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Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: More #BurghleyPony Training

World Horse Welfare Pamela, an 8.3 hand rescued Shetland pony, is set to become the smallest-ever Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials competitor. Supported by equestrian icons with her “star rider” yet to be revealed, the #BurghleyPony’s journey to four-star fame has been documented by a series of behind-the-scenes training videos released in the leadup to the event.

Throughout the summer Pamela has been training hard under the watchful eye of legendary horseman, including Carl Hester in dressage and Mark Todd on cross country.

This week her training continued via a show jumping masterclass with Tim Stockdale, who remarked after the session: “It makes the hair on the back of your neck stand up — the majesty of her jump, the power, the grace … it’s fabulous equine magnificence.”

Yogi Breisner also stepped up with a last-minute pep talk for the horse, taking her tiny nose in his hands as he imparted his wisdom:

We can’t wait to see where all of this is going, and our own Jenni Autry will be at Burghley this week to provide a firsthand report!

Go #BurghleyPony. Go Eventing.

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Your Official AEC Social Calendar

Eats, drinks and the best company in the land at the 2016 AEC Welcome Reception. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

The party never stops at the USEA American Eventing Championships! Tryon International Equestrian Center will play host to a full week’s worth of evening entertainment throughout the AECs, from competitor parties to Friday night polo and Advanced show jumping as this week’s “Saturday Night Lights” headliner.
Here’s a rundown of the action:
 
AEC Welcome Reception, Wednesday, August 30
Celebrate the commencement of the 2017 USEA American Eventing Championships presented by Nutrena® at the AEC Welcome Reception in Legends Club. Drinks and hors d’oeuvres will be served throughout the event, which will begin at 6 p.m. and continue through 7:30 p.m. All entered competitors will receive one free ticket, but additional tickets can be purchased online by clicking here.
AEC Adult Rider Party presented by Beohringer Ingelheim, Thursday, August 31
 
Thursday night activities will feature the Adult Rider Party hosted by Beohringer Ingelheim at the Silo Bar. A cash bar will be available, but riders registered for the USEA Adult Rider Program will receive drink tickets. This event is open to USEA competitors and family members.
AEC Young Rider Party, Thursday, August 31 
 
Younger riders will not be left out of the Thursday evening fun! The Young Rider Party is free to USEA riders age 21 and under, and will feature pizza and ice cream buffets. USEA competitors and their families are welcome at this event.
Brooke USA “Shelter the Donkeys” Fundraiser, Friday, September 1
 
Friday night will also feature the Brooke USA “Shelter the Donkeys” Fundraiser, which will highlight the initiatives of Brooke USA, a recognized 501c3 based in the United States dedicated to providing resources and awareness for working equines and donkeys in underdeveloped countries. From 5:30 – 7 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 1, be sure to swing by the decorated lounge area underneath of the Announcer’s Tower for a themed cocktail made by celebrity bartenders and Brooke USA ambassadors including Boyd Martin, Sinead Halpin, Tik Maynard, Allison Springer and more. A silent auction will run in conjunction with the event and feature mini-horse appearances, too.
 
AEC Competitor Party, Friday, September 1
Enjoy Gladiator Polo™ from the Special Events Tent during the 2017 USEA American Eventing Championships presented by Nutrena® Competitor Party on Friday, September 1! Beginning at 6:30 p.m. and finishing at 9 p.m., offering heavy hors d’ouvres and a cash bar for competitors, family, and friends! All entered competitors will receive one free ticket, but additional tickets can be purchased online by clicking here.
 
Gladiator Polo™ Argentine Asado Buffet, Friday, September 1
Kick-off the evening with an authentic fire-grilled Argentine Asado buffet on the Legends Club Porch overlooking the ring starting at 6 p.m. The all-you-can-eat buffet features tri-tip of beef with chimichurri, garlic Parmesan corn, roasted potatoes, Russian potato salad, smoked trout, chicken with rice, and more! A cash bar will be available. For pricing and to purchase your Argentine Asado buffet tickets click here.
“SNL” Advanced Show Jumping Legends Club Buffet, Saturday, September 2
Enjoy the highlight class of the 2017 USEA American Eventing Championships presented by Nutrena® under the lights in George H. Morris Arena on Saturday, September 2. Doors open at 6 p.m. The class will begin between 7:30 p.m. and 8 p.m., showcasing the best of U.S. eventing, as combinations complete the final phase of this impressive discipline to crown the winner of the 2017 Adequan® Gold Cup Series. An all-inclusive buffet dinner and open bar offers a fantastic view of the main arena and a lively social atmosphere during our signature “Saturday Night Lights” evening competition. Tickets are available online. Click here to purchase.
“SNL” AEC Craft Beer Festival, Saturday, September 2
There will be a Craft Beer Festival held in the Special Events Tent during Saturday Night Lights on September 2, with private seating and viewing for the 2017 Adequan® Gold Cup Series Advanced Show Jumping competition. The festival, held from 6 – 10 p.m., will include unlimited four-ounce pours from participating craft breweries, a heavy hors d’ouvres buffet, and a souvenir cup from TIEC. Some of the featured beers from Asheville craft breweries include Sierra Nevada, New Belgium, French Broad Brewing Company, Pisgah Brewing Company, Oskar Blues, Bold Rock, Catawba Brewing, Asheville Brewing, Highland Brewing, Noble Cider, Hi Wire and more. Tickets can be purchased at the door and online by clicking here.
Edited from a press release. 
American Eventing Championships: WebsiteScheduleRide Times/Live ScoresEN’s Coverage

Tuesday Video from SpectraVet: Stuff Eventers Say

Washington state eventer Robin Loch sent us this video, several parts of which hit pretty darn close to home!

She explains the impetus behind the video’s creation. “I was sitting on my bum eating M&Ms when I started thinking of things eventers say or commonly run into and thought … heck, I have nothing to do but homework and adult activities so might as well procrastinate and make a video that I thought was hilarious. There are definitely things that happen that I forgot to include and some of these apply to all riders, but ya know, close enough!”

Robin has been riding since age five and gravitated toward eventing from the get-go, on whatever pony was available. “I always ended up with the bratty ponies no one else wanted to ride but they taught me the most, and to this day my favorite horses to work with are the difficult ones no one else wants to work with,” Robin says.

Now 20 years old, Robin is in her junior year of college and was last competing at Training level with her “spicy” little Thoroughbred mare, Trin (AKA Cool Lady Taylor). School has been keeping her busy lately, she says that eventing is always on her mind and in her heart: “Eventually I want to compete at the top of our sport and tackle the Kentucky Three-Day event as well as compete in the Retired Racehorse Project Thoroughbred Makeover and Mustang Magic Makeover. I know some high goals, but I figure with a box of Pop Tarts and a cute pony there is no challenge I can not conquer.”

We like your style, Robin! Go Eventing.

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Weekly OTTB Wishlist from Cosequin: New Vocations Pony Club Challenge Edition

Earlier this year New Vocations Racehorse Adoption Program partnered with the United States Pony Clubs, Inc. to launch an exciting educational opportunity: the New Vocations Pony Club Challenge. The incentive-based competition is designed to give Pony Club members an opportunity to adopt retired racehorses, with participants showcasing their horse management and riding skills learned through Pony Club while providing qualified homes and new careers for retired racehorses.

For the Challenge, New Vocations will provide up to 50 free, retired racehorses, along with a $1,800 stipend, to eligible and pre-approved Pony Club members. These Pony Club members will compete for $10,000 in cash and prizes at the 2018 USPC Championships East in dressage, eventing, games, polocrosse, show jumping or western disciplines.

“By bringing together two organizations that are leaders in their fields, we will be able to provide an educational, incentive-based competition for Pony Club members that will ultimately increase the number of retired racehorses being moved into second careers,” explains Anna Ford, Thoroughbred Program Director for New Vocations. “We feel very strongly that this program will help educate the public on how much these horses have to offer once they leave the track while providing a wonderful opportunity for Pony Club members to experience equine ownership.”

Teresa Woods, Pony Club Executive Director, adds, “We are thrilled to partner with New Vocations to give Pony Club members this unique training and ownership opportunity. Education and horsemanship is synonymous with Pony Club, so what better way for members to utilize their Pony Club knowledge?”

For more information check out the New Vocations website. Here are three New Vocations Pony Club Challenge eligible OTTBs that caught our eye!

Photo via New Vocations.

Bi Light of Day (Five Star Day – Lady Bi Bi, by Lord Avie): 2010 15.2-hand New York bred mare

Bi Light Of Day, nicknamed “Lolli,” is a very elegant and refined girl with an attractive athletic build. Sired by multiple graded stakes winner Five Star Day, Lolli was a consistent runner on the track earning an impressive $185,875 in 46 career starts.

After Lolli’s 9th place finish on 6/14/17 her connections felt it was time for her to move on to her next career. Lolli has retired sound and has been transitioned into a turnout routine since arriving at the New Vocations facility. She is easy to handle on the ground and well behaved under saddle. Lolli is not spooky and a very straight forward ride. NV has been working on getting her to relax her top line and settle into a steady rhythm. She is naturally forward, but not a “hot” ride.

Lolli has made steady progress with every ride and has been more relaxed each day. She has been started over fences, and while she was uncertain at first, once she understood what was being asking of her she picked it up very quickly. Lolli is suitable for any discipline and does not have any limitations.

View Bi Light of Day on New Vocations.

Photo via New Vocations.

Tracy Island (U S Ranger – Moolakaya (FR), by Alzao): 2013 16.0-hand mare

Tracy caught NV’s eye as soon as she stepped off the trailer. She has a large intelligent eye and good looks to go with it. Tracy is a substantial, well built girl with a driven work oriented personality. She has retired after 13 career starts and is ready for her next job in life.

Tracy has been enjoying daily turnout and has buddied up with another mare in the program. They both have benefited immensely from having a companion. In the stall Tracy is well mannered, however she does prefer is you work slowly around her. She tends to get a little anxious while you tack her up but she settles once you get her into the arena. Tracy is not quite ready to stand patiently at the mounting block just yet, she relaxes more with each ride and is settling into a quieter atmosphere.

Tracy is a forward ride, with comfortable  ground covering gaits. She will make an excellent partner for an intermediate rider that will understand her desire to “go” at this time and will be patient as she continues to transition into life as a riding horse. Tracy will be suitable for flatwork and low level jumping. She is also available for the Pony Club Challenge and is recommend for a C-2 and above.

