Classic Eventing Nation

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: South Peace Helmet Cam

Take a spin around the Preliminary course with Jessica Kerschbaumer and her Thoroughbred mare Like A Girl at a very muddy South Peace Horse Trials earlier this month in Grand Prairie, Alberta. “Twig,” an 8-year-old Canadian Thoroughbred mare (Desktop X Toppers Happy), added 4 cross country time penalties to finish sixth in her division.

We are longtime fans of Jessica’s helmet cams, both because she is a fantastic horsewoman and also because she is always analyzing her rides looking for ways to improve. “We all have those runs we wish we could do over,” she says, “and no one is perfect all the time, especially not me, so hopefully instead of being critical we can all sympathize with those moments and learn from them and move forward.”

Well said, Jessica! Shout out to the organizers at South Peace for enduring heavy rains at their event. (I’d love to have some of that rain in the Pennsylvania area and surrounding states right now. With not a drop of rain in the forecast and unseasonably warm temperatures, we are set to have a very dry Morven Park this weekend!)

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Thoroughbred Makeover Preview Gives Sneak Peek at Next Week’s Action

Nucifera watching the action. Photo by Samantha Clark.

Fifteen of the over 400 entries for next weekend’s Thoroughbred Makeover at the Kentucky Horse Park came to a preview Tuesday afternoon at the Masterson Equestrian Complex here in Lexington. We saw barrel racers, field hunters, eventers, jumpers and dressage horses, and of course they all have one thing in common — they’re all former racehorses with less than a year’s training off the track under their belts.

Next Thursday and Friday 5th and 6th October will be the discipline specific competitions, taking place at the Kentucky Horse Park — some in the old indoor arena, the jumpers in the Walnut Ring, the eventing and field hunters out on the cross country — and the top three will be selected in each division. That is free and open to the public once you’ve paid your horse park entry fee.

On Saturday 7th October the top three in every discipline return to the indoor arena to try and win the coveted title of ‘America’s Most Wanted Thoroughbred’ awarded to the supreme champion of them all. Tickets to attend this are $25, but $15 for RRP members and children, and there will also be a live streamed in case you can’t make it in person.

And that’s not all … if you’re in the market and one of these catches your eye, almost half of them will be available for sale on Sunday 8th October. You can find all the details on the RRP website.

With $100,000 of cash and prizes to give away, the Thoroughbred Makeover is the richest racehorse retraining competition in the world, and the competitors are coming from all over the USA and Canada.

But let’s get to know a few of the Kentucky entries better..

Bobbie Jones and Proud Royal. Photo by Samantha Clark.

Bobbie Jones got Proud Royal from Winchester Place Farm last November thanks to a friend’s recommendation. Bobbie events and is a pupil of Cathy Weischoff’s (last year’s eventing winner) but she’ll be contesting the Field Hunter division next weekend. “I wanted to try something a little different and he’s game for anything!”

This is Bobbie’s first time doing the Makeover, and she reports that training so far has been fairly straight-forward. “He’s been really good, he’ll jump anything, he’s super-brave.” Proud Royal’s former owners at Winchester Place Farm gave Bobbie a set of silks in the colours that he used to race in, and they’ll be attending the Makeover to watch him go.

Carol Deeble and West of Denali. Photo by Samantha Clark.

Carol Deeble is riding West of Denali in the hunter/jumper division. She only got him in March after he retired last year with two wins from 22 starts and about $47,000 of earnings. Carol is an event rider, but with the time crunch and her horse’s laid back personality, she decided to switch to hunter/jumpers for the Makeover.

“He’s got a really good tempo at the canter, that’s his strong point, he stays really consistent, really quiet. Being around horses and stuff does not phase him one bit. The biggest issue I have with him is just getting enough energy out of him to keep him going!”

