Classic Eventing Nation

Sport Horse Nation Spotlight: Five Thoroughbreds Ready for New Heights

In the market for a new four-legged partner? You may find your unicorn on our sister site, Sport Horse Nation. To help with the search, we’re going to feature a selection of current listings here on EN each week. We include the ad copy provided; click the links for videos, pricing and contact information.

The Thoroughbred is a versatile, trainable, athletic breed and one of the most common found on course in eventing. Here are five for sale–both raced and unraced–with bright careers ahead of them. All they need is for someone to show them the way!

Vanlismar. Photo via Sport Horse Nation.

Vanlismar 5 y/o 16h TB mare

“V” is an unraced 16h 5 year old bay Thoroughbred mare. She is attractive, well put together, and has a soft mouth. V goes in a Nathe both on the flat and over fences. In 2017, she finished 7th in the Exmoor Eventing YEH 4 year old division along with successful runs at both the Beginner Novice and Novice levels. (View her record here) V is an enthusiastic and willing jumper; however, she is a sensitive ride and would be happiest with an educated rider who can help her learn to relax. Located in Massachusetts.

Country Ranger. Photo via Sport Horse Nation.

Fancy, Unraced 5 yr old TB with record through Novice and capable of much more!

Country Ranger aka “Reggie” is a 5 year old Thoroughbred gelding with Danzig and Unbridled lines. He finished 21st out of 97 in the Eventing division in the 2017 TB Makeover!! Since then he has competed through Novice and has the potential to move up the levels. Reggie is extremely easy on the ground with a kind demeanor.

Trailers, ties, stands for farrier, etc. Hacks out alone or in a group (especially enjoys bareback hacks with a halter). The same horse away from the farm. He is a quick learner with good instincts over fences. Really enjoys his job out on cross country and goes in a snaffle for all 3 phases.

He’s an above average mover and will be very competitive on the flat once he gets more experience in the ring. He has gotten a jump start on his training while in Florida this winter and is ready to continue up the levels with his new person! Located in Florida.

Nolan. Photo via Sport Horse Nation.

2011 16.2h Throughbred Eventer/Jumper with tons of Potiential

Lovely eventer or show jumper. Nolan is a 16.2, 2011 ottb. He has been successfully eventing through the novice level and has the scope and ability to go up the levels. A genuine guy that is brave cross country and will jump anything you point him at. Nolan is an eye-catching mover with three lovely gaits and natural flying lead changes.

He is best suited for a confident rider that can give him the guidance and support he needs as he is still learning. Nolan loads, clips, bathes, stands for the farrier, crossties, ect. all extremely well. He is a very lovable big guy that is looking for his next rider to fulfill the loads of potential he has. Located in Ohio.

Deo Volente. Photo via Sport Horse Nation.

Deo Volente: Perfect Eventing Schoolmaster!

Deo Valente: 2004 15.3h chestnut Hanoverian/Thoroughbred gelding. “Davie” is the perfect schoolmaster to learn on! He was the Beginner Novice Champion at the 2017 American Eventing Championships on a dressage score of 19.8! This lovely gelding is kind and uncomplicated, with a good lead change and correct way of going. His sweet personality makes him perfectly suited to a timid rider, whether it be a junior, young rider of adult amateur. He is easy to be around and would make a wonderful addition to anyone’s barn. Located in Georgia.

Nikki. Photo via Sport Horse Nation.

Super Safe Young Prospect

JODI HEMRY EVENTING PRESENTS: NIKKI, Breed: Thoroughbred, Color: Bay mare, HEIGHT: 16.0 HH, Age: 5 year old, $5,000. Nikki is a talented young prospect that would excel in eventing or the jumpers. Nikki has had a great foundation and is very well mannered on the ground and in the saddle.

She is currently in professional training and excels with each ride. Nikki is extremely easy to teach and has a great work ethic. She has three nice gaits and a great jump. She has been started over stadium jumps and cross country jumps. She is very willing and easy to ride to the jumps. She enjoys having a job and gets better with each ride.

