Leslie Wylie
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Weekly OTTB Wishlist from Cosequin

As a 5’2″ woman who recently decided to retire from big horses and buy myself a 14-hand pony (check out my “The Princess Diaries” blog series over on Bloggers Row), I can’t sing the praises of “fun-sized” horses loudly enough. If you’re petite like me it’s like the difference between driving a yacht and a jetski — I still can’t get over how quick, sporty and maneuverable she is. It’s all I can do from squealing “whee!” every time we jump a jump.

The OTTBs we’re featuring in this week’s Wishlist all have one thing in common: they’re 15.3 hands tall. Which, to me, is a pretty perfect size if you can manage it. (And considering 6’2″ Mark Todd managed two individual Olympic gold medals on his 15.3-hand Charisma, you probably can.)

Have a look!

Photo via New Vocations.

Photo via New Vocations.

El Gran Turismo (Arch – Cambiocorsa, by Avenue of Flags) is a 2012 15.3-hand well-packaged athlete! He is balanced, correct and oozes potential. Known as “Gizmo” around the barn, he is described as being “a spunky little dude” and “so stinkin’ cute.” He was recently gelded so while he is currently out with four other gelding, his new owners will want to keep an eye on group dynamics and choose buddies wisely. His current group is balanced and happy. He is lovely to work around and handle and he does not have any stable vices.

Under saddle, he is so cool! He has suspension and a spring to his step. He takes quite a bit of leg to keep going forward but you know you are sitting on plenty of horse to conquer anything. Gizmo feels like he will excel at eventing or jumpers and is destined for the show ring. This guy will be a competitor in his second career after retiring from racing without any apparent injuries after three unsuccessful starts.

Gizmo comes by his athleticism honestly. His dam, Cambiocorsa, was a Graded Stakes winner who excelled at sprinting on the turf, particularly the downhill turf course at Santa Anita. At one point she went on a seven-race winning streak with four of those wins coming in stakes races, including one Grade 3. She finished her career with earnings of over $520k. El Gran Turismo is like a mini-me of his handsome sire, Arch, who passed away earlier this year. He won the Grade 1 Louisiana Super Derby as well as the Grade 3 Fayette Stakes at Keeneland.

View El Gran Turismo on New Vocations.

Photo via Finger Lakes Finest Thoroughbreds.

Photo via Finger Lakes Finest Thoroughbreds.

Punch It (Girolamo – Winning Punch, by Two Punch) is a 2013 15.3-hand filly who is pretty, well-bred and sizzling with class.

She is lightly raced with only 11 starts and is not showing much promise. Her trainer is ready to retire her sound, clean-legged, and with much potential to be successful in another career! She has a great pedigree for sport — she is by AP Indy’s young son Girolamo, out of a Two Punch mare, which is a sire much coveted in the eventing world. Her second and third dams are graded stakes producers.

She has a gorgeous build, a natural topline and a floaty, ground covering trot. At only 3 years old, Punch It will continue to grow in height and will definitely fill out. She was a bit nervous during her photoshoot, but was not naughty. Her trainer reports she is sweet and good to work with and settles quickly at the farm. Finger Lakes Finest was told that her exercise riders love riding her as she is always well behaved and “classy.” A good home is a must! There has already been a lot of interest in this fancy girl, so call quickly if you are seriously interested in bringing her home!

View Punch It on Finger Lakes Finest.

Photo via CANTER California.

Photo via CANTER California.

Wild Ruler (Tribal Rule – Our Wildest Moment, by Event of the Year) is a 2010 15.3-hand mare who won $23,683 in 23 starts and is now ready for a send-off to a new career.

“Rey” has proven herself to be quite the catch: very sweet and athletic with a fantastic mind and willing attitude. A quick learner and not spooky, this horse just screams athleticism! She can be a forward ride and sensitive at times and needs a very quiet, calm rider. Still green but has been started over jumps. She is game for anything and figures out obstacles in front of her quickly and with ease. Cleared for any discipline, but her trainers would love to see her go into an eventing and/or competitive home. Quiet enough for an experienced adult amateur but talented enough for a professional.

View Wild Ruler on CANTER California.

 

Q&A With 2015 Aachen Champion Ingrid Klimke

Ingrid Klimke in the stable area of the CHIO Aachen. Photo courtesy of CHIO Aachen.

Ingrid Klimke in the stable area of the CHIO Aachen. Photo courtesy of CHIO Aachen.

Germany, which has historically dominated at Aachen, once again boasted a powerhouse roster of entries for the 2016 CICO3*. With the country’s Olympic team still up in the air (you can view the long list here) everyone fought to deliver a commanding performance to either confirm or sway the selector’s minds. And deliver they did, with four German horses in the top ten, and six in the top twenty.

2016 entry screenshot from hippobase.com.

2016 entry screenshot from hippobase.com.

When it comes to Olympic candidates Ingrid Klimke is certainly a frontrunner, having been nominated with Horseware Hale Bob OLD. She placed second at Aachen in 2015 with the 12-year-old Oldenberg gelding, clinching the win on SAP Escada FRH (formerly FRH Escada JS). Earlier today, Horseware Hale Bob OLD and SAP Escada FRH again dominated the 2016 Aachen leaderboard, this time going third and fourth respectively.

Her potential Olympic partner has an impressive resume, including a second place finish at Badminton in 2014 and a win at Pau the year before that, among many other top finishes at the three-star level.

Despite being a fierce competitor, Ingrid always keep both feet on the ground and this week at Aachen was no exception. In addition to the eventing competition, she is moonlighting in small tour dressage, performed a pas de deux exhibition with her brother Michael, and even her daughter Greta is participating in the festivities. CHIO Aachen sat down with Ingrid on the eve of the eventing competition start and kindly shared with us this interview.

This year the CHIO Aachen is a real family outing for you.

You can certainly say that again. It is great that my daughter Greta can be here, since the vacations have already started. This is the second time she has taken part in the Opening Ceremony and, of course, she considered it to be a huge honour to be able to make an appearance as Pippi Longstocking this year to match the partner country Sweden. I was even really nervous myself! And it was a fantastic Opening Ceremony, I am still blown away. Impressive!

Aged just 12 your daughter is already a successful rider. Does she take after her mama?

I think she rides more carefully than I do. But in any case she has the same enthusiasm and enjoys riding as much as I do. And that is the most important thing!

Back to you. What expectations have you brought with you to Aachen?

For me Aachen is the last trial before the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. So, of course, I am trying to keep Hale Bob in top form and will try to put in the performance possible with him in Aachen. We are currently working on a lot of fine details, but I can already say: He is in fantastic form! It is also great that my horse Escada can be here, which my main sponsor SAP made possible. So, I simply can’t wait for the show weekend to begin!

A victory with the team is no doubt the main aim.

