Classic Eventing Nation

Tuesday News & Notes from Cavalor

Happy (almost) Valentine’s Day from your horse! Graphic by Leslie Wylie.

Yesterday’s weather was just fantastic! We saw nearly 70 degrees in Georgia and it finally stopped raining. I rode in a t-shirt! In February! While I don’t think obsession with weather is exclusive to horse people, I do find myself checking my weather app way more frequently than my non-horsey friends.

National Holiday: Fat Tuesday

Events Opening This Week: Morven Park Spring H.T. (VA, A-2) Galway Downs International H.T. (CA, A-6) Rocking Horse Spring H.T. (FL, A-3) Texas Rose Horse Park H.T. (TX, A-5) Full Gallop Farm April H.T. (SC, A-3)

Events Closing This Week: Sporting Days Farm H.T. II (SC, A-3) Twin Rivers Winter H.T. (CA, A-6) Full Gallop Farm February II H.T.(SC, A-3) Rocking Horse III H.T. (FL, A-3)

Tuesday News: 

Leslie Law’s ideal show jumping is no more than seven jumps. He says keeping it short and sweet is ideal, but can be difficult for riders who lack confidence. The goal is to get the horse to loosen his shoulder, which begins in the flatwork session of your ride – a crucial component that can’t be overlooked! [Leslie Law: Warm Up For Stadium Jumping In Seven Jumps]

Heads up Training level competitors! The Charles Owen Technical Merit Award is back for a ninth year. This prize recognizes amateurs who demonstrate appropriate and safe cross country riding at designated events around the country. Each rider receives feedback on their ride to help educate the principles of safe cross country including the gallop, jump preparation, execution of the jump and rider position. [Charles Owen Technical Merit Award Returns for 2018]

No hoof, no horse. We all know this, which is why we love our farriers! Besides having a physically intensive job, farriers are also practicing a delicate science as they evaluate the balance and angles of each of your horse’s feet. [“No hoof, no horse”: The farrier’s three basics of equine foot care]

Tuesday Video:

Monday Video from Tredstep Ireland: Ride Around the World

I’m probably not the only one with a serious case of cabin fever right now, so thank goodness for Facebook and groups like As Seen Through Horses’ Ears. ASTHE is a public Facebook group where members share horseback photos and video from around the world. The only rules are that the shot has to be between the ears of a ridden or driven horse and you have to mention where in the world you are!

Today we’re bringing you six short clips all posted to the ASTHE group so that you can enjoy the view as well. How neat is it to get to see these different corners of the world? And of course the best view is from between the ears of a trusty steed!

Edderton, Scottish Highlands, UK:

https://www.facebook.com/susan.ross.1232/videos/g.208236055879418/1761904257187030/?type=2&theater&ifg=1

Quindalup, Western Australia:

https://www.facebook.com/belinda.west.399/videos/g.208236055879418/10155281305382548/?type=2&theater&ifg=1

Maura, Norway:

https://www.facebook.com/marith.granhus/videos/g.208236055879418/10156078571089710/?type=2&theater&ifg=1

Arequipa, Perú:

Bella y morita viendo el valle de vítor en Arequipa Perú

Posted by Francesca Cavallero Belon on Friday, January 26, 2018

Viđareiđi, Faroe Islands:

Vøtnini today (The waters) 🙂 This is a long way up in a valley (inni í Dølum as we call it), didn't get 'the waters' on this clip, but they were frozen, so not so visible today (they're like two very small lakes). Fugloy is very visible from here, too 🙂 You can even ride higher up on the mountain and get a good view over the neighbouring villages, but due to the snow and it being quite steep, and dark creeping up on us, we decided to head back home :-)Viđareiđi, Faroe Islands

Posted by Hanna Mohr on Saturday, January 20, 2018

Mesoyi, Cyprus:

Exercising the horses after the storm. Ramon calling for his friends. Mesoyi, Cyprus

Posted by Georgia Bruno on Tuesday, January 23, 2018

Chris Burton to Campaign Robyn Fisher’s Betawave

Robyn Fisher and Betawave at Le Lion d’Angers in 2016. Photo by Libby Law Photography.

