Classic Eventing Nation

Eventing 25: Tayler Stewart Pursues Her Own Path

The Emerging Athlete Eventing 25 winter training session took place in Ocala, Florida, January 8-11. We are excited to introduce you to some of the riders making their debut on the E25 list, which can be viewed here. Today: Tayler Stewart! 

Tayler Stewart and Ideal Contini. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

In her final year of eligibility, Tayler Stewart was named to the 2017 USEF Emerging Athletes Eventing 18 list. She had worked for years to get there and felt prepared. However she wasn’t expecting to then be named to the Eventing 25 list the following year.

“I felt very lucky. You’re on a list with three- and four-star riders that are a lot more advanced in the sport than I am. It’s more intimidating and I could tell there are a lot of holes in my riding to work on, but it gave me a lot of inspiration to work harder to be more like them,” said Tayler, who will turn 19 this summer.

Tayler attended the recent Eventing 25 Training Session in Ocala, Florida with Ideal Contini, a 15-year-old Westphalian gelding owned by Tayler and her dad, Tyler. While there they worked hard on improving their “adjustability and being true and correct in the connection” in dressage and show jumping.

Developing Rider Coach Leslie Law famously focuses not just on improving his students’ riding skills. He also brings in numerous industry professionals and holds unmounted sessions on horsemanship and stable management, which will be important keys to success for these up-and-comers as they make their way in the sport.

“I’m still in between going from being a junior to a young rider and having to think about how I’m going to make a living in this sport or establish a business and become a better rider,” Tayler said. “Leslie helps us a lot with figuring out what’s going to be the right path for us. He tells us about how he got to where he is and it’s cool listening to other older riders talk about how they are making their living and what they’re doing in the sport. It’s really enlightening.”

Tayler Stewart and Ideal Contini. Photo by Mike McNally.

Tayler first sat on a horse before she could walk and grew up riding ponies at her aunt’s GlenWillow Farm, a hunter/jumper facility in Maryland. She got exposed to eventing through Pony Club and was hooked after taking a cross country clinic with Patrick McGaughan, who is her trainer to this day.

“I found myself to be fitting in more with eventing and the culture of eventers, but there’s a lot to be said for how accurate and effortless hunter/jumpers can ride,” Tayler said. “I haven’t shown hunters in a while but I ride for my aunt (sometimes). It’s nice to go back and do that. It’s how I got to where I am and how I’ve been able to be successful. I developed a lot of my feel and good eye in hunters really young so in eventing I didn’t struggle to find distances.”

Tayler partnered with Ideal Contini, aka ‘Taz’ in 2015. He had campaigned through the three-star level with Sally Cousins, and Taylor admits that initially she didn’t want a ‘made’ horse. Yet, there is no substitute for experience and Taz has taken Tayler on the ride of a lifetime. “He’s the quirkiest and weirdest horse I’ve ever owned but he’s like my best friend. He tries his heart out all the time.”

In their first year together, Tayler and Taz finished fifth at the Virginia CCI*. The following summer they represented Area II at the NAJYRC before moving up to CIC2* in the fall. In 2017 the pair completed three CIC2* events, finishing in the top 13 each time, and capped off the season with a 9th place finish at the USEA American Eventing Championship at Intermediate and a top 20 finish at the Fair Hill CCI2*.

Tayler says that dressage is their weakest phase and they are still working out some kinks in show jumping, but they are unstoppable on cross country. As a pair, they have never had cross country jumping or time penalties in the ten FEI events they’ve tackled together.

“People ask me what my biggest accomplishment is and with Taz the biggest thing is our consistency at this level. I know going out that if I ride right it will go well,” Tayler said. “He’s not the best on the flat or the best jumper, but on cross country I feel so confident going out that he will keep me safe, be honest and try hard. He won’t save me all the time but he will do his best to bring me home.”

This year Tayler and Taz will make the big move up to Advanced and plan to finish out the year at the Fair Hill CCI3*. Tayler also hopes to return to NAJYRC, this time at the two-star level.

“I can’t say enough bout how much I love the Young Rider program and what it’s given me over the years,” Tayler said. “It teaches you what it’s like to work with others and work with a coach you’ve never worked with before. It really does prepare you to be on a team. It also gives you friends in the sport. You make great connections and build a community for yourself which becomes important later on.”