That is definitely possible. We have won many times with the team in Aachen already. However, we never come to Aachen with the attitude that we are going to put in a relaxed round. We know that we have to do our very best to have a chance of taking the team title here in this demanding competition.

If this succeeds you can let the wave of motivation carry you to Rio.

Yes, if I am ultimately on the team, certainly. Because in Aachen top conditions are offered, for instance the stadiums, the huge jumping arena. This is of course also a unique atmosphere for the horses too, before they continue on to a championship show.

You are not only competing in the “DHL Prize” at the CHIO Aachen.

Yes, that is right. I also brought the beautiful 8-year-old chestnut mare Geraldine with me to Aachen. I am very pleased after our first performance in the Prize of VUV, even if there is still some room for improvement, naturally. Also on board: My Trakehner gelding Parmenides,  an eventing horse that I have also won the odd advanced jumping class with too. I will be riding him on Saturday evening in the new competition, the “Lavazza Prize.”

A show competition that brings showjumpers, drivers and eventers together … What do you think of it?

I think it is fantastic that eventing was integrated into the CHIO Aachen in 2006 as a fixed discipline. And in my opinion the high attendance figures speak for themselves. There are always loads of spectators on the cross-country day and they really cheer us on. At the end when you ride into the Main Stadium, you are greeted by this incredible atmosphere that is unique worldwide. If another spectacular competition is added to the programme, it is simply wonderful for us eventers!


Congratulations to Ingrid on fulfilling her goals and making an unbreakable argument to be included on the German Eventing Team this weekend at Aachen!

Go Eventing.

Friday Video from World Equestrian Brands: The Unbreakable Shane Rose

“Being told you can’t do something is the world’s greatest motivator,” says Shane Rose, who was named to the Rio-bound Australian Olympic Eventing Team earlier this week with CP Qualified.

As an athlete Shane has enjoyed both highs — including a team silver medal at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing — and lows. Twice previously after being named to the team horse injuries kept him from competing. He had already arrived in the U.S. in preparation for the 1996 Games in Atlanta when his mount, Mr. Joe Cool, went lame. He also missed the 2012 Games in London when his mount that year, Taurus, sustained a shoulder injury at the start of the competition.

“Setbacks happen; you need to learn from the mistakes. I feel like I’ve done that,” Shane told Equestrian Australia after being named to the 2016 squad.

“I want to win a gold medal. I want to be the best in the world. You don’t need a lot of extra motivation. Every stone has been turned, but horses are unique creatures. It’s not as though I’m just preparing myself. Things happen; we just have to deal with them as best as we can.”

Competitive setbacks are one thing, but Shane has been confronted with higher-stakes challenges as well — of the life-or-death variety. In addition to having his thyroid removed after contracting cancer, over the course of the last 15 years Shane has broken both arms, twice; broken both his legs; underwent a tracheotomy and some facial reconstruction after getting kicked; and, just last year, broke five ribs, punctured a lung, suffered a split liver and had a severe bacterial infection.

And yet here Shane is in 2016, still standing, still fighting, still loving his sport, and now gearing up to represent his country on the world’s biggest stage.

Go Shane. Go Eventing.

The Princess Diaries, Act 3: Handing off the Baton

Sorry Princess, Esprit is not a good kisser. (Princess' squealing response three seconds later: Sorry Princess, Esprit is not a good kisser. (Princess' squealing response three seconds later: "GET AWAY FROM ME, YOU PERV!")

“Some people who are going through a midlife crisis splurge on a sportscar, take up skydiving or have an affair with the mailman. Since I am a 10-year-old horse crazy girl trapped in a 34-year-old body, I bought myself a pony.” In Act 3, Leslie and her new event pony Princess gear up for their first event together, which coincidentally requires facing a shared demon. If you missed them: Act I, Act 2

The last time I galloped out of a startbox was May 2014 at the Kentucky Horse Park.

We didn’t make it through the finish flags.

Esprit had been telling me all spring that he’d had enough of the big jumps, and I hadn’t been listening. Didn’t our four-year partnership, checkered by top finishes, deserve a happy ending? I wanted us to go out with a ribbon, not an E. We’ll give it one more event, I kept telling myself. But mapping human pride onto a horse never ends well, and walking off the course on that bright spring day with tears streaming down my face I knew that we were done.

Esprit jumping his heart out at May Daze, his last event. Photo courtesy of Xpress Foto (www.xpressfotot.com).

Esprit jumping his heart out at May-Daze at the Park, his final event. Photo courtesy of Xpress Foto (www.xpressfotot.com).

Opening the door of my trailer tack room two years later, in preparation to go pick up my new pony Princess, was like unsealing a mausoleum vault. Everything was just as I’d left it when I hastily packed up to leave May-Daze: bridle tag tossed on the floor, cross country boots crusted with salt, dressage saddle fuzzy with mold. With no horse to event, I just hadn’t had any incentive to clean it out.

This dressage test has seen better days. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Clearly did not hang this one on the fridge. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

I’d tried to put Esprit back in work a couple times since then, hoping for a low-level swan-song season, but both times it ended with a heartbreaking no-go. These days he’s living the good life in a big green field with his buddies, happily retired and forever shrouded in my love and gratitude.

He’s adjusted to our change in course a lot better than I have, honestly. Since Esprit retired there’s been a hole in my spirit that I’ve tried to fill with many things to no avail. Since I began eventing in the early ’90s, this is the longest I’ve ever gone without competing. The sport is in my bones and when I’m not doing it regularly I feel adrift, like a boat missing both its sails and its anchor. It’s only on the back of a horse that I feel like I truly know who I am, with a sense of where I’ve been and where I’m going.

When I finally bit the bullet and made the completely irrational decision to add a third, not-retired pony to my board bill, something began stirring inside me again. I feel a little bit brighter, a little more myself than I have in a long time. I spend all my spare time and emotional energy on Princess: puzzling her together, arranging and rearranging the chess pieces of our new partnership, and losing track of time at the barn.

“I’m having an affair with my pony,” I confessed to my husband Tommy one night when I’d gotten home after 9 p.m., again.

Because he is the best, most supportive husband in the world, he kissed my head and said something like, “Sounds good, babe!” And I know he means it, because seeing me happy again makes him happy.

"I am pony, hear me roar!" From L to R: Esprit, Mishka, Princess. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

“I am pony, hear me roar!” From L to R, our little family: Esprit, Mishka, Princess. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Princess, a fierce competitor in her own right, has some unfinished business hanging over her head as well. Her last event, coincidentally, was also in 2014 at the Kentucky Horse Park. And she, just like me, didn’t make it around the cross country course.

I don’t know what happened with her that weekend, and I don’t want to know. When I bought her I made a point of not asking. Water under the bridge. A fresh start for us both.

