Classic Eventing Nation

Saturday Links from World Equestrian Brands

Photo via Jonelle Price on Instagram.

Jonelle Price posted this video of a little squirrel climbing Tim Price like a tree to her Instagram story yesterday and I can’t get over it. The video may be gone from her stories by the time you read this, unless you’re up pretty early, so I felt it needed permanent documentation right here on EN. If anything, it’s proof that Tim is actually a Disney princess.

U.S. Weekend Action

Bouckaert Equestrian H.T. (Fairburn, GA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times]

Fair Hill International Recognized H.T. (Elkton, MD) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Hitching Post Farm H.T. (South Royalton, VT) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Hunt Club Farms H.T. (Berryville, VA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Otter Creek Spring H.T. (Wheeler, WI) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Spokane Sport Horse Spring H.T. (Spokane, WA) [Website] [Entries][Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Spring Gulch H.T. (Highlands Ranch, CO) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

The Vista Spring YEH/NEH Qualifier (Aiken, SC) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Scoring]

European International Events

LONGINES Whitsun Tournament Wiesbaden (Germany) [Website] [Times] [Scoring] [Live Stream]

Links to Start Your Weekend:

Disputed Bit Causes Costly Elimination for Canadian Rider

After 10 Years, Tiana Coudray Made It Back To Badminton

Fox-Pitt says Farewell, Next Stop Paris!

2024 Preakness Stakes Field Preview & Poll

Fair Hill is a Hidden-Gem State Park Brimming with Pastoral Beauty

Sponsor Corner: Is this not the sweetest photo from World Equestrian Brands? 😍🥰🤗 World Equestrian Brands works closely with Fly Pups, an organization that helps relocate pups to areas where they can be adopted! If you shop on worldequestrianbrands.com, a portion of all website sales go directly to help these little guys!

Morning Viewing: On honor of the Preakness Stakes today, let’s take a look back at one of the great OTTB ambassadors of our time, Icabad Crane. Icabad Crane ran third in the 2008 Preakness Stakes and later went on to have a successful career in eventing with both Phillip Dutton and later on daughter Olivia in the irons, all while owned by race trainer Graham Motion. Along the way he won the title of America’s Most Wanted Thoroughbred in the very first Thoroughbred Makeover competition in 2014. After retiring from eventing, Icabad found himself a third career as he returned to Graham to be ridden as his own personal track pony.

Video Break: On Board Vassily De Lassos with Andrew Hoy

While we were all eyes on Badminton, over in Germany, an international competition was happening at Marbach, where Australia’s Andrew Hoy won the 4*-L with Vassily De Lassos.

Incredibly, this is Vassily’s first international win, despite being an Olympic individual bronze and team silver medalist, and having over twenty top-5 placings. He’s also a clear inside the time specialist, both out on cross country and in the show jumping ring. Seriously, if when this horse takes on Paris, he’ll be a real player.

“Vassily was once again his fabulous self and the ‘Magical Ginger Unicorn’ we all know him as – and I am so grateful for him letting me ‘borrow his wings’,” Andrew wrote on Instagram. “An incredible performance – fast, efficient, confident and displaying the outstanding fitness level of his Anglo-Arabian genetics.

“I love coming to Marbach every year – the rolling hills are a real ‘Game Changer’ in the fitness level for all my horses – from the young ones starting their career to my ‘seasoned Pros’ getting ready for a Championship.”

Enjoy one of Andrew’s classic helmet cams as we ride ‘round Marbach with Vassily:

Bicton Arena’s Future Secured by Husband and Wife Team

Helen West and Andrew Fell will take the reins at Bicton Arena. Photo via Bicton Arena Press Release.

The future of the South West’s leading event centre, Bicton Arena has been secured by husband-and-wife team, Helen West and Andrew Fell who will jointly take the reins of the prestigious equestrian venue that offers a range of training and competition opportunities.

The former Chief Executive of British Eventing, Helen West and current Bicton Arena Manager, Andrew Fell have both completed their stints as Managers at Bicton and are synonymous with the venue’s popularity and success. The duo will now jointly manage the venue under a new era that will be sure to bring much success and renewed enthusiasm to the South West equestrian region.