View Tracy Island on New Vocations.

Photo via New Vocations.

Issheit (Crimson Classic – Tidesinn, by Tricky Creek): 2008 16.1-hand Kentucky bred mare

“Sheila” is an elegant, leggy mare with a big heart. She has earned herself war horse status after a total of 73 lifetime starts! Sheila earned over $250,000 during her seven-year career and is ready to step into her new life as a riding horse. She is friendly, willing and likes to work!

Sheila has been enjoying regular turn out with a buddy. She is currently partnered up with a gelding and is getting along great. When they tried turning her out with another mare she was a bit too dominant.

Sheila has steady gaits and is brave in new atmospheres. She has worked happily inside and out and really enjoys hacking out. Sheila has a surprisingly soft mouth for the length of time she’s spent in race training. She is learning to relax through her top line more with every ride. Sheila has a ground covering canter stride and steadies easily in her downward transitions. She has also been started over small fences and was eager to please. Overall Sheila is a pleasure to work with and she enjoys having a job! She is suitable for most disciplines including dressage and low level jumping with an intermediate rider.

View Issheit on New Vocations.

Weekend Instagram Roundup: Show Us Your Ribbons!

You guys crushed ittt out there this weekend, and now it is time to pose for a photo opp with your good-looking horses and shiny ribbons. Here are some of your proudest moments from Town Hill Farm H.T., Richland Park H.T. and Shepherd Ranch SYVPC H.T.

@glfeventing and her mare, Calida, finished in 2nd! Congrats ladies!

A post shared by Mill Creek (@millcreekequestrian) on

”Twas a great weekend for @cara_lavigna and Roo! Hip hip hooray! Blue looks good on you two!

A post shared by Mill Creek (@millcreekequestrian) on

SOOO beyond proud of Oso this weekend!! He put on his big boy pants and behaved like a star every day!! Happy to say that we started iff with a decent dressage score landing us in 7th, a perfect run on XC with 1 second of time, and A DOUBLE CLEAR show jump round!! What a good bear!! Also congrats to @pointbreakfarms and brady on fifth place, Melina and @the.penceypony with a sixth place finish and @enzoeventing FOR COMPLETEING AND SLAYING THEIR FIRST SHOW TOGETHER WITH A SEVENTH PLACE – – – #traininglevelsoon #wemovinupintheworld #tailoredsportsman #oso #irishsporthorse #ish #onekhelmets #osohandsome #ogilvyequestrian #pointbreakfarms #equifit #eventer #eventing #juniorrider #jumper #novice #tailoredsportsman #california #bestpony #shepherdrancheventing #smartpak #schockomohle #thirdplace

A post shared by Kora D (@kbdeventing) on

What?!?!? That never happens!!!

A post shared by Jen Boulden (@jenboulden) on

Twinning

A post shared by Taylor Freundlich☪️ (@tay_freundlich) on

Mary and Will with their goodies #truenortheventing

A post shared by True North Eventing (@true_north_eventing) on

the Bean landed us a 3rd place finish in Prelim Champs this weekend!! Can’t wait for our first 1* coming up in a few weeks

A post shared by Lizzie Chamberlin (@lizzie.chamberlin) on

GREAT JOB!!! Jonathan 5th, Kora 3rd & Melina 6th!

A post shared by Krystal Clemente (@mskclemente) on

dreaming of red ribbons❤️❤️

A post shared by cailida // cole (@glfeventing) on

Steph and Chief bring home the 5th place finish in a big division at Richland! Capped off by a strong XC run! Go Steph, and…. the Chief is back!

A post shared by BHF- Fox Hunting & Eventing (@blackhorsefarm_il) on

Windy day!! #fernhillchocoroyale #windy #dontmindmyhair @karlslezakeventing

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Go Eventing.

Wylie vs. the Mongol Derby, Powered by SmartPak: The Race, Part 3 – But Wait, It Gets Worse

In August 2017 writer/rider Leslie Wylie conquered her most fearsome feat of #YOLO yet: a 620-mile race across Mongolia. Riding 27 semi-wild native horses. Carrying only 11 pounds of gear. Relying on nomads for food, water and shelter. On a mission to help stop deforestation.

Held Aug. 9-19, the Mongol Derby is widely regarded as the toughest horse race in the world. Inspired by the Genghis Khan’s original “pony express,” there’s no trail or set route, just 25 GPS checkpoints/horse exchange stations to hit over the course of 7-10 days. Now that Leslie is home she is recapping her ride of a lifetime! Click here to read previous stories in the series.

New camel stirrups, check! All photos courtesy of The Adventurists/Mongol Derby.

Day 4

Day 4 dawned bright and full of naive promise at urtuu #9. A blood orange sun was yawning up from the horizon, casting sunbeams across the steppe that warmed the gers and backlit the horse line. Encircled by miles upon miles of nothing much at all, I felt like I was standing on the edge of the earth with no option but to jump.

After yesterday’s runaway horse debacle, things were looking up. It had been a pleasant night: Sleeping under a rug, in lieu of my gone-forever sleeping bag, hadn’t been half bad. And I’d gotten my first introduction to Mongolian dumplings, an absolute revelation, cloaking whatever mystery meat was on the menu in hand-rolled, pillowy dough so we didn’t have to look at it. Some of the swankier host gers even served them up with off-brand ketchup, a delicacy I liked to refer to as “wilderness ravioli.”

Another tremendous source of hope was the fact that I now possessed a pair of stirrups, or at least a couple stirrup-like objects, courtesy of crew member and acclaimed de-motivational speaker Hugh. Technically they were camel stirrups — big, rusty, medieval looking things; I’m pretty sure you could kill a man with one if you bonked him over the head with it. Hugh’s lackeys tied them onto my saddle with ratchet straps while he stood around, feeling manly.

I picked a black-and-white paint horse off the line and felt actual delight when he went bucking off with his herder. If I was going to make up for lost time today, I needed a horse with some spunk. Galloping out of the station behind Brits Cy and Paul, I felt like sticking my middle finger toward the sky: You can’t stop THIS girl, Mongol Derby puppet masters!

We’d only gone a kilometer or two before my optimism was interrupted by the clunk of a camel stirrup falling off. Well-played, puppet masters. Well-played.

I pulled up to address the wardrobe malfunction, insisting that Cy and Paul continue on and I’d try to catch up. I’d gotten off to fiddle with the stirrups when a cloud of dust came into view, heading my direction. It was Erik and the bloodwagon!

Erik is like the friend who shows up on your doorstep with pizza, wine and complete Golden Girls box set just when you need him the most. In this case he and his crew showed up with real stirrups and fenders, hand-me-downs from Julia Fisher, an American rider who sadly fell and broke a rib on day one.

I couldn’t have been more excited. Finally, something was going my way. After getting the new stirrups on, I mounted up and set back out on course. My horse picked up a brisk canter and I swiveled around to wave a cheerful goodbye to Erik and his crew. The documentary cameraman, who’d been recording #stirrupgate as it unfolded, focused his lens on us; at least this particular storyline of his film would have a happy ending.

And that was the exact moment when the paint bucked me off.

This time, I didn’t even try to hang on to the leadrope. I stood up, shook my fist at the horse as went buck-farting away, and collapsed back down to the ground in defeat. You’ve got to be kidding me.

Meanwhile, Erik sprang into action, ordering everyone back into the bloodwagon. They sped off after the horse, Erik leaning out the window while the filmmaker kept hold of his belt to keep him from falling out the door. “Get me closer!” he yelled to the driver, reaching toward the horse’s reins.

What happened next, some combination of fancy minivan maneuvering and a human wall that resulted in my horse inside a goat pen (looking not-at-all guilty for the havok he’d wrecked), still doesn’t quite add up in my mind.

Feeling like I’d just woken up from some hilarious dream, I hugged Erik and climbed back on the paint. You can’t stop THIS girl, Mongol Derby puppet masters. Although, point taken, you sure can slow me down.

But the biggest speed bump was yet to come. As the leg wore on the paint began to feel like a Walkman with a dying battery, the music playing slower and slower, its melody stretched apart like taffy until there’s nothing left but a sticky flatline drone. His reluctant canter gave way to a lethargic trot, which soon dissolved to a walk, and no amount of kicking or verbally coaxing or swinging my rope around would speed him up.

I kept hoping I’d run into another rider, and to be fair I did. Lucy and her horse pulled up a few kilometers in when her horse began having seizures, rearing up and flipping over backwards on top of her during one episode. She summoned the vets and they were there now, treating him. Unable to help, I wished them well and soldiered on.

Things got pretty bleak over the next few hours. When the paint’s walk slowed to something barely faster than a standstill, I dismounted to drag him along on foot, walking some 13 miles across the vast expanse of sand, scrubgrass and sun.

I was in trouble. It was hot, and my hydration pack was empty. I knew I should be sweating, but my skin was hot and dry. My energy was dwindling and I had no food. I knew my Garmin GPS batteries were running low (the extras had been in my saddlebag), so I only turned it on every couple miles to make sure I was still on track. If the batteries died and I was in the middle of nowhere … I avoided completing the thought. Even my senses seemed to be failing, depth perception for instance: the further we walked, the further away the mountain I was aiming for seemed to get.

At first, I wasn’t sure if it was real or hallucination when I saw a figure heading toward us across the steppe. As it got closer I realized that it was a herder on a motorcycle, and my heart clenched with fight-or-flight adrenaline. Riders have gotten robbed and even sexually assaulted during the Derby — I myself had woken up at 5 a.m. one morning during start camp to a drunk herder trying to get in bed with me — and my vulnerability in this moment especially was not lost on me. Two things that I’d kept on my person rather than in my saddle bag were pepper spray and a knife, and I clutched one in each fist as he pulled up in front of me.

Fortunately, I didn’t need them. The herder’s friendly, toothless smile quickly disarmed my defenses — he was clearly just concerned that I was off my horse and had wanted to make sure everything was OK. Unable to communicate that the paint was just a deadbeat, I handed him the leadrope to hold while I mounted back up, only to jump back off again when he was out of sight.