Nikki is great out on the trails with or without company. She has great ground manners, as she ties, clips, loads, ect. She is a lovely horse to be around riding or on the ground. She would be an excellent horse for an amateur or young adult to bring along, as she is a quiet, safe, easy horse to ride. Nikki is a talented young horse looking to start her career! Located in Georgia.

Listings included in this article are randomly selected and confirmed to be current and active before inclusion. Sport Horse Nation features user-generated content and therefore cannot verify or make any warranty as to the validity or reliability of information.

Red Hills CIC3* Cross Country Preview

Photo by Shems Hamilton/Red Hills.

Good morning from cross country Saturday at Red Hills International Horse Trials! For many horses this is their first big ask of the season, and course designer Mike Etherington-Smith has assembled a stout set of questions to be pondered and hopefully answered correctly.

“Big,” “bold” and “beautiful” are all words that competitors have used to describe the CIC3* track. Dressage leader Marilyn Little reflected, “The questions seem strong but very, very fair and evenly distributed throughout the course. There’s a lot to do at the beginning but also a lot to do at the end. It seems like a lot of questions in six minutes, and it looks like a ton of fun.”

The 2018 edition marks Mike Etherington-Smith’s fourth year as designer of the CIC3* and Advanced courses; the CIC2*, Intermediate, CIC1* and Prelim courses are designed by David O’Connor. Shout-out to builders Tyson Rementer and Levi Ryckewaert for their work in creating a course that melds seamlessly with the landscape.

The 2018 courses feature several changes, the biggest being that the track is reversed for all levels from previous years. Mike explains, “In turning the course around there is always a risk of spoiling what has been going on, but I hope that the flow and feel will work as well even though it will probably be a bit different for those who have been coming here for many years. As course designer it is important that the course have a good balance to it, asks a variety of questions whilst at the same time sets horses and riders up in a positive and enthusiastic frame of mind at the beginning of the season for what lies ahead.”

“As always, I truly hope that everyone has a good time and benefits from their run around the course,” Mike says. “It is not an easy track to go fast around, given the mix of open areas and woods but, having said that, everyone should be able to settle into a rhythm and get their seasons off to a positive start.”

For an even deeper dive, check out this virtual course walk courtesy of the good folks at CrossCountry App. There is audio from Mike on the CIC3* — thank you for the recordings, Jane Barron!

CIC3* show jumping begins Saturday at 9 a.m. followed by cross country at 10:50 a.m. The Advanced cross country takes place immediately after the CIC3*, starting at 12:31 p.m. Until then, go eventing!

#RedHills: WebsiteRide TimesScheduleLive ScoresEN’s CoverageEN’s InstagramEN’s Twitter

Saturday Links from Tipperary

#FamilyGoals. Photo by Amy Dragoo.

This time of year is so exciting and so frustrating at the same time. On the one hand, the competition season is getting back into full swing in most areas, with others not too far behind. I get butterflies when I look at the omnibus and start writing events down on my own calendar. On the other hand, I just wanted to get started already!

National Holiday: National Mario Day

U.S. Weekend Action:

Southern Pines H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Results]

Red Hills International CIC & H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Results]

Full Gallop H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Live Results]

Saturday Links:

Now on Course: Young Rider Alexa Lapp and 2017 USEA Horse of the Year Cambalda

PODCAST: Highlights from the 2018 ICP Symposium

One To Watch: Whitney Mahloch And $500 OTTB Military Mind Are Ready For Red Hills

British Olympian misses start of eventing season after fall

Tight On Space? Here’s a Simple Exercise for Small Arenas

Princes Anne: don’t hack with ‘ears full of music and phones’

Saturday Video: This pony has a bit of an unconventional jumping style. Might be a good dressage prospect.

Who put that jump in the way???!!!#securelowerleg #babypony #sfequine

Posted by SF Equine on Tuesday, March 6, 2018

Marilyn Little and RF Scandalous Score 24 in Red Hills CIC3* Dressage, Break Internet

Marilyn Little & RF Scandalous. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

A glance at the Red Hills dressage scoreboard makes it look like this place is a stocked pond of Valegros, with FEI scores reaching deep down into the 20s. This year’s leading CIC3* dressage score, a 24.0 scored by Marilyn Little and RF Scandalous, is 20.1 points better than last year’s leading score, a 44.1.