Ros Canter and Pencos Crown Jewel. Photo by Hannah Cole.

“I’m excited to embark on this new journey and explore innovative ways to expand our offerings and cater to the diverse needs of our equestrian community. This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for us, we will take it with both hands and endeavour to represent its loyal community as we strive to provide opportunities for those at all levels,” said Andrew, Co-Director. “We would like to thank Clinton Devon Estates and the Clinton family for their trust in us, and for working collaboratively with us to enable this to happen.”

Home to a host of competitions in dressage, showjumping and eventing from grassroots to elite level, the venue will continue to offer an ambitious calendar of high quality events.

Co-Director Helen added, “Bicton will always hold a special place in my heart, I first competed there when I was just seven years old. Thirty years later I got married there! Bicton really put me on the map with my cross country design career, which is something I am hugely passionate about, and opened doors for me to design around the world. I am committed to offering quality coaching for South West based riders and am keen to build a real sense of community and comradeship for us to all enjoy.”

US Equestrian Announces Allocation of 2024 USEF/USEA Developing Horse National Championships

Beautiful Morven Park! Photo by Sally Spickard.

US Equestrian is pleased to announce the host location of the new 2024 USEF/USEA Developing Horse National Championship, which will take place at Morven Park International & Fall Horse Trials in Leesburg, Va. From Oct. 10-13, 2024. This new national championship will feature two divisions – the first for six-year-old horses competing at the CCI2*-S level, and the second for seven-year-old horses competing at the CCI3*-S level.

“For the past three years the Morven Park International & Fall Horse Trials has offered CCIYH3*-S and CCIYH2*-S divisions, providing an opportunity to support the pipeline of international-level eventing horses in the United States,” said Stacey Metcalfe, Executive Director & CEO of Westmoreland Davis Memorial Foundation, Inc./Morven Park. “This year, we are thrilled to be hosting the USEF/USEA Developing Horse National Championships as a celebration of these athletes’ achievements and the next generation of equestrian sport.”

The aim of the USEF/USEA Developing Horse National Championship is to further opportunities and recognition for upcoming and developing combinations working towards the highest levels of international eventing. The championship is intended to encourage the continued development and education of young horses in the U.S., while adding incentive for athletes bringing developing horses through the levels to further their career experience.

“It’s very rewarding for us to add these National Championship divisions and these championships will continue to drive growth and depth within the U.S. Eventing Program into the future,” said Leslie Law, USEF Emerging Athlete Coach. “We want to recognize the commitment and dedication it takes to develop and invest in the progression of a young sport horse and know this championship will be a great addition to the fall schedule at Morven Park.”

For more information on the 2024 USEF/USEA Developing Horse National Championships, please contact Christina Vaughn, Director of Eventing Emerging & Development Programs, at [email protected].

Friday News & Notes from Stable View

With the thrills and spills of Badminton still fresh in all of our minds, complete with stories of both heartache and triumph, these words from last year’s Kentucky 5* winner, the wonderful Tamie Smith, seem particularly pertinent. With horses, as we all know, there is a low to accompany every high, and nothing can ever be taken for granted. But, as Tamie says, that’s what makes the big results even more special, and one lady who knows that all too well is Lucy Latta, the latest darling of our sport. A one horse girl, with a full time job to juggle alongside her eventing career, all of the long hours and sacrifices finally paid off for her and RCA Patron Saint – Paddy – this last weekend, with 2nd place at their first 5*. A dream come true, indeed, and one that most definitely needs celebrating, not just for being an amazing result in itself, but also because, as Tamie says – and has first hand experience of herself – you really never know what is around the corner….