The miles dragged on and on. I kept my eyes forward but allowed my mind to wander, under one condition: positive thoughts only. I imagined my husband Tommy bringing me coffee in bed at home, our buff-colored kitten purring into the crook of my arm. I heard my 2-year-old blue-eyed nephew, Cade, imparting his favorite advice: “Be safe on road!” I felt my fingers in my pony Princess’ silky mane, and smelled the honeysuckle that permeates summertime in Tennessee.

Finally, we made it to the mountain, and a solid nine hours after we started we found horse station #10. The paint and I parted ways, both overjoyed to be rid of one another.

After a long day of solitude, I couldn’t believe my good fortune: Clare and Rachel, my South Carolina comrades, were at the station! They were riding the race as a team and had been clocking steady progress. When Rachel heard about my lost kit she scooped me under her wing, setting me up with some electrolytes, painkillers and chafe cream — three direly-needed items. Her kindness and generosity put a lump in my throat.

There was time enough in the day for one more leg, and I set off from horse station #10 in a much happier state of mind than I’d arrived. Trotting behind Clare and Rachel into a fresh landscape of crisp green hills, gazing out between the ears of a horse who was NOT the paint, I felt some hope creeping back in. Maybe I could do this. Maybe it was going to be OK.

Horse station #11 was one of two penalty urtuus on the course and resultingly a sizeable group of riders had stalled out there, serving time for veterinary or other infractions (my vet card was clean but I owed an hour for outside assistance).

James, Clare, Erik, myself and Rachel with herding families and crew at horse station #11.

The mood of the camp was upbeat. The smell was, em, “ripe” with the aroma of riders who hadn’t seen a shower since start camp. Dinner was a show-and-tell of battle scars and stories. We tried to piece together where we were in the field, who was in front of us and who was behind, a mental exercise akin to keeping track of swimmers in a pool full of talcum powder. Comparing notes at horse stations was our only means of making head or tail of the chaos.

Unlike the Hunger Games, the faces of the Derby’s fallen soldiers weren’t projected in the sky each night accompanied by cannonfire and dramatic music. I was surprised and terribly sorry to hear about the five riders who had already come out of the race, but excited to (gently) hug two of them at #11: Julia, patron saint of my stirrups, and Jane Boxhall, who suffered a concussion on the fourth leg. In a display of true sportsmanship, both women came back out to the field to assist in the bloodwagon and lend moral support. Jane set me up with a few odds and ends from her kit, including my new DIY saddlebag, an oversized possum-hair sock.

I think that up until horse station #11, the cold, harsh reality of the Derby hadn’t quite settled down on me. I’d been chugging along in my own little bubble, oblivious to the more serious accidents and injuries that other riders had encountered. If the worst that happened to me in this race was the loss of my gear, some heat exhaustion and a slowpoke pony, I’d be lucky. But it was still early in the race — we weren’t even to the halfway point yet. Anything could happen, and I couldn’t help but wonder when my number might be up.

There was one more heartbreaking casualty still to come that evening. I was watching North Carolina firecracker Marianne Williams approach the station, eager to give her a reunion squeeze, when her horse went down in a marmot hole just a couple hundred meters out. She lie motionless as the horse got up without her.

Luckily the medical team couldn’t have been closer and they stabilized her quickly, pitching a tent around her and making her comfortable until the ambulance could arrive later that night. A broken collarbone, it sounded like.

Feeling helpless, I walked out to Marianne at dusk with some milk tea and well-wishes. As the sun disappeared and gave way to a moonless night, I lingered outside the tent, listening as she flirtatiously cracked jokes to the doctor. Meanwhile the gers had gone quiet, everyone lying shoulder-to-shoulder in their sleeping bags, simultaneously together and alone in the dark. After an interminably long day of fighting back tears, I finally let one slip.

#DogsOfEN: The Dog and Pony Show

Today is National Dog Day! And where would eventers be without their dogs? If your pup is by your side this weekend at the barn, an event or just hanging out at home, give him an extra snuggle and thank him (or her) for his enduring love and companionship. Go dogs!

You love your dogs, and we love showing them off via #DogsOfEN. Remember to tag your pup pics on Instagram for inclusion in a future edition!

Presley and Ravelle sporting their awareness ☺️ #dogsofEN #haltcanceratX #dogsofeventingnation

A post shared by Dana (@dchasephd) on

Horse show weekend got us like #eventerproblems #labrador #lifeandtimesofabbythelabby

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#stellathelab #walkingthepuppy #crosscountrycoursewalk #workinglab #blacklabsmatter #eventerproblems

A post shared by Allison McCracken (@50shadeseventing) on

If only my horse jumped as well as my dog does #majesticdoggo #dogsofinsta #DogsofEN

A post shared by Abby (@ashequine) on

Side kick | Velcro dog #dogsofinstagram #australianshepherd #aussie #barndog #dogsofen

A post shared by Hillary M. (@equestrianathart) on

Mazda’s “Are we there yet?” face #sheltie #dogsofinsta #dogsofen

A post shared by Jodi Leanne (@jodi_leanne) on

Still beating the heat. A reward for such a good Eventing pup! #moothru #dogsofen #scatteredacres

A post shared by Rachel Pie (@joeytheeventer) on

Practicing my grasshopper game. #lifewithluna #horseshowdog #miniaussie #aussiesofinstagram #dogsofen

A post shared by Luna the Mini Aussie (@life_with_luna423) on

When you can’t jump your horses!! #eventingdogs #beginnernovicepuppy #prelimdiva #areaiv #dogsofen #pitbullsofinstagram

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And … one #CatOfEN, because we’re equal opportunity like that!

Farm hand. #farmcat #tractor #farmlife #eventer #dogsofEN #cat #amynelsoneventer

A post shared by Amy Nelson Eventer Official (@amynelsoneventer) on

Go Eventing.

Wylie vs. the Mongol Derby, Powered by SmartPak: The Race, Part 2 – That Time I Lost My Horse Forever

In August 2017 writer/rider Leslie Wylie conquered her most fearsome feat of #YOLO yet: a 620-mile race across Mongolia. Riding 27 semi-wild native horses. Carrying only 11 pounds of gear. Relying on nomads for food, water and shelter. On a mission to help stop deforestation.

Held Aug. 9-19, the Mongol Derby is widely regarded as the toughest horse race in the world. Inspired by the Genghis Khan’s original “pony express,” there’s no trail or set route, just 25 GPS checkpoints/horse exchange stations to hit over the course of 7-10 days. Now that Leslie is home she is recapping her ride of a lifetime! Click here to read previous stories in the series.

Leslie Wylie and Rebecca “Pixie” Pumphrey setting off into the icy monsoon. Photo by Julian Herbert/Mongol Derby.

Day 2

After a not-long-enough hold the next morning for weather …

… I rode out from my safe (unless you are a mouse) haven into blinding rain and a sub-zero windchill. It felt like we were galloping through a hurricane, with visibility reduced to a stride or two in front of us.

My horse was a great sport about it, pinning his wet ears flat to his head but trucking on obediently save the occasional dramatic spook. Unlike first-world horses, who’ll come apart at the seams over an out-of-place flower pot, at least when this horse gave something the stink-eye it was for good reason: a tendon-slicing heap of broken vodka bottles, a tangle of rusty barbed wire or an open pit full of Soviet-era car scrap. Once he suddenly jumped sideways to avoid a tripping over a dead horse that, with its empty eye sockets, half exposed jaw and rib cage jutting through rotting flesh, I half expected it to rise up zombie-style and chase after us.

Man, I could’ve used a cup of coffee this morning.

My horse and I both were shaking like leaves by the time we made it to horse station #4 mid-morning. I was the first rider in and after vetting out I hightailed it into the ger to warm up by the stove with some mutton noodle soup.

The Mongol Derby, as you’ve probably gathered by now, is not a normal race. I hesitate even to call it a “race”; it’s more like the Hunger Games on horseback. The challenges arrived in regular waves, like we were being watched from some control room by a game master whose job it was to keep the chaos coming. I imagined a panel of buttons representing various threats — cloud-to-ground lightning, wild dogs snapping at your feet, pit latrine full of midges (worse than lightning and wild dogs combined) — and some sociopath puppetmaster pushing them willy-nilly, laughing derangedly while watching us squirm.

In this case, the wrench in my plan for the day was the fact that the next horse station no longer existed.

“Horse station #5 blew over,” veteran vet and event team manager Cozy Campbell shrugged. “The horses have all run off. You may get there and have to wait an hour or two, or it might be down the rest of the day.”

I took the news as a sign to hang out for a while and defrost. Hypothermia was the running theme of the day, taking out one American rider and putting another few on medical hold. As a domesticated creature whose natural habitat is a steaming hot bubble bath, I knew my limits. Cozy handed me a cookie made of yak lard or something. “Eat this,” he said. “It’s basically pure fat. You need it for warmth.”

I mean, who am I to argue with THAT logic? My Mongol Derby weight-loss plan wasn’t off to a great start, but hey, there was still time. Maybe I’d go home with a tapeworm. Fingers crossed!

After a while Ed, the Aussie Olympic pentathlete I began the race with, came blazing into the horse station, accompanied by tough-nut Kiwi Marie Palzer and British sassypants Rebecca “Pixie” Pumphrey. Ed and Marie took one look at me with my hand in a basket of stale sweet rolls and saw their opportunity to steal the lead — if horse station #5 was down, they’d just deal with it when they got there. Pixie’s priorities, on the other hand, were more in line with my own. She joined me in the ger as the two suckers she’d ridden in with thundered back out into the storm.

I admired Pixie from the start. British Airways lost all her luggage, including her riding kit and gear, but she’d kept her chin up despite the setback. It’s hard to convey how much effort Derby riders put into distilling a 10-day supply of survival gear — sleeping bag, first aid kit, utility kit, change of clothes — into a 5K limit saddle bag. Despite a running joke that all I was packing was nine pounds of duct tape and a bottle of my horse’s muscle relaxers, my own gear was meticulously calculated down to the ounce, the result of months of trial-and-error and neurotic list-making. I couldn’t imagine being in Pixie’s shoes, all that preparation out the window. She had to start from scratch in Ulaanbaatar, assembling a new kit from other riders’ spares (I made her a care package of riding clothes), but if she was losing her cool over it she never let it show.

After stalling at the horse station a while, Pixie and I mounted up and rode out together. We were a good match in the saddle, especially when mounted on horses with matching zoom-zoom personalities. We never caught Ed and Marie but had a grand time nonetheless throughout the day, chitchatting about life, taking proper noodle breaks at every opportunity and yet still somehow magically gaining on the leaders …

… and maintaining perfect vet card marks.

