Probably not YOUR go-to clip, but a cool one nonetheless: a clip given to Laura Szeremi’s two-star horse Quatar Z (nickname “Zebrasaurus”) last year by groom/artiste Tegan Henderson. Photos courtesy of Laura Szeremi and Tegan Henderson.
It’s that time of the year, folks. Bzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.
I’d love to say that I have the patience and artistic inclination to pull off a clip like these by Tegan Henderson — check out EN’s interview with Tegan from last year. That girl creates some straight-up masterpieces. But I do not, which is why my own go-to clip is the Irish Clip. So simple! So quick! So hard to screw up (even after you’re a couple beers into the six pack you brought to the barn because you hate clipping so much)!
So elegant. Photos courtesy of Laura Szeremi and Tegan Henderson.
Today’s “Let’s Discuss” question: What’s your go-to body clip?
And, bonus question …
If you feel so inclined, post a pic in the comments — we’d love to see your work!
Lots of pink ribbons were on display throughout the 2018 Event at Rebecca Farm to promote breast cancer awareness and the Halt Cancer At X initiative. Photo by Leslie Wylie.
Halt Cancer at X, the fundraising campaign created in 2012 in memory of The Event at Rebecca Farm founder Becky Broussard, continues to make huge strides each year. To date the initiative has contributed $222,000 to local breast cancer patient support organizations and another $320,000 to national breast cancer research initiatives.
For 2018, Halt Cancer at X has announced that it will award $47,200 in grants to local cancer support organizations to help sustain programs that benefit cancer patients and survivors in the Flathead Valley and beyond. The funds were raised during The Event at Rebecca Farm through a combination of parking donations, silent auction proceeds, and donations from competitors and individuals.
“I can’t believe how far Halt Cancer has come. To be able to support so many local programs each year and really make a difference means so much to me,” Sarah Broussard says. “We are definitely more than just horses. We really care about this community.”
The 2018-2019 recipients:
Save a Sister was this year’s largest grant recipient, taking home an award of $19,000. The funds will help support the group’s high-risk breast cancer screening program, which covers the cost of screening mammograms so breast cancer can be detected earlier. In the last 10 years, Save a Sister has provided more than 1,000 mammograms to women at risk for developing the disease.
“The goal of this program is to prevent breast cancer, and if we can’t prevent it, to detect it as early as possible,” says Dr. Amanda Beer of Save a Sister. “Through this program, and the massive amount of hours from my amazing team, we are definitely making a difference in this community and we could not do it without the funds from Halt Cancer at X.”
Cancer Support and Survivorship received a grant of $15,700. The organization offers a vast array of programs to promote community and education amongst cancer patients and survivors. Their offerings include support groups, nutrition classes and organized outings such as hikes, rafting trips and snowshoeing excursions. A portion of the grant funds will also support a retreat in Essex along with the Halt Cancer at X kitchen, where healthy cooking and nutrition classes are held.
Also receiving grants funds was Flathead Cancer Aid Services, which was awarded $10,000. The nonprofit provides financial assistance to cancer patients for things that insurance doesn’t cover such as rent, groceries and travel expenses. Flathead Cancer Aid Services helps to ease the financial burden of cancer patients so they can focus on healing and recovery.
This year’s final recipient was Casting for Recovery, which was awarded a $2,500 grant to help fund a fly-fishing retreat for Flathead Valley women affected by breast cancer. Casting for Recovery’s unique retreat experiences give women a chance to find healing in nature, learn a new skill and be part of a community of cancer patients and survivors.
“It provides a sisterhood for women, it provides an opportunity to get out and enjoy nature and see what nature can do. It’s amazing what being out in a quiet stream, just there with your sisters can do,” says Sarah.
For more information about Halt Cancer at X, visit the website here.
Elisa Wallace and Reloaded on the Jumbotron at the Breeders’ Cup. Photo via Retired Racehorse Project on Facebook.
Peanut butter and jelly, bread and butter, Thoroughbreds and eventing … some things just go together! And we can now add the Retired Racehorse Project and the Breeders’ Cup to that list of perfect matches, as the two organizations announced early last month that they would be partnering up to promote the Thoroughbred both on the track and off.
As a part of the partnership, the winning rider of America’s Most Wanted Thoroughbred from the Thoroughbred Makeover would receive tickets to the Breeders’ Cup World Championships and be honored in the winner’s circle between Friday’s races. Just one problem: the winner, Elisa Wallace, was already slated to compete two of her horses, Simply Priceless and Riot Gear, at Rocking Horse Fall H.T. that same weekend. It was certainly not for nothing though as each of her horses won their respective Intermediate divisions, RRP representatives were still able to attend and be recognized at the Breeders’ Cup, and a highlight reel of Elisa and Reloaded’s winning Makeover rides was broadcast on the Jumbotron.
Looking for your perfect match? Here are three prospects ready to come off the track and into your life:
Cosmo the Comet. Photo via Finger Lakes Finest Thoroughbreds.
Let’s kick today’s wishlist off with a (very) tall, dark, and handsome war horse, shall we? Cosmo the Comet was a successful racehorse making 52 total starts and earning nearly $120,000. He last raced in September 2017 (making him still eligible for the 2019 Thoroughbred Makeover) and has since been simply hanging out at his owner’s farm very near the Finger Lakes Race Track.
