Classic Eventing Nation

Tuesday News & Notes from Cavalor

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Barn dogs… We all know them. We see them eating and rolling in mysterious unspeakable things at the barn. My own dear Franklin got not one, but THREE baths this weekend. Honestly, you can’t take them anywhere. But it would be hard to imagine the barn without them. Don’t forget to share your barn pups with us by using the hashtag #DogsofEN for a chance at your photo being shared in our Dogs of Eventing Nation Series.

National Holiday: National Pickle Day

Events Closing This Week: Sporting Days Farm Horse Trials IV (SC, A-3)

Tuesday News:

Help save the Liz Cochran Memorial Groom’s Award! There’s cross country schooling, lessons with Olympians, marketing help and much more in this silent auction! Christmas presents maybe? Check it out and help support the groom’s award that recognizes some of the hardest workers in the sport! [Liz Cochran Memorial Groom’s Award Auction]

Italy is the first country to test out the HiLowDrop scoring method at national competition. Like what is prosed at the International level, this method of scoring drops any judges scores that deviate by 4% or more from the judging panel’s average to help prevent one judge from skewing results. The FEI General Assembly will debate the use of this method in international competition Nov. 18-21. [First Country Adopts Controversial Dressage Scoring System]

Is your barn as fire proof as possible? With winter approaching, that means more heating systems, more lighting and more hay which increases a barn’s risk of fire. Managing combustible materials like hay, bedding and dust is a great start. Now is the time to prepare to keep your farm safe. [Clean Up Combustibles In Horse Barns Before Winter]

Tuesday Video: Ingrid Klimke wins Grand Prix Freestyle Qualifier at the Munich Indoors

Monday Video from Tredstep Ireland: James Alliston and Happenstance, Galway Downs CCI3* XC

Last weekend, James Alliston rode Mary McKee’s Happenstance to a wire-to-wire victory in the CCI3* at Galway Downs. Thanks to Ride On Video you can watch their handy, double-clear cross country run here!

This was Eric Winter’s first time designing on U.S. soil and he did not disappoint! Riders jumped at the chance to ride a course by the same man who designed for Badminton in 2017, and for Blenheim through 2016. The Galway Downs terrain is a neat thing to behold as well — taking riders over soccer fields, winding through brush, and down the home stretch of the racetrack. Looks like fun to me!

David Taylor Selected for Virginia Horse Trials Course Designer Mentor Program

David Taylor on course at Virginia Horse Trials in October 2017. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

Last year David Taylor, of Keymar, MD, realized he wanted to be more than just a competitive eventer. He wanted to give back to the sport but at the time he wasn’t sure how. It wasn’t until he read an article on the United States Eventing Association (USEA) website about becoming a cross-country course designer that it finally clicked.

“Cross-country course design has always been intriguing to me, trying to understand why questions are being asked,” said Taylor, an Intermediate level eventer. “I think all riders need to understand this phase better and try to learn why jumps are where they are and why a course takes the shape that it does. This intrigued me beyond anything and was something I really wanted to look more into.”

Taylor signed up for the USEA’s B & C Jumping/Course Design Training Program last February and is now certified to design cross-country courses up to Training level. After the training session, he began apprenticing with whomever he could to further his education. Virginia Horse Trials (VHT) organizer Andy Bowles noticed Taylor’s diligence and invited to him to be the newest participant of VHT’s Course Designer Mentor Program.

“David is eager to gain as much knowledge as possible and is willing to put himself out there and work for it. He has a lot of drive and a lot of passion which makes him a good fit for our program,” Bowles said.

Bowles introduced the Course Designer Mentor Program in 2015 to encourage the development of the sport and provide a valuable educational opportunity for someone pursuing a career in cross-country course design.

“Part of our role as event organizers is to support bringing in new designers and help train them,” Bowles said. “It is an important process to help young designers learn from senior designers. By doing that we develop the pool of designers in this country.”

As the newest member of the VHT design team, Taylor was given the responsibility of designing the Beginner Novice and Novice courses for the October horse trials with guidance from course designer John Michael Durr. He also shadowed Bowles, Durr, and FEI course designer Captain Mark Phillips as they set the one-star and two-star courses.