Taylor remained in Florida following the Eventing 25 Training Session. She wants to keep riding with Leslie and learn as much as she can before returning home to Maryland. She is also taking online college courses and plans to major in English. If she weren’t riding she’d probably be a teacher, Tayler said, but ideally she’ll find a way to marry her love of teaching with her passion for horses.

“I’ve had moments in my life that I think every young rider has when they’re trying to decide whether to go head first into the sport or go to school and put riding on hold,” Tayler said. “I’m trying to figure out my path in the sport and what’s going to be best for me. I’d love to be on a team representing U.S. in eventing. I guess that’s the 10-year plan. In between I’d like to do a little bit of everything. I just hope whatever I’m doing that I’m happy doing it.

“Everything you do in riding and around horses, you can see the affect it has whether you’re cleaning stalls or winning an event. You get a sense of gratification. I love riding because of that. I can see my hard work going somewhere, and if you work hard you can have so many doors open for you.”

Sunday Links Presented by One K Helmets

Thinking of all the things she could roll in… Photo by Shelby Allen.

Let’s all say a silent prayer for grey competition horse owners. As a two-time victim of this harmful attribute, I so empathize with you. You bathe and bathe and bathe and they never quite stop looking yellow? After the umpteenth spa session, you tuck them (sleazy and all) into a spotless stall, only to arrive in the morning to see them somehow covered in poop. Grey horse owners, we salute you!

National Holiday: National Blueberry Pancake Day

U.S. Weekend Action:

Rocking Horse Winter I H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Results]

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

Sunday Links: 

Grid Pro Quo with Lainey Ashker

The Affordable Riding Act

British showjumpers stripped of titles after positive dope tests

Non-GMO horse feed: It’s not necessarily safe

Signs of ivermectin resistance seen in small strongyles on large British stud

What do cross-country colours actually mean?

Eventing Ireland increase entry fees for 2018

Sunday Video: This came up on my timeline today and I just have so many questions.

The Benefits of Auditing

Boyd Martin addresses a group of riders and auditors at a recent clinic at Texas Rose Horse Park. PC: me

It’s that time of year. Goals are being set; fitness schedules are being formed; diets are being (let’s not talk about diets) and clinics are happening everywhere in anticipation of the upcoming show season. Time to shake off last year’s dust and get down to business.  But what if there is a unbelievable clinic opportunity in your area with your absolutely favorite event rider of all time, and BLAST IT: you just. can’t. ride.

Don’t fret! There is an easy and often free (or at least cheap) answer to this dilemma! When you can’t ride: AUDIT! I know that probably sounds like a big “Duh!” statement, but I am always amazed at how many riders don’t take advantage of all the awesomeness auditing a clinic has to offer.

I am a huge fan of auditing. I learned to appreciate it’s benefits several years ago when I was injured and couldn’t ride. I became the queen of auditing and volunteering. A couple of weeks ago I audited a Boyd Martin clinic (you can read all about that one here.) Besides being an amazing clinic to audit (Boyd is a great teacher and  is very entertaining,) it really got me thinking about why I am such an auditing nerd.

1) Checking out the instructor and their teaching style is easy. Auditing is a great opportunity to see how a clinician teaches, and figure out where that style fits with your needs and riding goals. Are the instructions easy to understand? Do they nitpick you to death or focus on the bigger picture? Will you ride at the level you signed up for or be pushed to advance to the level? Did you learn something new or did the clinician just recycle the same old grids and ideas? Are the ideas presented in line with what your own trainer teaches or did you feel like your head was going to explode trying to understand what was being taught?

These questions may seem pretty basic, but …

2)Riding in a clinic can be expensive. Clinics seem to be getting more and more costly, especially if you are attending one given by a recognized name. Most of us are on a budget. Sometimes you need to choose between going to an event or attending a clinic or even just saving that hard earned cash for a new pair of boots. Knowing the answers to the questions I listed above BEFORE you ride can make the difference between wishing you had stayed home versus wanting to ride with the clinician again or the next chance you get. Auditing can also help you answer those questions without breaking the bank because a lot of the time auditing is free. And if there does happen to be an auditing fee, chances are it isn’t much.