Robyn Fisher announced today that her three-star mare and Le Lion graduate Betawave will be campaigned by Chris Burton for the foreseeable future, representing Australia and competing overseas.

“Leta,” a 9-year-old Holsteiner mare (Linaro X Wavelength, by Wodan) bred and co-owned by Carol Singh, has already arrived in England at Burton Eventing’s base near Surrey and will compete with Chris for the foreseeable future.

The arrangement fell into place after Robyn met Chris at Le Lion d’Angers in 2016, where the mare represented the U.S. at the FEI World Breeding Championship for Young Horses.

“I feel very lucky to have been Leta’s partner to this point in her career, and I am incredibly excited to watch her continue her education with Chris,” Robyn said. “Chris rides every horse in his barn himself every day and loves his horses very much. He is a kind and patient rider with an equally amazing team, who I know will provide impeccable care of Leta.”

Chris Burton riding Betawave at his base in the UK. Photo courtesy of Robyn Fisher.

Carol added: “Robyn has done such an incredible job with our mare so far, already surpassing dreams I had for her when I bred her. Chris riding her is like icing on the cake for me, and I could not be more excited to see where they go together.”

Robyn campaigned Leta through the CIC3* level, placing third at Twin Rivers last year. Chris plans to run the mare at several Intermediates first to develop their partnership before aiming for a CIC3* and CCI3* in the spring.

“I truly can’t believe my luck,” Chris said. “It isn’t every day you get offered the ride on a nice three-star horse. When Robyn sent the videos of Betawave, I thought she looked like a super jumper and lovely horse. Since landing in the UK she has turned out to be more special than I thought. It is a very exciting opportunity for me, and I only hope I can do the mare justice in the upcoming 2018 season.”

We wish Chris and Leta all the best as they compete in 2018 and beyond. Go Eventing.

Controversy Continues to Swirl Around The ARK at JFK

Stalls at The ARK at JFK Import Export Center. Photo courtesy of The ARK.

Controversy continues to swirl around The ARK at JFK Import Export Center in New York. The $65 million facility, located in Cargo Building 78A at John F. Kennedy International Airport, began providing equine import and quarantine service in September 2017. The ARK was expected to revolutionize the import process for horses and other animals flying into the U.S.

The state-of-the-art facility lists amenities that horse owners dream about at night: climate-controlled stalls, non-slip flooring, natural lighting, filtered air, 24/7 observation and care provided by an experienced equine staff, plus a bio-security program overseen by the Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine.  The Cornell Ruffian Equine Hospital is located only six miles away from The ARK, with veterinarians on call for emergencies.

Horses can be unloaded from the plane and settled into their quarantine stalls at The ARK within minutes. In contrast, horses that quarantine at the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s 40-year-old facility in Newburgh, about 90 miles north of JFK, are immediately re-loaded onto trucks for an additional two-hour ride, having already endured a transcontinental flight.

Considering the laundry list of amenities and close proximity to JFK, one would think that more flight brokers would start using The ARK for import and quarantine. But that hasn’t happened. Instead, the 48 climate-controlled stalls have seen paltry traffic since the facility opened its doors to horses. Instead, the vast majority of horses flown into JFK are still being trucked to Newburgh for quarantine.

Kristen McGowan, Director of Equine Operations, walks a horse through the state-of-the-art facilities at The ARK. Photo courtesy of The ARK.

John J. Cuticelli Jr., who owns The ARK, filed a $426 million lawsuit last month against the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the agency that oversees the airport. The ARK’s lease with the Port Authority reportedly grants them “exclusive rights” to handle the quarantine for horses and other animals coming to the airport from overseas. The lease also specifies that the Port Authority “must use reasonable efforts to cause other providers to cease their provision of the exclusive services.”

The New York Times extensively examined the legal controversy in a piece last month, saying The ARK’s owner “does not know whether he has stumbled into some bureaucratic nightmare with the Port Authority, a turf war between government agencies, or is the object of a boycott by livestock shipping agents and transporters.”