U.S. Weekend Preview

Bouckaert Equestrian H.T. (Fairburn, GA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times]

Fair Hill International Recognized H.T. (Elkton, MD) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Hitching Post Farm H.T. (South Royalton, VT) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Hunt Club Farms H.T. (Berryville, VA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Otter Creek Spring H.T. (Wheeler, WI) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Spokane Sport Horse Spring H.T. (Spokane, WA) [Website] [Entries][Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Spring Gulch H.T. (Highlands Ranch, CO) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

The Vista Spring YEH/NEH Qualifier (Aiken, SC) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Scoring]

European International Events

LONGINES Whitsun Tournament Wiesbaden (Germany) [Website] [Times] [Scoring] [Live Stream]

Friday News and Reading

Some good news from this side of the pond to start your weekend right. After much to-ing and fro-ing, the live export of horses for slaughter is finally going to be banned. As Roly Owers, Chief Executive of World Horse Welfare, says, this is an historic moment in the welfare of equestrian friends, and a massive step in the right direction. Three cheers for those who have campaigned tirelessly to reach this point: it’s been a long road, but the end is in sight.

I know Badminton reached it’s climatic finale over a week ago, but I am still soaking up all the related content, and boy is there plenty still out there. Horse & Hound are doing a sterling job of providing even more information about the prestigious event and its competitors, just when you think you know it all. Like this roll call of all of the prize winners you might not know about – shout out to Emily Gibson and Lily Wilson, Pippa Funnell’s grooms, who won the grooms’ award. Alex Bragg came away with a pretty big haul, too. If that isn’t enough, then here’s a few extra deets about the winning mare, Greenacres Special Cavalier. A mare you have to sweet talk?! Hands up who isn’t surprised.

Speaking of Badminton, as I am sure you are all well aware by now, this year’s competition marked yet another 5* completion for Boyd Martin. In adding this one to his incredible roster of 5* completions, Mr Martin has of course done what only one other rider has before him (Tim Price in case you were wondering): ridden around all of the 7 current 5*’s in the world. But another combination hot on his heels is that of Jessica Phoenix and the much beloved Wabbit. With four of the seven top events under their belt, Jessie and Wabbit are well on their way to pulling off the same feat, and no offence Tim and Boyd, but to complete all seven on the same horse is a new level of awesome.

Missed your chance to get your hands on Olympic tickets?! Well, I have some excellent news for you; the official resale ticket platform is LIVE. But be quick if you want to grab your ringside pass – I reckon any available tickets will be snapped up like hotcakes, even for the more obscure sports. Paris is the only place to be this Summer.

Sponsor Corner

Have you entered the USEF/USEA Summer Horse Trials at Stable View yet? Registration closes on 6/04! All levels welcome, from Beginner Novice through Advanced. Register soon to beat the late fees. Register now.

Weekend Watching

Before I leave you to enjoy your weekend, just a bit of wisdom from one of the Greatest of All Time: Queen Lucinda Green. So that’s why my OTTB spends hours stood stock still with his head up in the air…

Tommy Greengard and That’s Me Z Top Galway Downs Preliminary Challenge

Tommy Greengard and That’s Me Z. Photo by Tina Fitch Photography.

Young professional Tommy Greengard and That’s Me Z added this year’s Galway Downs Preliminary Challenge title to their two years of ongoing successes in the sport.

Launched in 2009, the Challenge is a West Coast fixture on the spring eventing circuit – giving horses and riders a step-up opportunity with slightly more difficult dressage and show jumping demands.

Equally important, the Challenge showcases its stars in front of a full VIP Pavilion in the buzzy party atmosphere of the Grand Prix Arena. It’s great for testing horses in an exciting environment and it’s festive and fun for exhibitors and fans.

The Preliminary Challenge ran concurrent with the Galway Downs Spring Horse Trials, May 10-12 at the Galway Downs Equestrian Center in Southern California’s Temecula Valley Wine Country. A lovely Mothers Day brunch carried the celebratory vibe into Sunday.

Tommy rides for Chocolate Horse Farm and he and Chocolate Horse’s owner Andrea Pfeiffer own “Z” together. The pair splashed onto the scene in 2022 as the top scorers, nationally, in the USEF Young Event Horse 5-Year-Old Championships and haven’t looked back.

With Intermediate mileage under Z’s belt already, the Challenge’s questions were easily answered in all three phases. After their 27.7 dressage start – from judges Michelle Henry and Carolyn Lindholm – the pair was flawless the rest of the way over cross-country designed by Rob Mobley and Alessandra Allen-Shin and show jumping designed by Chris Barnard.