Over the course of 13.5 hours that day I blew threw four and a half legs, three of them with Pixie, totalling well over 100 miles. The diversity of the landscapes we traversed was stunning — lush green river valleys, otherworldly sand dunes, mountains ablaze in sunset light. We squealed like little kids galloping through herds of sheep and goats and paused in awe on ridgetops, gazing out on a land unsullied by the western value system.

In the western world, boundaries are a deeply embedded part of our culture. Not only do we build fences around our houses, we crisscross our interior landscapes with them, constantly driven to compartmentalize every aspect of our lives: this vs. that, mine vs. yours, us vs. them. We construct barriers within and around ourselves out of a desire to feel protected and in control, only to find ourselves isolated and hemmed in. How would our lives look without those fences?

On the steppe, there are no fences; property ownership does not exist. The notion of “home” is redefined by the nomadic culture, where permanence is not located in a place but in the self. This idea would become a mantra for me throughout the Derby: my body is my home, my heart an extension of the vast wilderness unfurling in every direction around me.

Day 3

Speaking of bodies, after two days of riding at speed for hours on end, I was feeling pretty creaky. I limped gingerly out of the ger on day three, my clothes still clammy from the day before, and had to give myself a little pep talk before climbing aboard my first horse of the day.

Seven legs down, only 21 left to go!

It was a pretty pitiful pep talk, but to be honest I didn’t have much to work with. I was sore, I was cold, and there was still a whole lot of race in front of me.

The boy’s club of Barry Armitage and Jakkie Mellet, both of South Africa, and Australians Greg Chant and Warren Sutton had caught up with Pixie and I the night before and we all rode out together, despite a bit of squabbling at the horse line. Group dynamics in the Derby are touchy — there are lots of “strong” personalities in the mix, and at the top of the field competitiveness is cutthroat. Riding together can be a tactical advantage, harnessing herd mentality to keep the horses going, but an alliance’s true colors only show when things go pear-shaped.

Which is what happened about midway through our first leg of the day, when Pixie’s horse developed a sudden habit of bolting violently to the left. She got spun off on first offense, acquiring a tough-looking face full of mud, and eventually resigned herself to getting off and walking him to the next horse station. The boy’s club continued on but I hung back to walk in with Pixie.

It’s amazing how quickly your defenses develop during the Derby. Between unpredictable horses and rugged terrain, your senses had to maintain constant vigil. My heart was in my throat everytime I put my foot in the stirrup, knowing that within the next split-second I’d find myself either in the saddle or on the ground. My galloping position quickly evolved from a shiny, happy hover to “gonna take a bomb to dislodge me from this horse” defense mode. Even on the best behaved horses, it wasn’t a matter of if but when your horse was going to hit the deck, and you needed to be prepared to ride them down to the ground and back up again at any moment, at any speed.

At horse station #8, I pulled the plug on my first-pick horse, a scrappy-looking chestnut stallion, when he stood up on his hind legs and pawed the air for what seemed like five minutes straight to avoid bridling. Scanning the line for a second draft, a stunning blue roan caught my eye. Thus far I’d tried to steer clear of pretty horses, gravitating instead toward rough-and-tumble allycat-looking types, but this one was downright sexy: the color of a summer thunderstorm, with eyes like a film noir detective and striking triangle brands on his shoulder and hindquarters.

He stood stock still while I mounted him, cantered out of the station like a gentleman, and by 10K in had me convinced that he was not just a good-looking creature but a rational one as well, perhaps even with a code of ethics. That’s when I made a rookie error that would haunt me for the rest of the Derby: I decided to — wait for it! — dismount and take off my raincoat.

Game over. Horse: 1, human: 0. Thanks for playing. Goodbye! 

He bolted even before my feet hit the ground. I managed to keep hold of his lead rope but after a few feet of being dragged across the rocks on my stomach it slipped out of my grasp. I jumped up and watched in disbelief as my Mongolian dream pony disappeared over a ridge, never to be seen again.

Literally, we never saw him again.

The brilliant thing about the Derby is that it’s structured to allow riders the freedom to get in heaps of trouble, but if things go too far (for instance: if we get injured or our horse runs away forever) we can press a button for help. There’s a penalty attached, of course, but sometimes your options are limited. Not wanting to spend the next week of my life searching for my lost horse on foot, I reckoned that this was a button-press situation.

Sweet Pixie insisted on hanging out with me until help arrived, and sending her away was even sadder than losing my horse. We’d been a dream team, and at this rate it seemed unlikely that I’d catch back up to her before the finish line.

After a while a couple Land Cruisers full of crew came to my rescue. When I told them my horse had buggered off, Cozy leaned out the window with a tube of Pringles. “Eat this,” he said. “You’ll feel better.”

Cozy is so wise.

We drove around for a while searching and dispatched some herders on motorcycles to scout out the area, but my horse — along with all my stuff, which was attached to him — was clearly long gone.

They drove me back to station #8, where I hid out in the ger to avoid the parade of riders passing through.

I was comforting myself with some sweet rolls when race ref Maggie Pattinson walked in and made me an offer so terrible I couldn’t resist: I could ride on, using an extra saddle that had shown up at the station, just one catch … it just didn’t have stirrups.

At that point anything seemed like a better option than sitting around feeling sorry for myself. I asked the translator to explain my situation to the herders: If I was going to be riding 40k without stirrups, I needed a horse that wouldn’t be trying to assassinate me the entire way. One herder pulled a plain looking grey horse off the line and, to prove its sanity, not only vaulted on but proceeded to stand up on the horse’s back as well. I’ll take him! And with that, I was back in the hunt.

It turned out to be the most beautiful leg of the Derby, the path unwinding like a ribbon through a green valley rimmed with pastel-blue peaks. Questions tugged at my sleeve — would I be able to walk after 25 miles without stirrups? what would I do without my gear? — but I brushed them aside. No use wasting energy on things you can’t control.

Galloping along I felt light and weirdly unhinged, like a balloon cut loose from its string. What did I need that I didn’t already have? My body is my home. My heart is free.

#EventerFailFriday: Garden Variety Fail

It takes all kinds. Here are a few of our favorite #EventerFailFriday photos of the week! Don’t forget to tag ’em on Instagram for inclusion in an upcoming edition.

When your fails gets professionally captured #EventerFailFriday

A post shared by K O (@pandoramiak) on

When your horse is dramatic with a half halt #eventerfailfriday #failfriday #eventerproblems #ottbsofinstagram

A post shared by Royal Rose Eventing (@royal_rose_eventing) on

Me, trying to get through adulthood at the moment. #eventerproblems #misseditmonday #thesunwasinoureyes

A post shared by Logan Bearden (@loganbeardy95) on

A series of unfortunate events Full video is on my spam @jkits.taayyy #eventerproblems #herewegoagain

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Go Eventing!

Even More Random Stuff Eventers Would Jump

Eventers are visionaries. They see the world in a different way from their un-horsey brethren. For eventers, even the most mundane everyday object can suddenly seem full of potential … to be jumped.


https://www.instagram.com/p/BWqh6uVABKm/

Go Eventing.

Wylie vs. the Mongol Derby, Powered by SmartPak: The Race, Part 1 – Wait, What, I’m Winning?!

In August 2017 writer/rider Leslie Wylie conquered her most fearsome feat of #YOLO yet: a 620-mile race across Mongolia. Riding 27 semi-wild native horses. Carrying only 11 pounds of gear. Relying on nomads for food, water and shelter. On a mission to help stop deforestation.

Held Aug. 9-19, the Mongol Derby is widely regarded as the toughest horse race in the world. Inspired by the Genghis Khan’s original “pony express,” there’s no trail or set route, just 25 GPS checkpoints/horse exchange stations to hit over the course of 7-10 days. Now that Leslie is home she is recapping her ride of a lifetime! Click here to read previous stories in the series.

Go pony, go pony, go! Picture by Julian Herbert/Mongol Derby/The Adventurists.

If post time at the Kentucky Derby were a polite tea party, the start of the Mongol Derby would be a stein-smashing bar brawl. All around me, mayhem: 42 white-knuckled, steel-faced riders mounted up on tiny horses with steam blowing out their ears, the most civilized among them skittering around like popcorn while others spun like tops or flat bolted through the crowd.

These were the descendants of Mongolian warhorses and for all they knew we were charging off into battle, having missed the memo that Chinggis Khan’s mighty empire fell several centuries ago. In the final moments before the race a couple riders were still endeavoring just to climb in the saddle, their mounts issuing a buck-spin the moment they put their foot in the stirrup despite the herders trying to hold them down.

We’d been randomly issued horses for the first leg of the 28-leg race. Mine was midnight black and moved with a cocky mob-boss swagger, and I wanted desperately to stay on his good side. Ed Fernon, an Australian Olympic pentathlete whom I’d gotten to know on the six-hour bus ride to start camp, pointed out that I’d drawn the winner of the nadaam children’s race that had been our afternoon entertainment the day before. So he was basically a kid’s pony, right? Surely I could handle that. As the countdown began I lingered near the back, hoping to avoid fallout from the frontline and just run with the pack for a while.

Derby chief Katy Willings, who throughout the race somehow always managed to look like a glamorous starlet on an African safari holiday, counted us down. Three, two, one …

My horse lunged forward, haunches gathered underneath him like a genetically mutant greyhound. I chucked him the reins, figuring he could better navigate the pandemonium without my amateur-hour input. He hung back for a few strides, apparently did a few quick physics calculations in his head, and then surged ahead, deftly maneuvering his way through the frantic horde. We gained speed and seemed to get lower to the ground with each horse we passed, until suddenly we were out front and somehow still gaining speed.

Oh [expletive].

This was NOT part of the plan.

This is how not part of the plan it was: I didn’t even have my Garmin GPS navigator turned on, figuring I wouldn’t need it for the first few legs as we’d just be going with the flow. Now, with a growing gap between myself and the field, dozens of riders following my lead and tears streaming from my eyes from the wind, I had only the vaguest sense of what direction we were supposed to be heading. I pulled the navigator out and punched its buttons haphazardly, trying to pull up the correct track. Finally a disembodied arrow showed up, hovering meaninglessly over a gray screen. Not helpful.