3) Making friends is a bonus! Eventers are awesome. What better place to make some new friends than at a horse show or a clinic? Friends who you can look for at horse shows, get ideas from, or lament your latest elimination with. When you are an auditor, you don’t have a horse to take care of or a schedule to stay on. You can chat, listen, socialize and connect. I know theoretically you are supposed to be learning something, but it’s great to be able to have a good time while doing it. Each time I have audited a clinic, I have made new connections and started new friendships. I have even reconnect with folks that have moved out of my area that I was thrilled to see again. Auditing is a way to meet people and listen and and learn talk horse all day. For an adult amateur like me who lives in a somewhat isolated area and does not work in the horse industry this is heaven!

So the next time the clinic you wanted to ride in is full or your horse is lame or your bank account is empty, go anyway and audit! I bet you will be glad you did!

Go eventing!

Best of JN: The German Riding Instructor is the Hilarious Hero the H/J World Needs

In a hunter-jumper world that could desperately do with a laugh and a little light-hearted fun right about now, the German Riding Instructor — that is, Ronny Reimer of RCR Equestrian — is here to help.

His selfie videos “live from Ockla, Tyron and Weglington” point out the funnier things about that strange circus that is the winter showing circuit. Here are a few of our favorites.

Wellington is like Oprah Winfrey …. #ronnyriemer #GERMANRIDINGINSTRUCTOR #wellington #pbiec #horses #jumper #rcr #rcrequestrian #palmbeach #westpalmbeach #horseshow #grandprix #welcome #amazing #awesome #great #marketing #advertising @esp_wef @ronnyriemer @rcrequestrian @chnullie

Posted by The German Riding Instructor on Thursday, December 28, 2017

Impressive ! Must see architecture 🐴😊👍🏻💚 #rcr #rcrequestrian #GERMANRIDINGINSTRUCTOR #video #tampa #castle #king #amazing #awesome #twist #soda #coke #cola #pepsi #horses #horseshow #grandprixsundays #funny #love #advertising #marketing @germanridinginstructor @chnullie @rcrequestrian

Posted by The German Riding Instructor on Sunday, December 10, 2017

Top of the standard !!!!
Holy cow ! (Like the Indians would say) 😂😂😂
#TBTuesday #oldbutgold @marcusgruenthal

Posted by The German Riding Instructor on Tuesday, January 23, 2018

Follow The German Riding Instructor and never miss a video.

Go Jumping!

Long Live the Three-Day! Waredaca and HOTC Add P3D Divisions

Novice Three-Day competitors Emma Keahon and Wil’Ya Love Me on course at the 2015 Waredaca Classic Event. Photo by Kate Samuels.

The USEA Classic Series is growing! Both Waredaca and Heart of the Carolinas recently announced that they have both added Preliminary Three-Day divisions to their seasonal events. Joining the ranks of the Hagyard Midsouth Three-Day, these are the only three events to host this challenging competition at the Preliminary level. 

The Heart of the Carolinas Three-Day Event, hosted at Southern 8ths Farm in Chesterfield, South Carolina, is the only venue in the country to offer Beginner Novice through Preliminary long format divisions through the USEA Classic Series. USEA President Carol Kozlowski, Holly Hepp Hudspeth and Kim Keeton, DVM, have been named as 2018 clinicians.  

The Waredaca Classic Three-Day Event & H.T., October 25-28, 2018 in Layonsville, Maryland, offers Novice – Preliminary long format divisions alongside their horse trials.

While we could carry on all day about the benefits of a three-day, I think Waredaca said it best in a Facebook status: 

“It’ll leave you with goosebumps on your arms, sweat running down your body and elation in your heart. It will push you to your limits, at times scare the bejeezus out of you, but at the end of the three days, it’ll leave you and your horse bonded in a way you haven’t felt before.”

There’s a lot of talk about the value of the long format event…about how “back in the day,” that–that was real eventing; when cross country/endurance day was at the heart of the sport; when riders had to practice a different kind of horsemanship. Ask anyone who’s contested the Classic and they’ll tell you there’s truth to these claims. No event, championship or otherwise, can come close to the experience of completing a long format event.”

With the adoption of the short format, many missed their chance at experiencing the blood, sweat and tears of training for a three-day, but, thankfully, the USEA stands as the long format’s biggest advocate, and remains the only national association to continue offering the traditional format.