“David is showing real potential as a designer. He has a good eye and is eager to learn. At Virginia he was very studious and an asset to the team,” Durr said.

Taylor’s philosophy while designing his courses for VHT was to provide a fun and safe test for all horses and riders at the level whether they were competing in their first recognized event or getting ready to move up.

“My goal was design something that I can get everyone safely around but challenging enough that they would enjoy it. Show them something they may not have seen but don’t ask them a question they don’t know how to answer. It’s supposed to be educational for them. At the lower levels that’s really what it’s about,” Taylor said.

The experience of designing and setting his first proper courses and participating in the Mentor Program has been no less than “intense” and Taylor said he gained a tremendous amount of respect for course designers and the work they do.

Taylor is working towards earning his USEF “r” Eventing Course Designer license which would certify him to design through Preliminary. He will meet several of the requirements through the VHT Mentor Program and looks forward to continuing his education.

“I cannot adequately express my sincere appreciation to Andy for becoming the cornerstone of my course designing career,” Taylor said. “Additionally many thanks to John Michael for sharing his experience with me and his guidance in proper design, and to Captain Mark Phillips for the valuable time spent with a course design greenhorn.”

From a Virginia Horse Trials press release.

Weekend Instagram Roundup: Smiles for Miles

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I’ve got to kick off this week’s edition with a hopefully blush-inducing shout-out to my rider/writer buddy Lisa Slade, whose OTTB mare “Skittles” got her first taste of the cross country rainbow at River Glen H.T. Skittles’ path from the track to the startbox has been a pretty epic journey, literally (by all accounts she put on quite a show between cross country warm-up and the box) and figuratively, but Lisa knew she had something special on her hands and stuck with it. That big, shiny ribbon is well-earned — congrats, ladies!

Here are a few more of your award-winning smiles that lit up the Eventing Nation over the weekend, from River Glen in Tennessee [Results] …

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Transy teams placed 1st and 6th competing against 11 teams including D1 teams!!

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… Poplar Place in Georgia [Results] …

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Savvy and I rocked our first horse show! #superpony #i❤️mypony #Savvy #poplarplacefarm

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… and Texas Rose Horse Park [Results].

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The only one to finish on her Dressage score was my baby girl #eventing #prelim

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Congrats to all. Go Eventing!

Rocky the One-Eyed Wonder Horse Makes His Comeback

Photo by High Time Photography.

We all know that certain horses are special — they have more heart, more personality, and more goodness than the average beast. Silly Wabbitt, AKA Rocky the one-eyed wonder horse, is one such special horse.

Rocky was purchased off the track by my trainer Jammie Hand, then retrained and evented by her daughter Morgan Boyer through Intermediate. Now all grown up, Morgan partners with Jammie in the management of Blue Line Farm. I stumbled on Blue Line shortly after moving to Greensboro, NC, as a very out-of-practice adult ammy who had evented to Novice (OK, I did Novice once) as a teen, eager to get back into eventing.

Leasing turned into owning a terrific mare who carried me back to Novice, but when I wanted to try for Training she was not on board and was sold to a less demanding home. Looking for a horse to build my confidence, I asked if I might lease Rocky and our adventure began! We practiced for several months and entered my first Training event at the Fork; yes, I decided that my very first Training and our first event together should be one of the biggest Rolex prep events on the calendar — what could go wrong?

Photo by High Time Photography.

It was an eye-opener, both the scope of the show (“hey, there’s yet another of my four-star idols right over there!”) and the size of the fences! They seemed mountainous to me, and through timid riding I managed to pick up two cross-country stops with Rocky — the horse who never stops.

Still thrilled with accomplishing my goal of competing at Training, we went back to work and formed a real partnership and friendship over the next several months. The jumps seemed to shrink as Rocky gave me confidence I had never experienced before. He is a perfect cross country horse — forward but responsive, a true joy to run. I learned how to line up on the fence, put my leg on and go! Rocky taught me so much not only about cross country, but also about stadium and dressage. We competed several times over the spring and summer and steadily improved, winning the July War Horse event at the Carolina Horse Park in Southern Pines.