[Expletive, expletive, expletive.]

I yelled back to the nearest rider, who happened to be Ed: “Dude! You gotta keep up! I don’t know where I’m going!”

Between me pulling back and Ed kicking on we sprinted along together for a solid chunk of the leg, him yelling directives while I veered wildly in a number of directions, most of them incorrect. The steppe landscape is deceptively difficult to navigate, an undulating carpet of seafoam green in every direction with maybe a hazy mountain in the distance to aim for if you’re lucky.

A handful of riders eventually caught up and we arrived at the first horse station together, where a vet checked our horses’ heart rates (they had to be below 56 within half an hour of arriving), hydration, gut sounds, soundness and overall condition. If they weren’t up to par on any front, riders received a time penalty in accordance, to be served at one of two penalty urtuus later in the race. Horse welfare is at the forefront of the Derby, and the penalty system is in place to encourage good horsemanship throughout.

My horse sailed through vet check like a champ and I headed up to the gers, where the host family had set out boiled water and food, in this case a giant vat of fried noodles. I scarfed down an entire plate, not caring in the least that other riders were already mounted up and heading out on leg #2. At least I know what’s important in life: carbs.

After I’d eaten, refilled my hydration pack and sorted my GPS woes, I wandered out to peruse the next batch of equines. Riders were allowed to select our own mounts, first come first serve, and I felt like a kid in a candy shop eyeballing several dozen horses of all shapes and colors. Before I could make a decision a Mongolian girl, maybe 13 years old, took me by the arm and led me excitedly to a wild-eyed, giraffe-necked chestnut. “Choo choo!” she said, making a gesture like a rocket ship.

The infinite wisdom of horse-crazy teenage girls cannot be denied: Sold!

Climbing aboard was a bit nerve-wracking — as soon as I got a leg over the horse leapt into the air — and when the herder let go we were off to the races, literally. The horse bolted with blinding speed, his head practically in my lap; I could have been steering him by his ears. I had zero brakes as he took off into the great unknown, zooming past a couple riders immediately. All I could do was hold my breath as he nimbly leapt and dodged the knee-deep marmot holes that claim so many Derby contenders every year.

At some point down the road a herder in a truck pulled up beside us and indicated via coarse sign language that we could slice off a corner of the race route. The recommended route had us crossing a river via bridge, but the herder seemed to be saying that I could ford the river instead. “Baklava,” I yelled, butchering the Mongolian word for thank you, баярлалаа (pronounced “bayarlalaa”). After all the noodles I scarfed down at horse station #1 you’d think I could go one leg without a Freudian slip involving pastries, but no.

The advice paid off; the water level was low enough to splash through and to my surprise I arrived at horse station #2 ahead of any other riders. The herders crowded around me as I dismounted, like I was some sort of warrior princess just returned from slaying a dragon.

“You are best,” one of them whispered in my ear.

The Leslie Dot at horse station #2. My GPS tracker was on the fritz for the first few legs, hence the illusion that I rode a perfectly straight line between stations and/or was teleported by a magic unicorn.

When you’re winning all the herders want you to ride their horses — having one of their own in the lead comes with a big vodka toast at the end of the day, I bet. Ultimately, though, it’s the rider’s own decision, and I pointed to a little dun colored horse with conformation similar to the first horse I’d ridden: small and ribby, with a big jug head and an “I’ve seen things, kid” look in his eyes. The Derby ain’t no equine beauty contest, that’s for sure. We peeled out of the station just as the next batch of riders arrived, and I was immediately struck by the horse’s sportscar-esque rideability. The reins seemed unnecessary; I could turn him, rev him up or slow him down with my body weight alone.

It wasn’t really until that moment, as we were sprinting headlong across the steppe with the setting sun as our only rival, that it started to sink in: By some combination of luck and the gutsiness that sometimes accompanies not knowing what the hell is going on, I was WINNING the Mongol Derby. I felt honored and humbled. No matter what, even if things went south and my Derby ended tomorrow, I would forever have this moment.

I arrived at horse station #3 with about an hour-and-a-half before the 8:30 p.m. cutoff time and was faced with a tough question: Should I stay put for the night in the official Derby urtuu prepared for us, sharing the top of the scoreboard with other riders who would soon land there, or hop on a fresh horse and set out on the fourth leg to keep the lead? That would mean finding my own lodging for the night, be it camping out or overnighting in a family ger along the way.

I imagined my husband Tommy waking up in the morning to see the Leslie Dot well in the lead of the Mongol Derby, and the decision was clear: I would ride out. I wanted to make him, and all my family and friends following the race, proud, or at least make them spit out their coffee in surprise. In the Derby fortunes can shift at any moment, and more often than not they do. I knew I might not get another chance.

I galloped out of the station on my fourth horse of the day, a relatively gargantuan (AKA probably 14.3-hand) bay. It was a gamble, but this leg of the race route ran parallel to a major highway (AKA two-lane road that might as well have had tumbleweed blowing down it) so I hoped there might be some semblance of civilization along the way.

With just a few minutes left to ride I came across a group of herders attempting to load what seemed like 40 horses into the bed of a single pickup truck outside a corral. I pulled up and showed them a note I’d had the translator write up for me explaining my situation. The herders talked heatedly in Mongolian, discussing what to do with this random American girl who’d shown up on their doorstep like a stray kitten. Just when I thought they were about to resort to rock-paper-scissors, one of them took the reins of my horse and headed off toward a nearby ger, gesturing for me to follow.

My final day 1 resting place was just a ger in the middle of a goat field, but for whatever reason it hilariously showed up on the map as “Golden Meadows Shopping Mall.” #GPSfail

Reader commentary = on point.

The herder sent me into the ger with his wife, who was friendly and seemingly nonplussed by the surprise houseguest. She gave me a bowl of warm milk from a big vat of the stuff she had simmering in the middle of the small canvas hut. The weather was turning — the wind had picked up and the air temperature was plunging lower by the moment — and the milk was a comforting gesture.

The ger was spartan in its simplicity: two hard twin beds, a couple cabinets showcasing assorted trinkets, and a dung-burning stove in the middle (I didn’t see a single tree until about halfway through the race, so poop is the fuel of choice). A chubby-faced toddler, maybe two years old, was playing contentedly with a ball in the middle of the floor.

The herder soon came in, accompanied by several of the men who had been helping to load the horses. He ladled some airag, a ceremonial drink made of fermented mare’s milk, into a bowl and gestured for me to take a sip. It’s really not as bad as it sounds — with a splash of Kahlua airag could be the Mongolian answer to a White Russian, I think! — but when I puckered my lips reflexively everyone laughed.

I’d brought some American Spirit cigarettes as gifts for helpful herders and passed them around. The men smoked them appreciatively and broke out the vodka while the wife passed around a bowl of sour-tasting cheese curds. Despite the fact that I knew not a word of Mongolian, nor did they understand an ounce of English, it was a pretty congenial gathering. Mix that vodka with some Jell-O and sub cheese puffs for cheese curds, and we could have been bro-ing out in a college dorm room.

After they left I rolled my sleeping bag out on the floor, not wanting to take up a bed. I laid down to a staring contest with a mouse who was checking me out from the beneath the cupboard. As the herder’s final party trick, he pulled a giant pair of pincers from beneath the bed and baited its tips with cheese, immediately luring another mouse buddy out from the shadows. He looked at me, raised his eyebrows and then … crunch, accompanied by the tiniest death squeal ever. The herder looked impressed with himself. Not sure how to respond, I forced a smile and slow clapped a little. Nothing like a little violent murder to cap off a long day on the steppe.

The weather worsened overnight, with day one’s blue skies and warm breeze deteriorating into icy rain and gale-force wind. I would later learn that a few riders got caught out camping between horse stations #2 and #3 that night and were forced to pack up and ride forward to shelter after dark. They were in bad shape when they arrived to the horse station, but staying out would have meant hypothermia or worse. That’s the Derby — you never know what is going to happen next.

As night wore on it got colder, and father, mother and son ended up piling into the same bed for warmth. I tossed and turned on the floor, kept awake by the scurrying of mice and the cries of sheep and goats encircling us outside. Every couple hours the guard dog would go crazy about something, and the herder would go outside to scan the vicinity for wolves.

The storm buffeted our ger for hours on end. Eyes closed I imagined that I was aboard a small sea vessel slowly passing through a midnight squall, rocking back and forth on black waves, nothing but emptiness in all directions. It was only day one but already I’d never felt so far away from home.

#EventerSolutions: Making Do With What We’ve Got

Where there are #EventerProblems there are #EventerSolutions, as horse folks tend to be a pretty crafty, resourceful and frugal (read: broke) bunch.

In this spin-off series we spotlight some of your most inventive problem-solving masterpieces and determined DIY efforts — even if you don’t ALWAYS achieve the desired result. Be sure to tag your photos with the hashtag #EventerSolutions on social for inclusion in future editions!

It seemed to work #eventerproblems #eventersolutions #dressageishard #IamCanadian

A post shared by Kelly S (@stb_eventing) on

When an eventer gets prego cankles…. #icevibes #eventerproblems #bartendingdoesnthelp

A post shared by Jeanna Epping (@jemevent) on

Thank you Walmart for the cheap poultice paper!! #eventerhacks #groomhacks #schoolsupplies #groomtips #eventerproblems

A post shared by Genevieve Faith (@faitheventing) on

It’s hot. It’s beer-thirty. No barn fridge, but Cairo’s water is cold … #eventerproblems

A post shared by chmortensen (@chmortensen) on

When Daddy doesn’t like cleaning tack inside you use the bath #kiwiingenuity #eventerproblems

A post shared by Kate (@mackate3kids) on

#tbstallion #balls #ballswiffer #swiffer #eventersolutions #eventerproblems #blackstallion

A post shared by Helen Brew (@helen_brew) on

When you’d rather spend $4 on duct tape than $100 on new boots for #eventercharlie #eventerproblems

A post shared by Alexei Pilotski (@alexeipilotski) on

Go Eventing.

#DogsOfEN: Making A Splash

Water jumps, troughs, ponds, pools or just plain puddles, dogs love them all, especially in the heat of summer. All the dogs in this week’s edition of #DogsOfEN are living their best aquatic lives.