Lexy Funk and Princess at Midsouth Pony Club H.T. at the Kentucky Horse Park in 2012. Photo courtesy of Xpress Foto (www.xpressfotot.com).

Lexy Funk and Princess at Midsouth Pony Club H.T. at the Kentucky Horse Park in 2012. Photo courtesy of Xpress Foto (www.xpressfotot.com).

Lexy Funk and Princess at Midsouth Pony Club H.T. at the Kentucky Horse Park in 2012. Photo courtesy of Xpress Foto (www.xpressfotot.com).

Lexy Funk and Princess at Midsouth Pony Club H.T. at the Kentucky Horse Park in 2012. Photo courtesy of Xpress Foto (www.xpressfotot.com).

Princess and I have come a long way in just a matter of weeks, and when the closing date of Champagne Run rolled around I knew what to do. We could hang around the farm for the rest of the summer, picking away at details in the ring, or we could drive up to Lexington and face our demons — at a very reasonable Novice level. (In yet another parallel between Princess’ competition record and mine, neither of us have competed at Novice since 2010).

After two decades in this sport, I know better than to put any stock in pretty narratives. The paths we navigate with our equines unfold in baffling ways. There are ups, downs, twists, turns, double-backs, and dead ends. You get what you get, which isn’t always what you want, need or think you deserve.

I have no designs on a ribbon this weekend, but I think it would do us both some good to find some finish flags. Ready or not, Kentucky, here we come.

Team USA Clear Through First Horse Inspection at Aachen CICO3*

Lauren Kieffer and Landmark’s Monte Carlo. Photo by Shannon Brinkman. Lauren Kieffer and Landmark’s Monte Carlo. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Patriotic eventing enthusiasts are getting plenty of opportunities to cheer on Team USA this summer, the next being the Aachen CICO3* in Germany.

We’re happy to report that the Land Rover U.S. Eventing Team is clear though the first horse inspection, from which Shannon Brinkman has kindly provided us photos.

Here’s our crew looking fresh on the jog strip:

Matt Brown (Cochranville, Pa.) and Blossom Creek Foundation’s Super Socks BCF, a 2006 Irish Sport Horse gelding

Matt Brown and Super Socks BCF. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Matt Brown and Super Socks BCF. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Matt Brown and Super Socks BCF. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Matt Brown and Super Socks BCF. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Hannah Sue Burnett (The Plains, Va.) and Jacqueline Mars’ Harbour Pilot, a 2003 Irish Sport Horse gelding

Hannah Sue Burnett and Harbour Pilot. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Hannah Sue Burnett and Harbour Pilot. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Phillip Dutton (West Grove, Pa.) and David Garrett’s Indian Mill, a 2005 English Thoroughbred gelding

Phillip Dutton and Indian Mill. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Phillip Dutton and Indian Mill. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Lauren Kieffer (Middleburg, Va.) and Jacqueline Mars’ Landmark’s Monte Carlo, a 2006 Irish Thoroughbred Cross gelding

Lauren Kieffer and Landmark’s Monte Carlo. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Lauren Kieffer and Landmark’s Monte Carlo. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Dressage and show jumping take place tomorrow with cross country to follow on Saturday.

The Americans face off against eight other teams: Australia, France, Great Britain, Germany, Ireland, the Netherlands, New Zealand and Sweden. The entry list features quite an all-star lineup, with many teams using the CICO3* as a prep or final selection test for the Olympics next month in Rio.

Team USA finished third last year, and we’ll be cheering them on for another top finish.

USA! USA! Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

USA! USA! Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Go Eventing.

Aachen CICO3*:  Website, Entries, Schedule, Dressage Ride TimesLive Stream

Thursday Video from Nupafeed: Great Meadow International Remix

Fun videos are still popping up from from the 2016 Land Rover Great Meadow International, presented by Adequan, which is good news for those of us who just can’t get enough.

Check out this one featuring mood-pumping music and breathtaking cinematography from Cinaero Studios.

If you missed it, you can catch up on all of Jenni’s live event coverage from Great Meadow here and view full results here.

USEF Network did a wonderful job livestreaming the event with commentary from John Kyle, Karen O’Connor and Will Faudree — click here to watch a replay on demand and check out their YouTube channel to watch individual cross country rounds from winner Clark Montgomery and Loughan Glen, second placed Marilyn Little and RF Demeter and U.S. Olympic Eventing Team representatives Lauren Kieffer and Veronica.

Go Eventing.

SmartPak ‘Ask a Non-Rider’: Studs and Stud Suds, Part 2

If you thought the first time SmartPak quizzed its non-rider employee contingent about the identity of these mysterious objects …

Photo via SmartPak.

Photo via SmartPak.

Photo via SmartPak.

Photo via SmartPak.

… was painful (hilarious, but painful), you’re in for a treat! Part 2 is here.

While they’re pretty sharp sleuths when comes to the studs — well, mostly (“These go into the hooves? … Sounds painful!”) — the Stud Suds quickly sent them headfirst into the gutter.

“Naughty!”

“I don’t know how to answer this. I do know how to answer it, but I don’t know if I want to.”

“I hope it’s not for private areas.”

Best/worst answer: “Is this kind of like some sort of a sex tool I guess. Is that right?”

*Facepalm*

Check it out:

Want to catch more “Ask a Non-Rider” videos? Click here to open the full playlist.

Here’s a smart tip, because we love you and want you to be happy: there’s a sale going on at SmartPak as we speak! Get 25% off SmartPak brand tack, apparel and supplements with the promo code SAVEBIG16. And, as always, it’s free shipping on all orders over $75.

Go SmartPak. Go Eventing!

Canadian Eventing Team for 2016 Rio Olympics Is Officially Announced

Photo via Wikimedia Commons Photo via Wikimedia Commons

The Canadian Olympic Committee and Equestrian Canada have officially named the Canadian Eventing Team for the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

The following athlete-and-horse combinations will compose the Team (in alphabetical order):

Rebecca Howard (Marlborough, UK) and Blithe Hill Farm’s Riddle Master

Colleen Loach (Dunham, QC) and Peter Barry’s Quorry Blue d’Argouges

Selena O’Hanlon (Kingston, ON) and John and Judy Rumble’s Foxwood High

Jessica Phoenix (Cannington, ON) and Donald Leschied’s A Little Romance

The following combination has been named as the traveling reserve:

Kathryn Robinson (Kettering, UK) and her own Let It Bee

The Canadian Eventing Team earned its Olympic berth after finishing sixth at the 2014 FEI World Equestrian Games in Normandy, France. The Canadian Show Jumping Team as well as the names of the two individuals who will be representing Canada in dressage have also been announced and can be viewed at the link below.