Not all shipping agents are boycotting The ARK. Brook Ledge Horse Transportation, which flies horses through its wholly owned subsidiary Horse America, has been a staunch advocate of The ARK from the start. Horse America imported the first horse to the facility on Sept. 1, 2017, Parker Miller’s mare Superstorm Sandy, who evented to the one-star level in England and came to the Millers from Blyth Tait’s yard.

Scarlette Gotwals, Director of Flight Operations at Horse America and a licensed veterinarian, said Horse America’s experience while importing Superstorm Sandy for the Miller family made The ARK their go-to choice for import and quarantine.

Dr. Scarlette Gotwals with Superstorm Sandy, the first horse to be imported at The ARK. Photo courtesy of Horse America.

“When the mare got to The ARK, her temperature was normal and gum color was good, but you could sense that she just wasn’t quite right. The equine team at The ARK confirmed that. I spoke to Marcie Miller, Parker’s mom, and she authorized us to take any measures necessary,” Dr. Gotwals said.

“We got her on GastroGard right away. We were able to start feeding her small, frequent meals because of The ARK’s 24-hour care. She was a different horse the next day. If she had come off the plane and gone on a trailer straight to another import facility, it could have been a different story.”

Multiple flight brokers have also called into question the experience and qualifications of The ARK’s staff of horse handlers. When asked for comment, The ARK told EN their equine handlers and staff are avid riders and horse owners with extensive experience in managing equine facilities.

“In the case of Superstorm Sandy, we were able to be proactive because her behavior was caught by the staff,” Dr. Gotwals said. “The equine staff at The ARK immediately informed us of their concern for Sandy.”

Kristen McGowan, director of equine operations, previously co-managed a 150-stall show barn on Long Island. Krissy Sommermeyer, who equine quarantine manager, worked at an eventing barn in New Jersey and co-managed an 80-stall show barn on Long Island. Shannon Walker, equine export manager, previously worked at a Thoroughbred breeding facility in New York, as well as the USDA New York Animal Import Center.

“If the owners were aware of the difference between The ARK and Newburgh, I think many would send their horses to The ARK,” Dr. Gotwals said, “but owners may not be made aware they have a choice. We prefer to place the owners in the driver’s seat to quarantine per their preference.”

Several prominent shippers have been vocal about why they continue to use Newburgh as opposed to The ARK. While traffic around JFK has been cited as a major concern, release times for horses at Newburgh are only offered at two times: 10:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, or 10:15 a.m. on weekends. Trucks line up on a first-come, first-served basis to pick up their horses at Newburgh. If trucks miss both release times, they must return the next day.

The ARK is flexible with release times, which can be scheduled during lighter periods of traffic. One of Horse America’s clients wanted to pick up his horse at 7 a.m. the day following the release due to a conflict in his schedule, and The ARK happily accommodated his request.

Dr. Scarlette Gotwals, right, with Judy Krajewski, a Horse America employee, and Superstorm Sandy, the first horse imported at The ARK. Photo courtesy of Horse America.

“When horses enter the country at JFK it means the horses deal with the traffic either way — immediately after they arrive from a 6 to 8 hour flight spent in a standing jet stall and sit in traffic to get to Newburgh, or directly from The ARK two days after their quarantine at the time you choose,” Dr. Gotwals said. “We need to start thinking of what is best for the horse, not what is convenient for the transport picking the horse up.”

Alison McGowan told The New York Times that when she imported two horses from Europe last year, she asked the shipper to take the horses to The ARK. When she discovered that the shipper planned to take the horses to Newburgh instead, she canceled the flights and scheduled with Horse America to ensure her horses would import through The ARK.

“For me as a horse owner, I would never ship horses halfway across the world on a long flight and then put them on a trailer for two hours to quarantine,” she said. “The ARK is outstanding. I’d rather have a state-of-the-art facility providing the best care.”

While Horse America strongly recommends The ARK, their “putting the owner in the driver’s seat” philosophy means they still give their clients the choice of having their horses taken to The ARK or Newburgh.  Horse America charges $2,650 for import services and quarantine at Newburgh and $2,950 at The ARK — a $300 difference.