American dressage has improved but not THAT much, y’all. Public service reminder! The method of calculating dressage scores in eventing has changed effective Jan. 1, 2018: FEI dressage scoring has dropped the 1.5 coefficient and is now equivalent to dressage scores at USEF horse trials. The coefficient was removed, according to the FEI, “to address risk management issues through rebalancing the importance of cross country skills.”

Previously, scores were calculated by taking the percentage score, subtracting from 100 and multiplying by a coefficient of 1.5, with the resulting figure rounded to one decimal digit. Now, scores will no longer be multiplied by a coefficient of 1.5. Removing the coefficient aligns with the FEI Eventing Committee’s vision to eventually transition to positive scoring in eventing. Two positive scoring proposals will be reviewed in 2018 for implementation at a later date.

With the old 1.5 coefficient system Marilyn’s score would have been a 36; without it, the score is a 24.0.

There now, that’s better, deep breaths. As you were, Internet.

Having said all that, today’s CIC3* DID see a high scoring batch of competitors. EN’s resident stats guru Maggie Deatrick crunched the numbers and reports that the judging finished the day +0.66 above expected averages for these combinations. For more eventing math geekery, check out her “By the Numbers” preview here.

Marilyn Little & RF Scandalous. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Marilyn Little and RF Scandalous, a 13-year-old Oldenburg mare (Carry Gold x Richardia) owned by Jacqueline Mars and Phoebe and Michael Manders, performed an on-form test to top the CIC3* division. “Kitty” looked eager to do her little turn on the catwalk, but without the tenseness that accompanied their last CIC3* outing at Ocala in November.

“She was very excited at Ocala,” Marilyn recalls. “It was just a really abnormal week for us from A to Z, so here I was hoping to have a quiet, calm conservative, test where she left feeling very zen.”

Aside from bouncing into the canter rather than the trot from their first halt-salute — you cannot blame a girl for feeling pumped about her first big outing of the season! — Kitty channeled her energy in all the right directions. “She lacked a little brilliance I know she can have, but traded on the discipline side of it. She gave me everything I wanted and I was really happy with her.”

Marilyn is still in a boot from when she bonked her foot on a cross country jump at Ocala, breaking it into about a million pieces, which will need to be fused later in the year, post-September. She has spent a lot of time on a scooter since then but hasn’t missed any time in the saddle; she insists that it doesn’t bother her when she’s riding: “I’m totally pain free.” Funny, that’s what Michael Jung said, too.

Nonetheless, she’s ready for a crack at tomorrow’s CIC3* cross country course: “Whenever you’re walking around the course and you just feel like you can’t wait to get out there and jump, it’s really exciting. Everything is very well presented, and it has a great flow to it, which for many years was a concern here but they’ve done such a beautiful job of maximizing everything the property has to offer.”

Marilyn is aiming Kitty toward Kentucky and notes that Red Hills’ galloping lanes are great for horses working in that direction. “In Wellington we do not have opportunities like that!,” she says. “How fast I go tomorrow just depends on what [Kitty] says, but I’ll still really use those galloping lanes to open her up and gain fitness.

“The questions seem strong but very, very fair and evenly distributed throughout the course. There’s a lot to do at the beginning but also a lot to do at the end. It seems like a lot of questions in six minutes, and it looks like a ton of fun.”

Jordan Linstedt and RevitaVet Capato. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Jordan Linstedt and RevitaVet Capato, a 15-year-old Hanoverian gelding (Contendro I x Annabelle) owned by the rider and Barbara Linstedt, swooped into second after the lunch break on a 29.5. This pair has really hit their stride in the first phase, and they performed an elegant and correct test. West Coast represent!

To be fair, Jordan has been bouncing back and forth between her home in Washington state and the East Coast with regularity for the past year. She came over early for Kentucky 2017, then rerouted to Bromont, then went home, then came back for the AECs and Plantation and Fair Hill in the fall, then went home. Now she’s back, again, with an eye on Kentucky or maybe Badminton. What’s the mileage on your truck, Jordan?!