The bigger priority was giving the Zangersheide 7-year-old more exposure to the Saturday night lights and atmosphere of the show jumping finalé. Neither that, nor the first time show jumping after cross-country, phased the talented horse. “He’s always been a very confident, special horse to bring along,” Tommy said of their two years together.

The Challenge has consistently offered $15,000 in cash and prizes and emphasized special awards presentations and parties to mark the achievements of all.

This year, exhibitors received gifts from Devoucoux, RevitaVet and the Arma line from Shires Equestrian. Devoucoux and CWD provided the top horse and rider a generous basket of approximately $1,500 worth of bridles, reins, martingale, show boots, etc…

Tommy’s Third Win


Tommy first rode in the Preliminary Challenge four years ago, and this year marks his third win. His own 4* partner, Joshua MBF, was his first winning ride. And another Young Event Horse superstar owned by the Chocolate Horse partners, Leonardo Diterma, was also crowned champ with Tommy in the irons.

This year, Tommy also finished 6th with I’m All In, a 6-year-old German Sport Horse that is newer to the level.

“It’s huge to get this level of atmosphere,” Tommy remarked. “It’s great for any event horse. We love the Preliminary Challenge and we encourage everybody to do it.”

Tommy refuses to “get all balled up about” about future plans, but the hope for Z is the FEI World Championships for Young Horses in France this fall. It’s a long ways off, he emphasized, but next steps include additional 3* mileage in Washington state and at Rebecca Farms, Montana, this summer. Receiving the USET Foundation’s Amanda Pirie Warrington Grant this year is making extra preparation possible.

Chocolate Horse Farm’s enthusiasm for the Challenge led to six stablemates entering the line-up. One of them is 2023 USEF Eventing Young Rider Championships team silver medalist Greylin Booth, who finished third overall and as the Top Rider.

Greylin and Quick Quinn, a 7-year-old Holsteiner, stayed on their 33.8 dressage score. (Greylin and professional Bec Braitling tied on that final score, with the closest to optimum cross-country time breaking the tie in Greylin’s favor.)

“It was so fun,” said Greylin, a high school junior who also finished 11th with Modesto RE. “Both of my horses are coming 7, and we picked the Preliminary Challenge for its format. We knew it would be a good experience to show jump in that amount of atmosphere and the dressage test is harder than anything I’d experienced.”

She loved the “incredibly fun, open” cross-country track. “Quinn is so brave and honest and I was able to let him go in some of the stretches, and he still had energy for show jumping. I am really pleased with how well he handled the atmosphere and focused on his job.”

As for her own nerves in that environment, Greylin said she benefited from a similar experience during last fall’s USEF Eventing Young Riders Championships, presented by USEA. Breath work and visualization techniques have been a big help, too. Above all, Andrea Pfeiffer and Tommy Greengard and the Chocolate Horse team have prepared her and her horses for confident progress.

The Galway Downs CCI 2*-L this fall is penciled in for both of Greylin’s horses. “I’m super excited about that and I also believe in letting the horses tell me what they want to do so we ensure good experiences.”

Bec Braitling, the California-based Australian international rider, took 4th place overall with Elliot V, one of two horses she rode in the Challenge for friend Tamie Smith.

A Warrior Rises

Southern California professional and Galway Downs regular Auburn Excell Brady rode the 7-year-old BSP Boudica to top horse honors. Like all three top finishers, they added nothing to their dressage effort – in this case a 29.5.

Auburn was thrilled with the KWPN mare’s outing – from the sand box to show jumping.

“This dressage test is more stop and go and for a horse like her, it’s kind of ‘in your face.’ Except for not working on the rein back enough, I’m pleased that I’d actually gotten her to where she knew what things were happening. She was confident and not put off by me.”

This pair has come a long way since Boudica came to Auburn in the fall of 2022 as a sales horse. “She was never an easy ride, but I finally started getting along with her.” A “come to Jesus” lesson with Ian Stark last summer helped turn the tide, she reported.