This war horse retired sound and now that he’s had a year of let down to adjust to a slower lifestyle, he is ready to go back to work in a new career. Cosmo the Comet did his best racing on the turf and his owner thinks he’d really enjoy eventing. She calls him “good natured and loving” but also says he can be a strong ride but isn’t naughty and has lots of endurance.
Zesty Zar sounds like a really lovely young horse to bring along off the track. The folks at New Vocations say he’s a pleasure to work with on the ground and note that he especially enjoys grooming and bath time. Not only that, but he’s also lovely to work with under saddle. “Zar” is forward thinking, eager to please, and seems to enjoy learning new things. Having last raced at the end of August after 13 total starts he’s still very green as a riding horse, but the future looks promising for him!
Richiesonarampage raced 15 times and earned $27,000 and he certainly looks proud of himself for it, doesn’t he? This gelding is nicely put together and was very sweet and personable with CANTER Chicago’s volunteers who did his photoshoot – they have pegged this horse as one who they think is going to sell fast! “Ritchie” is said to be sound and was noted to have clean legs. He actually raced just two days prior to his CANTER listing and seems just as fresh and fit as ever.
Located in Cicero, Illinois at Hawthorne Race Course.
Get so caught up with weekend eventing action that you totally forgot about fall’s biggest horse race, the Breeders’ Cup Classic? No judgement, and for your recap convenience, a quick summary: Capping off a nearly-perfect season, Accelerate was the toughest of them all in the $6 million race held Saturday at Churchill Downs. Thankfully our friends at Horse Nation have done a bang-up job covering the Cup — here’s a replay, and visit the site for more including this photo gallery of Breeders’ Cup jockeys’ winning moments, this embarrassing report about the Cups’ token drunk dude, and an inspiring feature on the New Vocations Breeders’ Cup Pledge program.
Accelerate, ridden by Joel Rosario, wins the Breeders’ Cup Classic on Breeders’ Cup World Championship Saturday at Churchill Downs. Photo by Jessica Morgan/Eclipse Sportswire/CSM.
In a year that felt strangely empty with the early retirement of the Triple Crown winner Justify, a 5-year-old named Accelerate stepped into the void and grabbed the championship for himself: winning five of his last six starts, the chestnut son of Lookin At Lucky made Saturday’s Breeders’ Cup Classic his sixth Grade I victory of 2018.
Accelerate was trainer John Sadler’s 45th Breeders’ Cup hopeful, and his victory broke one of the most infamous losing streaks in Breeders’ Cup history. He went off as the favorite in a star-studded field including Dubai World Cup winner Thunder Snow, UAE Derby winner Mendelssohn, Travers winner Catholic Boy, and 2017 multiple Grade I winner West Coast.
Mendelssohn set a grueling early pace that sent murmurs through the crowd as the fractions flashed up on the screen, with McKinzie and West Coast in hot pursuit and Thunder Snow lurking on the rail. Accelerate, under a ride by Joel Rosario, had to hustle from post 14 to make up some ground and settled clear mid-pack.
Into the home stretch, Mendelssohn tried his best to hold on but faded, leaving the door wide open for Accelerate to sweep three-wide on the turn and take command of the race. He held off challenges first by Thunder Snow and then by characteristically late-closing Gunnevera to cruise under the wire the latest Classic champion.
A fascinating debate now unfolds over who should earn Horse of the Year honors: Justify, the undefeated unraced-as-a-two-year-old Triple Crown winner who retired in the first half of the year due to injury, or Accelerate, who won six Grade I stakes in California and then beat the best of the East Coast in the Classic? Weigh in with your thoughts!
I had serious FOMO this weekend watching the Virginia Horse Trials action from afar. It became a favorite of mine when I was living in Virginia, and I’m looking forward to a return one day hopefully soon! Something about the autumn colors in the foothills makes my heart happy.
National Holiday: Voting Day! Don’t forget to get out to the polls today, EN.
If you live in Maryland’s Anne Arundel County, don’t forget to rock the vote for Steuart Pittman! Perhaps best known for his work as founder of Retired Racehorse Project, Steuart now has his sights set on making a different kind of change in the world. He is a do-er, which led to his campaign to be elected Anne Arundel County Executive. The incumbent Executive, Steve Schuh, was bad news: a far right-wing Republican with a developer-funded agenda of unchecked, fiscally irresponsible growth. When nobody came forward to oppose him for reelection, Steuart reckoned that he was going to have to do it himself. You can read more about Steuart’s community-first platform via his campaign website. [Pittman for People]
I was riding horses when I was 15, but not 5-year-old at the YEH Championship! Emma Keahon was, and she was riding Dorry Gascon and Andrew Keahon’s 5-year-old Irish Sport Horse gelding, PS Duty Calls. [Now on Course: Emma Keahon and PS Duty Calls]
Former four-star horseIdalgo was sadly euthanized this week. Ridden by William Fox-Pitt, “Frog” finished second at Badminton and won a European gold medal in 2009. He retired from eventing in 2010, and spend the rest of his life with William’s former pupil Alex van Tuyll, enjoying life and hunting. [Heartbreak as British team gold medallist dies: ‘He was cheeky, but never malicious’]
It’s nearly impossible to predict the outcomes of an entire season, and 2018 was no different. There were ups and downs and twists we couldn’t have thought up ourselves. Horse & Hound highlights the most memorable. [When the unexpected strikes… 11 surprises of the 2018 eventing season]
The $20,000 Horseware Indoor Eventing Challenge took place this past weekend during the annual Royal Agricultural Winter Fair in Toronto, Ontario. The competition, now in it’s 11th year, is an invitation-only event that see’s riders face off over both show jumps and solid obstacles in a course designed by Capt. Mark Phillips.