“Brad Gotwals, my husband and president of Brook Ledge, has always made it a point to find the most efficient routing, safest design for horse vans and the best drivers with the goal of seeking solutions to put the horses first,” Dr. Gotwals said. “We’ve carried that same spirit through to our flight company, Horse America, and I will apply the same values and principles in flying horses as we do with the ground transportation.”

Confessions of a ‘Master’ Event Rider: Movin’ on Up?

Photo by Horse Life Photography.

I have a confession to make. I am old. As in, not young. As in, not bouncy. As in, on occasion, ouch.

Truth be told, in every sport there is an age at which normal mortals (Tom Brady versus Time excepted) have to face the fact that getting hurt, badly, is a real possibility. And that scares the crap out of me.  

I have a spirited (ok, unruly) OTTB that is now 11. I thought she would be over her “enthusiasm” by now, but nope, that’s just her. I got her at 4, when I was 48. After 30+ years of not riding, I thought, well, I’ve never had a Thoroughbred and there are so many that need adopting, and I want a horse.  

It was happenstance that I ended up with Sweetie. I was “just visiting” the Thoroughbred Retirement Center on an emotional Christmas Eve in 2011. The first horse I saw was being ridden by someone who was clearly a hunter-jumper: dressed to the nines with no dirt or scruff on her boots. (Eventers, you know we don’t go places without at least a peck o’ dirt on us at all times…) I took one look at the horse and said to myself, “that is no hunter jumper; that is an event horse.” Don’t ask me why I thought I was qualified to make that distinction, but like I said, I was emotional. It just so happened I had my helmet with me, so I hopped on the horse. BAM. I owned a horse. No matter that she hadn’t been ridden more than five times after leaving the track. I could handle it. Couldn’t I?

I brought her to my barn and began the long process of teaching her how to be an event horse. Why I thought I could do that is beyond me, but looking back, I think it was meant to be. Even the pet psychic (yes I am one of those people) said Sweetie was supposed to be mine and that loved ones who had passed over had helped bring her to me. So, while I was re-learning how to ride after so long, I had this young horse that I was supposed to bring along too. Green plus green equals black and blue? I had not heard that phrase in time to save me from my folly.

Don’t get me wrong. I have made dear friends, had wonderful coaches, and have reignited a passion long dormant. It has been an amazing ride with an amazing horse.  I just have one niggling little problem that I’m not sure anyone can help me with.  

I’m scared to move up. And I argue with myself ALL THE TIME about it.  

I have campaigned Sweetie through Novice at Area 1 events with modest success. I have pride that what she knows, I have taught her. I have done Training level height jumps at schooling shows and at home. She, without me on her back, has free jumped 4’3”. Clearly she has the chops to jump Training level, but do I?

As a kid I went Training easily. No fear. The bigger the jump, the better. I had a Morgan/Saddlebred that could and would jump anything. I suspect Sweetie, with another rider, could and would jump anything. I look at pictures taken by everyone’s favorite Joan Davis, and Sweetie is way over the jump. Speed also isn’t a problem. So what IS the problem?

I have had two really bad falls. The first required six weeks of pool therapy so I could move my knees again. The second involved me versus a jump cup bolt. The bolt won, and my thigh had a giant hole in it requiring 14 stitches. I physically recovered with just a scar (and I don’t care because bathing suits are so yesterday and I’m too busy riding to swim anyway). Emotionally though, the non-physical scar hasn’t healed despite my attempts at recovering my mojo.

So, I planned to move up to Training last year after becoming bored by Novice. I just. Can’t. Seem. To. Do it. I’ve told people I’m going to do it. I’ve assured my coaches I’m going to do it. I’ve told myself I’m going to do it. Next year, I say. Definitely. Pfffft. No problem. Except there is. It’s me. And I’m embarrassed by it. Even now as I write this, I’m teary. I had goals. I wanted to be Walt Gervais of Denny Emerson fame (for those of you who don’t know, Walt did his first Prelim at 70). I wanted to come off cross-country exhilarated that I had overcome my fears and made it over a Training course. I think, though, that I have to take a step back.