For the winter she’s been based near Leslie Law’s place in Ocala, with whom she has been training, but will gypsy caravan herself and her crew to Southern Pines after Red Hills, where she’ll train with Bobby Costello and use Will Faudree’s gallop for four-star fitness prep. She has eight horses with her and two students: “It’s been a big undertaking but a lot of fun.”

The only run Capato has had thus far this year was at Rocking Horse, where he put in a very nice test, but Red Hills offered a chance to test the pair in a bigger atmosphere. “Obviously it’s a lot of atmosphere and he used to be spooky, but I trust him so much more now,” Jordan says, noting that whereas she used to take a hold of him when he got uptight now she just softens and keeps riding forward. For today’s test, she says, “I didn’t feel like I went all out, but I wasn’t conservative either; I kind of found a middle.”

As for tomorrow’s course, she says, “It’s big and bold and for [Capato] I think a really nice course … I’m excited to get out there and ride it.”

Jessica Phoenix and Pavarotti. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Jessica Phoenix and Pavarotti, a 16-year-old Westphalian gelding (Pavarotti Van de Helle x Fidelia) owned by Don Good, round out the top three after laying down their usual solid-as-a-rock test for a score of 29.8. “It’s always fun competing him,” Jessica says of her 16-year-old partner. He’s been relaxed all week, she says: “I was so excited to get him in the ring today. He was great — the changes were beautiful, the best they’ve ever been, his trotwork was awesome as per usual.”

Of tomorrow’s course, she comments, “It’s a big, full, forward course. It’s always hard with the path through the trees, the changes in shading. It’s definitely technical and big and should be a good test.”

Up next for this pair: The Fork, then the CCI3* at Jersey Fresh. Best of luck, you old married couple you!

Looking on down the leaderboard, we’ve got Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg in 4th (29.9); Selena O’Hanlon and Foxwood High in 5th (31.2); Waylon Roberts and Lancaster in 6th (31.4); Phillip Dutton and I’m Sew Ready in 7th (31.9); Courtney Cooper and Who’s A Star in 8th (32.1); Leslie Law and Voltaire de Tre in 9th (32.3) and Lauren Kieffer and Landmark’s Monte Carlo in 10th (32.9).

Meanwhile, over in the Adequan USEA Gold Cup Advanced division, there’s a tie for first between Phillip Dutton and Fernhill Singapore and Waylon Roberts and Kelecyn Cognac. Both scored a 29.8.

Red Hills marks the Advanced debut of Phillip’s ride, a 9-year-old KWPN gelding (Singapore x Riedellia) owned by Sue Foley, Ann Jones, and Tom Tierney. Waylon and Kelecyn Cognac, a 15-year-old Thoroughbred gelding owned by Roberts and Anthony Connolly and L. Skey Levely, are old hat at the level but this is their first time competing at Red Hills together.

Those bros hustled off to walk cross country after their Advanced dressage rides, but we were able to catch up with Lindsay Beer, who sits 3rd in the division on a 32.9 with El Paso, a 16-year-old Trakehner gelding owned by Penny Beer.

Lindsay Beer and El Paso. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

The 23-year-old young professional from Ontario has been competing “Pasta” for the last eight years, at the Advanced level on and off again for the last five. “So he’s a longterm partner of mine,” Lindsay says of her horse, who sounds like quite the character. “He’s is so cheeky. He’s like Eeyore. He’s sort of lazy and nappy and just a grumpy old man, but when it really counts he’s on. He sleeps every single day before I get on him, napping in the crossties like, ‘Ah, geez, another ride,’ then as soon as I take him out he’s like, ‘OK, let’s do this.’ And he knows when he’s competing.”

Of their dressage test, she says, “He was really good today, very obedient. Normally we struggle with him getting a little bit lazy in the ring, but he kept his energy level up which was great without getting too feisty.”

Looking ahead to cross country, Lindsay says that the course looks good but will be a bit of a difficult course for Pasta. “There’s a lot of turning and narrow galloping lanes, so it will be tough to make time. But it’s his first run at this level for the year so we’re just going to go at a nice steady pace.”