At the suggestion of Auburn’s husband, the mare’s name was changed to that of a notorious Celtic warrior. “Maybe I’m superstitious, but I think that might have helped, too!”

Competing regularly at Galway Downs helped put the mare at ease. And, fellow professional Taren Hoffos gave advice — “stop pulling on her” – that paid off over cross-country, Auburn added.

The Shows Go On…

Eventing competition at Galway Downs resumes with the he next recognized event, which will be the Oct. 30-Nov 3 Regional Championships and CCI-L that headline another fixture in the West – Galway Downs’ fall international competition.

Nilforushan Equisport Events stages high-level hunter/jumper competition, going on now through early June, then again in October. Shows in various disciplines keep the Galway Downs calendar full, with the June 14-16 Cheers to Summer dressage competition as a new highlight.

Visit www.galwaydowns.net for more information, and sign-up for the monthly Galway Gazette newsletter to stay abreast of news from this premier equestrian venue.

Chatsworth International + FEI Nations Cup Leg Canceled Due to Heavy Rain

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Just as competitors were arriving and beginning to unload their lorries, organizers at the Chatsworth International Horse Trials (UK), also the site of the next FEI Nations Cup leg, made the difficult decision to cancel this weekend’s event. The decision comes after 12 hours of heavy downpours that have saturated the grounds and created untenable circumstances.

“We are devastated to announce that due to the last 12 hours of heavy rain on site, under instruction from the BE and FEI officials we have been forced to cancel the 2024 Chatsworth International Horse Trials,” the event shared on social media. “We are sorry for the disappointment and inconvenience this will cause. Our team has worked incredibly hard to organise the event, however the decision has been taken to ensure the safety and wellbeing of our athletes, visitors and horses, which is our number one priority. All ticket holders will be contacted to process a full refund. There is no need to contact us.”

Chatsworth International Horse Trials cancelled

We are devastated to announce that due to the last 12 hours of heavy…

Posted by Chatsworth International Horse Trials on Thursday, May 16, 2024

The event was to showcase the next leg of the FEI Nations Cup, which was also to be the first event for the USEF European Development Tour, who will next head to Millstreet in Ireland at the end of the month.

Around the World and Then Some: Boyd Martin Reflects on Finishing All 7 CCI5* Events

With his completion of the 2024 MARS Badminton Horse Trials aboard the Turner family’s Tsetserleg TSF, Boyd Martin became the second rider to complete all seven permanent CCI5* events around the world. We wanted to hear his thoughts on the accomplishment:

Origins

Twenty four years ago, Boyd Martin cantered up the centerline in his first CCI5* (then designated as a CCI4*).

It was a different time; two and a half decades all at once seems like the blink of an eye – “a bit of a blur” as Boyd describes it – and a lifetime.

The Adelaide International is the sole CCI5* event located in the Southern Hemisphere and Boyd’s home country of Australia. To this event in 2000, Boyd brought his Pony Club horse, an off-track Thoroughbred named Flying Doctor. He rode cross country sans body protector, as most of his counterparts did in that time. The event was still run in its “classic” long format, with four phases of cross country.

“Looking back on it, I remember walking the course and I didn’t walk it with a coach, and I wouldn’t have known how many strides were between the jumps,” Boyd says wryly. It was a different lifestyle that the then-19-year-old lived: he’d stay out late each night partying and then roll out of bed (often a sleeping bag in the back of the trailer), hangover be damned, to go and compete at the highest levels of the sport.

Inexperienced or not, Boyd made good on that first 5* start, finishing fifth and even more importantly, recognizing within himself that he’d found his purpose in life.

Embed from Getty Images

Boyd competed a handful more times at Adelaide, even collecting his first win at the level quite early on, in 2003 with True Blue Toozac. This would be the final year the event was run as a long format, and it had featured a competitive field vying for selection for the following year’s Olympics in Athens.

“Looking back now, I had no idea what I was doing, but I did know one thing: I loved it,” Boyd said. He’d spent many years under the mentorship of Olympic veteran Heath Ryan, who laid the foundation of hard work and tough love that cultivated Boyd’s existing scrappiness. “That win in 2003 was a big one because no one really knew who I was, even in Australia. I was just a scrappy kid, and it was the year before the Olympics so it was hotly contested. That sort of was the competition that really put me on the map.”