Photo by High Time Photography.

We returned to War Horse at Carolina Horse Park in September with high hopes. However, Rocky slipped getting off the trailer and got away from me, taking a very uncharacteristic solo gallop around the show stabling. When I caught him not more than a couple of minutes later there seemed to be something wrong with his left eye. The on-site vet checked him out and recommended that I get going to NC State. We drove as fast as safety and the law allowed, but when I unloaded him at NC State I could see that the eye appeared to be shrunken and full of blood. The ophthalmology team confirmed my worst fear — the eye was damaged beyond repair and needed to be removed. One tearful phone call with Jammie later, Rock was off to surgery.

Rocky came home after a few days with his left eye socket wound stapled shut. He seemed a little confused and unsteady at first, but cantered off into his pasture to see his friends as soon as he was allowed. After about a week we tried walking around the arena and the farm. Rocky spooked a couple of times, which is very unlike him, and my heart sank. We slowly got back into work as directed by our vet, and he got better every day.

Photo courtesy of Jess Copland.

Finally the staples came out and we were ready to see if he could still jump. Morgan wanted to take the first jumps and tried a couple of cross- rails and small fences. Rocky sailed over them with his old enthusiasm and confidence. There was no doubt he knew exactly where the jump was and intended to jump it. I got on and we had our first jump school since the accident. Amazingly, he seemed just the same horse as ever. We decided to get plans back on track and entered the October War Horse in the Novice division.

The War Horse series features a schooling day the day prior to competition, and we definitely wanted to take advantage before our first show back. I took Rocky out with the rest of the Blue Line crew, planning to do the Novice fences and maybe try a couple of the easier Training obstacles. Rocky had other ideas, and quickly showed me that he could — and wanted to — jump the BIG jumps. From the saddle there was no hint that he had lost an eye — he locked on to fences, galloped, and jumped with his typical enthusiasm and joy. We bumped up to Training level for the next day and put in a solid performance (no jump penalties on cross country of course!).

Photo by Brant Gamma.

Virginia Horse Trials was next — our first recognized show since the accident. Dressage showed that we were a bit out of practice and we had a rail in stadium — but I was still thrilled with my buddy Rocky. It poured all night before cross country, and I was having serious doubts about going out on course. It was a muddy mess, but other riders were getting around without slipping so we decided to go for it. I was quite nervous heading to the start box, especially as the horse in front of us slipped and scrambled badly at fence 1. Finally, our moment arrived: Rocky sprang from the start box and galloped away, sailing over the course despite the terrible conditions. He brought me home with a clean, safe round. We finished 10th of 21, not bad for six weeks after losing an eye.

Rocky was just a wonder horse — not a one-eyed wonder horse — when we first met. He has given me confidence at Training level and showed me the true joy of running cross country. Through his accident I learned about having faith in your horse, and that I have a remarkable barn family. Jammie and Morgan have been my biggest cheerleaders, despite the fact that their best horse suffered a permanent injury while in my care. The rest of the Blue Line crew has been there to encourage us and help take care of Rocky when he was first hurt. And Rocky — he is still the same goofy, gentle, carrot-stealing cross country machine as before. He is just a little more special now.

Photo by Brant Gamma.

With special thanks to Jammie Hand, Morgan Boyer, Dr. Tom Daniel at Southern Pines Equine Associates, the ophthalmology team at NC State, and Carolina Equine Hospital especially Dr. Mark Wallace.

Monday News and Notes from Fleeceworks

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This is my favorite time of year. Crisp, fall days are my absolute favorite. Bundling up in layers and unpacking my favorite winter hats and scarves. Cooking comforting soups and relaxing by a cozy fire. At the barn the horses are fresh and lively and the anticipation of the new year is invigorating but seems far enough away to just enjoy a stress-free ride. What is your favorite part of fall?