Lindsay winters in Aiken and trains with Joe Young. Carolina is up next on their schedule before they head home for the summer.

CIC3* Top 15 After Dressage

CIC2* Top 10 After Dressage: 

CIC1* Top 10 After Dressage: 

CIC3* show jumping begins tomorrow at 9 a.m. followed by cross country at 10:50 a.m. The Advanced cross country takes place immediately after the CIC3*, starting at 12:31 p.m. Until then, go eventing!

#RHHT2018: WebsiteRide TimesScheduleLive ScoresEN’s CoverageEN’s InstagramEN’s Twitter

Friday Video from World Equestrian Brands: Vintage Badminton Footage

Michael Jung and La Biosthetique Sam FBW at Badminton 2017. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Yesterday marked two milestones in Britain — the eventing season officially began, with competitions at Tweseldown and Oasby, and — thrillingly — the official countdown to Badminton commenced. Eight cheeky weeks to go, people! Cue much speculation about the entry list, obsession over course designer Eric Winter’s sophomore effort, and, best of all, a serious amount of behind-the-scenes insight over the next two months, as EN delves into what goes into putting on the world’s biggest three-day event.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BfxtNEbAOmL/?taken-by=bhorsetrials

The staging of this veritable masterclass in eventing excellence is managed because of the tireless dedication of its organisers, whose forward thinking has allowed the event to evolve over the decades. Each year, the event gets bigger, better, more prestigious, and embraces more and more sporting and safety technology. Want proof of this evolution? Check out this 1988 documentary showcasing the history of the event — it’s a whole different world from the mod-cons we enjoy today, like, um, tack that doesn’t disintegrate mid-course.

Keep your eye on EN for your backstage pass as we count down to the 2018 Mitsubishi Motors Badminton Horse Trials — who are you hoping to see leave the start box this year? Can’t wait two whole months? Check out Badminton’s YouTube page, where you can revisit all the action in full from 2017.

#EventerFailFriday: Lissa Green – ‘That Escalated Quickly’

Baby horses do the darnedest things. Lissa Green handled this dramatic moment in true eventer fashion — with a laugh and plentiful rocketship/heart emoji.

Go Eventing.

By the Numbers: Red Hills CIC3*

This year Red Hills has re-claimed its position as the first CIC3* of the season in North America, bringing with it a big, star-studded field. Here, you can opt to run show jumping first by doing the CIC3*, or enter the Advanced to sharpen your skills jumping after cross country, splitting the numbers slightly between the two divisions. Most of the experienced horses have been aimed at the CIC3* for this show, opting for the show jumping-first format.

Now in the third year with Mike Etherington-Smith designing the cross country, Red Hills is well into its course transformation. Chris Barnard took over the design of the show jumping last year. It’s also a good time to remind everyone that the FEI dressage scoring has dropped the 1.5 coefficient and is now equivalent to dressage scores at USEF horse trials.

Photo by Shems Hamilton/Red Hills.

The Field

  • The last time a pair outside of the top two after dressage won the event was in 2011, when Allison Springer was in third on Arthur. Riders inside the top three after dressage have gone on to win the division every time in the last decade.
  • Only three riders have ever made the time with a clear round at Red Hills in its entire history; Selena O’Hanlon (A Fine Romance and Foxwood High, both in 2013), Phillip Dutton (The Foreman in 2005 and Nova Top in 2004) and Peter Atkins (Henry Jota Hampton in 2012).
  • The last horse to win the CIC3* while still having a rail down in show jumping was Mighty Nice, who won with Phillip Dutton in 2013. The CIC3* winner typically goes clear in show jumping.

