Classic Eventing Nation

Wylie vs. the Mongol Derby, Powered by SmartPak: Don’t Mess With Texas, Part I

In August 2017 writer/rider Leslie Wylie will be attempting her most fearsome feat of #YOLO yet: a 620-mile race across Mongolia. Riding 25 semi-wild native horses. Carrying only 11 pounds of gear. Relying on nomads for food, water and shelter. On a mission to help stop deforestation.

The Mongol Derby is widely regarded as the toughest horse race in the world. Inspired by the Genghis Khan’s original “pony express,” there’s no trail or set route, just 25 GPS checkpoints/horse exchange stations to hit over the course of 7-10 days. Keep it here for weekly updates from Leslie as she prepares to embark upon the ride of a lifetime! Click here to read previous stories in the series.

“Twelve saddles standing ready. Twelve horses resting up. Tomorrow, we will host a miniature Mongol Derby for two hopeful 2017 riders, Liv Wood of Canada and Leslie Wylie Bateman of USA. We will cover 100 miles, switching horses every 35 miles, in 100 degrees, with 100% humidity. If they can hack it out here, they can hack it anywhere!” — Devan Horn

Part I: Sink or Swim

Here in the South we have a bad habit of inviting people we’ve just met to do things — “Let’s have lunch sometime!” — as a matter of politeness, with no real obligation or even intention of following through. But if we learned anything from last year’s Lady Martha Sitwell series, it’s that you should never invite Leslie Wylie into your life if you don’t mean it. Because she WILL show up on your doorstep.

Whether it’s a fox-chasing party princess in Great Britain or an action hero endurance star in Texas, I never turn down an invitation to take notes from ladies of the bada$$ variety. So when, three minutes into our first phone conversation, 2013 Mongol Derby runner-up Devan Horn invited me to come spend a day training with her in Humble, Texas, I hung up and bought a plane ticket.

Devan is a special human being, or perhaps “superhuman” is more like it. At the tender age of 24, Devan has thrice completed the Tevis Cup, the most prestigious endurance riding event in North America, and in her spare time runs ultramarathons and participates in roller derby, a sport wherein tatted-up girls with nicknames like Nasty Pelosi, Susan B. Agony and Nancy Raygun don roller skates and try to break your knees whilst racing you around a track.

Just another day in the life of Devan. Photo courtesy of Devan Horn.

Of particular interest to me, of course, is the fact that she’s a two-time Mongol Derby veteran, nearly winning it in 2013 and nearly killing herself during a 2015 rematch. In the former, chronicled on this ABC Nightline special, she crossed the finish line first but was issued a time penalty when her horse’s heart rate didn’t come down fast enough, leaving the window open for a rival to win. The second time around, she was urinating blood before the race even began but it wasn’t until day six, when her kidneys were literally shutting down, that she allowed the medics to pull her off course. Third time’s a charm, though, and in 2018 she has her sights set on finally getting the win she came for.

The night before our ride I met my new Derby sensei and her boyfriend Scott at a local Tex-Mex restaurant for dinner. She was everything and nothing I imagined: hair dyed an icy blue with eyes to match, a glacier-sized presence belying her petite 5’2″ stature, and a laugh so warm it could melt Antarctica. (Which is one of few continents she hasn’t attempted to ride across, yet.)

There was no smalltalk, only strategy. Even our chips and salsa became visual aids for Devan’s coaching.

Navigation training: “OK, the chips are your waypoints, and the salsa is the mountain …” Photo by Leslie Wylie.

#DevanDerbyProTips:

  • When your horse spooks at something in the brush, DON’T look back; it’s a wolf.
  • When you’re being hunted by a pack of wild dogs, DON’T fall off, because you WILL get ripped to shreds.
  • Run TOWARD attackers instead of away from them, screaming obscenities, so they’ll deem you too psycho to mess with.
  • Understand that the fastest horses are also going to be the wildest, so if you want to win you better be good at sitting a buck.
  • Know the difference between family gers, which are safe, and bachelor gers, which you want to avoid at all costs.
  • Hobbles will NOT prevent your horse from ditching you overnight.
  • Accept that no matter how repulsive you imagine steppe cuisine will be, it’s going to be even worse in reality.
  • And, most importantly, try to get prescription-grade antispasmodics for your kit. Because when you get giardia, and it feels like you’re being stabbed in the gut each time your horse takes a step, you’re going to want them.