National Holiday: Actor’s Day

U.S. Weekend Action:

Full Moon Farms H.T. [Website] [Entry Status]

River Glen Fall H.T. [Website] [Results]

Poplar Place Farm H.T. [Website] [Results]

Texas Rose Horse Park Fall H.T. [Website] [Results]

Monday News and Notes:

The BC Young Riders are holding their 2nd annual online auction! All money is used to subsidize Young Rider clinics, coaching and course walks at events, support for a destination event, and the NAJYRC. There are several items up for the bid including lessons/coaching from former BC riders – Tik Maynard, Danica Meyerhoff, Stephanie Rhodes-Bosch, Dana Cooke, Holly Jacks-Smithers – PLUS Mark Todd clinic, Rebecca Farms event entry, Sagmae Gift Certificate, Cat Skiing at Mustang Powder and so much more! The auction ends November 18th at 7 p.m. PST. [Click here to bid!]

The equine veterinary world is still on the hunt for a more affordable way to diagnose gastric ulcers in horses. A gastroscopy is the gold standard for diagnosis, but it is expensive and complicated. It was hoped that a new blood test that measures sucrose levels would be a potential solution, but the results were not 100% accurate. All is not lost, however, as sucrose may be yet be a useful “marker of gastric injury”. [Blood Test Misses Mark for Diagnosing Ulcers]

Have you been struggling to settle into the torture of #NoStirrupNovember? You are not alone! What you need are some helpful tips from an expert to get the most of stirrup-less sessions. The USEF Learning Center has a new video featuring Show Jumping Hall of Famer Anne Kursinski. She discusses the benefits of riding without stirrups and shares some helpful exercises along the way. [Riding Without Stirrups with Anne Kursinksi]

Rebecca Farm already hosts a world-class three-day event. This winter they will try their hand at organizing a skijoring competition! This involves a horse and rider pulling an athlete on snow skis through gates and over jumps. It sounds almost as thrilling as eventing! [Rebecca Farm to Host Skijoring Competition]

A recent survey revealed that bullying is rife within the professional equestrian world, particularly for grooms. The survey, conducted by the British Grooms Association, listed 70% of grooms as having been bullied by an employer or co-worker and 83% of them say they are suffering from stress or mental wellbeing issues as a result. The Grooms Minds project is calling for a change in the industry. [Grooms on the edge as bullying revealed]

Hot on Horse Nation: Five places you don’t have to splurge for your horse

Monday Video:  The Ocala Jockey Club International is this week!

#NoStirrupNovember Check In: Jelly Legs Be Gone!

We’re almost half-way through #NoStirrupNovember 2017 and we thought we’d check in and see how you brave souls are holding up. If you’ve been diligent in practice, the post-ride jelly legs of week one should be subsiding. The stirrup-less work is hopefully getting easier and you’re noticing an improvement in your balance and position.

Everyone works through No Stirrup November differently, whether they chuck their irons in a tack box for the month or drop them periodically throughout a ride. You’ve got to do what works best for you and your horse!

My strategy is to cross my stirrups for 10 minutes or so after a good warm-up. Because I have a young horse, I’ve been sticking to short spurts of sitting and posting trot without stirrups. I’ll also drop them during walk breaks and practice keeping my heels down. When I pick my stirrups up again, I notice I’m definitely sitting taller and straighter which helps my horse go better.

So remember, you don’t have to go the whole month without stirrups. Even a little no stirrup work goes a long way!

And so it begins… #NoStirrupNovember #feeltheburn #workout #basics #fundamentals #foundation #torture

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#nostirrupnovember – definitely getting better!!

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#nostirrupnovember for Guinness and @sofiehjohnson this morning! #teamwildwood #ridewild

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Kickin’ the dust up with my favorite guy. #nostirrupnovember #TheGreatTyrone #dressage

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No one is safe from #nostirrupnovember – not even the beginners! #inmyhappyplace #horses #thisisthebeginning #equestrian

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The Western world joins the fun, too!

Keep up the good work!

Sunday Videos: Galway Downs Training Three-Day Top 3

The traditional long format is alive and well through the USEA Classic Series. A long format event is a monumental undertaking for both the organizers and the competitors. They certainly take more time, land and manpower to host. For the riders, they must plan their conditioning program carefully and prepare for months.