This year it was Lauren Kieffer who came out in the top spot thanks to two clear and fast rounds, besting nine other top riders. Lauren was mounted on Glendening Avis, a 13-year-old Canadian Sport Horse mare, loaned to her for the event by Callie Evans. Enjoy the video of Lauren’s winning round above and make sure to check out the full report of the indoor eventing action at The Royal thanks to Suzanna O’Connor.
CCI2* winners James Alliston & Pandora. Photo by Kim F. Miller.
Galway Downs concluded its 2018 international equestrian competition schedule with a grand finale event this weekend. We catch up with James Alliston, Charlotte Babbitt and Bec Braitling, who emerged as CCI2*, CCI1* and Training Three-Day victors.
CCI2*
Competing at Galway Downs, a venue whose motto is “a legend reborn,” James Alliston is a living legend in no need of rebirth. The Northern California-based Brit logged yet another international win with his victory in the CCI2* aboard the Palomino Swedish Warmblood mare Pandora. Already dubbed “the little legend,” the diminutive mare with a big jump and a tall rider was one of few to sail clear over Mark Donovan’s show jumping track. In doing so, the pair improved from the second-place standing they’d maintained since dressage.
Winning on their dressage score of 34.6, James was optimistic about the next phases. “She was really good on cross country. Even when I didn’t give her the best approach to the big ditch and rails on the hill, she’s so brave that she just shuffled in a little step and popped over it.” He was equally confident for stadium jumping: “She’s naturally very careful, fast and, touch wood, she normally jumps clear rounds.”
Pandora’s owner, Laura Boyer, was James’ first client when he got settled in California. He rode Pandora’s sire, initially rode the mare when she was 3 and then resumed the ride a few years ago. At Galway he also picked up the Best 7-Year-Old honors for her. This was James’ sixth CCI1* victory, which adds to at least “a couple” of three-star victories over the years, he estimated.
Generous prizes awaited the veteran victor: $1,500 in prize money, a Galway Downs plaque, a Professional’s Choice cooler; a Devoucoux saddle, a $500 CWD voucher; a bottle of APF; certificates from Ride On Video and Event Training Online; and a bag of Triple Crown Feed.
The crowd hushed Mallory Hogan and her partner of four years, Clarissa Purisima, to the first clear show jumping round of the division. With two months competing on the East Coast under their belt, they were well prepared to take advantage of what Mallory described as “an atmosphere that really lights her up.” Along with Saturday’s long cross country track, “I really tried to channel all that into her show jumping.” She also earned the Mia Erickson Memorial Trophy
Mallory’s two-time NAYC Area VI teammate Maddy Temkin had the lead going into show jumping. A single rail dropped Maddy and Mr. Hart to third, but still a happy outcome for the two high school seniors who’ve been stars of the West Coast circuit for many years and represent bright hopes for the sport’s future.
CCI1* winners Charlotte Babbitt & 2 A.M. Photo by Kim F. Miller.
CCI1*
The ever-smiling 17-year-old Charlotte Babbitt had a triple crown weekend with her 6-year-old 2 A.M. She was tied for first after dressage and was one of few to master a show jumping track that only eight of 49 managed to clear without faults. Charlotte won the CCI1* on her dressage score of 25. She also earned top Young Rider honors and 2 A.M. earned Best 6-Year-Old designation.
“It’s really special to have this kind of partnership, especially when he’s only 6 and I’m only 17,” said Charlotte, who rode with a big smile from wire to wire. “I can’t help but smile. He’s very fun to ride, he wants to please and he has the attitude that there’s nothing he’d rather be doing. On Saturday’s cross country, we were fast but I never once kicked him. He just went along like a hunter.”
With Galway becoming a back-to-back win after her recent Woodside CIC1* victory, Charlotte and 2 A.M. seem on track for next year’s goal: making the Area VI NAYC team.
Charlotte trains with Chocolate Horse Farm and has a lot of loot to haul home to Northern California’s Petaluma: $1,000 in prize money, a Galway Downs Plaque, a Professional’s Choice cooler; a $500 CWD voucher; a bottle of APF; certifications from Ride On Video and Event Training Online; and a bag of Triple Crown Feed.
Professional Shannon Lilley’s partnership with Fernhill Rising is only a few months old. She was thrilled with their red-ribbon finish and has high hopes with the talented horse. Located by her coach Dana Lynd-Pugh, the mare is a “horse for the future,” said Shannon.