Boyd Martin and Ying Yang Yo. Photo by Denise Lahey.

The result would likely have given Boyd a one-way ticket to Athens, but an ill-timed injury to True Blue Toozac would put that dream on ice for the time being. He’d have to wait two more Olympic cycles to get his first shot, representing the U.S. in London (2012) with Otis Barbotiere.

Most Boyd fans will know the story from here fairly well: a few years later, Boyd felt he’d done what he could do in Oceania, and packed up his bags to pay a visit to another Australian who’d relocated to the U.S.: one Phillip Dutton. In 2006, he brought another OTTB, Ying Yang Yo, to America and contested his first U.S. 5* at Kentucky, finishing 11th. That sealed the deal – Boyd returned to Australia, married his wife, Silva, sold everything he owned, and set sail for a new life in the States.

Since that first outing in 2000, Boyd has contested an impressive 62 CCI5* events with 24 different horses, including three appearances at the Olympics and four at FEI World Championships/World Equestrian Games. His completion of Badminton this month with the Turner family’s Tsetserleg TSF now makes him just the second rider behind New Zealand’s Tim Price to finish all seven permanent 5* events (Tim’s got a slight one-up here, as he also contested the “pop-up” 5* at Bicton in the UK that was run in 2020).

Evolution

Boyd Martin and On Cue. Photo by Abby Powell.

Like many involved in the sport through its evolution, Boyd’s borne witness to the changes eventing has seen from his view as a rider and producer of horses.

“The design of the course now is a lot more testing of rideability and accuracy,” he explained. “Over the years we’ve seen a lot more technical fences with corners and narrows and humps and lumps, going fast and then slowing right down and getting your horse concentrating and thinking. I do think that’s made it a lot more challenging, where it’s not just big big jumps that scare the crap out of you – it’s more of a test of training and adjustability.”

I asked Boyd how he’d characterize each of the 5*s now that he’s had a good crack at each one.

“Doing them all now, I would say Adelaide, Lühmuhlen and Pau all have a real correlation among them,” he said. “Flatter courses in a smaller space, so it’s much more sort of high speed to low speed with twists and turns and accuracy. I also think it requires a different sort of horse – more your championship-type horse can go there and the heavier warmbloods that lack a little stamina you can actually get around those flatter courses at those three. So riders with big stables can now sort of point their horse toward the five-star that suits.”

“Badminton, Kentucky and Burghley – they’re the classics,” he continued. “The ones with the big prize money and the crazy spectators and just this special aura about them, Kentucky being in the mecca of horse sports in America and Badminton and Burghley just having this huge history of 75 years with almost sacred ground.”

Boyd Martin and Fedarman B compete at Luhmühlen in 2023. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“Maryland I would describe as in alignment with Badminton, Burghley and Kentucky in terms of scope and size of jumps and the test of undulating country. As time goes on, I hope that it will become even more recognizable and attract more of those crazy amounts of spectators.”

And surely the way he has had to evolve his own training has adjusted with the times. “The horses, to start, have just changed so much,” he agrees. “My first twenty five-stars were all on off-track Thoroughbreds, and now I hardly have any Thoroughbreds in work. I think the dressage and show jumping have gotten way more competitive and influential, but I still feel like just to finish at a place like Badminton you’ve got to select a horse that’s got unbelievable stamina and endurance. I still look for as much Thoroughbred blood as I can in my horses; horses that are at least half Thoroughbred.”

“I did probably shift, once the five-star shifted to the modern format, with my fitness program, very lightly,” he said in terms of preparation, though it’s true that the foundations of conditioning set out by those classic long format riders are very much applicable to today’s iteration of the sport. “But honestly, not by much. I still get them as fit as humanly possible. These five-stars are still a whole different ball game; the courses are relentless and the designers are really sticking it to you, especially the last four or five minutes when there’s fatigue.”