[Canadian Equestrian Team Nominated for Rio 2016]

Weird But True Olympic History: Insanity in the Middle at the 1936 Berlin Games

Olympic eventing has shape-shifted quite dramatically over the years, with early editions being nearly unrecognizable side-by-side with the modern sport. As we approach the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio, and with so much discussion taking place about where to take the sport in the future, we’re taking a look back at its evolution over the past century. Click here to read previous editions.

1936 Olympic three-day team and individual gold medalist Captain Stubbendorf (GER) clears the difficult fascine ditch on Nurmi. Photo: IOC

Between scary viruses, contaminated water, corrupt cops, shady politics, unfinished construction and various assorted logistical nightmares, there’s plenty of trepidation surrounding the upcoming Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro.

As a journalist who was literally evacuated from the equestrian venue during the test event last year — because a major drug lord had been killed and there was concern about retaliatory gang violence in the streets, no big deal — and then was kept up all night by the sound of gunfire and mysterious explosions in the distance, I GET IT.

But believe me when I tell you that when it comes to eventing, whatever happens in Rio will have nothing on what went down at the Berlin Olympics in 1936. Here’s a synopsis of the competition, as gathered from the official IOC report.

Things started off innocently enough. After dressage had a stint as the sport’s final phase in 1912, then was scrapped altogether in 1920, by 1936 dressage was back and occupying its modern position as the first phase of the eventing competition. Beginning with the first movement, “Enter at the gallop,” and featuring 13 minutes worth of various paces and figures such as the “zigzag,” the dressage at this Olympic Games went off without a hitch.

Captain Lippert (Germany) on Fasan. Photo: IOC

The real trouble began during the cross country competition, a five-phase test that spanned 36 kilometers (22 miles) with a time limit of just over two hours.

The course, which took two years to construct, contained many “new and unusual kinds of jumps,” including steep ravines, massive barriers, vast ditches and … fence #4, the WORLD’S FIRST OFFICIAL WATER JUMP.

Nobody saw this thing coming.

Many riders, not knowing how to approach such a jump, ran at it full-tilt, clearing the hurdle only to succumb to the drag of 3-foot deep water and treacherously boggy footing on the other side. According to the event report, of 46 horses who jumped into the pond, there were 18 horse falls and 10 rider falls.

Here’s a video of competitors negotiating the pond with varying degrees of success:

I can’t decide whose save is more amazing: the Italian’s …

water6

… or the Norwegian’s.

water7

But for sure my favorite moment is when the soggy rider marches off in disgust when his horse decides, post-fall, to seize the moment for a water break.

water5

Later the fairness of the obstacle was called into question. Some claimed the competition was rigged, that the Germans had known such a jump would be on the course and thus claimed an advantage.

Home-team advantage speculation wasn’t limited to three-day eventing, as the Germans claimed all individual and team medals in straight show jumping and dressage as well.

The officials rebutted, “In Olympic tests, above all, horses and riders should prove that they can overcome any difficulty.” They pointed out that “several other obstacles had much more influence in determining the final results or causing the elimination of horses,” citing the obstacle immediately after the pond, a ditch where 10 horses were eliminated, as an example.

(Later that year, however, the FEI ruled “to bar jumps over hurdles into ponds in international three-day-events because these obstacles might cause too many accidents” — a decision that, of course, has since been reversed.)

At the end of the day, 27 out of 50 entries completed the course.

Out of all this chaos, a few narratives of glory emerged. One of them was the story of Jenny Camp, the great American event mare ridden by Col. Earl F. “Tommy” Thomson, who posted relatively few jumping faults (40 on cross country and 10 in show jumping) to bring home the individual silver medal.

The event report spared few words for non-German competitors but had this to say of Jenny Camp: “It was a delight to watch this eager yet careful horse work. Her rider, the American, Captain Thomson, is the prototype of a splendid military rider, with a brave heart and clear judgment.”

Captain Thomson (USA) and Jenny Camp take the 35th obstacle of the cross-country competition. Photo: IOC

But my personal favorite story of the Berlin Olympics is that of Kurfürst, ridden by Lt. Freiherr von Wangenheim of Germany.

After sitting 46th following dressage (the IOC report reads, “For reasons which could not be exactly determined, Kurfürst became somewhat confused during the dressage test with the result that some of his figures were failures”), horse and rider set off for cross country.

Like so many before, Kurfürst fell at the pond. Although the horse waded into the middle and for several moments refused to be caught, Wangenheim eventually remounted and, despite a broken collarbone, finished the course without interruption.

Lt. Freiherr von Wangenheim of Germany broke his collarbone at the pond, then fell again in show jumping, but completed the event to help Germany win team gold. Photo: IOC

Unfazed by the previous day’s disaster, and with Wangenheim’s arm immobilized in a sling, the pair prepared to tackle the final jumping test. The goal: to finish the course so that the German group would remain complete and eligible for a medal.

Things were going well … until the in-and-out. Kurfürst, who was said to be “fresher and more enterprising than ever,” made a rush for the second fence. His rider hauled back on the reins, causing Kurfürst to rear and fall over backwards against the jump, momentarily pinning Wangenheim beneath him.

No one recounts the drama of what happened next better that the IOC report itself:

“The rider quickly crawled out from under the horse. Kurfürst, however, lay as if he were dead. There was breathless silence in the stadium. Then Kurfürst leapt to his feet as if he had awakened. His rider mounted him without help. From this point to the end he made no further faults. Despite Kurfürst’s 310 penalty points on the cross country stretch, the German riders had also won the team competition. No pen can describe the impression made when over one hundred thousand enthusiastic human beings give vent to their delight.”

All of which is to say, even before there was red on right and white on left, there was always insanity in the middle.

Stay tuned for our next edition of Weird But True Olympic Eventing HistoryGo Eventing.

Tuesday Video from SpectraVET: Breyer Olympic Course Walk

In the process of excavating YouTube gems for Horse Nation’s annual Breyer Horse Film Festival, a tie-in to the Kentucky Horse Park’s Breyerfest, HN editor Kristen Kovatch unearthed a video she thought might resonate with the eventing crowd.

She explains, “Not even sure what to say about it, except this kid (YouTube alias “Breyerlov”) was SUPER SERIOUS about creating a Breyer cross country course, including the jumping lanes, a Head of the Lake, options, jump judges, etc….”

Let’s take a tour of the course:

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Creative jump construction, good use of terrain, challenging for the level, a good mix of technical and galloping questions … Pierre Michelet has the 2016 Rio Olympic course on lock, and Derek di Grazia has been named cross country course designer for the 2020 Olympics, but 2024 could be yours for the taking, Breyerlov!

Check out more of her videos on her the Breyerlov YouTube channel here.