The FEI rider rep for the Galway Downs International, Shannon had highest praise for organizer Robert Kellerhouse and his entire team. “The guys did a tremendous job on the cross country footing and the new warm-up ring and stadium jumping rings, and footing, are great.” Those and other upgrades “really make it a special atmosphere. It’s very good for the West Coast.”
Crammed with colorful fences, the new jumping arena was also a little intimidating, Shannon noted. “It’s busy in there! There was a lot to look at, so many jumps and it was a little distracting to horses and riders. You had to really go forward and keep straight and hold out in the lines to make sure you stayed on the right step.”
Nick Cwick and Get Played were another pair to benefit big time by clearing the show jumping track. They moved from eighth to third by doing so.
Training Three-Day winners Rebecca Braitling & Dassett Ricoche. Photo by Kim F. Miller.
Training Three-Day
Professional Bec Braitling, 15-year-old Jordan Crabo and amateur rider Cecily Bonadio finished where they started after Friday’s dressage: first, second and third.
Representing Australia, Bec is delighted to have Dassett Ricochet in her stable, period, blue ribbons or no. “We found him in England last summer while shopping for another client. When they brought him out, he was so pretty I secretly thought, ‘Gee, I hope he turns out to be a bit green for her.’” That’s how it turned out, but not too green for the veteran competitor, for whom client Lauren Burnell purchased the Dutch Warmblood.
Having contested many long formats at the upper levels, Bec advocates it strongly for students and young horses, especially those like Ricochet. “The steeplechase was a really good way for him to get going. He started Phase A puffed up and was quite overwhelmed seeing all the other horses out there, but steeplechase settled him down.”
For junior and amateur riders, Bec said T3D “makes you a better rider. I encourage all my riders to do it because there’s so much to think about. There’s a lot involved. It’s not like you just warm-up and do cross country. Everyone who has the opportunity to do one should.”
Bec left loaded down with prizes: a Galway Downs plaque; a Professional’s Choice cooler, a $500 CWD voucher; a bottle of APF; certificates from Ride On Video and Event Training Online; and a bag of Triple Crown Feed.
Third generation horsewoman Jordan Crabo of Arizona said on Friday that her German Riding Pony Black Gold could be tricky. Second after dressage, she tackled Saturday’s cross-country “as if we’d already had a few stops.” As a result, they had zero penalties to log their first completion in this division. Jordan felt it helped that she’s been riding two horses at CCI1*, including her mom Barb Crabo’s former 3* horse Over Easy. She also spent two months this past summer as a working student for top British eventer Pippa Funnell, benefitting from lots of fresh knowledge going into Sunday’s strong finish. And Black Gold did his part. “He was awesome!”
Small animal veterinarian Cecily Bonadio was already over-the-moon after dressage, and even more so to finish on that score for third place with her remarkably savvy 6-year-old, Just Off Broadway. Cecily explained her approach to show jumping as similar to that on Saturday’s fault-free cross country round: “We’ve been working on rhythm, I just try to stay out of her way, let her know where to go, and let her do what she does so well.”
The amateur rider is another fan of the T3D format. “I loved doing steeplechase on the racetrack. I learned how fast she is: very!” She also loved the technicality of the combinations on Phase D. All in all, a great preparation for the pair’s goal next year: Preliminary.
The fact that Sunday was Cecily’s birthday was icing on the cake: a carrot cake, apparently, as Cecily’s parents waited at the backgate with a full bag of carrots for the mare and big smiles for their daughter.
School teachers know that skipping an assembly on a Friday in May to hide in my classroom and troll an online auction fundraiser for Boyd Martin after his barn burned down is really for the benefit of the 6th graders. So, what could I do to support him that would maybe bring some benefit to me? I’m too far away for lessons, too poor for high end items; I know, I’ll bid $380 on a breeding with Ronald Zabala’s show jumper stallion, Wonderboy. My Vermont Sport Pony (some may use the term Morgan) doesn’t want to jump and I don’t want to do saddle seat so I kind of need another horse. It’s only been 30 years since we bred and started our own; I can do that again.
I won the breeding — one dose of frozen semen, no live foal guarantee so I needed the perfect mare. Not a 10 year old maiden, not a 20 year old who hadn’t had a baby in 8 years. The perfect mare. And I found her! An OTTB who had been dropped off as a rescue: 12 years old, two previous babies, well-bred (Stormcat Granddaughter, what was I thinking?), moderately successful ($170,000 winnings seems pretty great to me). The fuzzy cell phone pic looked like good conformation with big lop ears which I love.
Vet checkup the next morning showed that she was ovulating now. Cue many Facebook posts about follicle size, semen shipping across the country, and sperm motility that made my non-horsy husband very uncomfortable. Three days later, at the reproductive specialist vet clinic, I had to explain that I had never met the mare, never met the stallion, never met the owners of either mare or stallion and never met the vet that did the work — I don’t recommend this method unless you have a really high uncertainty tolerance.
The ultrasound pics on Facebook with no explanation gave my mother-in-law some hope for a grandchild but the mare settled and had a happy, easy pregnancy. She was pleasant to have around and got along well with my lame, and slightly neurologically damaged OTTB gelding.