Purpose

Boyd Martin and Neville Bardos on course at Kentucky in 2011. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

While of course Boyd’s career is far from over, this milestone of finishing all 5* events in the world serves as a reminder of the incredible amount of dedication that’s required to even reach the start box at a 5*.

“The early days in Australia just getting started, I was so unbelievably excited to just be there,” he reflected. “It is so hard just getting one horse there – when you think of the thousands and thousands of hours of practice, the years of training, the qualifying stage by stage, year after year. It’s really five, six, seven years of chasing that dream and I’ve got an unbelievable amount of admiration for anyone who even just gets to the starting line because I know how hard it is to find the horse, put those years of work in, and then also have a bit of luck on your side.”

So despite the understandable blur that is the last 24 years, Boyd is sure of one thing: “A five-star competition is the ultimate high where you’re on cloud nine for weeks and weeks after a fantastic performance. It’s also true in reverse, where when things don’t go well, it’s a huge emotional adrenaline dump where you’re just heartbroken and all that training and prep goes in a split second when you fail. It’s a huge, empty, depressing feeling.”

“I do think as you get older, it gets a little easier. But I look back at Badminton and it was just there for the taking. I had a good dressage, it was an open field with some of the Olympic horses not there, and just one mistake on cross country really just takes the wind out of your sails a bit.”

What pulls you out when you’ve found yourself in one of those emotional holes? You remind yourself of what you’re here to do.

“To be honest, I’ve dedicated my life to this, and the five-star is what I live for,” Boyd continued. “All those thousands of hours of practice and picking out the young horses and going to the smaller events – all of that with one goal in mind.”

Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg in Tokyo. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

My final question was to ask Boyd for some of the strongest memories from all 63 5*s he’s done now. He picks out a few off the top of his head: winning the inaugural Maryland 5 Star with On Cue for one, and his first win with True Blue Toozac all those years ago.

A few minutes after we got off the phone, he called back.

“I’d have to say that Neville Bardos getting to Burghley, after everything that happened with the fire, was a top high for me,” he said, having had some time to collect his thoughts (by the way, one of the best tellings of the Neville Bardos story exists within this Purina documentary from 2017). “But I also think it’s important for as much as we talk about the highs to also recognize the lows, and that for me was losing Crackerjack at Pau [in 2017]. I just remember having the absolute round of the day and he’d had such an incredible story of being bred by Colin Davidson, who later passed away in a car accident and his mother sent him to me to finish his work. It was just a bitter reminder of how tough this sport is, that horrible ending. When it goes well, you’re a champion, but when it doesn’t go well, you’re just kicked in the gut over and over again.”

It’s true: like many riders with Boyd’s tenure in the sport, he’s come back from the lowest of lows more times than you can count. He’s still coming to terms with a finish at Badminton that he knows could have been much more competitive than it was. He spends the countless hours of time in the saddle, building relationships with owners and sponsors, and surrounding himself with a team of professionals to assist him.

All in the pursuit of a goal that, truthfully, feels out of reach more often than not.

Completing seven different 5*s isn’t just a competitive accomplishment, it’s a personal triumph – but it’s far from a bookend for Boyd. He’ll always be hunting the next horse, the next 5* – after all, as he puts it, “it’s what I was put on this earth to do.”

Missing Out on Paris Tickets? The Ticket Resale Market is Now Open

Photo via Château de Versailles on Facebook.

If you’ve not managed to get tickets for the Paris Olympics, you might not be completely out of luck as a new ticket resale market across sports is now available.

While we don’t see any cross country tickets available for Paris, as of writing this article there are some offers available for eventing dressage and show jumping, as well as other equestrian disciplines. If you want to check out some other sports, there are also some tickets on resale for those. If you have tickets and need to offload them, you can also list them here. Tickets should come and go off this platform as people’s plans change, so keep an eye out if you don’t see what you want right away.

We of course can’t guarantee availability, but here is the link if you want to have a shot!