“It’s hot” -Sawyer #dogsofEN #fitchscorner

A post shared by megmurfey (@megmurfey) on

Beating the heat! #dogsofen

A post shared by Rachel Pie (@joeytheeventer) on

Eventer Dog Oakley does water complexes with a little encouragement from Eventer Dad #dogsofen #labradork #poolday

A post shared by Lizzie Harder (@eventerlizzie) on

#theboys #doingsummer #lovetheirpool #dogsofen #dogsofinstagram #hodyandgroot

A post shared by Helen Bird (@nelehdrib) on

#otterdog #borderterrier #dogsofEN

A post shared by megmurfey (@megmurfey) on

Go Eventing.

#EventerFailFriday: Style Points

You do you, horse. Just be yourself out there. Especially if someone is out there watching with a camera.

Here are a few #EventerFailFriday photos that we found particularly inspiring this week. Be sure to tag yours on Instagram for a future edition!

This ditch was a lot wider than he thought… #shelovestrouble #blmmustang #teambadidea #eventerfailfriday

A post shared by Sydney Janel (@sgb_eventing) on

I see the need of a belly guard girth in this mare’s furture.. #noscopenohope 💸💸

A post shared by Courtney (@cjbenton92) on

#EventerProblems Vol. 125: Keep EN Weird

What a “unique” demographic we have in the people and horses of Eventing Nation. Here are a few snapshots from your very “special” lives.

Don’t forget to tag ’em #EventerProblems on social media!

That look when you eat French fries and realize you still have MTG on your fingers… #eventerproblems

A post shared by Alexei Pilotski (@alexeipilotski) on

Thanks Monday. #eventerproblems #fml #wheelbarrow #eventer #eventing #farmlife #still10stallstoclean

A post shared by Amy Nelson Eventer Official (@amynelsoneventer) on

Baby birds! The mom built a nest in an unused helmet! #eventerproblems

A post shared by Helen Brew (@helen_brew) on

#takingittothenextlevel #bubblebath #spadayforthepony #spoiled #eventershavethebestaccesories #eventerproblems #iceicebaby

A post shared by Simone Bøgelund (@simone_boegelund) on


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When you find this in your helmet. #eventerproblems

A post shared by jmcelhaney (@jmcelhaney) on

Go Eventing.

Wylie vs. the Mongol Derby, Powered by SmartPak: The Eagle Has Landed

In August 2017 writer/rider Leslie Wylie will be attempting her most fearsome feat of #YOLO yet: a 620-mile race across Mongolia. Riding 27 semi-wild native horses. Carrying only 11 pounds of gear. Relying on nomads for food, water and shelter. On a mission to help stop deforestation.

To be held Aug. 9-19, the Mongol Derby is widely regarded as the toughest horse race in the world. Inspired by the Genghis Khan’s original “pony express,” there’s no trail or set route, just 25 GPS checkpoints/horse exchange stations to hit over the course of 7-10 days. Keep it here for weekly updates from Leslie as she prepares to embark upon the ride of a lifetime! Click here to read previous stories in the series.

Send-off card photoshop wizardry from the inimitable Andrew Hock.

Mongolia might not not be ready for Leslie, but Leslie sure is ready for Mongolia. I’m here, I’ve had approximately six hours of sleep in the past 48 hours, and I’m ready to party. Or just take a nap. The jury is out.

My Knoxville-Chicago-Beijing-Ulaanbaatar flight arrived shortly after midnight on Friday.

Field notes from the Beijing airport: Crystal balls permitted in check-in luggage only. I can’t believe they confiscated mine. I thought I was going to have the Derby betting pool on lock!

Ulaanbaatar is Mongolia’s capital city, and not unlike The Hunger Games we were all instructed to meet up here for pre-race training. I couldn’t wait to intimidate the competition with my secret skills, like shooting an apple out of a pig’s mouth. Or a reindeer’s mouth. Or a yak’s mouth? Whatever it is they’re into here.

Unfortunately for the resistance, all I could muster on Saturday was a field trip to the state department store with a few of my fellow tributes. It was the Mongol version of a mall, except that instead of Bloomingdale’s and Nordstrom there were more, uh, “primal” offerings. Bonus: it’s super fun to go shopping here because 1 USD = 2,500 Mongolian Tughriks, so even if you’re just spending $3 you feel like a high-roller.

Liv Wood, the Katniss of Canada, really wanted a wolf skin rug for her bathroom, so we hit up the fur department first.

“So. Much. Death,” bemoaned Pixie, a tiny blond gal from London whom we all feel sorry for because British Airways lost all her luggage.

Liv shook her head, defeated. The eyeball holes, the ratty ears, the big dead paws … she just couldn’t do it. It was too much.

They did, admittedly, have some cool hats tho.

After we got done putting dead animals on our head, we checked out the rest of the store. From weird and weirder saddles …

… to horse-head guitar things …

… to actual bows and arrows, just sitting out with some equestrian paperweights like NBD.

I Mongolia’ed so hard at that department store, I got back to the hotel and had to take a six-hour nap. I finally jolted awake at about 9:30 p.m. (which is 9:30 a.m. EST, I think), realized that I’d missed my dinner plans completely, and got to work on my Montana boot camp recap. Was that just last week?! I don’t even know what is real anymore.

By the time I published that story it was basically time to shower, eat breakfast and head to Derby orientation in a meeting room downstairs. A rider who’d pretty much just gotten off the plane from a 24-hour flight from Zambia and I practically propped one another up in the coffee line, making delirious small talk and laughing for no good reason at all.

Today’s orientation was all classroom stuff: an overview of race rules and protocols, a debriefing on the course …

Looks like a piece of cake on paper! HAHAHAHAHAHAHA

… a how-to session on the emergency SPOT trackers we’re encouraged to deploy in the event that we’re actually dying, and veterinary/medical briefings.

Derby chief Katy Willings and rider manager Maggie Pattinson were as fun and hilarious, yet also legit knowledgeable and caring, in person as they were in my Horses in the Morning interviews with them here and here respectively. Both women earned my instant respect with their devotion to and advocacy for the real stars of the Derby, the horses themselves.

The veterinary briefing from Dr. Emma Alsop and the medical briefing from Deborah Swann were extra-entertaining because neither of them held back on their opinion of how insane this race truly is. Dr. Alsop, who oversaw the daunting logistical nightmare of looking at 2,000+ horses from which she selected 1,450 suitable for the race, straight up told us she thought we riders were “crazy.” Deborah, who has zero bedside manner and yet I innately feel like I could trust her with my physical life, opened her presentation with, “I swore I would never do this again but got sweet talked into it.”

Note to The Adventurists: Maybe next year you guys could integrate a motivational speaker into the mix? But all things considered, it’s a massively impressive production they put on here, pairing 40+ riders with 25+ horses apiece and doing everything within their power to ensure the safety and enjoyment of both parties.

Tomorrow morning we leave out at 6:30 a.m. for two days of training on the steppe before the race begins on Wednesday. Until my triumphant return, I’ll leave these updates in the trusty hands of Horse Nation editor Kristen Kovatch (you can also follow the race on the Derby website here). When you see a photo of me in a beautiful light blue silk scarf during the race, it’s a gift from Kristen. “Light blue in Mongolia symbolizes ‘the eternal sky’ and is considered a sacred color,” she told me. I’ll wear it with honor, my friend.

Speaking of which, I want to take one last opportunity to thank all of you who have supported me in so many important ways throughout this journey. I ride for you: Erika Adams, Ruth Ahearne, Josh and Jenni Autry, Danielle Bacher, Kaitlyn Barnhill, the Bateman family, Mogie Bearden-Muller, Jodi Becker, Molly Bender, Shellie Billings, the Bold-Greenes, Hilary Bornemann, Elizabeth Bourbon, Nancy Bowman, the Card family, Carol Carter, Tony Cheatham, Lee Choset, the Cochran family, Beth Collier, Casey Cordy, Mogie Bearden-Muller, Jon Bicho, Samantha Clark, Jill Decker, Krista Degitz, Emily Denman, Tony Desmond, Julie DeYoung, Andrew Dickson, Jason Dugmore, Tj Egg, Jen and Trent Ellenburg, Terry Emmitt, Amy Cowan Etsell, Barbara Folsom, Jamie Graves, Alex Green, Michelle Griffen, Matt Hagy, Rita Hanson, Alisha Hartley, Glenn and Jenn Hebert, Annie Higley, the Hill family, Jody Hoch, Laura Beth Ingle, Lorraine Evans Jackson, Violet Jen, Jamie Jennings, Katie Kelly, the Kelly family, Margaret Kimmel, Claire Kirsch, April Kmiec, Jim Koford, Kristen Kovatch, Richard Lamb, Yen Lai, Carla LaFleur, Stephanie Letarte, Lisa Lemke, Sara Lieser, Lida McAllister, Robin Duggins McClamroch, Jason McLean, Katherine McDonough, Angela Mcmanus, Mo Meyer, Cj Millar, Matt Miller, Thea Miller, Kimberly Ostertag, Jocelyn Pierce, Lynn Pop, Nicole Rettino-Lambert, Janelle Roads, Ilona Rule, Mary Schmitt, Brad Sellers, Gretchen Schmidt, Martha Sitwell, Lisa Slade, Lindsay Spain, Mollie Stanfill, Brenna Starch, John Thier, Leslie Threlkeld, the Traver family, Cathy Vogt, Kate Vosbury, Jon Wells, Cathy White, Pam White, the Wylie family, Rachel Zent and so many others who have made this journey possible.

I’m as ready as I’ll ever be. See you on the other side!

 

 

Wylie vs. the Mongol Derby, Powered by SmartPak: Montana Boot Camp!

At least there aren’t any grizzlies in Mongolia.

In August 2017 writer/rider Leslie Wylie will be attempting her most fearsome feat of #YOLO yet: a 620-mile race across Mongolia. Riding 25 semi-wild native horses. Carrying only 11 pounds of gear. Relying on nomads for food, water and shelter. On a mission to help stop deforestation.

The Mongol Derby, to take place Aug. 9-19, is widely regarded as the toughest horse race in the world. Inspired by the Genghis Khan’s original “pony express,” there’s no trail or set route, just 25 GPS checkpoints/horse exchange stations to hit over the course of 7-10 days. Keep it here for weekly updates from Leslie as she prepares to embark upon the ride of a lifetime! Click here to read previous stories in the series.