Jordan Linstedt and Revitavet Capato. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

Dressage Divas

  • RF Eloquence was lightly competed over the past year but has laid down two tests that scored over 75% out of the three competitions he’s attended. He and Ellie O’Neal are one of three pairs averaging a sub-30 dressage score over the last 12 months in this field.
  • Until the Ocala Jockey Club CIC3* last fall, Marilyn Little and RF Scandalous had received scores of 70% and above from 16 of the 17 judges who had ever scored them at the Advanced, 3* and 4* levels. An uncharacteristic test in Ocala broke that impressive streak, so Red Hills will be the first opportunity the pair have to bounce back to their normal scoring patterns.
  • Selena O’Hanlon and Foxwood High have been on an absolute tear recently, winning their last two Advanced/3* runs at Rocking Horse and Fair Hill, and placing in the top three at Plantation Field CIC3*. This pair hasn’t been out of the top five since Kentucky last spring. They’ve now scored in the 20s in their last three dressage tests at this level, one of which was at Rocking Horse last month, proving they haven’t lost an edge over the winter break.
  • Jessica Phoenix and Pavarotti are perennial contenders in the first phase, and Pavarotti in particular has been Mr. Consistency over the past 12 months. In six tests at the Advanced and 3* level, Pavarotti has varied only 3.1 penalty points from highest (31.5) to lowest (28.4) scores.
  • Jordan Linstedt and Revitavet Capato are another who have really hit their stride in the first phase, almost matching Pavarotti for consistency. Setting aside their first Advanced of 2017, they scored between 28.6 and 31.5 for six consecutive Advanced/3* starts to end last year, then came out with a bang in February and laid down a 25.4 at Rocking Horse.

Jessica Phoenix and Pavarotti. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Show Jumping Powerhouses

  • Jessica Phoenix buckled down with Pavarotti in 2017 and seriously improved their show jumping form. In the last 12 months, this pair are five for five on clear rounds at the Advanced and CIC3* levels.
  • RF Scandalous and Marilyn Little have been prolifically good show jumpers, adding nothing to their score in the stadium phase in six of their eight rounds at the Advanced, 3*, and 4* levels. They’ve only ever had one rail, adding just four penalties to their final score at Jersey Fresh CIC3* last spring.
  • Bill Hoos and Celtic Rhythm have been very strong in the stadium phase over the last half of 2017, jumping clean in four of their last five attempts at the Advanced level. They added only one rail in the last eight months at this height, incurring one rail at Stable View.

Lisa Fergusson and Honor Me at Red Hills. Photo by Diane Flowers.

Cross-Country Machines

  • The Canadians are currently dominating on cross country, with Selena O’Hanlon and Foxwood High leading the way. Their last four runs at Advanced and CIC3* have a combined seven seconds over the optimum, they’ve averaged only four seconds over the last year, and they haven’t been more than 12 seconds over optimum time at this level since The Fork in 2016. And, as mentioned earlier, Foxwood High is the only actively competing horse to have ever made the time at this venue.
  • Neck and neck with Selena are her Canadian teammates Lisa Marie Fergusson and Honor Me. This pair has finished clear at 20 consecutive Advanced and CIC3* dating back to 2015, and their average time at A/CIC3* has dropped from an average of 30.25 seconds over optimum in 2015 to 6.67 seconds over in 2016 and 2.17 seconds over in 2017.
  • Three pairs to keep an eye on are Whitney Mahloch and Military Mind, Jacob Fletcher and Atlantic Domino, and Waylon Roberts and Lancaster. These three horses have struggled with consistency on cross country, but when they run clear, they have been very fast. Lancaster clocked in his first clear round at Pine Top earlier this year only six seconds over optimum, while Jacob and Atlantic Domino have averaged only 7.5 seconds over optimum in their career clears. Whitney and Military Mind have come home under optimum in three of their four career clears, clocking in with only 1.6 time penalties in the fourth clear round.

Phillip Dutton and I’m Sew Ready. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Jack of All Trades

  • I’m Sew Ready and Phillip Dutton fall just outside of the top tier of performers for each phase, but just barely. I’m Sew Ready hasn’t quite averaged 70% at the Advanced and 3* levels in the last 12 months but he’s been hitting that mark for the last six months. He’s not the most careful jumper in the field, but he’s never had more than one rail in an Advanced/3* round with Phillip. And although he’s only once made time at a CIC3*, he’s always come home within 30 seconds in 91% of his career clear Advanced/CIC3* runs with Phillip and within 20 seconds at 55% of them. These two will be right in the mix come Saturday.
  • Tsetserleg is another who might fly under the radar right into a top five placing by Saturday. Boyd Martin has patiently developed this gelding and was rewarded with two top-three placings at premier events at the end of 2017. Tsetserleg has yet to crack into the 20s but has only once failed to achieve a sub-35 score at this level. He’s only once had more than one rail at A/3*, yet has jumped clear his last three rounds, including a CCI3*. And excluding a horrendously muddy Jersey Fresh last spring, Boyd and Thomas have never been more than 18 seconds over optimum. This is another pair who will advanced through the ranks throughout the weekend.