Go eventing.

Eventing Flourishes in Southern Arizona with New Horse Trial in 2018

Three cheers for eventing in Southern Arizona! Photo via Southern Arizona Eventing Association’s Facebook page.

We are very pleased to wish a warm EN welcome to Area X’s newest event, Southern Arizona H.T.! Held at the Pima County Fairgrounds in Tuscon, Arizona, the inaugural competition will take place March 24-25, 2018.

Though this event is brand spanking new, it’s creation is years in the making. It all starts with George and Nina Masek who owned Grass Ridge Farm in Sonoita, Arizona.

They faithfully served their eventing community for decades, and their Grass Ridge Farm H.T. was a staple on the Area X calendar. Following their deaths, the last of their farm’s namesake competitions was sadly held in 2014. The Grass Ridge Equestrian Foundation (GREF) then set out to ensure the sport’s future in southern Arizona.

Grass Ridge Farm H.T. Photo via Southern Arizona Eventing Association’s Facebook Page.

“‘GREF’ was tasked with the unfortunate reality of wrapping up operations, but wanted to preserve the Masek’s legacy and eventing in Southern Arizona in same way,”  explained Marian LaLonde, President of the Southern Arizona Eventing Association. It was the end of an era, but the beginning of a new one and from there, the Southern Arizona Eventing Association (“SAzEA”) was born. The GREF Board worked to preserve the jumps and equipment and passed the torch to SAzEA and a new Board of Directors who accepted the mission to find a new home to continue eventing in Southern Arizona.”

The SAzEA explored their options for an eventing hub, eventually finding a home at the Pima County Fairgrounds in Tuscon, Arizona, where 60 acres have been allotted by the Southwestern Fair Commission for a cross country course.

Check out a tour of the Southern Arizona H.T. venue:

In addition to the spacious cross country track, which is being designed by Adri Lea Doyal, the fairgrounds also boasts permanent stabling, hundreds of RV hookups, accessibility to the beautiful city of Tucson and close proximity to Interstate 10.

“This is a dream come true and SAzEA is the story of how a collaborative effort consisting of an amazing group of board members, coordinators, builders, trainers, donors, supporters, family members and invaluable volunteers can make a positive difference in our sport!” Marian continued.

One of the many beautiful jumps that will be featured at the March Horse Trial! Photo via Southern Arizona Eventing Association’s Facebook page.

“We are so pleased to be able to provide another venue for the training and education of our Pony Clubs, Young Riders, and Adult Riders who are all part of keeping the sport of eventing alive. We look forward to seeing everyone in March for our first annual Southern Arizona Horse Trials and future Arena Eventing or clinic events in 2018.”

“We are dedicated to continuing to improve and expand the course and to offer new and exciting opportunities for our sport in the years to come. We are so grateful for the fantastic amount of enthusiasm and support we have received and we are especially appreciative of all of the encouragement and generosity from our donors, exhibitors and trainers in Area X. This project was a huge undertaking and those of us on the SAzEA Board didn’t fully appreciate what we were getting ourselves into, but we have learned that it pays off to dream big. At long last, it is finally time for all of us to KICK ON AND RIDE! See you all soon!”

Southern Arizona H.T.: Website, Omnibus

 

 

Saturday Links from Tipperary

Photo by Pam Stone.

While our warm weather compatriots are already enjoying the start of the competition season, we snowbound eventers have to entertain ourselves somehow. Actress, comedian, and equestrian Pam Stone invites fellow cold weather barn-goers to come one and all and enjoy their own competition, such as the event she calls the Manure Luge (see video at the bottom of the post!)

Maybe we can get a whole slew of events together for a sort of Winter Equestrian X Games? We just need some more events…how about the Blanket Bundling Relay? Frozen Water Bucket Weightlifting? Iced Road Apple Curling? What other events can you come up with, EN? Let us know in the comments!