Photo by Samantha Clark

Carol saw West of Denali on a Facebook ad, and travelled up to Michigan to meet him, and she jokes, “The rest is History!” It will be her first attempt at the Makeover, but she works in the USEF office at the Horse Park so she’s seen it before. “I’ve gotten to see it a couple of times and thought what a great thing it is. I love Thoroughbreds, I’ve always had thoroughbreds and it’s something I really wanted to try.”

Jenn O Neill of Lucky Dog Eventing with Nucifera. Photo by Samantha Clark.

Jenn O’Neill runs Lucky Dog Eventing out of Haylands Farm here in Lexington; she is renowned for consistently picking and producing some exceptionally nice OTTBs, and her entry in the Makeover, Nucifera, is no exception.

Nucifera has been snapped up already by her client Tess Utterback. Tess is retiring her older 15-hand Paint gelding this year, and their plan was to go to Ireland this October and buy her a proper event horse, but as fate would have it, she rode Nucifera once and declared, “I have to have him!”

According to Jenn, “Tess is a self-proclaimed nervous amateur, but that horse gives her so much confidence, he gives her wings! She NEVER EVER wanted a Thoroughbred. Funny how one horse can change your entire stereotype,” and she added, “This horse is such a class act; I’m so fortunate to still be riding him.”

Nick Larkin and Love’s Not Fair. Photo by Samantha Clark.

New Zealand event rider, Nick Larkin, who won the inaugural CCI4* at Rolex in 1998 on Red, is back! He’s moved to a new farm here in Lexington, and after a break from eventing he’s excited to plunge back in and start competing seriously again. His Makeover entry belongs to Megan Sanders and is seriously fancy.

Lebron’s Jockey Club name is Love’s Not Fair and he’s by Fairbanks; he last raced in July of 2016 and won five races out of 36 starts, earning just over $123,000. His owner Megan Sanders knew she wanted him as soon as she saw him.

Kelly Murphy-Alley will be competing Storm Prospector in the barrel racing division, and he will be for sale on Sunday.

Kelly Murphy-Alley and Storm Prospector. Photo by Samantha Clark

I watched Kelly ride him in the arena, tie him up to the trailer while she hauled her own barrels or sat and played with her baby, and I couldn’t have been more impressed by either of them; they’re a class couple. And those boots…!

It was such a pleasure to talk to all these riders and listen to them wax lyrical about their lovely Thoroughbreds. Each one mentioned their horse’s brain and temperament, and the whole afternoon was a testament to the versatility of the OTTB.

The RRP Makeover website is chock-full of information about each horse, and some fascinating statistics on the competition — you can easily lose an hour or two browsing it, and I highly encourage you to do so!

If you do make it here to the Horse Park next weekend, try to catch Rosie Napravnik talking at 10 a.m. on Thursday in the Club Lounge, or Dan James and Tik Maynard at 1 p.m. Tik will also be presenting Freestyle 101 on Sunday, and Nick Larkin will be doing cross country schooling that day too.

If this was just the preview, I can’t imagine how much fun next weekend will be and wish all the competitors the very best of luck. With thanks to Thoroughbred Charities of America for their sponsorship of the event, and to all the various retraining and rehoming programmes and individuals who work so tirelessly to promote the ex-racehorse.

Start Box, Starting Gate, School: Lauren Snider’s Life Is a Full Plate

Lauren’s beloved Soldyouadream, AKA “Junie,” whom she lost last fall. Photo by Jacky Bolam.

Lauren Snider of Starfire Eventing and Racing in northern Kentucky is a lifelong Area 8 eventer, having competed through the CCI2* level. She galloped racehorses for 18 years and trained her own stable for five. In addition to eventing her own horse, training another two, teaching a handful of students, and attending Northern Kentucky University, she just got a new yearling to break and get back into racing. “I was coerced,” she says, “since full-time school and showing horses isn’t enough apparently.”

Lauren admits that it is a full plate, but that it works for her. “The more I have to do, the better I perform it seems,” she says. “I thrive on it. My typical day is non-stop riding, teaching, homework and horse care, not necessarily in that order! I sometimes forget to eat and often fall asleep with a pen in my hand or the laptop in my lap with my hand on the mouse pad. My husband is a long-haul truck driver, so I also have to manage things around the house most of time, as he is away from home more often than not.”