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Thursday News & Notes from Ecogold

Is this the real life? Is this just fantasy? Ever since Badminton I’ve been struck with one heck of an eventing hangover, and seeing this share from Laura Collett made me wonder if I was in the midst of one of the far-out lucid dreams I’m plagued with secretly enjoy, which are, apparently, a symptom of being embroiled in the eventing madness that is a 5* weekend. I don’t keep a diary, but I do relay my nocturnal headtrips to an EN buddy and it turns out, I’m pretty normal – well, when I’m firmly planted between the flags with the red on my right, at least.

In other – less weird – news, Hot Bobo’s baby is doing great after a bit of a turbulent start to life. Little Hot Tamale is home and Karl Slezak has assured everyone who’s been following her journey that there are no expected future limitations linked to her premature birth. ‘Molly’ sure looks like hot stuff and we can’t wait to see her galloping in her mom’s footsteps at events one day.

National Day of Note: Today is National Horse Rescue Day – which, really, should be every day. It’s such a privilege to spend our lives with horses, and, although it can be a pretty tough life, with the weight of responsibility, the physical labor, the emotional turmoil they can put you through, the lack of sleep… over and above it all is the power of our connection with these awesome beings and the devotion they give us. If there’s anything you can do to help out one of the excellent horse rescue programs that are working to give all horses what we give ours, please think about that today, and every day, really.

U.S. Weekend Preview

Bouckaert Equestrian H.T. (Fairburn, GA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times]

Fair Hill International Recognized H.T. (Elkton, MD) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Hitching Post Farm H.T. (South Royalton, VT) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Hunt Club Farms H.T. (Berryville, VA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Otter Creek Spring H.T. (Wheeler, WI) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Spokane Sport Horse Spring H.T. (Spokane, WA) [Website] [Entries][Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Spring Gulch H.T. (Highlands Ranch, CO) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

The Vista Spring YEH/NEH Qualifier (Aiken, SC) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Scoring]

UK International Events

Chatsworth International (FEI Nations Cup) (Derbyshire, UK) [Website] [Entries] [Scoring] [H&C+ Live Stream] [NC 4*-S XC Livestream via FEI YouTube Channel]

European International Events

LONGINES Whitsun Tournament Wiesbaden (Germany) [Website] [Times] [Scoring] [CMH Live Stream]

Thursday News and Reading

Call out for USEA Members and VIP Volunteers to share their best bits If you’re one of those very, very good guys who help to keep our sport running, head on over to this IG post and share what roles you love and why for the chance to be featured in a USEA article.

It’s not your trainer’s job to… We get it, trainers are a huge part of our lives, but do we sometimes assume their job description includes more than it actually does? Here’s what trainers have to say about that. Guilty? Well now you know.

Today’s tearjerker is one of those bittersweet tales that it’s nice to enjoy over a cup of something comforting. Appropriate for Horse Rescue Day, this is the story of a foster-based rescue in Pittsburgh. Obviously, fostering means that horses will come and go from the center, and although it’s great that they’re moving on to forever homes, there are people who will miss them once they’re gone. Blogger Sarah K. Susa recounts a childhood memory as she explains how she prepares the kids who’ve fallen in love with foster horses for saying goodbye.

Before I’d even met a horse in real life, I was a horse girl. I spent as much time as I could enveloped in horses, only I could hold my barn in my hands, as I devoured every single horse book I could find. One series in particular was The Silver Brumby – my fascination for wild horses was born between those pages. And so, when I came across this article about a program that works to rehome wild brumbies , it piqued my interest. There are sad truths about some of the methods used to manage the wild herds, but overall this piece is about the people who are working towards positive alternatives and their celebration of these versatile equines.

Sponsor Corner

Did you spot Ecogold’s saddle pads at the USEA Intercollegiate Championships? University of Kentucky Eventing Team looked stunning in their custom Ecogold pads! The Ecogold Breeze collection can be customized to match your team’s colors.

Video Break

Not every horse who goes to Badminton is one of the big guys… Enter the Shetland Pony Grand National , which is both fun and serious in equal measure. Honestly, you may be giggling at the spectacle of itty bitty ponies, their lil legs going like the clappers as they gallop over teeny fences, but many of the young riders move on from these pint-sized rides to have exciting equestrian careers. And the whole thing is in aid of charity – this year the Bob Champion Cancer Trust.