Miles <40

We made plans to ride out at 6 a.m. the next day, along with Liv Wood, a 2017 Derby competitor from Canada who has been training in Texas for the past month. Like Devan, Liv is a honeybadger of the first degree: 25-years-old, bulletproof and fiercely independent, with a velcro seat from galloping racehorses at the track in New York.

Liv’in her best life. Photo courtesy of Liv Wood.

We tore out of Cypress Trails Ranch at two minutes past the hour, just as the sun was rising. Chasing Devan and Liv through the labyrinth woods, I felt like a little kid playing “Chutes and Ladders,” never sure what lay around the next bend.

Dieseletta, the first of my mounts for the day, was a dark bay Egyptian Arabian-cross. Arabians are funny creatures, bred for centuries to go and go and go, yet always reserving the right to spook sideways at lightning speed on account of threats both real and imagined, or slam on the breaks from a full gallop to stop and stare at a puddle.

Dieseletta’s antics made me giggle, but she was brave when it counted. Our route was threaded with creeks and Dieseletta, being the bravest horse of the three, was always appointed first to cross. I felt proud at the first canal we encountered: While the other horses balked, Dieseletta leapt willingly off the bank into the water, trotted across, pinged up the bank out, then turned right to pop across a runoff ditch. Eventer skillz on point!

Mile after mile we pushed further from home, undeterred and perhaps even heartened by a thunderstorm we rode straight into. The downpour was a welcome relief from the scorching Texas summer temps, and I relished the wetness on my bare arms and flushed face.

Riders of the storm. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

The first leg of our ride was only supposed to be around 25 or 30 miles. But at some point, horses on autopilot and conversation in high gear, we got sidetracked, adding another dozen or so miles to our planned route. Once back on course and just about three miles from home, we found ourselves at an impasse. The trail crossed a creek, normally about knee deep, but now looking a bit swollen and rushed due to the storm. Flash floods are common in the area, and the rain had been coming down steadily for a good long while now.

Should we turn back, which would mean a miles-long backtrack on already spent horses? (We’d been trotting or cantering most of the way.) Or forge ahead through the creek, which Devan and Liv had crossed so many times? The barn was so close!

I kept my mouth shut as Liv and Devan debated pros and cons. In the end the decision was made to cross. Dieselette and I headed in first, aiming for patches of grass that indicated shallowness. Then — splash! — we suddenly stepped off some sort of underwater ledge and found ourselves swimming. The breathtakingly strong current sent us swiftly downstream. I grabbed mane, kicked my feet free of my stirrups and let my legs float behind me, just like my sisters and I used to when swimming ponies across the farm pond as kids.

But this time, something was wrong. Dieselette kept going underwater, sinking until her feet touched the bottom then rearing up, thrashing for air, only to sink again. Liv later said it looked like I was riding the Loch Ness Monster.

Devan immediately recognized what was happening: I hadn’t unsnapped Dieselette’s running martingale, and every time she raised her head she was hitting the top of it and panicking. Devan, who insists she would sink like a stone if dropped into an Olympic swimming pool, dove off her own horse and swam toward us in the hope of getting Dieselette free.

Waterlogged photo of the crossing. Photo by Devan Horn.

I let go of the mare, figuring she’d have a better chance of righting herself without a human on her back. For a few terrifying seconds that seemed like hours, Dieselette and I were both floating downstream, me just ahead of her, unable to fight the aggressive current. I tried to swim against it, even cut sideways across it, but couldn’t. A premonition of Dieselette pummeling into me, and all the worst case scenarios that might follow, flashed through my mind. Just in time her hooves found solid ground, and my fists latched onto a clump of brush attached to the shore.

Meanwhile Devan’s horse was gone, well on its way back to the stable, with Liv tailing behind. Devan, Dieselette and I started our slow march home along the waterlogged trail, dripping wet and silent.

I spent a very short moment shrugging off guilt. Devan had tacked Dieselette up that morning for me while I fiddled with a leaky camelback, so how was I supposed to know she was even wearing a martingale? And it wasn’t my decision to cross the creek, so that should absolve me of some responsibility, right?

Wrong. I’m an adult. I’m responsible for myself, and the moment I swing my leg over the back of a horse I assume responsibility for that animal as well. Tack included. If someone else saddles up my horse for me during the Derby, I’m still responsible for checking it. Decisions, and their consequences, included. When it comes to safety, groupthink has no redemptive value after the fact. No excuses, not here in Texas and for damn sure not in Mongolia.