I have spent the winter thinking about this. It’s been too dang cold to ride, so I’ve had a lot of time to think. Revelation: Maybe it’s OK NOT TO DO TRAINING. Maybe I can enjoy being a “Master Novice Rider.” Maybe I can enjoy my time with my friends and not be terrified in practice or competition. It’s supposed to be fun, right?! Right?! So why do I feel I’m letting people down? Like I’m letting my horse down? Maybe as a type-A achiever I have to disappoint even myself. And that’s harder than I ever imagined that would be. At 55, I feel like I have only so much time left and I have to push it to the limit before I’m too old.  

However, I had another fall last weekend. I did not get hurt; I was just sore for a few days. But during the warmup around the jumps I had literally felt my legs shaking. Ultimately, my horse stopped and I rolled off. No big deal. But the demon reared its ugly head again – the Training Argument. I decided right then and there that it’s going to have to be ok not to go Training. I don’t want to be in pain. I don’t want to invite anxiety. Shows are hard enough without that added pressure. I especially don’t want to push Sweetie because of some goal I have that is not fair to her. She doesn’t care how high we jump. She doesn’t know Novice versus Training. It’s just about enjoying the ride, with my favorite four-legged fur baby. I have to find a way to give myself permission to be ok with it.  

With apologies to whoever I am letting down, and with a little tear in my eye, I am now publicly giving myself that permission. I thank you, gentle reader, for allowing me to confess my biggest fear about eventing, and I hope that I have given some of you permission to be ok with just who you are, too.

Go, be you, have fun and Go (Novice!) Eventing.

Monday News and Notes from Fleeceworks

Holly Payne Caravella with CharmKing and Avant Garde after a successful weekend at Pine Top Farm. Holly Payne Caravella with CharmKing and Avant Garde after a successful weekend at Pine Top Farm.

Holly Payne Caravella with CharmKing and Avant Garde after a successful weekend at Pine Top Farm. Photo via Holly Payne Equestrian on Facebook.

My first show of the year is in the books! I spent the weekend working at one of my all-time favorite events: Pine Top Farm. The off-season has felt especially long and I was getting really restless at home. Despite the rain and gray skies in Georgia, it was so good to be back at an event!

National Holiday: National Hug Day!

U.S. Weekend Action:

Pine Top Intermediate H.T. [Website] [Results]

Ocala Winter I H.T. [Website] [Results]

Monday News and Notes:

A new award will be offered at the 2018 Thoroughbred Makeover at the Kentucky Horse Park in October. A $2,500 cash prize, sponsored by the Louisiana Thoroughbred Breeders Association, will be presented to the top-placed Louisiana-bred at the competition. [New Award for Top-Placing Louisiana-Bred at 2018 Thoroughbred Makeover]

You know the saying: “No hoof, no horse.” Good farrier work is critical to your horse’s hoof health. Three key aspects your farrier will focus on is the trim, the center of rotation and the heel. You may not be doing the work yourself, but it’s still important to understand what your farrier is doing and why. [Three basics of equine foot care]

Because a grid is a really just a combination, and we don’t usually trot combinations on course, it makes sense to eventually start cantering grid exercises that you practice at home. USET Selector Robert Costello shares his favorite canter grid that serves to improve both horse and rider skills. [Grid Pro Quo]

Monday Video: Pine Top Prelim winners Tender Bravissimo (aka Whiskers) and Courtney Cooper. Check out the air they catch over the hammock!

Winner Winner Chicken Dinner! Pine Top + Ocala Intermediate Recap

It was a big weekend in Area III as heavy hitters came out swinging at both Pine Top and Ocala, and we can safely say the winter season is well underway in the southern states.

Liz Halliday-Sharp and Deniro Z at Ocala Winter I Horse Trials. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Over 500 competitors  gathered at the Florida Horse Park for Equiventures’ Ocala Winter I presented by Ocala Ranches, which gave way to four competitive Intermediate divisions. The first open division was won by Katie Ruppel aboard her up-and-coming star Foreign Affair (34.5), and the second open division went to Liz Halliday-Sharp and her own Deniro Z (24.3).