Lauren and Pedro. Photo by Katie Wegman.

Start Box

Eventing has always been Lauren’s passion. She enjoyed success as a young rider, training with Phillip Dutton in high school after winning a Bit of Britain scholarship. She went on to earn a team bronze medal for Area 8 in the NAJYRC CCI2* in 1999.

Having worked in the racing industry for many years, Lauren is a big fan of the Thoroughbred breed and an advocate for OTTBs. She got her current horse Pedro, a 2009 Kentucky-bred gelding who raced under the name Mrthreeofive (Tenpins – Crowning Mood, by Chief’s Crown ), off the track in May for free, sight unseen.

“I’m madly in love with him,” she says. “I found him through a connection at the track and took him on a hunch. He’s a dreamboat, but he’s tough too. I was horseless and in a very dark place since I had to euthanize my 5-year-old last fall. He really helped me get my mind back in the right place.”

Pedro won his very first mini trial at Leg Up in August and was fifth at the Spring Run mini trial a few weeks ago as well. Jump Start Horse Trials, taking place this weekend at the Kentucky Horse Park, will be his first recognized event.

“I think he has all the makings of an upper-level horse, fingers crossed! He has serious ADD, which is one of his biggest obstacles,” Lauren says.

Photos by Coady Photography.

Starting Gate

Lauren’s relationship with the racing industry is bittersweet.

She left the sport in March 2016 after plenty of internal debate. The timing seemed right: Her old reliable mare My Cherry Pie was retiring sound and happy, her best horse was hurt, and the others weren’t running well.

“I was working so hard and had nothing to show for it anymore.” Her own body had taken quite a beating after 18 years of galloping racehorses and eventing, and she felt like it was time to take a step back. But moreover, she was having a hard time reconciling her own ethics with those predominant in the sport.

“I left frankly because I had become disgusted with all the cheating and general ways of the racetrack,” she says. “I love Thoroughbred horses, and being on the back of a racehorse is one the greatest feelings in the whole world, but I have trouble reconciling my horse care beliefs and the way I believe horses should be trained with how things are done in the racing industry, especially regarding medication use and misuse.”

She thought she had left that world behind for good until one of her old owners, Tommy Horan, called her out of the blue two weeks ago. He was considering purchasing a yearling filly by English-bred Grade 1 winner of $2.2 million dollars Noble Mission — a classy prospect for sure, as most of Noble Mission’s babies went for between $100,000 and $350,000 at a recent sale. But he would buy the filly under one condition: if Lauren would break her and train her.

“I wanted to say no right away, but he has always been so good to me as an owner and his other horses are with a much bigger trainer, so I was honored that he wanted to trust me with a horse of this caliber,” Lauren says. “We both pretty much feel like we won the lottery! She is royally bred for the turf on both sides of her pedigree. I’m just going to roll with it and see what happens. She’s beautiful and her stride is amazing.”

Lauren feels like having just one racehorse in training will be much more manageable than the multi-sport, multi-horse operation she was running before.

“Having a racing stable and trying to event is very tough because I do everything myself and have no grooms,” she says. “So every time I would go out of town for a show, I’d have to find reliable people to care for four to five racehorses for two to three days. The whole time I was competing I would be stressing about the racehorses. I did at times think I needed to choose between racing and eventing. I think with just one horse it will be a lot easier.”

The new race filly in for training. Photo courtesy of Lauren Snider.

School

Lauren is juggling four classes this fall at Northern Kentucky University, where she is pursuing a Bachelor’s in Social Work, and is on track to graduate in May 2019.

Her long-term goal: “I plan to get my Master’s in social work and work in the field of substance abuse counseling. I would eventually like to open my own inpatient substance abuse treatment facility, and incorporate equine therapy into a program of other traditional therapies.”