PREDICTED WINNER: Selena O’Hanlon

Selena O’Hanlon and Foxwood High. Photo by Amy Dragoo Photography.

Keep Your Eye On …

  • Phillip Dutton and I’m Sew Ready
  • Lisa Marie Ferguson and Honor Me
  • Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg

Potential Spoilers

  • Marilyn Little and RF Scandalous
  • Whitney Mahloch and Military Mind
  • Jacob Fletcher and Atlantic Domino

Red Hills International CIC & H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Results]

Pre-Game Sights & Sounds from Red Hills International Horse Trials

The eagle, er, chinchilla has landed at Red Hills International Horse Trials 2018! Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Greetings from Tallahassee, a city with many attributes: state capitol, home to Florida State University, birthplace of rapper T. Pain, and also the band Creed was formed here, whoa.

As you can already tell, Jenni, who has historically covered Red Hills, has the weekend off, so you’re stuck with this girl! Personally, I’m happy to be here — I haven’t been to Red Hills in a solid eight or so years ago, back when cross country was held on a completely separate piece of property you kind of had to hack to. All I really remember is coming off course feeling like I’d had the raddest ride ever, full-speed ahead through some sort of cross country pinball chute, despite the fact that I got lost no fewer than twice and racked up a million time faults.

The venue is gorgeous — all live oaks and pine with sunlight streaming down through the Spanish moss that hangs like party streamers from the trees. The event organizers pull out all the stops to put on a good show for competitors and spectators alike, and I can’t wait to watch the action unfold.

Photo by Leslie Wylie.

The weather on Thursday was sunny and slightly crisp, with temperatures to rise into the 70s over the next few days. Looks like zero percent chance of rain through Saturday then thunderstorms on Sunday, but what do meteorologists know, fingers crossed for sunshine from start to finish.

Clayton’s boggin, tho. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

I tooled around the show ground yesterday, snapping photos of folks settling in for the weekend ahead and practicing their tricks.

Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Oh my god, you guys, I have a new girl crush: CS Carrera, a flash little mare ridden by Julie Richards and owned by Sher Schwartz, who is competing in Open Prelim. Despite being just a shade over 15 hands Carrera was OWNING that warmup ring — they call her the “Little Princess” and it’s easy to see why! Move outta the way, boys, royalty coming through!

Julie Richards and CS Carrera. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

She’s by Contendro 1 out of Beaulieu’s Cayenne, also owned by Sher, whom Julie competed through the CCI3* level. Cayenne and Carerra were tight-knit and even ventured out to events together when Carerra was just learning the ropes (there’s a sweet photo of them at the AECs together in 2014 here). When Cayenne later died in a pasture accident, I’m sure both the mare and her humans were heartbroken. So it’s extra special to see Carerra out following in her mum’s hoofprints and doing really well for herself, always finishing at the top of the scoreboard mix. She deserves to win everything all of the time, IMO.

Plus, the pair more than reminds me of Julie and another totally rotten little stinker, her brilliant late 2004 Olympic mount Jacob Two Two. Julie, for all her mile-long legs, does love those cheeky ponies!

On a related cute note:

Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Th cross country course is all dolled up and ready for walking, replete with wildlife. We’ll be along shortly with a full course preview — you can check out our preview of the preview, so to speak, here.

A new addition to this year’s course: live humans as course decoration. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Photo by Leslie Wylie.

“Excuse me, sir, do you have a license to be fishing here?” Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Dressage takes place for all divisions today beginning at 8 a.m. Keep it here for all the latest!

Red Hills International CIC & H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Results]

 

Friday News & Notes from Kentucky Equine Research

Southern Pines!! Photo by Jamie Gornall.