When the trail intersected a road Devan caught a ride with someone from the barn who’d come to fetch her, leaving Dieselette and I to our own devices. “But I don’t know how to get back to the barn!” I shouted after her, remembering the maze of forest paths we’d taken to get here.

“Just give Dieselette her head,” Devan said. “She knows her way home.”

I reluctantly chucked her the reins. The mare picked up an easy canter and set off into the dark woods, veering left or right at each split in trail without hesitation. My own self-confidence, on the other hand, was in tatters and we weren’t even halfway through the ride. Was I in over my head?

To be continued …

Keep up with my adventures in the lead-up to the 2017 Mongol Derby each week on Horse Nation, Eventing Nation and Jumper Nation, and tune into Horses in the Morning each Monday at 10 a.m. EST as I interview Derby crew and previous competitors. 

Each Derby competitor’s $12,995 entry helps benefit the Mongolian families whose generosity with their horses and their homes makes the race possible, as well as Cool Earth, a charity that works alongside indigenous villages to halt rainforest destruction.

Can you help? Please visit the Wylie vs. Mongol Derby GoFundMe page — all donations are deeply and eternally appreciated! Corporate sponsorships are also available and include ad space on EN, HN and JN, product reviews and usage during the Derby and much more. Email [email protected] for details.

Join me in welcoming the newest sponsors in my Mongol Derby adventure! 

SmartPak Equine is already my go-to supplier for gear, supplements and all things equine, so there’s no way I’d head off to Mongolia without them! And you know they’re always up for an adventure. Their apparel line ticks all the boxes for me, from fit to fashion to function. I can’t wait to wear SmartPak on the steppe!

Not only does Fleeceworks make a fantastic product — my own pony goes in a Perfect Balance half pad every day — it’s a company with a conscience. Its “Pads with Purpose” program donates 10-15% of the purchase price of your item to your choice of Fleeceworks-supported charities, from food banks to cancer research to animal rescue. And Fleeceworks’ Easy Care Bamboo line goes hand-in-hand with the Derby’s official charity, Cool Earth.

Just gonna go ahead and venture a prediction that I’m going to need a grab strap out there — my pony can be “semi feral” every now and again, but it sounds like the horses I’m going to be riding are a whole new level of wild. And here’s hoping I never have to repurpose my belt as a tourniquet. Thanks in advance, C4, for the lifeline!

And a big thank you to all my sponsors:

A Bustling Spring for Jan Byyny: USEF’s Newest Eventing Selector

Jan Byyny and Urrem at Bromont in 2016. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

Between being named the newest USEF Eventing Selector and bringing her top mount Inmidair back to the Advanced level following a three-year hiatus, Jan Byyny has had a bustling spring season.

She’s already attended Carolina International, Kentucky and Luhmühlen as a selector, and now that Jan has a better feel for her new role, she kindly took time out of her busy schedule to take us behind the scenes.

“When I was asked to be a selector, my first thought was, ‘I want to be selected for teams. I don’t want to be the one selecting. I’m not done competing yet.’ But since I won’t have a horse that could be considered for the next year or so, I changed my thought process,” Jan said. “I decided if I want to be selected for future teams, then I want to know how it all works.”

Jan is no stranger to representing Team USA, having won winning individual bronze and team gold with Shared Dreams at the 2003 Pan American Games at Fair Hill. She was selected as an alternate for the 2004 Athens Olympics and also represented the U.S. with Task Force at both the 2005 World Cup Finals in Malmö and the 2006 World Equestrian Games in Aachen.

She was also selected to ride at Luhmühlen in 2005 with Waterfront when the U.S. sent a group of riders to compete in the new CCI4* at the venue. Returning to the venue 12 years later as a selector brought an entirely new experience.

Jan enjoying a rare quiet moment at Luhmühlen with her mom Jo, who made the trip to Germany with her.

“We had such a great group of American riders, and everyone really worked together. I was so proud of them,” Jan said. “Even though it was called a ‘soft’ four-star, is there such a thing? Maybe it wasn’t Badminton, but Luhmühlen is never Badminton. It’s Luhmühlen. And the show jumping was tough.”

With her first overseas trip as a selector complete, Jan has been working with the other four selectors — Bobby Costello, Phyllis Dawson, Debbie Furnas and Derek di Grazia — to select the team that will compete next week in the Nations Cup CICO3* at Great Meadow in The Plains, Virginia.