Lauren wears her heart on her sleeve, mindful of the people around her and especially those who are suffering or in need.

“I decided to go back to school because I want to help people with substance abuse problems get better,” she says. “I want to save lives. The final push for me to re-enroll was this winter when I found out that someone I was close to in rehab had died as the result of her addiction.”

This weekend at Jump Start H.T., her myriad endeavors — eventing, school and social work — are coming together. For her Ethics and Advocacy class at the university, she is conducting a personal hygiene item drive to benefit The Henry Hosea House of Newport, Kentucky.

“As eventers we are privileged to be able to work with our beautiful horses every day and attend competitions on the weekends,” she says. “Some of us have even been able to make horses our livelihood. For each one of us, there are many more who aren’t so fortunate. While we wince at the cost of that glue-on shoe or hay price increase, people in my community and yours are worried about where their next hot meal or tube of toothpaste is going to come from.”

The Hosea House is a charitable organization that provides a hot meal every evening to an average of 150 people, along with offering a foot clinic, personal care items, Thanksgiving baskets, and referral services to a network of other agencies within the community for any other service a guest may need.

“I chose the Hosea House because I think they do great work and don’t get the publicity or support that some of our other local organizations get,” Lauren says.

Her request to fellow eventers competing at Jump Start this weekend: “While you’re at the story this week picking up your bottled water, snacks and zip-lock bags, grab one of the personal care items listed below and drop it by our stalls.”

Suggested donations:

  • shampoo
  • razors
  • soap
  • toothpaste
  • toothbrushes
  • lip balm
  • deodorant
  • feminine products
  • diapers
  • etc.

“When you drop by our stalls, you can grab some free treats for your horse and feel good that you helped someone less fortunate than yourself,” she says. 

Lauren is in stall #2005 at Jump Start H.T. Let’s all give her a hand!

Go Eventing.

2018 Kentucky Three-Day Event Tickets Go on Sale Today!

Michael Jung and fischerRocana FST. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Christmas seems to come a little bit earlier every year, amiright? I am talking, of course, about tickets to the 2018 Kentucky Three-Day Event (April 26-29), which officially go on sale today at 9 a.m. EST.

Usually tickets don’t go on sale until the beginning of November, but they’re being offered up early this year to unveil a new ticket-ordering system.

“We have been building a new ticket system. It’s ready, and we are eager to unveil it,” says Stewart Perry, President of Equestrian Events, Inc. (EEI), organizer of the Kentucky Three-Day Event, of the earlier date.

“Our new system has really simplified the process of buying tickets to our event,” said Lee Carter, EEI Executive Director. “Even those purchases that traditionally folks called in, like group tickets, can easily be done online now.”

Ticket options include single-day, three-day (Fri-Sat-Sun) and four-day general admissions, as well as group sales and reserved grandstand seating. Reserved grandstand seating and tailgating spots go fast once sales open, so fans will get the best tickets at the best prices if they order early.

New this year is Saturday’s CSI3* $225,000 Invitational Show Jumping Grand Prix, to be held after cross country country, and Friday’s $35,000 1.45m FEI ranking class, held after Friday’s dressage. There is no charge for the Grand Prix or ranking class tickets, but seats must be reserved through the ticketing system ahead of time.

Sure, we still have a few months of pesky winter to suffer through, but in our hearts it’s already springtime in Kentucky and the birds are singing and the four-star horses are galloping past. For eventers who suffer from Seasonal Affective Disorder, nine out of 10 doctors surveyed recommend purchasing Rolex tickets in advance to hang on your fridge or display in another prominent place in your home to keep the cold-weather blahs away.

Order your tickets today at www.KentuckyThreeDayEvent.com/tickets!

Boekelo CCIO3* Entries Go Live with 3 American Combinations

Caroline Martin and Pebbly Maximus are one of three combinations that will represent the USA at Boekelo. Photo by Adam Fanthorpe.

Seventeen nations will be represented in the FEI Nations Cup Final at Military Boekelo CCIO3* in Enschede, Netherlands, Oct. 4-8 next week, including three American combinations.