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#EventerProblems, Vol 80: Horses Behaving Badly

From leaving “some room for improvement” under saddle …

jumps warm-up fence bigger than anything he will see on course…refuses to go near the third fence #logic #eventerproblems A photo posted by katie lavallee (@katie_lavallee) on

…to random acts of self-harm…

back on that cold hose grind #theswampmonsterisdead #eventerproblems A video posted by Kate Drake (@katedrakevt) on

… to taking off and/or destroying their clothing at every opportunity …

This means war. #eventerproblems #highmaintenance #wedontlikesunburns #atleastidont A photo posted by Celsie Rae Abelt (@westwindstudio) on

… and putting EVERYTHING in their mouths …

Dragon says “these Smartpaks are MINE!!!” Silly baby #melissamillereventing #smartpak #eventerproblems A photo posted by arminda99 (@arminda99) on

… horses truly have a gift for driving their people completely crazy. Although I suppose the argument could be made that we already are a bit mad?

#canadianclub & #eventing #Camden #xc #cantjump #needsmoreschooling #eventerproblems @kgoat94

A video posted by Maddiee Gray (@93mads) on

Normal day at work #eventerproblems #bits #workinghorsegirl A photo posted by megan (@kieshorse) on

My horse gets more massages than I do. #equestrianproblems #eventerproblems #thoroughbred #17hh

A photo posted by MaeMae (@prettygrittytb) on

I want to take this footing home #eventerproblems A photo posted by Allisen (@dasheventing) on

Bought a paddling pool today and am eliminating the #equestriantanlines #eventerproblems

A photo posted by Helen Brew (@helen_brew) on

When your purse absolutely must match your tack #eventerproblems #eventersofinstagram #matchymatchy #brownsandblacks

A photo posted by Stefanie Bates (@stefbates) on

"When you are out doing fitness work with your fancy Training going into Prelim Thoroughbred, and your kid decides to tag along. Then does everything you do... on his pony... bareback... with no reins... laughing the whole time... (sigh... feeling inadequate)" Daphne Soares

“When you are out doing fitness work with your fancy Training going into Prelim Thoroughbred, and your kid decides to tag along. Then does everything you do… on his pony… bareback… with no reins… laughing the whole time… (sigh… feeling inadequate)” Daphne Soares

Keep it crazy, EN. Go Eventing.

Equestrian Australia Announces 2016 Rio Olympic Squad

Sam Griffiths and Paulank Brockagh at Badminton. Photo by Jenni Autry. Sam Griffiths and Paulank Brockagh at Badminton. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Equestrian Australia has announced that the following four riders will comprise its team for the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro:

Chris Burton and Santano II, a 9-year-old Hannoverian gelding owned by Black Run Syndicate

Sam Griffiths and Paulank Brockagh, a 13-year-old Irish Sport Horse mare owned by Mr. and Mrs. S. Posford, Mrs. J. Carter and Sam Griffiths

Shane Rose and CP Qualified, a 13-year-old Holsteiner gelding owned by Shane Rose and Elizabeth Wischer

Stuart Tinney and Pluto Mio, an 18-year-old Hannoverian/Thoroughbred gelding owned by Elizabeth and John Pittard

The following combinations, listed in alphabetical order, will attend the pre-Games staging camp in the UK beginning July 24. On or before July 25 the Eventing Selection Panel will identify one of the pairs, possibly but not necessarily a team member’s second nominated horse, as the travelling reserve.

Samantha Birch and Hunter Valley II

Chris Burton and Nobilis 18

Sonja Johnson and Parkiarrup Illicit Liaison

William Levett and Alexander NJ

William Levett and Improvise

Shane Rose and Virgil

Paul Tapner and Prince Mayo

Stuart Tinney and Carlchen

Equestrian Australia has adopted a High Performance Squad system of categorizing riders and/or combinations identified as having the potential to represent the country at major championships like WEG and the Olympics. All four selected riders, plus Paul Tapner, were listed on Australia’s 2016 “gold” level squad and were expected to be frontrunners come time for team selection.

We are sorry to see U.S.-based Australian Ryan Wood, who appeared on the FEI Olympic Nominated Entry List with Powell, off the team as he’s been on absolute fire this year. Powell won the Jersey Fresh CCI3* in May and placed second in the CIC3* at Fair Hill the month before that, and his other two top horses — Woodstock Bennett, who is fresh off a Bromont CCI3* win, and Frankie, who swept the CIC3* division — would have been at home on the long list as well.

Ryan has been working diligently for years to produce the exciting upper-level string he going, and while the timing may not have been quite right this time around, he is certainly knocking at the door. Equestrian Australia would be remiss not to keep Ryan on their radar for future team championships.

[Eventing Team looking to get Australia back on the podium]

 

 

Monday Video from Tredstep Ireland: Great Meadow International Highlights

It was a thrilling weekend at Great Meadow International, with Team USA sweeping the Nations Cup title and Clark Montgomery and Loughan Glen enjoying a victorious homecoming in their first event back on American soil since 2012.

You can catch up on all of Jenni’s live event coverage from Great Meadow here and view full results here.

USEF Network did a wonderful job livestreaming the event with commentary from John Kyle, Karen O’Connor and Will Faudree — click here to watch a replay on demand. Alternately, if you’re short on time, the video above offers an abridged roundup of weekend highlights including rider interviews and stunning footage of the action. 

Go Eventing.

Camie Stockhausen Hangs on for Dear Life to Win at Roebke’s Run

Camie Stockhausen nearly snatched defeat from the jaws of victory yesterday at Roebke’s Run H.T. in Hector, Minnesota.

She kindly sent us a video and explanation of what happened: “My horse Best Etiquette (‘Eddie’) and I were holding first place in Open Training after dressage and cross country. Unfortunately, we executed a glorious stop at fence one in show jumping, taking down all the rails.”

In eventing, however, fortune favors those who refuse to go down without a fight.

“With great help from Eddie putting his neck up like Fred Flintstone’s brontosaurus, depositing me onto his withers, I was able to shimmy back into the saddle,” she says. “The kind Minnesota crowd clapped and I waved and smiled, because of course, I planned all that!”

That’s right, Camie! It looked to us like you were just leaning down to give Eddie a big hug.

Roebke's fail Ed

“The fence was rebuilt and we jumped the course quickly to cover for time added due to sliding through the fence. At the end of all this drama, we won the blue ribbon!”

Many thanks to Camie for sharing and to Jay Stockhausen for the video.

Go Camie and Eddie. Go Eventing!

Weekly OTTB Wishlist from Cosequin

Buying an OTTB straight off of the track yourself and retraining them a new career can be an incredibly rewarding experience if you have the time, resources and experience to do so. But there are other ways to partner with OTTBs in their ex-racing lives, including taking the reins of a Thoroughbred who has already out there making their way in the eventing world.

For this week’s edition of OTTB Wishlist, as we did last week, we’re taking a departure from our usual MO of featuring Thoroughbreds just recently off the track or still very green in their secondary careers. Instead, we’re skipping ahead a few months or even years to spotlight OTTBs available for sale that have already gotten a jump start on eventing.