Clayton Fredericks made the jump from fifth to first by the end of the weekend in the Intermediate Horse division with Kingfisher Park’s FE Stiff Upper Lip (32.4). They added only .8 cross country time penalties to their dressage score. Following in second is Clark Montgomery and his promising new ride Caribbean Soul, an 11-year-old Thoroughbred owned by Maren Foster. Finishing on a score of 32.5 they were the only Intermediate pair to come inside the time on cross country this weekend in Ocala.

The fourth and final Intermediate win belongs to Anna Loschiavo and Prince Renan, a 15-year-old Thoroughbred owned by Rodney Oakes and Gina Giudici-Oakes, who led start to finish in the rider division.

Selena O’Hanlon showed that her Fair Hill winner Foxwood High is feeling fine this season, winning the Advanced combined test with a dressage score of 25 and one rail down.

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

Pine Top Intermediate

Speaking of three-star superstars, Cooley Cross Border also earned himself a blue ribbon Georgia with Kim Severson across in the Advanced/Intermediate division. They finished on a score of 24.9.

Intermediate A was had by Allison Springer and The Lord Willing Syndicate’s Lord Willing who led from wire-to-wire on 32.4. Following in second is Waylon Roberts & Lancaster (35.7), and Tim Bourke in third with Quality Time (38.8).

Doug Payne was the winner of the second Intermediate division aboard Lisa Wall’s Getaway on a final result of 40.8. Keeping the sibling rivalry alive, Holly Payne Caravella finished second with CharmKing (41.5).

Kerry Torrey and her own Zumba lead the Intermediate rider division from start to finish. Tipping one rail and accruing a handful of cross country time penalties for a final result of 37.2. Maddie Lichten and Yarrow took second place (43), and Marley Stone-Bourke finished third with LVS Dassett Charisma (49.1).

Pine Top Intermediate H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Results]

Sunday Video from Total Saddle Fit: Eventing Sunny Florida

It was a busy weekend at the Florida Horse Park as competitors geared up for the Ocala Winter I Horse Trials presented by Ocala Ranches. You’ve got a front row seat to watch some of the blue ribbon rides thanks to David Frechette! You can find even more videos from all phases of competition on his YouTube Page, The Horsepesterer (make sure to subscribe while you’re there!).

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

Intermediate Horse: Clayton Fredericks & FE Stiff Upper Lip

Intermediate Rider: Anna Loschiavo & Prince Renan

Open Intermediate B: Liz Halliday-Sharp & Dinero Z

Open Preliminary A (Weekend): Leslie Law & QC First Class

Open Preliminary A (Friday One-Day): David O’Connor & Cooley Dream

Specifically for eventers, the StretchTec Shoulder Relief Girth now comes in 2 shades of brown to match monoflap jump saddles!  Let your horse move more freely and breathe easier by using the same girth as Tamra Smith.  Them all here: totalsaddlefit.com

What’s In Your Arena? Presented by Attwood: Up Your Circle Game

What’s in Your Arena? is an EN series sponsored by Attwood Equestrian Surfaces in which riders share their favorite jumping exercises. It’s easy to get stuck in a training rut, and we hope this will inspire you with fresh ideas that you can take home and incorporate into your own programs.

Photo by Lainey Ashker.

Have you gotten dizzy practicing Werner Geven’s Circle of Hell that we shared a few weeks ago? You’re in luck because we’ve got an even bigger challenge for you today: Meet the Circle of Hell’s big, bad brother.

Lainey Ashker shared this gem as part of her #GOTD series. Like Werner, she describes the task as “deceptively simple,” but if you tried the Circle of Hell in your arena, then you know that it’s anything but!

Essentially, you start on the circle with four rhythmical strides in each of the ‘slices,’ then you take it out to surrounding oxers, which are set on an outside line with two of the verticals set on the circle.

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bet9GK_hlCu/?taken-by=laineyea

“This deceivingly simple jumping exercise hones outside rein effectiveness and the rhythm of the canter! I also like how supple the horses become at the end of the workout!” Lainey said. 

She also filmed an entire lesson helping a few students of all levels work through this tricky exercise, which you can rewatch here:

Go eventing.

Best of JN: Behind the Lens & In the Saddle With Giana Terranova

Behind the Camera with Giana Terranova. Photo by Ariane Samson Photography.