Caroline Martin will ride Pebbly Maximus, her 14-year-old Irish Sport Horse gelding she already successfully campaigned overseas earlier in the summer, with a top 15 finish in the Houghton Hall CICO3* Nations Cup and fifth place finish in the Bramham Under 25 CCI3*.

Liz Halliday-Sharp and Deniro Z at Carolina International. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Liz Halliday-Sharp will ride Deniro Z, a 9-year-old KWPN gelding owned by the Deniro Z Syndicate, in his CCI3* debut, coming off a strong fifth place finish in his first three-star in the Blenheim 8/9-year-old CIC3*. This horse has won an eye-popping five internationals over the past calendar year.

Katherine Coleman will ride her own Back to Business II, a 10-year-old Irish Sport Horse mare that already has a strong finish at CCI3* level on her record this season, having finished 12th in her debut at the level at Tattersalls in Ireland over the summer.

Katherine Coleman and Back to Business II at Tattersalls. Photo by Jenni Autry.

In all, 104 horses and 92 riders will compete at Boekelo, including 13 teams in the Nations Cup Final. After eight Nations Cup legs this season, Great Britain (590 points) and Germany (580 points) will battle it out for the series win at Boekelo, with just 10 points separating them on the leaderboard.

France is well back in third place on 335 points, but the host nation of the Netherlands is within striking distance of a podium finish on 280 points if they can deliver a strong performance on home soil. Sweden sits fifth in the current standings on 210 points, with the USA in sixth on 180 points.

Australia brings a strong group to Boekelo, including Chris Burton with Kate Walls’ Cooley Lands, winner of the Blenheim 8/9-year-olds CIC3*. Other nations fielding riders for the competition include Belgium, Brazil, China, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Lithuania, New Zealand, Norway and Switzerland.

Click here to browse the full entry list for Boekelo, and keep it locked on EN next week for live coverage from the event. The competition will be live streamed with English commentary for the first time this year, so all of you following along from home will be able to watch. Go Eventing.

[2017 Military Boekelo CICO3* Entry List]

Wednesday News & Notes from SmartPak

The worst sight after getting off a horse. R.I.P. Ariats. Photo by Maggie Deatrick.

There’s nothing more depressing than realizing that sweating through your boots over and over again through a ruthless summer has worn out the calves on boots less than six months after they finally broke in. My favorite thing about new boots? How pretty they are. My least favorite thing? How I can’t feel my toes when they are zipped up.

National Holiday: Crush a Can Day (What?)

U.S. Weekend Preview:

University of New Hampshire H.T.  [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Larkin Hill H.T. [Website]

Morven Park CIC & H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times]

ESDCTA H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times]

Stable View Advanced Oktoberfest H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times]

Woodland Stallion Station H.T. [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Spokane Sport Horse Farm H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times]

Jump Start H.T. [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Your Wednesday News & Notes:

A commemoration of Maxime Dubost will take place tomorrow in France. A service will be held at 2 pm at the Crématorium de Crouël. The Jardy venue is postponing the competition that was to be held tomorrow and all French competitors are asked to consider postponing their competition plans this weekend. [Commemorating Maxime Dubost]

One of the stories coming out of Puerto Rico is the plight of the thoroughbreds at the racetrack in Puerto Rico. With hay extremely tough to get and water being rationed to a quarter of a bucket per horse, multiple groups are mobilizing to try and help the horses who remained behind. [Efforts Afoot to Assist]

Sam Griffiths was sure he wasn’t quite right after Badminton. After a fall at Burnham Market, Sam had pain in his neck but doctors could find nothing. He managed to get through Badminton but persisted with the doctors, who found that he had cracked a vertebrae after all. Sam just returned to competition, successfully running Intermediate with his four-star partner Paulank Brockagh. [Sam Griffiths’ Winning Return]

SmartPak Product of the Day: My horse likes to play Houdini at shows, generally finding a way under his stall chain and ambling over to the nearest patch of grass. Or the neighbors’ hay. You know, any food that is available. The only thing that stops him are these uber-heavy vinyl stall guards, which also happen to be customizable to your colors. [SmartPak]

Tuesday Video from SpectraVet: A Happy Marlborough H.T. BN Helmet Cam

Some days I’d rather watch a GoPro of a happy horse and rider clocking around a Beginner Novice course than one of a four-star rider tackling the biggest course in the world. This is one of those days.