I planned to start sleeping in my truck bed above the small paddock about 10 days before she was due. School ended Friday; the milk test kit only barely registered Saturday morning and I worked all day at the tack shop so I was tired and wanted one more night in my regular bed. Big mistake. 5:30 Sunday morning groggily heading upstairs, I looked out the window, baby standing up and mare herding the gelding away from her. “Oh shit! … No wait, if she’s standing there, it’s OK.” Baby was still wet and mom hadn’t even passed the placenta yet so I figure she wasn’t more than a half hour old. My not-a-morning-person husband still talks about how he woke to me screaming at him to carry/usher the fresh baby up to the clean straw bedded stall while I led the mare.
Photo courtesy of Kate Rakowski.
Photo courtesy of Kate Rakowski.
Photo courtesy of Kate Rakowski.
She’s been pushing the envelope since she was born 10 days early. Her show name is Cattitude and no name has ever fit a horse so well. She’s 6 now and we’ve had adventures, challenges, and growth in all its convoluted and roundabout ways. I still haven’t made it to a clinic with Boyd to tell him the story and introduce him to my good fortune that came out of his bad fortune, but word from those who know him is that he’d like our story. Stay tuned for more of the story of our life together including several near death experiences for both of us, some successes, a lot of frustration and still some hope that she will eventually grow up to be as good as I know she could be.
The 2018 season may be winding down but this weekend was still bustling, with FEI events on both coasts and a little horse trial action in between. Here are your weekend winners!
An extra congrats to our lowest scoring finishers in the country this weekend, Jocelyn Kriss-Parker and Orvyn TNE, who won their division of Open Novice at Virginia on a score of 20.7.
Virginia CCI, CIC, & H.T. [Website] [Results]
CCI 1*: Colleen Rutledge & C Me Fly (30.3)
CCI 1* YR/JR: Isabel Finemore & Rutherglen (33.2)
CCI2*: Boyd Martin & Contestor (39.2)
CIC2*: Boyd Martin & Kyra (33.4)
Open Intermediate: Emily Beshear & Fernhill Cascum Marco (46.3)
Junior/YR Preliminary: Natalie Ellis & Just Bailey (30.0)
Modified Division A: Kim Severson & Exclusively Cooley (23.3)
Modified Division B: Mary Fleming & Self Appointed (29.4)
Open Preliminary: Dana Cooke & Master The Moment (24.8)
Preliminary Horse: Erin Sylvester & Plouescat Gold (33.5)
Preliminary Rider: Lacey Ogden & Cooley Ground Control (32.7)
Junior/YR Training: Eliza Eddy & LVS Jackson (28.9)
Open Training: Michael Pendleton & Copper Classic (24.8)
Training Horse: Linden Wiesman & Discreto (30.7)
Training Rider: Charlotte Stillfried & Palma D (27.3)
Junior/YR Novice: Katherine Johnson & Meadow Brook Quasar (29.5)
Novice Horse: Eleanor Leonard & Alvescot Moneymaker (26.9)
Novice Rider: Cathy Blackmon & Hideaway’s Special Delivery (30.7)
Open Novice: Jocelyn Kriss-Parker & Orvyn TNE (20.7) *******
Beginner Novice Horse: Ashley Adams & Charly (25.0)
Beginner Novice Rider: Carin Brown & Dans La Nuit WE (33.3)
Junior/YR Beginner Novice: Megan Smallwood & Kilronan’s Countess (33.8)
Open Beginner Novice: Bobby Meyerhoff & Goresehill Zulu (24.0)
Starter: Nicole Yoest & Fergus Maximus (30.3)
Rocking Horse Fall H.T. [Website] [Results]
Open Intermediate-A: Elisa Wallace & Simply Priceless (29.6)
Open Intermediate-B: Elisa Wallace & Riot Gear (31.9)
Open Preliminary-A: Jonathan Holling & Prophet (28.9)
Open Preliminary-B: Kylie Lyman & Xuanatu (31.7)
Preliminary Rider: Savannah Blackstock & GarryNdruig Albie (32.5)
Open Training-A: Zoe Crawford & Francelia (28.9)
Open Training-B: Clayton Fredericks & FE Friday (26.1)
Preliminary / Training: Ashley Baehr & OT Bandini (41.8)
Training Rider-A: Haley Hughes & Igor S (28.4)
Training Rider-B: Gabbie Sacco & Ultimate Opportunity (30.7)
Jr. Novice Rider: Kathleen Abrams & Spintastic (33.1)
Open Novice-A: Alexandra Green & Fernhill Regal B (31.2)
Open Novice-B: Elinor O’Neal & QC Wanderlust (27.6)
Sr. Novice Rider: Tracy Ferguson & R. Chumley (30.7)
Beginner Novice Rider: Brenda Hutton & WYO Dun Maid (31.3)
Open Beginner Novice: Tik Maynard & Galileo (26.8)
Full Gallop Farm November H.T. [Website]
Preliminary: Nilson Moreira da Silva & Lancelot (38.3)
Training-A: Samantha Hay & Tre Jolie (26.8)
Training-B: Erin Thiel & Allia (29.3)
Preliminary/Training: Kristin Schmolze & Chubba (41.1)
Novice-A: Grace Boni & Rio Grande (26.9)
Novice-B: Jessica Schultz & Into Thin Air (28.6)
Training/Novice: Cameron Stacy & Nobody Owens (89.5)
Beginner Novice-A: Susan Thomas & FGF Actively Engaged (30.3)
Beginner Novice-B: Jeanne Hulse & Pathfinder (29.0)
Starter: Anna Bosworth & Galapagos (30.3)
Galway Downs CCI & H.T. [Website] [Results]
CCI1*: Charlotte Babbitt & 2 A.M. (25.0)
CCI2*: James Alliston & Pandora (34.6)