Galway Downs in Temecula, Ca. ran the final Classic Series event of 2017 earlier this month (if you missed our coverage, click here!). Thanks to the fine folks at Ride On Video, we can watch the top three finishers of the Training Three-Day as they take on Phase D of endurance day. Remember, these horse and rider combinations have already done two phases of roads and tracks and run steeplechase. All three of these pairs ultimately finished on their dressage score. Well done!

Do you dream of riding in a long format? The USEA has tons of fitness tips and other advice on their website. Now is the time to plan your 2018 season and a long format is an admirable (and attainable!) goal. Remember, the series can’t continue without you! Long live the long format!

1st place: Jordan Linstedt and Janine Jaro’s Staccato

2nd: Mackenna Shea and Judith McSwain’s Fleeceworks Ghost

3rd: Amaya Davis and her own Evening Attire

Click here for full results and here to see more videos from Ride On Video.

Prelim ‘Lateral Work’ Exercises for Rider Strength

Laura Crump Anderson is an Equestrian Fitness Specialist at InForm Fitness Leesburg. She is certified as a personal trainer by the American College of Sports Medicine and specializes in working with riders of all ages and disciplines. She is EN’s fitness columnist and returns this week with a new exercise for event riders.

I am in favor of No-Stirrups November, but it does not count as exercise! Photo by Lee Rouse.

It’s time to get real and tell you something that as a certified personal trainer is embarrassing to admit: I HATE TO EXERCISE.

Even in college while my friends were marching happily off to Longwood University’s state of the art facilities, I would find any excuse to get out of it … typically, my horse. Unless it was a course which absolutely, positively, no if’s-and’s-or-but’s required my presence, you would not find me in the gym. Intellectually I knew how important exercise was for my overall well-being, but I hated it!

Ever since elementary school I could be found in the barn, riding every possible moment, spending countless hours doing barn chores, and working at all things horse-related. In a strange twist of fate, I suffered from a chronic overuse injury from doing too much. Yes, it’s true: I ended up with overtraining injuries without ever doing any training!

What does that look like, you may ask?

Left: what a cervical spine should look like. Right: what my cervical spine looks like. X-rays courtesy of Advanced Corrective Chiropractic.

My back pain grew so severe by my sophomore year of high school that I quit riding for nearly a year. I only picked it up again because I had a 3-year-old homebred Connemara cross, with a lot of potential, hanging out in my parent’s field. I will forever be grateful to that wonderful horse for breathing a passion for riding back into my life. So I faced a dilemma: How do I do what I love, and remain injury-free?

The answer was simple: exercise.

Today I’m an “adult” and even now there are a myriad of things I would rather do than exercise. Ask my colleagues: I complain the entire time I exercise. If I am honest here, I humbly admit that if did not have them to hold me accountable it would be a challenge to ever work out.

None of my colleagues are strangers to exercise, conventional or otherwise. They even seem to ENJOY it. They say awful things like, “As soon as you get past the first exercise it gets easier,” or “Just do it!” That’s not me. I HATE EXERCISING. I hate the first exercise just as much as the last. The only thing which my colleagues and I agree on is this: It does feel great to be done. Yet I still intellectually know that exercise isn’t just good for me, it’s one of the most important things that I engage in.

How do I know?

I began studying exercise science because I learned firsthand how important fitness is for the equestrian. As eventers we tend to be more fit than most people, but are we fit enough for optimal performance on our horses? As eventers we have extremely demanding schedules. Between riding, caring for our horses, driving, going to work and/or school, and trying to put together something that resembles a life outside of the barn, we tend to exemplify what it means to be an overachiever.

Yet, there are still only 24 hours in the day for us … where can we possibly fit in exercise?

Contrary to conventional exercise philosophy, 20 minutes of high intensity, slow motion strength training done once or twice each week will make a profound difference in your riding. Some words of caution: rest and recovery are important. As it is with our horses, it’s critical to not undermine a sufficient period of rest.

