website, BrookeBricks.org, will be launched later this spring.

Petra Ingram, Chief Executive of The Brooke, says, “We are so proud to be a part of WEG this year. The theme of humans and equines through time also ties in with our Every Horse Remembered campaign, which honors the horses who worked side-by-side with soldiers in World War One. We’re looking forward to working together with Tryon International Equestrian Center to organize Brooke-themed activities and raise funds for working horses, donkeys and mules around the world.”

Learn more about the charities at www.BrookeUSA.org or www.TheBrooke.org. For more information on WEG, visit www.Tryon2018.com.

[Brooke Becomes Official Charity of FEI World Equestrian Games™ Tryon 2018]

#EventerProblems Vol. 136 from Ecovet: Twitter Edition

How much struggle can you fit in 280 characters? PLENTY. Here’s your latest batch of #EventerProblems as shared on Twitter.

Go Eventing.

Weekend Results Roundup: Carolina International, Poplar Place, Southern Arizona

Cross country course or mini golf? Loved the the pirate ship on course at Carolina International. Photo via EN’s Instagram @goeventing.

What a weekend it was in the Eventing Nation! In addition to the headliner event, the Cloud 11~Gavilan North LLC Carolina International CIC & H.T. in Raeford, NC, Poplar Place Farm hosted its March H.T. in Hamilton, GA, and the inaugural Southern Arizona H.T. took place in Tucson, AZ. Let’s recap and raise a toast to the winners!

  • A warm welcome to a brand new event on the USEA calendar, Southern Arizona H.T. — v.1.0 down, many more to come! Held at the Pima County Fairgrounds, the event has been years in the making and is a huge boon to Area X. The event’s weekend debut was a smash hit by all accounts, attracting 104 starters contesting Introductory through Prelim/Training divisions. We spoke with its organizers earlier this year — check out the story of how the event came to be here.

How pretty is this portable start box? Photo via the Southern Arizona Eventing Association Facebook page.

  • After cancelled January and February horse trials and a change of ownership, Poplar Place Farm is back up and running, hosting its first of four 2018 events over the weekend. New owner Launa DesPortes has big plans for the venue (see “Sale Ushers in New Era for Poplar Place Farm“), and the work is already underway — new jumps and even the construction of a big new pavilion! Already looking forward to that competitors party. Training Rider winner Mellisa Warden reflected, “What a special event … This was the first weekend I’ve ridden at this event in nine years and it hasn’t down-poured, but as always, the most friendly competitors and awesome spirit! I’m glad to see Poplar shining again, as it should.”

Mellisa Warden with Poplar Place organizer Shelley Page and Secretary Rick Dunkerton. Photo via Mellisa Warden.

  • The lowest finishing score of the weekend goes to Holly Payne Caravella and Marilyn Payne’s SF Double Entendre, who won the Open Training C division at Carolina International on their dressage score of 20.5. Holly had a very successful weekend, also winning Open Intermediate with Shelby Corliss Godfrey’s Bruisyard Hall, who also earned the TIP Award — a fantastic debut at the level for an exciting combination. She was third in the same division with the CharmKing LLC’s CharmKing. And, of course, Holly’s brother Doug had a not-too-shabby weekend as well!

Photos via the Holly Payne Equestrian Facebook page.

  • We’ve been enjoying watching Libby Head‘s Badminton dominator Sir Rockstar continue his career with Erin Jarboe. The pair has been out and about this winter, placing 2nd over the weekend in the Training Rider A division Carolina International. Erin was a teammate of Libby’s from the University of Georgia Eventing Team, and she first competed “Rocky” as a catch-ride for the USEA Intercollegiate Championships last year. The pair clicked and it’s been a win-win for all ever since — 20 years young, Rocky! Great to see Libby out as well in a division of Open Training with Sir Real … no relation to Sir Rockstar, but a fun coincidence!
  • Fantastic weekend at Carolina for my first event in a year! Hal was so good and we added just a rail and a handful of…

    Posted by Libby Head on Sunday, March 25, 2018

  • Another sweet not-quite-retirement story: Kate Chadderton‘s Advanced mounts Buckharo and Collection Pass have both retired from the upper echelons of eventing and are happily teaching their new young riders the ropes of eventing. “Whenever they see each other in the warm up they nuzzle up to each other to say hi!” Kate reports. Both competed at Carolina International in the Prelim Rider division; “Bucky,” ridden by Julia Luce was 4th and “Cole,” ridden by Grace Gaynor, was 2nd. Well-done!