Open Preliminary: James Alliston & Cassio’s Picasso (29.8)
Preliminary Rider: India McEvoy & Redbull (34.6)
Jr. Training Rider: Jaya Mayne & E’Zara (30.7)
Open Training: Alexandria Biederman & Cruising Heart (28.9)
Sr. Training Rider-A: Anne Thompson & Nugget (30.4)
Sr. Training Rider-B: Laura Leitch & Lamartine Z (29.8)
Jr. Novice Rider: Sophie Dever & Clever Notion (23.8)
Open Novice: Nicholas Cwick & Oliver Twist (21.0)
Sr. Novice Rider: Eric Courtney & Guinness (32.3)
Training 3 Day: Rebecca Braitling & Dassett Ricochet (24.6)
Izzy Taylor and Be Touchable produce one of the rounds of the day to sit third after cross country. Unfortunately, the horse was withdrawn before the final horse inspection. Photo by Tilly Berendt.
One thing was for certain after last year’s Pau CCI4*: if you hadn’t previously been paying attention to the French four-star, tucked away in the foothills of the Pyrenees and the tail-end of the eventing calendar, you almost certainly were thereafter. It’s been all too easy, after all, to consider Les 4 Etoiles de Pau a ‘soft’ option; a sensible move-up course, or the haunt of first-timers. But to consider it thus would be to do it a disservice: Pau, which earned itself four-star status just 11 years ago, might not be a Badminton or a Burghley, but with just six events at this level worldwide, should it try to be?
“It’s always been a proper four-star, but it’s a very different track because it’s flat, and with the manmade mounds it just makes it a bit different, in that respect,” says Nick Turner FBHS, who represented Great Britain internationally in both show jumping and eventing before turning his hand to coaching. He took charge of the Brazilian eventing team at London 2012 and the Irish eventing team at Rio, and is one of the most respected trainers in the industry. He’s also been the man behind the CrossCountry App’s official coursewalk for the past couple of years, giving him the chance to dissect the questions from a broad spectrum of viewpoints.
“The horses who are a little bit colder, or lacking a bit of blood, can often get round here, but then you have your Burghleys, which a horse who’s less blood would likely find more difficult than this. But I think, dimensionally, it’s always been big — the terrain lends itself to horses getting round often, but to me, you’ve got to have your wits about you and not underestimate what’s out there.”
Course designer Pierre Michelet — occasionally, and mostly affectionately, dubbed ‘Michelet the Menace’ — certainly has a big job on his hands when it comes to creating a four-star track on the small swathe of land he’s been granted. Where Badminton, Burghley and Kentucky benefit from sprawling estates and long galloping stretches, which lend themselves to enormous timber efforts punctuated by tighter, technical questions, Pau works under almost completely opposite circumstances. It’s set just north of Pau’s city centre and, though it operates within the confines of a racetrack, which should, in theory, allow for plenty of galloping space, only a third of the course opens up into the track. The first and final thirds of the course wiggle their way through the limited space alongside the main road, fringed by garages, schools, and garden allotments. To get a better idea of what this looks like, check out Pau’s site from the air:
An overview of Pau’s site. The first and last third of the course cover the left third of the site, while the middle third criss-crosses the racetrack to the right.
Comprendez-vous? That works out something like this: as you can see, there’s not a lot of time or space for horses and riders to settle into a rhythm and just travel — instead, they’re always thinking ahead to the next adjustment or turn.
For the sake of comparison, let’s take a look at Badminton’s site. It’s a pretty stark contrast, and in both cases, it well and truly defines the identity of each event and the role it plays within the sport.
Badminton estate: so much room for ACTIVITIES.
2017: The Year of the Dragon
2017 was an interesting year for Pau. Michelet, who is known for designing tough, technical tracks — the Rio Olympics and that European Championships course at Strzegom were among his masterpieces, lest we forget — suddenly kicked into overdrive, creating a beast of a Pau course that caused myriad problems across the board. Many of those problems occurred in the first third of the course: the first water, in particular, was hugely influential, causing issues to 11 combinations. Of those, five retired or were eliminated at the direct route, which consisted of a hanging log into the water and then a bending line over two skinny brush arrowheads.
Ros Canter and Zenshera, eventual 7th-place finishers last year, jump through the first water on the 2017 Pau course. Photo by Tilly Berendt.