Twenty-three-year-old Giana Terranova has devoted the past four years of her life to capturing moments behind the lens, but this winter circuit she is balancing her growing career with her own competitive desires at WEF. She has picked up a lease for the season to help her pursue her own desires in the saddle, all while photographing some of the most beautiful horses in Wellington. JN caught up with Giana after taking home a tricolor in her first division ever with Over Easy at WEF to talk about how she juggles such a demanding but fulfilling schedule.

Where It All Began

The Southern California native’s love for horses was fueled by her grandmother, who signed Giana up for her first lessons when she was eight years old. It wasn’t until she was 14, however, that she began competing regularly when her parents purchased her first horse, Cooper, who she would show mostly on the local circuits. Giana was fascinated by photography and filmography at a young age and began a very popular YouTube channel to document her equine adventures. That love of film developed into a passion for still photography and she began taking photos at the age of 16.

Upon graduating high school, Giana relocated to Savannah, Georgia to attend Savannah College of Art and Design to major in Equestrian Studies. There she rode for SCAD’s intercollegiate equestrian team and began training with Lauren Marcinkoski of Swamp Fox Farms. In an attempt to bring in some additional revenue, Giana began actively pursuing photography as a business under the name Giana Terranova Photography.

Little did she know, that bud of an idea blossomed into something spectacular. “This last year was when I officially went into full-time photographer and made it my one and only job! What started out as just a hobby to make some extra cash for horse shows ended up being a full-time career that actually is funding my horse show career as well!”

 

Photo by Giana Terranova Photography.

Tales of a Traveling Photographer

After graduating college, Giana returned home to Southern California and began training with Courtney Hurley of Hurley Equestrian. As her business took off, horse lovers all over the country reached out to Giana begging her to come to their locations to photograph their horses.

“Depending on the time of year, I can be pretty much all over the place. Besides Southern California I also make Northern California trips and Arizona trips. I usually come to Florida every winter, as well as stops in Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina in the spring. Summer I normally do multiple trips Northeast, and I’m hoping to add to that list!”

Giana couldn’t have been happier that her passion had developed into a career, but it did put a hold on her competitive desires for a while. “There’s always places to be, sessions to book, and I truly believe that constantly maintaining it and staying on that grind is what really has made my business grow as much as it has,” she shared with JN.

“However, it’s difficult for me to really find a horse that can truly be my partner because of it. I’m never really in one place for very long to be able to buy a horse or even maintain a long-term lease. Because of that I have to take what I can get, ride whatever comes along, and learn along the way!”

Giana showing her summer lease horse, Silbermond. Photo by Izzy Anderson

Ambitions Abound

Thanks to her connections with Swamp Fox Farms, Giana was able to pick up the ride on Over Easy, AKA Easy, a 15.2h Swedish Warmblood mare. The pairing that appears to be a great match as they started out their partnership together with a Reserve Champion in their warm up classes at WEF. “I’d definitely like to thank Lauren and Swamp Fox Farms for finding me a lease for my VERY particular situation,” Giana shared, “as well as Courtney Hurley for helping me become the rider I am today and getting me back into the ring competitively when I didn’t think it was possible before.”

2018 is the year that Giana plans to find a harmony between her riding and photography. “I’d really love to be able to compete consistently in the 3’ hunters at least for this year. I’d love to move up to the 3’6’’ eventually, but my ultimate goal is to be able to compete in the hunter derbies.”

Giana and Easy celebrating their win with Swamp Fox Farms trainer David Loman. Photo provided by Giana Terranova.

As for her photography, she hopes that her travels take her to new places, even outside of the United States. “I always have to thank my amazing friends, family, and clients that have supported me throughout the years, spreading my work and my business all over. Without them, this company would be nothing but a fun idea I had as a teenager!”

And for those of us who have a passion we want to turn into a business one day, Giana leaves us with this nugget of wisdom. “I guess as cliché as it is: just don’t give up. Life is going to try and get in the way and throw curve balls and the best thing you can do is just keep on trucking along. As with most great things, there isn’t a quick way or short cut to success. Working with horses really gives us equestrians a front row view on how that concept works pretty well! If you are truly passionate about your idea for a business, it will succeed.”