Here are three OTTBs that are startbox ready, via EN’s classifieds site Sport Horse Nation. We’ve included the ad copy provided; click the links for videos, pricing and more information.

Photo courtesy of Katie Murphy via Sport Horse Nation.

Photo courtesy of Katie Murphy via Sport Horse Nation.

Desert Sonorous 2009 SAFE TB Preliminary – Confidence Builder

“Deszi,” whose Jockey Club registered name is Katelyn’s Desert (Wild Desert – Julia Singing Bear, by Diligence), never raced but instead found her calling in the event world. She is the ideal lady’s ride, and would be a lovely partner for someone returning to riding, looking for confidence, or the adult/young rider seeking an experienced horse.

She is elegant under saddle, and soft and supple to the aids. A quiet mind, Deszi is always composed. Her stride is soft and smooth, with a rhythm that is easy to settle into and jump from. She never says no, and does not get frazzled from rider mistakes. Despite her young age, she is incredibly quiet and focused in the ring, on trails, roads, open fields and at competitions. Deszi has extensive Preliminary experience and has competed at two CIC*s.

Sound, sane, and kind, Deszi will build your confidence, keep you safe, and allow you to enjoy the ride.

Located in Epping, New Hampshire.

Photo via Sport Horse Nation.

Photo courtesy of Anne Aryadne Walker via Sport Horse Nation.

Sporty chestnut 6-year-old, actively competing at Novice, upper-level prospect!

Fantastic opportunity to get an excellent horse just as she’s coming into her prime! 15.3-hand OTTB mare — her Jockey Club registered name is Nomorewar (More Than Ready – War Charm, by War Chant). Fun, talented, athletic mare with a superb work ethic. Correctly started, loads of potential. Poised to move up through the levels!

Delta is a bold, careful, straightforward jumper who holds her own rhythm to fences. Doesn’t need a lot of ‘whoa’ or a lot of ‘go,’ more inclined to add a stride then leave one out. Has a great metronome canter over fences, semi-automatic flying lead changes, and is extremely handy. Jumps 3’6’’ at home and has plenty of scope to go higher.

Great mover with an awesome attitude about dressage, consistently scores in the low 30s. Started on leg yield and shoulder-in, loves to stretch long and low. Experienced cross country, jumps ditches, banks, and water — loves it and shows great aptitude! Hacks on the buckle, alone and in groups.

Recently moved up to Novice at schooling horse trial and finished on her dressage score. Primarily focused on eventing, but also excels in jumpers – won her division at a schooling show and loved it! Would excel in eventing, jumpers or hunters.

Perfect for a competent and ambitious junior/AA or young professional — anyone looking for a fun, athletic prospect to move up through the levels.

Delta is sound and a pleasure to work with both in the saddle and on the ground, loves being groomed and pampered. She lunges/ties/clips/trailers and is UTD on everything. Continuing to compete until sold, price will increase with training.

Would not be selling, but we plan to buy a house in the spring and I need to act like an adult and contribute to the down payment. My loss is your gain! Serious buyers feel free to message me for all the details.

Located in Great Falls, Virginia.

Photo courtesy of Mogie Bearden-Muller via Sport Horse Nation.

Photo courtesy of Mogie Bearden-Muller via Sport Horse Nation.

Lower Level Winner

Urban Star (Carson City – Global Star, by Relaunch) is a 13-year-old, 15.3 -and Thoroughbred gelding. Urban has evented through Novice very successfully. Schooled Training. Very uncomplicated, ready to take his next rider up the levels and be a successful hunter as well.

Urban is a super sweet and always wants to please. Has spent the last few years doing hunters and being a part-time school horse. Started his eventing career by winning his first recognized Beginner Novice in March. A+ Temperament.

Located in Centreville, Maryland.

20 Reasons Why Diesel Trucks Are the Worst

This post originally appeared on EN’s sister site, Horse Nation

It’s not that I want to drive a truck — I HAVE to drive a truck, in order to haul to shows and perform various horse-ownership duties. But truck ownership has its pitfalls.

My cherry-red 2004 F250 (nickname “Roy”) and I have a love-hate relationship. When it’s just Roy, my ponies and I cruising down the interstate with the windows rolled down, the music cranked up and the throaty purr of that big diesel engine all around us, I wouldn’t trade him for all the sensible sedans in the world.

But the moment I unhook the rig and we re-assimilate into the real world of claustrophobic parking lots and speed limits — Roy is my only vehicle — I want a divorce. Or at least an affair with a Mini Cooper.

20 reasons why trucks are THE WORST:

#1. Cars hogging the diesel pumps when there are plenty of gas pumps open.

It’s like beating someone in a wheelchair to the handicap restroom stall when there are six other stalls open — just bad form.

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#2. Fuel price sticker shock.

I know how much it costs to fill up my truck but the wallet-stabbing pain of seeing those numbers, time and time again, never dulls.

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How much Roy’s breakfast costs. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

#3. Catcalls from guys in trucks that are smaller than mine (I always feel sorry for those guys): “Hey! Your boyfriend lets you drive that thing?” 

Real original, buddy. I’ve only heard that one about a thousand times. 

best-pickup-line-ever

Not.

#4. Just to be equal opportunity, let’s acknowledge that truck-related harassment isn’t limited to females.

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#5. Although, seriously, what’s up with all the hyper-masculine, sexually-charged diesel engine names?

Powerstroke, Cummins … um, ewww.

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Photo by Leslie Wylie.

#6. And then there are the never-ending truck wars.

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#7. And the fact that, technically, you share something in common with these people…

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…as well as my least favorite demographic, people who drive giant trucks for no good reason:

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To their credit, diesel-driving urban-dwellers have it especially rough. For example:

#9. The dirty looks people give you when you pull into a Whole Foods parking lot…

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#10. … or up next to a hybrid at a stoplight.

Quit judging me! Do you think I ENJOY spending $4 a gallon on fuel?

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#11. Your truck earns a reputation in the neighborhood for scaring small children, tormenting dogs and waking people up when you get home late.

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Roy never gets invited to neighborhood cookouts anymore. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

#12. You’re always the first person friends, family and distant acquaintances call when they need a hand.

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#13. And it’s not like you can just lend them your truck.

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#14. The unfortunate truth is: Your truck can move pretty much anything.

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#15. So you help them, because moving is your superpower and with great power comes great irresponsibility. 

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#15. Other urban inconveniences include parking…

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#16. … and having to turn the engine off and lean out the window when you pull up to a drive-thru. It’s easier to just go inside.

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Which brings us to #17. You’re constantly tempted to do stupid stuff.

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#18. You can be going 90 mph and it feels like you’re just tooling around on a Sunday drive.

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#19. Sometimes it’s just too much power to handle.