National Holiday: National Seed Swap Day

U.S. Weekend Action:

Rocking Horse Winter I H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Results]

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

Saturday Links:

Brook Ledge Horse Transportation Announced as Title Sponsor of The Great Meadow International FEI Eventing Nations Cup™

PODCAST: Insights from the Eventing 25 Winter Training Sessions

The Affordable Riding Act

‘I thought ‘this is going to kill me’’ — rider issues warning after being trampled in the back of her horsebox

Here’s Why a Thorough Warm-Up Isn’t Just For Your Horse

Deconstructing the Saddle Pad

Saturday Video: Introducing the 2018 Manure Luge Championship!

Calling all competitors for the 2018 Manure Luge Championship. Show us your run! Funn Farm currently in First Place! Dixie Atkins I may need to commission a trophy!

Posted by Pam Stone on Wednesday, January 17, 2018

Friday Video from World Equestrian Brands: The Hardest Thing About Riding Horses …

https://www.instagram.com/p/BebTuJvgXI0

… is the ground, natch. But just as there’s a million different ways to clear a fence — some more impressive than others — there’s a million different ways of hitting the deck, too. Sometimes, in the process of finding the ground with your face, you find a few skills you never even knew you had, too. This week, we’re ushering in the weekend with a selection of first-class falls – some remarkably acrobatic, some cringe-inducing, and mostly all just plain funny.*

*NB: no horses, ponies, or riders were hurt in the making of these videos. Okay, okay, perhaps there were a few dented egos. And maybe a couple of cameramen with aching sides. 

Ever dreamed of running away to join the circus? So has this intrepid soul, who has perfect her inter-species leapfrog routine. To complete the look? Just add tutus.

https://www.facebook.com/horsepeoplesMind/videos/1539019916134089/

Even at the best of times, handstands are hard. The bum-to-gravity ratio just never seems to stack up. No such problems for this kiddo, who not only gets beats the odds against momentum, but manages to look SO zen while doing it. Impressive. Props to her pony, too, who evidently has a second career as a cheerleading spotter.

Have you ever seen anything quite so meticulously planned as this horse’s scheme to shed his rider and head home early? As easily as placing the angel atop the Christmas tree, Barbie’s Dream Horse gets exactly what he wants, when he wants it. #BeMoreLikeBarbiesDreamHorse

Turns out there are plenty of horses out there with a point to prove. This happy chap decided it would be more fun to complete his showjumping round alone — but his rider didn’t give in easily. I’m not sure what’s more impressive; the fall, or the solo jumping.

Did you think we’d get through this without a resurgence of this, the best hatcam video of all time? Shamrock used to be a racehorse, and sometimes Shamrock likes to relive his glory days. There are some naughty words in this one (but let’s face it, we’ve all been there). WOAH, SHAMROOOOOCK!

Totally blown away by the runaway success of ‘Woah Shamrock’! 1.7 million hits and counting – thank you all so much for viewing and sharing the video in it’s infancy.

Posted by Woah Shamrock on Friday, March 24, 2017

Horses, eh — who’d have them?!

Best of HN: ‘New to Horses’ Meets ‘Been There Done That’

Pixabay/CC

I was recently inspired to write this following a conversation with my dear friend who is just diving — perhaps I should say cannon-balling — into horse ownership for the very first time. She had no previous experience with horses until last year, when her 13-year-old daughter began taking lessons.

Quite happily half-leasing my lovely mare, my friend was gradually wading into barn-life, one inexperienced toe at a time. She was pleased to see her daughter happy during lessons and content to shed any horse-related questions or concerns alongside her muddy boots until the following week’s session.

All that changed when an acquaintance — who had seen pictures of her daughter on Facebook riding a fabulous jet-black beauty — contacted her with a “special opportunity.”

This acquaintance was moving and needed a new home for her gelding.

Of course, my friend, having limited knowledge of horse-keeping, let alone how one determines whether or not an animal is healthy and of good temperament and would be suitable for a beginner like her daughter, did what most people would do when faced with a gift horse…

She put up a fence and built a lean-to.

Many of us take for granted the little things that occur while owning and caring for a horse, forgetting that inexperienced (adorably optimistic) beginners aren’t familiar — yet — with many of those normal horsey “events.”