If you feel me, check out this one from Marlborough H.T., held Sept. 16 in Upper Marlborough, Maryland. Michaline West and Finley made short work of the course — love that blonde mane and Michaline’s effusive praise and clear confidence in her speedy pony. Thanks to Holly Covey for sending it our way!

View Marlborough H.T. results here.

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Dear Trump, Please Just Help Yourself to This EN Photo from Central Park Horse Show

We did a double-take yesterday after realizing that The Trump Organization, “the most globally recognized brand in luxury real estate, golf, hospitality, wine & entertainment,” lifted a photo off EN’s Instagram and reposted it to its own social media with no permission or credit.

Thank you to everyone that attended the Central Park Horse Show at Wollman Rink and congratulations to the winners! 🐎

Posted by The Trump Organization on Monday, September 25, 2017

But no worries, Trump Organization, help yourself — the invoice is in the mail.

Wollman Rink, site of Central Park Horse Show, has been operated by Trump’s company since 1986. During the event the connection was pretty hard to miss, as the Trump brand logo could be seen on signage around the ring.

Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Photo by Leslie Wylie.

President Trump was not in attendance at the show, but #bobbleheadtrump apparently made it out to the Arena Eventing class.

#bobbleheadtrump #trump

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#bobbleheadtrump #trump

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#trump #bobbleheadtrump

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#bobbleheadtrump #trump

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Read our recap of the event here. Go Eventing.

Who Has It Easier: Tall Eventers or Short Eventers?

Amy Nelson (left) and Lyndsey Humpal (right) at Hummingbird Stables

We asked Eventing Nation fans, who has it easier: tall riders or short riders? Turns out we ALL have a seat on The Struggle Bus. Some of us just have a little more leg room, and some of us can reach the overhead compartments.
Let’s compare:

Stirrups/Saddle

Tall Riders Say: Pros? No stirrups? No problem. I have plenty of leg to wrap around the horse! Cons? Stirrups do have to be on the last hole to be functional, and I can’t hop on a naughty horse that a student/friend was just on. If I do … my legs dangle and I just forget about adjusting the stirrup altogether and let my leg hang. I need a long flap, or three inches of knee pokes out in front of my knee roll.
Short Riders Say: Pros? I can school my 9-year-old student’s pony and the saddle/stirrups fit just right. I have never uttered the words, “that flap is too short for me.” Cons? No stirrups? Big problem. I am perched up here with my short legs, that barely go halfway down the horse’s side. I learn great balance this way though! Some of us buy children’s stirrups (one reader admitted she STILL had to punch holes in them to make them shorter). Where are all these tall stork children??
Bridling/Saddling
Tall Riders Say: Pros? Horses that are tough to bridle can’t get taller than my wingspan. I can reach. I can hoist a saddle on any horse’s back with ease. Cons? The opposite is true. I’ve had to literally sit on the ground to bridle a horse who was so relaxed his head was dragging.
Short Riders Say: Pros? I can fasten a noseband in 2.4 seconds. It’s eye level. Ponies, relaxed horses, you name it. I’ve become skilled at training the hard to bridle horses, because, I’m not going to put up with bridling a giraffe. Cons? If my horse wants to avoid the bridle, he can. Not by stretching up … just by standing. I have give the ol’ heave ho to get a saddle on my horse. He is not impressed. Sometimes he gives me encouragement though by biting my back as I struggle.
Mounting
Tall Riders Say: Pros? I can mount even a 16.2hh from the ground bareback. Cons? I need to make sure my girth is tight before I mount, as my size makes the saddle slide way more than a smaller rider!  I’ve ended up on the ground when I’ve gotten in a hurry and forgot to that final girth check.
Short Riders Say: Pros? If I forget to tighten my girth enough, it’s cool. My low center of gravity and small frame helps it not move too much until I’m secure. Cons? Normal mounting blocks aren’t tall enough, and forget mounting from the ground! Mount from the ground, bareback, Here, hold my beer. I once dropped my number in the woods on the way to the start box at an event. I was riding a 16.2hh 4-year-old OTTB.  I had to lower one stirrup all the way down, hop around as he kept moving, and it took 15 minutes to get on because there was no one to give me a leg up! I almost missed my warm up!