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#20. Careful, though, because everything about truck repair and maintenance is about 10 times as expensive as the car equivalent. At least if you have to sell your house to keep up with payments…

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Got truck woes? Feel free to vent in the comment section below. Go Eventing!

#DogsofEN, Vol. 8: Eventers Got It Ruff

It’s hard work being an event dog. There are horses to be escorted on hacks, itches that aren’t going to scratch themselves, water hoses to be chased, jumps to be jumped … thank goodness there are naps to be napped as well.

Here’s your latest batch of #DogsofEN ‘Grams!

The dogs are affecting productivity this afternoon….

A video posted by Will Coleman Equestrian (@willcolemanequestrian) on

She’s a natural #NAYRJC2017 #dogsofEN @madzlesesne

A video posted by Dana Lesesne (@danalesesne) on

Seriously? #dogsofinstagram #jackrussell #eventerproblems

A photo posted by Ashley Betz (@ashbetz) on

Eyelashes: red on right, white on left. #insanityinthemiddle #dogsofEN #eventingpup #Archie #littlereddog

A photo posted by Rachael Walker (@doubleshot_equestrian) on

When your dog thinks prelim xc is easy. #catahouligan #DogsofEN

A photo posted by Becky Farrell (@beckylynnfarrell) on

This is what grass happiness looks like #stretchingthehips #horseshowdog #dogsofen #chihuahuasofinstagram

A video posted by Chuy (@chuyofinsta) on

a day in life of a barn dog #dogsofen #dogsofinstagram

A photo posted by Joonbug (@joooooonbug) on

Our supervisors for cross country day at Aspen! #dogsofEN #aspenfarms #FGEdogs

A photo posted by Full Gallop Eventing (@fullgallopeventing) on

Go Eventing.

Friday Video from World Equestrian Brands: #FBF to Great Meadow 2015

The year: 2015. The event: Great Meadow International. The scene: CIC3* and Pan Am Prep Trials. The winners: Jennie Brannigan and Cambalda (CIC3*), Lauren Kieffer and Meadowbrook’s Scarlett (Pan Am Prep Trial division).

Relive the action from last year’s competition via this 14-minute highlight reel courtesy of our videographer friend Buzzterbrown.

Can’t wait to see how 2016 plays out! Keep it locked on EN for all the latest.

Event Rider Masters: WebsiteRankingsStart TimesLive Stream

Take a Stroll Around Barbury International’s Cross Country Course

Hoo-hoo will win the third leg of the Event Rider Masters series? Photo via CrossCountry App. Hoo-hoo will win the third leg of the Event Rider Masters series? Photo via CrossCountry App.

The third leg of the  Event Rider Masters series takes place this weekend at the St. James Place Barbury International Horse Trials.

As Jenni mentioned in her preview earlier this week, 40 horses and riders will compete, including series leader Astier Nicolas and two combinations representing North America: Tiana Coudray and Sambuca F and Rebecca Howard and Riddle Master.

Thanks to our friends at CrossCountry App and ERM’s Hannah Vowles, we’ve got a preview of the Captain Mark Phillips designed cross country course.

Keg party at fence #9! Photo via CrossCountry App.

Keg party at fence #9! Photo via CrossCountry App.

Or perhaps you prefer your cross country courses with a side of champagne? Photo via CrossCountry App.

Or perhaps you prefer your cross country courses with a side of champagne? Photo via CrossCountry App.

This year’s edition features a new route with a different start and some extra twists:

Hannah will be adding some audio with riders before Sunday. It will appear automatically in your window, so be sure to check back!

Event Rider Masters: WebsiteRankingsStart TimesLive Stream

The Princess Diaries, Act 2: In the Presence of Pony Royalty

Surveying her kingdom.  Photo by Leslie Wylie. Surveying her kingdom. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

“Some people who are going through a midlife crisis splurge on a sportscar, take up skydiving or have an affair with the mailman. Since I am a 10-year-old horse crazy girl trapped in a 34-year-old body, I bought myself a pony,” Leslie Wylie writes in Just a Little Pony, part 1 of her new blog series. In part 2 Leslie and Princess, a 14-hand pocket rocket who competed through Prelim with her former lady-in-waiting Lexy Funk, embark upon the getting-to-know-you process. 

Princess stepped off the trailer at her new Tennessee home like she owned the place, which I gather is how she rolls through life in general. Everytime I walk out to the pasture to catch her, I feel like I ought to curtsy first. It’s Princess’ world and I’m just lucky to be living in it.

We spent our first week together romping around the farm, getting to know one another. We went on long walks in the woods and talked about life, dreams, and assorted secret girl stuff. As the grand finale I’d let her run away with me up the big hill in the back pasture or nose the neighbor’s minis over the fence before we headed for home.

14.1hh is so relative. Princess, you’re a giant!

A video posted by Leslie Wylie (@lesliewylie1) on

Eventually, though, I knew our life of leisure wasn’t going to cut it if we ever wanted to make it to the Pony Olympics. It was time to start getting down to business.

Step 1: Address that irritating dressage thing.

When it comes to the subject of dressage Princess and I had a lot in common. I.e. we both think that, in comparison to more adrenaline-fueled activities, fancy-prancing around in circles is pretty dumb.

After our initial dressage schooling session, which honestly made me want to shoot Princess with an elephant tranquilizer dart, I bit the bullet and got a last-minute spot in a clinic with Big Uncle Jim Koford.

Jim is the patron dressage saint of eventing nutters everywhere. An international Grand Prix rider who once moonlighted as a four-star eventer, he gets that we’re “a special breed,” and that sometimes what makes a horse brilliant over fences can make them a little spazzy on the flat. Which is probably applicable to some riders (me! right here! this girl!) as well.

My favorite horses tend to be well-meaning maniacs, which is inconvenient at times but Jim has always been brilliant at getting the best out of our partnerships. He’s never judgemental and always explains things in a way that has cross-discipline application.

Jim: “Your horse needs to be more adjustable on the flat.”

Me: “Sounds boring.”

Jim: “Having a more adjustable horse will shave seconds off your cross-country time.”

Me: “Sold! Sign me up!”

Naturally, I couldn’t wait to hear what he had to say about my new acquisition.

“She’s got some Miley Cyrus in her,” he observed calmly, watching my 14-hand wrecking ball skitter across the diagonal. But over the course of 45 minutes Jim worked his usual voodoo, channeling our can’t-stop-won’t-stop energy into something a little more Hannah Montana than Miley.

By the end I felt like we could have dropped a canter pirouette bomb or two. Maybe there’s hope for us yet?

Step 2: Jump all the thingz!

Here again, I figured it was better to kick things off with a professional opinion. For help I turned to my secret weapon: hunter/jumper trainer Amanda Melton-Finger.