Which brings me to the conversation (via texts) with my friend:

Friend: “Oh my gosh!!! When we went out to the pasture this morning, we found Novio [the gift-horse] with his feet like this…

[insert pic of rear hooves with white lines visible on coronary bands] …

“My uncle is visiting and he said he thinks it’s White-Line disease…”

[…continued expressions of dread…]

It had been raining for several days, and as Novio isn’t stabled, I explained that the white-ish band was a perfectly normal result occurring when a horse has his feet wet for an extended period of time. Crisis averted. But not before the bewildered gelding received a Clorox wash recommended by out-of-town-uncle-who-once-worked-with-a-guy-whose-brother-had-horses. Oy.

The thing is, when you don’t know for yourself, it’s quite natural to accept the advice of someone with more “experience.” However, confirming said expertise before using Uncle Jim-Bob’s peppermint-and-moonshine remedy is definitely a wiser course of action (and all the horses say amen).

Before you scoff at my silly friend… let’s be honest, most of us have experienced similar situations along our own journeys.

The thing is — I didn’t write this to shame my friend. It’s more of a friendly reminder for those of us in the equine “been there, done that” crowd to reflect on our days as “newbies” and the horsey-freak-outs we experienced ourselves… so we can encourage our beginner pals instead of rolling our eyes at them.

It’s also a salute to those “new-to-horses” folks, for recognizing a special passion and being brave enough to build a barn in their backyards.

SO, to you moms who do not have the horse-bug, but whose children definitely do…

Thank you.

Without those of you — like my newbie-friend — willing to plunge into this crazy world of saddles, helmets, fences, and farriers, there would be kids sitting at the beginning of their journey with bags packed full of passion flung on the dusty ground beside them.

Without someone to care enough to “book the trip,” these young people, born with an invisible link between horses and themselves, wouldn’t have the chance to even begin their greatest adventure.

I was one of those kids on that platform of dreams! My parents knew nothing about horses, but they understood that my heart would know its most happy state only if I could fill it with horses.

And here’s to all the “later-in-life-newbies,” just beginning their own journey with these amazing animals. All the accompanying highs and lows will no doubt make you laugh and cry (a lot)… good luck and hang on tight!

Now for those of you who eat, sleep and breathe all things horse, who have more pictures of old Lightning than of your children, and whose car retains hint-of-barn no matter how many air fresheners you have dangling from the mirror… if you know a newbie who ends up in a “free horse” situation, or does the proverbial leap before looking when buying one… try not to have your first observation be that the horse is slightly pigeon-toed, or that they’re totally gonna need a trainer, when the amateur calls upon you for advice.

Instead, try to help this person make the best choices they can, knowing that soon enough they’ll find out if the horse really is the best gift ever, not suitable at all, or indeed, if they even want to stick with the whole “horse thing.”

Whatever happens, offer kind advice, remembering that not all people are horse people like you, but everyone should have the right to hop aboard the Equine Express, even if it’s only for a brief trip or they are just traveling as baggage attendants (the boot polishing, hair braiding, girth tightening mommas).

Be patient and understanding… especially when the newbie calls in a tizzy over the tiny yellow things stuck on their horse’s legs, or when she discovers the chestnuts and assumes they are tumors.

Sometimes all you can do is laugh and then thank the good Lord that your newbie days have long since passed.

Go riding.

Pixabay/CC

Sara Shelley is a writer, who enjoys her family of “nineteen” (husband, three kids, one horse, one dog, three cats, six chickens, a turtle and three fish) surviving the resulting chaos only through faith, and a well-developed sense of humor. She spends as much time as she can riding her horse, and making memories with her clan.

Get to Know Tsetserleg: Boyd Martin’s Small But Mighty Mount

Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg at Fair Hill International 2017. Photo by Shelby Allen.

It’s fitting to equate one of Boyd Martin’s newer mounts, Tsetserleg, to Clark Kent. Day by day in training he’s good, but unassuming — even mediocre at times. It’s not until he’s at a competition does the 16.1-hand gelding show his true colors and transform into Superman … but only for the right person.

“He can be a mediocre performer at the barn, but he loves his job and turns it on at shows,” says Tsetserleg’s owner, Christine Turner of Indian Creek Farm. “He would do anything for his rider — if he likes them — and he loves Boyd.”

Boyd echoes that Thomas has been a bit of a “sleeper,” only truly showing what he’s capable of in competition: “He doesn’t ‘wow’ you at home, but when he gets to a competition he grows to 17.2-hands and jumps as high as you want to jump and moves like Totilas.”