Slightly further along at fence 11ABC, we saw a large brush atop a steep mound. On the landing side, and after bounding down the mound, horses and riders were faced with two angled brushes over ditches, with an acute turn between them. About halfway through the day, the second of these hedges was removed, taking with it some of the intensity of this tough, scrappy line. In total, nine combinations would fault at this combination through the day.
Nana Dalton and Absolut Opposition clear the final element of 2017’s influential ditch-and-hedge question, before the second hedge was removed. In the background, you can see the first two elements of this fiendishly tricky question. Photo by Tilly Berendt.
So what changed between 2017 and 2018? On paper, the numbers actually aren’t dissimilar — this year, we saw a 64% completion rate with 38 of the 60 starters finishing, as opposed to last year’s 63%. In 2017, 72% of the combinations who finished the course did so without jumping penalties, while this year 28, or, just shy of 74% managed the same. The number of double-clears was up this year, though; 2017 saw just two add nothing in this phase, while we had four come home without time this year.
But numbers need quantifying, and the way that Michelet planned his course this year reflected much of the feedback he received after last year, which made for rather tough viewing and saw some seriously experienced combinations head home very early in the course. Rather than building almost impossibly technical questions, which can tend to punish, rather than reward, the efforts of even the best jumping horses, he created a stamina test that made use of even twistier sections of track and man-made mounds. This created an equally influential course that didn’t feel, well, heartbreaking in the way that last year’s often did.
“I wasn’t in love with it last year, at all,” says Nick Turner. “I felt that it was unfair on horses, and punished those with a big heart, and that was my one concern last year – that it was just one ask too many. The fences came up much more rapidly, and there were a lot more combinations. Within the waters, it was a lot more technical. I didn’t feel last year’s was overly horse-friendly, whereas this year, Pierre had softened it to a degree, but it still was a true four-star course. It allowed horses to read the questions much more than last year’s course did.”
Nick cites the ditch-and-hedge question at 11ABC last year as one of those asks too many: “I was glad to see it removed this year.”
Kim Severson and Cooley Cross Border clear 34A… Photo by Tilly Berendt.
Of course, this was still a Michelet course, and a Pau without some tricky and seriously technical questions would just be, well, a go-karting track. This year, one of the most influential combinations on course came very near the end at 34AB and 35. Utilising the last of the man-made mounds (a phrase that never seems to get any less questionable, no matter how many times I type it), any combination that’s placed here has historically been a bit of a late heartbreaker, chucking eleventh-hour 20s at otherwise clear combinations. This year, he placed a large, but straightforward, brush-topped rolltop at the crest of the hill, and as our competitors wound their way down, they encountered two offset skinny arrowheads — in fact, the same skinny arrowheads that had caused so much drama in last year’s first water. There was an alternative route, and the two arrowheads were separately numbered, which allowed for some creativity between the two, but for the most part, competitors sought not to waste any valuable seconds through the penultimate combination.
…before popping down over the direct route at 34B. They would be the first of several high-profile combinations to glance off of the next skinny at 35. Photo by Tilly Berendt.
So what made it so tough? Horses and riders are tired at this point, both mentally and physically, and traversing a final bit of terrain like this is tough work. So, too, is rebalancing and finding the right line as they speed down the hill, and this is a great example of that adaptability that Michelet built to seek: many riders walked this line six, seven, eight times, trying to figure out whether the obvious four-to-two stride method was the right one, but ultimately, what you got depended on how your horse landed from 34A. More often than not, it was a much shorter, flatter effort than anticipated, and those who adapted on the fly and held for three balanced strides between the two skinnies were home clear.
The crucial point here is that Pierre Michelet was able to take the feedback from 2017 and spin it into something constructive: the hard combinations still existed, certainly, but we saw him make use of separate numbering (34AB and 35, rather than 34ABC; 24AB and 25 in the middle water rather than 24ABC), which allowed for a slightly wider margin for error, and we saw a much more even smattering of issues across the course, rather than carnage in one or two locations. In fact, that penultimate combination at 34AB and 35 was, by the numbers, the most influential on the course — and it only caused problems for five of the competitors. The result? A course with true four-star technicality, but one which relied on time and survivable, innocuous glances off fences to turn the tables, rather than cheap thrills and spills.
Apportioning Influence: The Role of Cross Country on the Leaderboard
Only four of the top 10 after dressage managed to stay within this elite group — World Champion Ros Canter and Zenshera produced the goods for the second year in a row but slipped two placings to fourth after adding 7.2 time penalties. They made this up overnight, though, when the withdrawal of Izzy Taylor‘s Be Touchable, also a top-10 remainer, boosted them to third. Interestingly, Ros thought this year featured a harder course than last year’s track, with its energy-sapping, tight loop back around into the first water.
“I thought it rode tougher this year. There was that extra little loop at the beginning, going through the water twice, and it was just all over the place,” she explains. “Last year I had the most amazing round, and you don’t have those very often, but I definitely had to work a little bit harder this time. He tired more this year than he did last year, and I think it was just the circling around — he’s not a Thoroughbred, and he has to dig deep from the word go.”
Ros Canter and Zenshera jump into 2018’s final water. Photo by Tilly Berendt.