I decided this time around with my four-year-old OTTB to start him over fences in a completely different way than I’ve ever done before. In an attempt to make a horse that is fairly self sufficient and confident from the beginning, I’ve taught him to jump completely on the line, without a rider. Today I’m taking him cross country schooling for the first time, or rather, I’m having my friend Cali school him on a long line up and down banks, into water, and over his first cross country obstacles. Time will tell if this experiment works, but I think I’m on the right track so far.

National Holiday: National Get Over It Day

U.S. Weekend Preview:

Southern Pines H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Results]

Red Hills International CIC & H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Results]

Full Gallop H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Live Results]

News From Around the Globe:

Red Hills weekend!! Nothing is quite so glamorous early in the year as Red Hills, and it is certainly a destination event every year. Did you know that Phillip Dutton has won the CIC3* here an astonishing six times? Can he do it for the 7th time on I’m Sew Ready? Dressage action starts today at 8am sharp, prepare yourselves. [Red Hills Fast Facts]

If you want to see the best ISO Horse ad in the entire history of the internet…look no further. We got you covered. [Horse Nation]

Ahhh, training a young horse to stand quietly on the trailer at shows. This can be one of the most frustrating training activities to participate in, especially if you have a horse that is rather opposed to the idea. They can really get into protesting. Jason Webb of Australian Horse Training has some excellent pointers that I will personally be using in the future of how to help a horse with anxiety and/or impatience about standing quietly on the trailer. [How Do I Get My Horse To Stand Quietly on the Horsebox?]

Schramm Sesh of the Week

Jimmie and Dom Schramm have teamed up with Kentucky Equine Research to provide an inside look into their conditioning program using KER ClockIt Sport. Each week we’ll share an example ride and some notes of what the Schramms look for as their horses progress.

This week Jimmie and Eclaire, a 7-year-old German Sport Horse, put in a final XC school in preparation for Rocking Horse HT.

“With this schooling the aim was to just touch on all the questions,” Jimmie said. In her final school before an event, Jimmie likes to string together several exercises in a row to replicate the real cross-country day experience. “I always build through the exercises, working from the easier questions to more technical,” she explained.

Jimmie presented Eclaire with three sets. She took short breaks in between, both to allow the mare to recover physically and “digest mentally what she has learned in hopes that it carries over to the next question.”

“She felt particularly good this day, very focused and listening really well,” Jimmie said. “She loves to run so sometimes not taking over is difficult for her, but she was spot on!”

Check back next week for another Schramm Sesh! Want to gain insight into your horse’s fitness? Try KER ClockIt Sport. The free app helps take the guesswork out of equine fitness by monitoring heart rate, speed, distance and altitude during rides. EN’s guides to the app explain all the details: 7 Reasons to Download KER ClockIt Sport and How To Get the Most Out of KER ClockIt Sport.

Thursday Video from Nupafeed: What’s So Great About Grand Oaks?

The Grand Oaks Resort in Weirsdale, Florida hosted their inaugural USEA Horse Trials this January with rave reviews from competitors. The equine-inspired resort has long been host to dressage, show jumping, combined driving, and polo events, so the team at the resort sure know how to put on a great show.

What exactly is so great about it? Just take your pick: from the fanfare and big-show atmosphere, to the thrilling and beautiful cross country track, and don’t forget the resort amenities and accommodations. But enough from me! Let’s let event organizer Shelley Page, XC course designer Clayton Fredericks, and competitor Tik Maynard tell you all about it:

Grand Oaks Inaugural Horse Trials

Grand Oaks Resort is pleased to present a video recap of our Inagural Horse Trials that took place January 19th-21st 2018!We look forward to seeing everyone back on property November 23rd-25th for our second Eventing Show, if not sooner.Tom Warriner Shelley Howerton Page Kacy Tipton-Fashik Marilyn Hunt Monica Lea Clayton Fredericks Tyson F Rementer Codie Fravel Phillips Buick GMC Scott Adcox Katie Reynolds 父 Wentz Joel Wiessner

Posted by The Grand Oaks Resort on Tuesday, March 6, 2018