“He’s a funny little character — he’s got a bit of an awkward jump, but he’s a real trier and a pleasure to have,” says Boyd.

A ‘Dark Horse’ Prospect

Christine first laid eyes on Tsetserleg as a 5-year-old at Tim and Cheryl Holekamp’s New Spring Farm, where he was bred. A mentor to Christine, Dr. Holekamp is a longtime supporter of the USEA’s Instructor Certification Program as well as the American Trakehner Association, and their Missouri farm has been home to a number of clinics and inspections over the years. It was at one such inspection that the young black horse turned Christine’s head — but he wasn’t what they were there to see that day, nor was he even being inspected.

The Turners had originally come to the Holekamps’ farm to look at Tupelo, a 3-year-old Trakehner mare who would end up taking reserve champion at the inspection after the Turners agreed to purchase her. Dr. Holekamp had tried to pique Christine’s interest in another Trakehner gelding at the farm, but Tsetserleg, a half-brother to Tupelo out of the same dam and sired by the famous stallion Windfall, caught her eye instead. When Christine learned that Tsetserleg’s barn name was Thomas, she knew it was meant to be.

“My husband is Thomas E. Turner IV and my daughter is Tommie, so it’s very much a family name,” she explains.

Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg at Fair Hill International 2017. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Shooting for the Stars

Thomas was campaigned to the two-star level by Michael Pollard. After the 2015 season, the Turners handed the reins over to Boyd Martin. Boyd got to know the gelding over the 2016 season, competing at the Intermediate/two-star level for the majority of the season before stepping up to Advanced at Stable View in October.

Through ups and downs, 2017 proved to be Thomas’ breakout year. Things started out quite promising with an Intermediate win at Pine Top and then a 4th place finish in Advanced at the same venue a couple of weeks later. The step up to three-star at Red Hills in March didn’t go quite as planned, with Boyd taking a tumble off the gelding at a triple brush near the end of the course.

“He couldn’t make the jump at Red Hills toward the end, but it was good for him to get the experience,” Christine recounts.

But Thomas bounced back with a vengeance and zipped around the Advanced track at The Fork a month later — probably the biggest course he had seen yet, according to Boyd — and claimed 2nd. His second CIC3* attempt came at Jersey Fresh later that spring. He and Boyd added only cross country time, on an exceptionally stormy day, to take 2nd again. The trend of success continued for the rest of the season, with the pair never finishing further down the leaderboard than 7th. They ended the 2017 season with an impressive 3rd in the Fair Hill International CCI3* thus crowning him USEF CCI3* National Reserve Champion, and subsequently Tsetserleg was awarded Performance Gold by the American Trakehner Association.

The Belief Pays Off

Thomas’ current success is made that much sweeter for the Turners as they remember the journey it took to get the slow-blooming gelding to this point. Christine has always believed that Tsetserleg was destined for great things — it just took some time to find his match.

“He has had to put up with a lot of trainers that were inexperienced or never believed in him,” she says. “Here I am going, ‘Look, I know he can do it!’ but who am I to them to tell them this? He came from being something that people never believed in to being a powerhouse with Boyd.”

Though it’s taken time for the gelding to blossom into the fierce competitor and proper upper-level horse that Christine knew he was capable of becoming, the sky’s the limit for the gelding with Boyd now in the saddle.

“I think he’s a proper four-star horse, but the biggest thing is he’s such a gutsy trier. At Fair Hill he impressed me in every single phase,” says Boyd. “Chris kept telling me over the last year that this horse was capable of anything. She was right. We must never underestimate a horse’s desire! It is very hard to measure at first sight.”

Photo by Shannon Brinkman via Der Trakehner.

Looking Ahead 

2018 is already off to a good start as Boyd and Thomas are the cover boys on the January issue of Germany’s Der Trakehner magazine. If all goes well, Thomas may get his four-star shot come April at the Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event.

“I leave it up to the professionals, Boyd and Erik Duvander, our new High Performance Coach, to decide what is best for Thomas and Boyd. We totally trust our rider and support them with whatever they decide,” Christine says.

“We are never let down when he says that he wants to take it easy, and we get excited when he wants to move up. We are hoping for Kentucky, but we know Boyd has a few others who may take that spot. We are just excited for whatever may happen!”