Cole and Bucky in the warm-up at Carolina International. Photo by Kate Chadderton.

  • The name game: At Poplar Place there was a Schikeria, who won Training Rider with Mellisa Warden, and a Hips Don’t Lie, ridden to 5th place by Sommer Matheny in Jr. Beginner Novice. Close enough! We also appreciated the trifecta of Sandra Phillips’ Six Pack Event, Barb Crabo’s Guinness, and Manuela Propfe’s BoozeTraveler at Southern Arizona H.T. Honorable mention to Hailey Benton’s Mon Petite Chou, an adorable French term of endearment that translates to “My Little Cabbage.”

Your weekend winners:

Carolina International CIC & H.T. [Website] [Results] [EN’s Coverage] [EN’s Instagram] [EN’s Twitter]

CIC1*: Elinor MacPhail O’Neal & Zick Zack (25.7)
CIC2*: Katherine Coleman & Billy Bandit (32.5)
CIC3*: Doug Payne & Vandiver (29.6)
Advanced: Will Coleman & Off The Record (45.5)
Intermediate Rider: Ryan Keefe & Flintstar (37.7)
Open Intermediate: Holly Payne Caravella & Bruisyard Hall (36.5)
Open Preliminary-A: Jordan Linstedt & Staccato (28.1)
Open Preliminary-B: Ryan Wood & Fernhill Flame (24.6)
Preliminary Rider: Janelle Phaneuf & Cougar Bay (28.8)
Open Training-A: Tik Maynard & SW Lhittle Rascal (26.6)
Open Training-B: Paige Crotty & Cooley Dawn Raid (27.1)
Open Training-C: Holly Payne Caravella & SF Double Entendre (20.5)
Training Rider-A: Elizabeth Ricklefs & Idlehour Patriot (25.0)
Training Rider-B: Natasha Jane Austin & Timeless Secret (30.7)

Poplar Place H.T. [Website] [Results]

Intermediate/Preliminary: Werner Geven & L’Avventura (41.1)
Open Preliminary: Lesley Grant-Law & Lady Chatterley (34.9)
Preliminary Rider: Alese Lyle & Princess Leia (46.0)
Open Training: Zachary Brandt & Fernhill Can Do (37.4)
Prelim/Training: Laurel Massey & In High Heels (43.5)
Training Rider: Mellisa Warden & Schikeria (36.0)
Jr. Novice Rider: Ella Kay Lane & Dark Shadows (35.9)
Open Novice: Zachary Brandt & City So Cool (26.4)
Sr. Novice Rider: Abby Blackburn & Celtic Steel (33.1)
Jr. Beginner Novice Rider: Emma Hilbert & A Hero’s Tale (38.1)
Open Beginner Novice: Nicole Maynard & Thunderstruck (32.8)
Sr. Beginner Novice Rider: Meredith Hunter & Classic Imp (28.6)
Starter: Ashley Templeton & Jackazoom (38.5)

Southern Arizona H.T. [Website] [Results]

Open Preliminary/Training: Frederic Bouland & K-Cosimo SE (39.1)
Open Training: Laura Borghesani & Mr Z (33.5)
Training Rider: Mary Hanson & Dance All Night (36.9)
Open Novice: Angela Carmitchel & Prima (26.9)
Novice Rider A: Peyton Klein & Davinci (32.9)
Novice Rider B: Carolyn Leblanc & Jack Leblanc (32.9)
Beg. Novice Rider A: Ruth Mock & Wodie (35.1)
Beg. Novice Rider B: Carrie Matteson & Pretend to Fly (36.1)
Open Beg. Novice: Laura Borghesani & Lf Dozer (32.1)
Introductory: Debra Haber & Pik Encore (31.1)

Go Eventing.