“It is a great group of people. Everyone has a little bit of a different way of looking at things, and I think that’s a healthy thing. We may not always agree, but at the end of the day we all want the same thing — for the U.S. to be the best,” Jan said.

“As a selector, you have to be able to say what you think and not be afraid to be wrong. You listen to the other four people and hear their opinions and then have to be able to say, ‘That’s a great point. I hadn’t thought about it that way.’”

Having been in a position as a rider when she wasn’t named to a team or placed on a training list, Jan said it’s eye-opening to see the “nuts and bolts” of how selection works. “If you’re ready, you’re going to be selected. If you’re not, you’re not. It’s really that simple.”

Jan Byyny and Inmidair at Kentucky in 2014. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Inmidair’s Comeback

While Jan is fully immersed in being a selector, she is also actively seeking her own competition goals. Next week will mark a major milestone as Inmidair, an 18-year-old New Zealand Thoroughbred gelding Jan owns with her parents Dick and Jo, returns to FEI competition for the first time since finishing seventh at the Kentucky CCI4* in 2014.

A soft tissue injury in his foot forced Inmidair’s withdrawal as an alternate from the 2014 World Equestrian Games, and since then Jan has slowly and carefully rehabilitated him. He returned to competing at Pine Top in February and ran the Advanced at Fair Hill’s April Horse Trials. A sixth-place finish in the Virginia CIC2* last month officially signaled that “JR” is back.

“I want to enjoy my time I have with him because he is an awesome horse. He thinks he’s better and badder than ever! He has been so happy to be back out. I learned a valuable lesson at Virginia because I’ve been trying not to jump him too much, but he was wild. I had to gallop him before going cross country just so he would be rideable,” Jan said.

“It was great information to take away. I said to myself, ‘Jan if you’re going to keep going with him, you have to train him!’ I want to be a horseman and competitive. If I’m going to do this, I want to win, but I want to do it the right way.”

Jan said having three years away from competing at the Advanced level proved to be a valuable time, both to produce her younger horses coming up the levels and also to focus on furthering her own education.

“I realized things I needed to improve on. We had success before because JR is really talented and we’re both gutsy, but now we have to be better than that because the sport has moved on,” Jan said.

“When you haven’t run Advanced for awhile and you want to make time and be competitive, you have to make sure you have prepared yourself to do that. That’s not always an easy task, but it’s a fun task. I’m thoroughly enjoying it.”

Jan Byyny and Urrem at Carolina International 2016. Photo by Jenni Autry.

As for the horses in her string she hopes will be in contention for teams in the coming years, Urrem, a 9-year-old Selle Francais mare Jan owns with her parents, continues to be a standout. The mare sustained a tendon injury in the Plantation Field CIC2* last year but is back to competing now; Jan plans to aim her for the Fair Hill CCI2* this fall.

“She’s probably one of the nicest horses I’ve ever had. The way she went around Plantation last year made me think she was ready for the next level, but I think it’s good to make sure you have your i’s dotted and t’s crossed before stepping up to Advanced. She’s super brave, fun and careful — completely an alpha mare but probably the sweetest thing I’ve ever had.”

Jan also has Volcan de Caverie, an 8-year-old Selle Francais gelding, who hasn’t finished outside the top 10 since stepping up to the Preliminary level at Sporting Days in March.

Jan on the mower preparing for Surefire.

In the midst of all this, Jan continues to run a thriving training and boarding facility alongside her boyfriend Tom Finnen at Surefire Farm, which once again hosted one of Area II’s most popular summer horse trials last week in Purcellville, Virginia.

“Going to Luhmühlen as a selector wasn’t ideal timing since we were getting ready for Surefire the following weekend — thank you to Tom for staying home to keep getting everything ready! — but I am so grateful that I had the opportunity,” Jan said.

“Even though I wasn’t competing, I felt proud to be an American. Everything about it was inspiring — even watching the CIC3* with all the Germans preparing for the European Championships and seeing the quality of the dressage. Being a selector is a fascinating role, and I feel honored that I was asked.”

Sharon Polding Living the Amateur Dream With Championship Selection

Sharon Polding and Findonfirecracker. Photo courtesy of Robert Polding.

The CIC2* Senior European Eventing Championships for amateur riders takes place in Tongeren, Belgium, from 27 to 30 July, and Great Britain’s team selection has just been announced. For team debutante Sharon Polding, it is a dream come true.