Actual eventing trainers are great when you can get ’em but I think there’s a lot of good stuff to glean from other disciplines as well. Amanda, whose Westwind Equine Training Center is just down the road from us, has been a wonderful resource in the past, sanding down my rough edges and reiterating the importance of civilized techniques like actually counting your strides down a line. She’s also knows ponies better than anyone in the land, having spent literally hundreds of hours ringside in “ponyland” at A shows.

Cultural differences aside…

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… I knew she could answer some of my burning pony questions.

After all, Princess was once a member of the A-circuit pony jumper elite herself and her siblings are all at Pony Finals each year. I like to imagine them at a family reunion, her hunter-ring brethren walking the straight and narrow and Princess the black sheep eventer cousin.

Her career path could have been much different. Legend has it that she ended up an eventer after getting sent down the road from USET show jumper Aaron Vale’s barn — maybe her changes weren’t “auto” enough, or maybe she offed some 10-year-old. Princess isn’t exactly a stick-and-spurs kid’s pony, you know.

Lexy Funk and Princess, showing off her scope.  Photo by Aimee Towell.

Fence too small, must jump higher! Lexy Funk and Princess, showing off her scope. Photo by Aimee Towell.

As with Jim, sessions with Amanda are judgement-free zones. She didn’t bat an eyelash when I shared my Princess homicide theory.

“I had a man-killer once,” she commiserated, and the tone of her voice made me suspect she wasn’t joking. Clawing the air like a T-Rex for emphasis, she said he walked on his hind legs for the first two months she had him, trying to take people out. But eventually he came around and now spends his days snoozing around child/ammy adult courses.

It’s not that Princess is evil, at all — in fact, she’s one of the sweetest horses I’ve ever met. She just has a lot of zest for life and, like a whiz-kid prodigy forced to sit down and do multiplication tables, a low tolerance for fences lower than 3’3″ or 3’6″.

Amanda gave me some good food for thought and I left Westwind feeling like I had a good gameplan in place.

Gymnastic line as sentence, tail as exclamation point.

A video posted by Leslie Wylie (@lesliewylie1) on

Part 3 is in already in motion, can’t wait to tell you all about it! Until next time …

USEF Names Nations Cup Team for Great Meadow

Team USA: Phillip Dutton and Fernhill Fugitive (photo by Leslie Threlkeld); Lauren Kieffer and Meadowbrook's Scarlett (photo by Jenni Autry); Boyd Martin and Welcome Shadow (photo by Jenni Autry); Clark Montgomery and Loughan Glen (photo by Leslie Wylie). Team USA: Phillip Dutton and Fernhill Fugitive (photo by Leslie Threlkeld); Lauren Kieffer and Meadowbrook's Scarlett (photo by Jenni Autry); Boyd Martin and Welcome Shadow (photo by Jenni Autry); Clark Montgomery and Loughan Glen (photo by Leslie Wylie).

The USEF has just named the Land Rover U.S. Eventing Team for the Land Rover Great Meadow International presented by Adequan® CICO3*, taking place July 8-10 in The Plains, Va.

The following athlete-and-horse combinations will compose the tam (in alphabetical order):

Phillip Dutton (West Grove, Pa.) and Ann Jones and Thomas Tierney’s Fernhill Fugitive, a 2005 Irish Sport Horse gelding

Lauren Kieffer (Middleburg, Va.) and Marie Le Menestrel’s Meadowbrook’s Scarlett, a 2007 Thoroughbred cross mare

Boyd Martin (Cochranville, Pa.) and Gloria Callen’s Welcome Shadow, a 2005 Thoroughbred cross mare

Clark Montgomery (Tetbury, England) and Holly and William Becker, Kathryn Kraft, and Jessica Montgomery’s Loughan Glen, a 2003 Irish Sport Horse gelding

The following combination will serve as the alternate:

Maya Black (Clinton, Wash.) and Dawn and Jonathan Dofelmier’s Doesn’t Play Fair, a 2005 Holsteiner gelding

Maya will compete as an individual unless a replacement to the team is necessary.

If the team roster rings a bell, it is of course because it identical to the U.S. rider squad we are sending to the Rio Olympics, but with Phillip, Lauren and Boyd riding their direct reserve horses instead of the horses with which they have been named to the team.

Jenni is just rolling into town and will be bringing us all the action live as it unfolds, so keep it locked here!

[USEF Names Land Rover U.S. Eventing Team for Land Rover Great Meadow International presented by Adequan® CICO3*]

#GMI2016 Links: WebsiteEntriesScheduleTicketsLive Scores

#EventerProblems, Vol. 79: Summer Struggles

Lost and mangled fly masks, discarded shoes, scary tanlines, sizzling temperatures, horse show headaches, dirt baths for all … some #EventerProblems are particularly rampant this time of the year.

Here’s a sampling!

Oh, that’s why I don’t like wearing these breeches in summer. #nostirrups #feeltheburn #eventerproblems

A photo posted by Lisa Colburn (@xkyaliix) on

#eventers will understand. 1:00 #crosscountry time in July in #Texas. #eventerproblems #austineventing

A photo posted by Becca Speer (@beccarides) on

When you’ve been riding outside since March but haven’t gotten any beach time until June… #eventerproblems

A photo posted by Kate Drake (@katedrakevt) on

Lazy boy #breakfastinbed #danishwarmblood #eventhorse #eventerproblems #wontgetup #toolazy

A photo posted by Stine Degn (@drdegn) on

Help #eventerproblems

A photo posted by Lea Ditte Marsk Lauridsen (@lea_lauridsen) on

Now Clare has to turtle!!! #austineventing #teamwork #turtleturtle #eventerproblems @clarebear986

A video posted by Lisa Bauman (@skibumangel) on

Durasole is totally good for my manicure, right? #barnlife #eventerproblems

A photo posted by Kelly Walker (@good_apple_eventing) on

I guess it’s time for new socks. #eventerproblems #lifeistooshorttowearboringsocks

A photo posted by Celsie Rae Abelt (@westwindstudio) on

Go Eventing.

Tuesday Video from SpectraVet: #GMI2016 Nation’s Cup Promo

This weekend is kind of a big deal, y’all. Great Meadow International marks the first time a FEI Nation’s Cup competition will be held on this side of the pond, and with it doubling as the mandatory outing for the U.S. Olympic eventing team all eyes will be on The Plains, Virginia from July 8-10.

The competition will begin with the first horse inspection on Friday afternoon, July 8. Dressage will start Saturday morning on July 9 and continue through the afternoon, followed by show jumping under the lights that night. Cross country will be held Sunday morning, July 10. Click here for ticket information.

Keep it locked on EN for everything you need to know about #GMI2016. Jenni will be our boots on the ground, bringing us all the latest. You can also follow the event on Facebook here, Twitter here, Instagram here and check out the website here for more a complete entry list and further details. Go Eventing!

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