Even when we cannot make it into a training studio like InForm Fitness, there are some simple things that we can do on our own, utilizing high intensity training principles, to develop greater strength, stamina and connection in the saddle.

The Prelim Lateral Work is the next step up from “Beginner Novice ‘Lateral Work’ Exercises for Rider Strength.” This works similar muscle groups, however, requires more focus and balance. If you struggle with this exercise, especially keeping your hips parallel to the ground, perfect this control at the Beginner Novice before attempting Prelim.

Haley Carspecken at Mara Depuy’s Willow Bend Farm.

Prelim Lateral Work

  • Start on all fours
  • Lift in your core
  • At the same time, lift your left hand and right leg, keeping your shoulders and hips parallel to the floor.
    Be careful not to rock back in your hips — keep your hips poised over top of your planted knee
  • Move at a smooth controlled pace (think Tai Chi) of 10 seconds up, and 10 seconds down

Haley Carspecken at Mara Depuy’s Willow Bend Farm.

  • At the top of each repetition
    • Finish the position strong through your fingertips keeping your arm straight
    • Perform a two-second squeeze at the top, flexing your toes back towards you, and engaging the muscles from your glutes to your heels

If failure does not occur within two minutes, consider adding weight to your ankles and hands the next time.

Remember: perfect repetition requires a smooth controlled pace, with no acceleration at the top or the bottom of the rep. Increase resistance two pounds at a time; it is much better to have too little weight and go longer, than too much weight and sacrifice form.

Want to read more from Laura? Click here.

Best of JN: Amy Millar Wins Canadian Championship With One Stirrup

Rio Olympian Amy Millar made it a home-country win for spectators at the Royal Agricultural Fair and Royal Horse Show last weekend, and she did it with one arm behind her back, proverbially speaking. Or quite literally, she did much of it short a stirrup but still managed to make it look like a textbook ride.

Amy and Heros 86 came into the final night of the three-round competition with some penalties from night one, but jumping fast and clear rounds on Saturday allowed her to clinch her first ever national championship title.

“There are very few things that I get as excited about as The Royal Agricultural Winter Fair,” said Amy after her win. “It has been such a big part of my life for so long that I have wanted this for probably the whole time I have been alive! It is so important to me and to Canada; the stands are filled with Canadians who love the sport, and it has always been so prestigious to win.”

At ten years young, Heros 86 is already an Olympic veteran, but still has a huge career ahead of him. The Belgian Warmblood is owned by a syndicate of Amy’s friends who have known her much of her life and rallied together to get her the ride on the talented gelding.

Amy Millar and Heros 86. PC: Ben Radvanyi Photography

“It’s a group of people that I’ve known a long time and really love; they are all good friends of mine, and I can’t thank them enough for their support.”

International competition started at The Royal Tuesday night, with the FEI World Cup on Wednesday night. We saw other Canadian greats like Amy’s father Ian Millar, Tiffany Foster, Keean White, Ali Ramsay, and hailing from below the border, top-ranked Americans Kent Farrington and McLain Ward.

Go Amy, and Go Jumping!

The Royal: Website, Results, Livestream, Facebook

$125,000 Canadian Show Jumping Championship – Final Standings
Saturday, November 4
Rider/Hometown/Horse/Final Score
1. Amy Millar Perth, ON Heros 1.25
2. Francois Lamontagne St. Eustache, QC Chanel du Calvaire 3.73
3. Ali Ramsay Victoria, BC Hermelien VD Hooghoeve 4.24
4. Nicole Walker Aurora, ON Falco Van Spieveld 5.34
5. Isabelle Lapierre Levis, QC Cescha M 5.86
6. Laura Jane Tidball Langley, BC Concetto Son 9.06
7. Jonathon Millar Perth, ON Bonzay
8. Tiffany Foster North Vancouver, BC Brighton
9. Ainsley Vince Burlington, ON Darling
10. Jordan MacPherson Toronto, ON Aanwinst
11. Vanessa Mannix Calgary, AB Chemas
12. Hugh Graham Schomberg, ON Knock Out 3E