Short Rider Amy Nelson does the splits while trying to mount from the ground.

 

Breeches/Boots

Tall Riders Say: Pros? Sometimes freakishly tall items are on sale! Cons? Nothing fits. Breeches are too short. “Tall” field/dress Boots are too short. If they fit in the height, they will never fit in the calf. I’m pretty most people aren’t 6 feet tall with calves as wide as a piece of dry spaghetti.

Short Riders Say: Pros? Sometimes freakishly small items are on sale! Cons? Nothing fits. Breeches are too long. I have to roll the ends up eight times and stuff them in my boots, and get bruises at my ankles where all the fabric bunches. “Short” field/dress boots are too tall. They pinch in the back of my knee, especially in the saddle, and I get bruises. If they fit in the height, they will never fit in the calf.
Riding
Tall Riders Say: Pros? If I drop my reins I can easily pick them back up. I can use my size to my advantage on an unruly horse, and I can use my size to promote respect on the ground as they see me at eye level. My legs wrap around the horse’s barrel and help with the lazy ones to get going. On many good sized horses, my feet hang below the barrel! Cons? Longer torso means my center of gravity is higher, so it’s much harder to ride out a buck or naughty behavior. I can’t ride anything smaller than 13/14hh, even if they need a trainer. Trail riding? Be prepared to take out EVERY. SINGLE. SPIDERWEB. (With your face.)
Short Riders Say: Pros? I can ride your daughter’s 11hh leadline pony to keep him in shape, all the way up to an 18hh behemoth. It helps my business that I can “fit” on anything! My compact size makes it tough to unseat me, and we make great jockeys! I don’t have to be as absolutely perfect with my upper body (William Fox-Pitt) to stay out of my horse’s way on cross country. He’ll forgive my little smurf hands if I make a mistake. Cons? These stumps I call legs are not wrapping around the horse unless he’s 11hh. Riding a draft cross is like straddling a sofa. Sometimes in the ring as a trainer when I warm up a child’s horse at a youth only show they think I’m the kid competitor. Once I fell off my horse at a show at my husband grabbed my loose horse (he knows if I’m still breathing, get the horse). The ring steward asked, “Do you want me to hold the horse so you can go check on your daughter?” “That’s my wife.”  (whispers) “She’s so tiny…”
As it turns out, as a short rider, I was under the impression that the grass was always greener. It’s surely easier for tall riders. And I’m sure tall riders think that about us little guys. The truth is, we all struggle. Every BODY is different. So put yours to good use. Go Eventing.
Did we miss one? Post your #shortriderproblems or #tallriderproblems!

#EventerProblems, Vol. 128: A Special Breed, Horses vs. Humans Part 2

Well over a hundred #EventerProblems later I still don’t know who has more screws loose, event horses or the people who ride them. In vol. 127 and 128, we’re letting the two parties face off.

Last week we made a case for horses being the crazier of the two. Today, we’ll let humans take the stage!

https://www.instagram.com/p/BXrStvphh8j/?tagged=eventerproblems

It seemed to work #eventerproblems #eventersolutions #dressageishard #IamCanadian

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Strolling into work on Monday morning with this weekend leftover. #eventerproblems #optimumtime

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So, whaddya think, EN?

Go Eventing.