Montana Boot Camp! With Special Thanks to Swan Mountain Outfitters

I don’t have any statistics to back this up, but I’m guessing prissy folks don’t fare too well in the Mongol Derby. I’m no priss, but I do enjoy first-world creature comforts: white wine, bubble baths, white wine in a bubble bath, and of course kittens … none of which are readily available out on the steppe.

So in the spirit of “suck it up, buttercup,” I’ve spent the summer actively attempting to priss-proof myself. Some things I have already got on lock, like personal hygiene or rather the lack thereof. For the past few months my every waking hour has been spent riding, exercising or writing, all of which require minimal self-grooming. My pony isn’t keeping tabs on how often I shower, everybody smells like foot at the gym, and when you work from home you’re doing well just to change out of pajama pants. So seven to 10 days of degeneration into my grossest possible self during the Derby seems like more of a weird science experiment than a burden.

Other things have been more of a challenge. Like sleeping. During the Derby I’ll be crashing with whatever random nomadic families will take me in when I show up like a lost kitten on the doorstep of their ger. It’s an incredibly generous cultural gesture, but I struggle with insomnia even in our plush king-size bed, so I knew I needed to practice sleeping “outside the box.” Random places I’ve laid my weary head to rest this summer, with varying degrees of success: a rental car in Germany, a parking lot in Houston, a hammock in Kentucky, a horse trailer in North Carolina, the backseat of my car on the Obed, a few nights backcountry camping in the Smokies, and a couple airports including Newark, the ultimate “if you can sleep here, you can sleep anywhere” test. Which I failed, miserably.

While covering The Event at Rebecca Farm for Eventing Nation in the homestretch of the Derby, I took it to the next level, Airbnbing a teepee on a bison farm:

More like Airbnbear … note the brochure they set out for guests — some light bedtime reading.

To the horror of pretty much everyone, I even spent a night ON a cross country jump. Which was actually pretty amazing, actually; I fell asleep to shooting stars and woke up to a technicolor sunrise.

My sleeping bag on jump #19.

But the best was yet to come. Last summer my friend Casey returned from a vacation to Glacier National Park, just a stone’s throw from Rebecca Farm, raving about a wine-and-cheese llama trek she went on through Swan Mountain Outfitters. What?! Wine + cheese + llamas = these are a few of my favorite things. I contacted the company to book a trek while I was in the area but by the end of the conversation had been talked into a five-day pack trip. “It’s not for the faint of heart,” Katie LeBlanc, Marketing Director for Swan Mountain, warned me. Sold!

It seemed like the perfect pre-Derby bootcamp, and it was. We met up Monday morning, loaded our gear onto pack mules, and rode some 15 miles into the Bob Marshall Wilderness. At one million acres it’s even bigger than adjacent Glacier, and wilder — the only way to really get in there is by foot or on horseback. The lack of accessibility makes it feel even more special, like you’re seeing a part of the world that relatively few have seen before.

As we trekked further and further in, the scenery grew increasingly jaw-dropping. I’d always heard that the area was beautiful but THIS blew my senses completely. Crashing waterfalls, sun-dappled forests, craggy cliffs, meadows blanketed with crayon-hued wildflowers … I couldn’t wait to see what was around the next bend.

View between the ears of my trusty mount, Lakota.

After six or so hours of riding we reached upper base camp, which was already set up. We’d sleep in roomy canvas wall tents, replete with wood-burning stoves, and take our meals family-style at a big table in the kitchen tent. The hard-working horses and mules had a big comfy paddock, and as our (totally awesome!) guides Maddie and Sean turned them out the seven other guests and I convened around the campfire, happy for a rest after the long ride.

Swan Mountain’s upper base camp made up for whatever horrors I experienced that night at the Newark airport.

It quickly became apparent that our trek was going the be the perfect blend of physical challenge and rustic pampering. Each morning after a hearty breakfast compliments of camp chef Jess, we ventured into the wilderness on horseback with the pack mules trailing behind. We’d ride two or three hours to some postcard-perfect alpine lake, crystal clear and jumping with rainbow trout, and spend the day there fishing, hiking, swimming or just napping in the sun.

At the end of the afternoon we’d journey back to camp, where Jess would grill up the fresh-caught trout and serve it up alongside dutch oven baked bread and whatever else was on the menu for the evening: moose steaks, potatoes, even huckleberry cobbler made from berries she picked on the trail. Definitely “glamping” compared to Mongolia, but a nice stepping stone at least!

Pretty sure I’m not going to run into any fresh-baked huckleberry cobbler on the steppe.

One of my favorite things about the trek was its allowance for us to truly choose our own adventure — we could make the week whatever we wanted it to be. Me, I really wanted to log some miles on foot; after all, if during the Derby my horse dumps me halfway through a 25-mile leg and gallops off into the sunset with all my gear, I better be prepared to do some serious hiking.

Each day, armed with my GPS and maybe some bear spray, I’d climb six or seven miles up some mountain, always lingering for a while at the top. Sitting there amongst the glacier-carved peaks, some of them capped in snow or stripped bare by avalanches, feelings of awe and humility washed over me in waves. No matter how hard mankind tries to dominate the natural world, it will always be bigger and more powerful than us. What can we learn from its raw, honest beauty? How can we make our own worlds larger, our own lives more robust?

Katie wasn’t kidding with her “not for the faint of heart” disclaimer; some of the trails were downright harrowing! Our mounts carefully picked their way across terrain that ranged from shale rock faces to narrow cliffside paths, including a vertical maze of switchbacks up Lion Creek Pass so steep that the sound of a horse kicking a rock off the trail sent shivers up your spine.

One recurring theme I’ve encountered in my outside-the-comfort-zone horsey travels, whether while pointing an Irish foxhunter at a six-foot hedge, tolting an Icelandic horse along the side of a volcano, cantering Arabian endurance horses through deep sand, or trusting a Quarter horse with my life in Montana, is that sometimes we don’t give these incredibly tough, smart, resilient animals enough credit.

In the Olympic disciplines — eventing, dressage, show jumping — there’s a tendency toward borderline control-freak horsemanship. We practically bubble wrap our horses to keep them safe and sound. Under saddle we manipulate our horses’ bodies into cookie cutter shapes, micromanage their every footfall and designate ourselves the administrator of every decision. But in doing so we may also be inhibiting our equine partners’ own initiative and instincts.

There’s certainly a place in the world for submission and obedience. When Princess and I gallop out of the cross country startbox, I’m the only one of us who has walked the course, so she’d best listen up for advice about direction and speed. But there’s a fine line between democracy and dictatorship. I always want my pony to have some input as well, because ultimately she’s the one who has got to get us from one side of the obstacle to the other.

Lion Creek Pass was so steep the guests had to dismount and hike down, while the guides tied the horses and mules together and led them down by hand.

Similarly, when riding the Derby, I understand my place. I’m the one with the GPS, but the horses we’re riding have been bred for centuries to read and safely navigate the challenging terrain we’re going to be traversing. Every year Derby riders suffer terrible injuries when their horses step in a marmot hole and somersault, or lose precious time getting stuck in quicksand, etc. The ability to trust a horse, to let go of both the reins and our western world notions of what the horse-rider relationship is supposed to look like, is going to be one of the most important skills we’re going to need to survive the steppe.

Another thing I realized in Montana is that, not unlike the horses I ride, I sometimes don’t myself enough credit. We surround ourselves with so much “stuff” in life, oftentimes neglecting our most important assets of all, our bodies and our minds, in the process. My thoughts wandered constantly in Montana, sometimes contemplating the Derby and sometimes percolating on nothing much at all. It made me realize what little space I give myself in daily life to just sit alone with my thoughts. At home, my tendency is to cram every nook and cranny of my day to the brim. It’s definitely a contributing factor to my insomnia: I blaze through life at such a dizzying pace that I’m simply unable to shut it off at the end of the day.

This summer, over the process of paring my life down to the basics, I’ve rediscovered parts of myself that have gotten buried in the detritus of everyday life, or eroded away over the years by self-doubt. I remembered that I’m tough. I’m smart. I’m resilient. I relearned how to trust, not just horses, but myself. I realized that I already possess everything I need to survive, not just in Mongolia but amidst all of life’s unpredictable, unmappable geography.

Somewhere in the mountains of Montana, my insomnia disappeared, and it was only partly because I was physically spent. Moreso, it was because my mind was quiet and at peace, the usual hamster-wheel thoughts replaced by the white noise of a creek burbling outside my tent. Curled up inside my warm sleeping bag, inhaling and exhaling the brisk mountain air, I slept like a baby for the first time in years.

Just three days until the Derby! We’ll be bringing you daily updates, and you can also follow the race on the Derby website here.

Many thanks to Swan Mountain Outfitters for making this incredible experience possible! They offer a variety of horseback tours as well as guided hunting and fly fishing trips. This big game outfitter has access to thousands of acres of the Flathead National Forest, in and around the famed Bob Marshall Wilderness.

If you’re attending The Event at Rebecca Farm next year, consider sticking around for a Swan Mountain adventure. Have an unhorsey significant other in tow? Here’s a thought: Shoo him into the woods for a fishing or hunting excursion while you do your thing at the event, or treat him to a wine and cheese llama trek through sister company Swan Mountain Llama Trekking. Alternately, just make a vacation of it — I guarantee you’ll come back feeling like a new person, ready to take on the world. 

Each Derby competitor’s $12,995 entry helps benefit the Mongolian families whose generosity with their horses and their homes makes the race possible, as well as Cool Earth, a charity that works alongside indigenous villages to halt rainforest destruction.

Can you help? Please visit the Wylie vs. Mongol Derby GoFundMe page — all donations are deeply and eternally appreciated!

Wylie vs. the Mongol Derby, Powered by SmartPak: The Unofficial Mongol Derby Betting Pool

In August 2017 writer/rider Leslie Wylie will be attempting her most fearsome feat of #YOLO yet: a 620-mile race across Mongolia. Riding 25 semi-wild native horses. Carrying only 11 pounds of gear. Relying on nomads for food, water and shelter. On a mission to help stop deforestation.

The Mongol Derby is widely regarded as the toughest horse race in the world. Inspired by the Genghis Khan’s original “pony express,” there’s no trail or set route, just 25 GPS checkpoints/horse exchange stations to hit over the course of 7-10 days. Keep it here for weekly updates from Leslie as she prepares to embark upon the ride of a lifetime! Click here to read previous stories in the series.