Elsewhere in the top 10, Denmark’s Peter Flarup and his Frankie climbed from 10th to seventh, moving up one more to third overnight and adding just 5.2 time penalties. Our eventual winner Thibault Fournier, an incredibly impressive first-timer at the level, was fifth after dressage, but his foot-perfect double-clear catapulted him into the top spot with Siniani de Lathus. To watch his round back, and the rounds of his fellow French compatriots, is eye-opening — it’s suddenly easy to see how each of the tough combinations on course should be ridden. There’s a good reason for that, and it’s not just ‘Sissou’s’ naturally open stride — it’s how Thibault rides him into each fence, with minimal fuss and set-up.
Interestingly, the separate numbering of fences occasionally led to some questions — did they, or didn’t they? “I think the numbering was wrong there – if you committed to that arrowhead, you should have been deemed as presenting. It’s too close to tell,” says sixth-placed Tom Crisp. Give the above video a watch and see what you reckon.
“Michelet is very clever in how he sets courses; maybe, on first thought, they don’t look overly technical, but they are, actually – you have to keep the concentration,” explains Nick. “I think it’s the forwardness of the lines; they’re built for that very forward, very French way of riding, and when you start adding strides or not staying committed, it can cause issues. But also, within that commitment, you can get it wrong — you can commit to the distance between the first two fences in a combination, but if you have a third, that’s where we saw it unravel, somewhat. Michelet encourages forward riding, but that forwardness can just create a lack of traction in the hind end, that connection, really. If horses are used to being ridden that way — as the French horses usually are — it’s fine, but our way of riding, more traditionally, is a little bit more connected, so some of these fences end up being on the end of a horse’s stride.”
“Yes, we can” — eventual winner Thibault Fournier gives a masterclass in forward riding across Pierre Michelet’s Pau course. Photo by Tilly Berendt.
Chris Bartle, chef d’equipe of the British team, agrees with this assessment: “Pierre always sets very forward distances, he really commits riders, which suits the French style of riding, and so I think those who really attacked it normally had a good ride through. The spread of questions on course were often related to that distance issue, that positivity, and saying ‘yes, we can!’ and going for it in a rather French style of riding.”
It was a great day overall for first-timers — four of the top 10 going into show jumping were debutante riders, while six of the horses in the top 10 after cross country made their debut at the level last week. Notably, three of these top 10 horse-and-rider pairs are French, including Thibault. They also had three of the four double clears we saw — Thibault is joined in this honour by fellow debutantes Alexis Goury and Clara Loiseau, as well as Gemma Tattersall and Pamero 4 — corroborating the idea that their style of riding, and the style of riding that Pau favours, really is that different from what we’ve become accustomed to in the UK and US.
Playing the Four-Star Comparison Game
The biggest climber of the week was Great Britain’s Tom Crisp, who we spoke about in our final report from the competition. Tom moved an incredible 45 places up the leaderboard after cross country, finishing 48 places up after a double-clear show jumping round. His score of 37.8 in the first phase had him well off the pace with the 11-year-old mare Liberty and Glory (Caretino Glory x Little Runnymede, by Ginger Boy), a petite homebred owned by Tom’s wife Sophie and her father Robin Balfour. But now that we’ve seen the dressage coefficient removed, there’s much, much more room for movement — only five marks, or just over 12 seconds, separated 15th place after this phase (William Fox-Pitt and Little Fire, 30.5) from 42nd (Patricia Pytches and CES Ballycar Chip, 35.5).
Tom Crisp and Liberty and Glory. Photo by Tilly Berendt.
“This year’s Pau course wasn’t as twisty as previous years — I thought it had a nice flow to it,” reflects Tom. “As a course builder, Pierre questions the horse by using open striding. Is that a good thing? Is that a bad thing? It just is what it is, really, and you have to go to Pau prepared for it. When in France, ride like a Frenchman; be open and attack the distances. Oddly enough it did work; there were certainly places where you’d walk it and think it wouldn’t, but it worked for me and it worked for most of the people who rode it positively.”
For Tom, it’s crucial that four-star tracks retain a high level of influence on the final standings, but there’s a fine line between asking the right questions and entrapment of horse and rider.
“You want to test the rider’s accuracy and ability to hold the line, and you need to test boldness and all that sort of thing, but you don’t want to trap horses and get them to a place where they no longer understand where they’re meant to be going,” he explains. “It’s such a fine line because in many ways, you want to catch people out – otherwise, you end up with a high clear rate and not a lot of change on the leaderboard. It becomes a bit cheap if everyone’s getting around; I much prefer to see a lower completion rate at the top level. If I’ve gone to a Burghley or something and I’ve not completed, I’ve always thought that that’s the way it should have been.”
We spend a lot of time debating how we can maximise the influence of the cross country phase, without setting an impossible — or dangerous — challenge to less experienced competitors. When Captain Mark Phillips got it so right at Burghley this year, I implored the eventing community to shout about it, and in this case, I say much the same thing. Pau is not yet perfect — as a four-star, it’s still in its infancy, and getting it really, truly right at this level is a very, very difficult prospect — but Pierre Michelet is to be praised for using what he learned last year to streamline the conceptual basis of his cross country course and create something that was as quintessentially Pau as we’ve yet seen.