My pony Princess unamused by my “Man from Snowy River” impression atop a mountain in North Carolina.

The 2017 Mongol Derby start gun fires on Wednesday, Aug. 9, at which time some 38 of us will be unleashed onto the Steppe clinging for dear life to pint-sized equine rocketships with minds all their own. I’m writing this from an airplane somewhere between Knoxville, TN, and Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia — thank you to all who have relayed support and well-wishes as I embark upon this life-altering crackpot adventure!

First order of business: Like any proper horse race, we’ve gotta have a betting pool! We Derby riders may not win much more than glory, a ceremonial scarf and a well-deserved nap if we cross the finish line first, but you guys following the race from home are in luck! Our good friends at SmartPak have kicked in a $100 gift card for one lucky bettor.

All you’ve gotta do is place your bet in the poll below before the start of the race and your name will be entered into a drawing for the gift card.

Insider tips: Whom to bet on? Hmmmm. My mom and mother-in-law are Team Wylie all the way, so just bear in mind that if you bet on me that you’re going up against two pretty fierce ladies. I’d advise giving the entry roster a scan — click “Download the 2017 Press Release” at the bottom of the Derby website here. So many interesting people from all around the world with so many interesting stories! And myriad reasons to root for them all.

One of the best parts of doing this Derby thing has been the opportunity to meet, interview and feel inspired by my fellow competitors. Among them: the favorite to win, Will Comisky. The 28-year-old Australian cattle runner was a joint-winner in 2016, and in 2017 he’s back to try and win it on his own. Check out my Horses in the Morning interview with him here. Another Aussie to keep an eye on is 29-year-old Ed Fernon, an Olympic pentathlete who summits the world’s largest mountains in his spare time, no big deal!

There are professional polo players, internationally competitive endurance riders, experienced adventurists, horse racing enthusiasts, a former tank commander in the British army, and many lifelong equestrians. Riding alongside them will be underdogs — like 61-year-old Mark Bauwens of London, who describes himself as “the oldest, fattest and least funny competitor!” — as well as everyday riders in pursuit of a challenge. We’re from all walks of life — there’s a potato farmer from South Africa, a sheep farmer from Iceland, a dairy farmer from England, a dog sledder from Sweden, an artist, a private investigator — united by a shared love of horses and adventure.

There are 10 North Americans in the mix. Hailing from Canada there’s Liv Wood, the 24-year-old force of nature I introduced you to earlier this summer when we endeavored a one-day 100-mile ride in Houston under the tutelage of Derby veteran Devan Horn. We recapped our ride on HITM here. And I’m looking forward to meeting Tamara Beckstead, a small animal vet from Ontario whose eventing career has earned her the name “Teflon Girl.”

Coincidentally, five of the eight riders representing the U.S. in this year’s Derby are from the south, myself included. When a southern broad sets her mind to something, you’d be unwise to bet against her, and the Derby is no exception. Earlier this summer one of them, Marianne Logue Williams, invited us all to her farm in Tryon, NC, for a weekend retreat, where we spent a couple days riding, swilling wine, comparing notes and basically becoming instant BFFs.

The Steel Magnolias: moi, Marianne Logue Williams, Clare Summers, Rachel Land and Julia Fisher.

Allow me to introduce you:

Maryanne is a modern-day pioneer woman trapped in the body of a blonde Barbie doll who once killed a rattlesnake with a bow and arrow. And then she put it in her fridge to make a belt from later, probably alongside the ingredients for making a mean cocktail which is also in her skill set. She’s fairly recently divorced, and whatever sugar-coated venom she’s packing is going to make her a force to reckon with on the steppe.

And then there’s the “Team Strong & Crazy” mentor-student combination of Rachel Land and Clare Summers, both from South Carolina. Rachel is a spunky, Crossfitting mother of four boys who I think is just looking forward to getting out of the house. Clare is a willowy, silver-haired southern goddess, and when she speaks you understand why tough horses turn to butter when she comes around. Together they’re a forcefield of no-detail-left-behind preparedness, and they plan to ride the race as a package deal. You can listen to my Horses in the Morning interview with them here.

Rachel Land: mother of four young boys, co-founder of Strong & Crazy, equestrian performer, ostrich jockey and endurance rider.

Last but not least is Julia Fischer, who at age 65 is my automatic hero for being the most senior rider in this year’s race. She’s a psycholinguist from South Carolina, serious and analytical, and from first impressions also one of the most stubborn, determined women I’ve ever met. She’s been dreaming about riding the race for years and finally, this year, decided that it was now or never. I also interviewed Julia on HITM — you can listen in here.

Julia Fisher teaches experimental psychology when she’s not competing in 50-mile endurance races.

In addition to the “Steel Magnolias,” Pierre Germain of Maryland, Amanda Charlton Herbert of Maine, and Rick Helson of Wyoming round out the American contingent, plus California-based German polo enthusiast Hanna Schumacher. Can’t wait to meet my fellow Americans! Maybe we’ll have time for a day trip to Russia — I hear they’re really loving those new sanctions we just imposed on them, could be exciting.

Without further ado, it’s time to place your bet.

Then let us know you voted by visiting the SmartPak Facebook page or just sharing your name and email so we can contact you!

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We’ll be bringing you daily Derby updates, and you can also follow the race on the Derby website here(more…)

#EventerFailFriday: The Long Spot

When your horse just can’t wait to get off the ground. Here’s your latest batch of #EventerFailFriday photos … when in doubt, leave it out! (Just kidding. Do not leave it out. You need that stride.)





Tuesday Video from SpectraVet: Carl Hester Enlisted to Train #BurghleyPony

World Horse Welfare Pamela, an 8.3-hand Shetland rescue pony, is set to become the smallest equine ever to participate in the Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials this year. Supported by equestrian icons with her “star rider” yet to be revealed, the #BurghleyPony’s journey to four-star fame will be documented by a series of behind-the-scenes training videos released in the leadup to the event.

Burghley Horse Trials Event Director Elizabeth Inman explains, “Pamela was certainly a surprise late entry and once we had recovered from the initial shock at the prospect of a Shetland pony ‘competing’ at Burghley, we can now see that Pamela is no ordinary Shetland pony. To have received the backing of so many equestrian stars goes to show just how talented this pony really is and we are delighted that Pamela has chosen Burghley to be her four-star debut.”

The first video features Olympic gold medalist dressage rider Carl Hester, who predicts that they have their work cut out for them! Keep up with #BurghleyPony‘s progress via the World Horse Welfare and Burghley Facebook pages.

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A Golden Legacy: Los Angeles to Host 2028 Olympics

Bruce Davidson Sr. (USA) and JJ Babu. Photo by Virginia Hill/CC.

We knew that the the 2024 and 2028 Summer Olympic Games were going to Paris and Los Angeles, although not necessarily in that order, but now it is well on its way to becoming official: Paris will be hosting the former and L.A. the latter.  The deal, announced yesterday by L.A. officials, will be formally confirmed by the IOC in September.

The 2028 Games will mark L.A.’s third time playing Olympic host, as it previously hosted the Games in 1932 and 1984. The U.S. eventing team has had good luck in Los Angeles, sweeping team gold both times it was held here. Those are some big shoes to fill, but we’ve got 11 years to whip U.S. eventing into gold medal shape — challenge accepted!

In 1932 the podium was topped by the three-man U.S. team of Earl Foster Thomson, Harry Chamberlin and Edwin Argo. In advance of last year’s Games Lorraine Jackson dug through the IOC archives and produced a fascinating article about what that year’s three-day eventing competition looked like. She described the endurance day layout as “mind-boggling,” as the cross country course crossed multiple major thoroughfares and cut off downtown Santa Monica from any traffic northwest of Centinela Avenue. Read more here: “10 Incredible Eventing Images from the 1932 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.”

Image via IOC.

Image via IOC.

In 1984, Bruce Davidson, the late Karen Stives, Michael Plumb and Torrance Fleischmann (nee Watkins) won the team gold medal and Karen and Ben Arthur won individual silver. The U.S. also won team gold and individual gold and silver in show jumping. I had some fun with the IOC archives here — “10 Photos from the 1984 Olympics That Will Blow Back Your Feathered Mullet” — and check out this video for some great footage from those Games.

J. Michael Plumb (USA) on Bluestone, who finished 10th in the individual competition. Photo by Virginia Hill/CC.

The Sepulvida Valley Sports Complex, located about 11 miles from the Olympic Village at UCLA, has been proposed as host site of the equestrian events in 2028. The venue will also host canoe slalom and shooting. Here’s a look around that venue:

Time to bring back the gold, kids! Go Eventing.

 

[Los Angeles Makes Deal to Host the 2028 Summer Olympics]

Rest in Peace, Salute The Truth

Photo courtesy of Steuart Pittman.

We were saddened to learn of the passing of Salute The Truth, Steuart Pittman’s 22-year-old Maryland bred Thoroughbred stallion. Lightly raced under the Jockey Club name Boy Done Good (Salutely – Good Queen Liz, by Sir Raleigh), he went on to event through the CCI3* level and was a popular eventing sire. The big, handsome redhead had movement to spare, a first-rate cross country gallop and the biggest heart in the land, and his legacy will be revered by the eventing community.

Steuart, a Thoroughbred advocate and founder of the Retired Racehorse Project, shared a tribute to the horse on Facebook yesterday:

“Salute The Truth, aka Willie, moved on today. He’d started to lose weight the last few weeks, colicked mildly yesterday, and this morning was in distress. I had thought I couldn’t pull the trigger on the horse that to me was father, son, brother and best friend. He did everything I ever asked of him, and he kicked my ass when I needed it. He pushed me to my limits and I pushed him to his. We lived a hell of a great life together, jumping terrifying cross country courses, suffering through endless hours of dressage, and sharing thrilling moments in the breeding shed.

“Neither of my two favorite vets could get here until afternoon. Once I knew that this was the end of the road for the old guy I was glad to do it myself. Just me and my horse alone in his paddock with nobody watching. He was so ready. He held his head still, and I separated my heart from my brain just long enough to pull the damn trigger. I felt instant relief, grief, and then peace.

“Everything that horse did in his life was with dignity, and he sure as hell went out that way. Thank you Willie. I love the hell out of you.”

Go Willie.