“I was in a work meeting trying to be quiet and hold it together when I heard the news. I was humbled to be selected, and I feel extremely proud,” recalls Sharon, aged 45, who works as a global account manager for a telecommunications company.

“For someone like me, a mum and a hard-working amateur, to be asked to compete for your country is something you dream of as a kid, but you never expect to actually happen.”

Fabulous Findonfirecracker

Sharon has been selected to contest the event with her own 10-year-old mare, Findonfirecracker, having placed just outside the top 20 at Bramham International CIC3* in June, and having shown consistent form at Open Intermediate level this year.

“I bought Findonfirecracker, or Dizzy, as a foal and she was delivered to me when she was weaned, as she is half-sister to my homebred, and I wanted two foals running together,” remembers Sharon. “She is a loving, sweet-natured, sensitive horse who loves to compete, especially jump. ‘Stressage’ is not her favourite phase, but she can do a great test.”

Dizzy is Sharon’s horse of a lifetime and her best friend, she says. “I had a lifelong ambition to complete a CIC3*, and in particular at Blenheim, and she helped me achieve this in 2016 [placing 24th]. Dizzy is also the only horse to become the National Riding Club Open Individual Show Jumping and also the Horse Trials Champion in the same year [in 2013].”

Dizzy made the step up from one-star to two-star two years ago in 2015. But how did Sharon know her plucky mare was ready?

“Dizzy stepped up when she was 8-years-old, although she didn’t start eventing until she was 6, as I’d had a baby, so she had to wait!” Sharon says. “It was a natural progression, as she had completed a couple of one-star double clear and was starting to be competitive at Intermediate. She has now completed Blenheim, Burnham Market and most recently Bramham CIC3*, all double clear.”

Sharon Polding and Dizzy were the UK’s National Riding Club Open Individual Show Jumping Champions and also the Horse Trials Champions in 2013.

‘I Want to Wrap Her in Cotton Wool’

Sharon admits she wants to wrap Dizzy in cotton wool and ‘bubble wrapping’ ahead of the championships, but concedes that they do need at least one more run. “We are heading to Brightling Park for the CIC2* next week, plus some show jumping and dressage thereafter to keep her brain entertained.”

The Kent-based rider has been riding all her life; Sharon hunted regularly, and competed in the UK’s Pony Club Championships in eventing and show Jumping.

“I would have loved to have been a professional rider, but did not have the backing, facilities or funding, so in 1990 I began commuting to London for work to be able to afford to keep my horse at livery and ride after work and event.”

She purchased that horse, Abbygail, as a 5-year-old from the local riding school. “She was only 15.1 hands, but had great breeding. She evented up to CCI2* and did a couple of Advanced, and became my foundation mare.”

Sharon Polding’s daughter Poppy with her mare, Dizzy. Photo by Sharon Polding.

Poppy Pops Up

Sharon married her husband Robert in 2002; the pair thought children ‘were never going to be’ so Sharon focussed on breeding horses, considering the equines to be her ‘surrogate’ children. “Well, that was the plan,” she rues.

Then in 2011, daughter Poppy arrived, now 5 years old. “I still work full-time in a senior role and am semi-based from home, but I do travel and often work very late and long hours; but ‘needs must’ to fund the horses,” she tells us of her hectic, plate-juggling lifestyle.

With multiple time constraints upon her, Sharon made the decision a few years ago to keep just one horse to compete, Dizzy. “I have sold a number of youngsters and get immense pleasure from watching them. One of my babies is Georgisaurous; I sold him to William Fox-Pitt and he is 6 now. I watch the horse’s progress with pride.” (The pair is doing well at Novice, and recently won at Chatsworth International).

“I still have two former Advanced broodmares and am still breeding, but now not all for me; I have come to terms with the fact I can’t keep them all,” Sharon continues.

A future star? Sharon Polding’s daughter Poppy with her mare, Dizzy. Photo by Sharon Polding.

National Selection Makes It All Worthwhile

“I won’t lie, it takes hard work and very long hours to juggle the job and be a wife and mother,” Sharon tells us. “I still start the day at about 5:30 a.m. and am often out riding after I have put Poppy to bed, so I am not distracted. Luckily, Robert is a good cook! And when things like the national selection happen, it is all worth it.”

Sharon advises others chasing the dream to work hard and never give up. “Just because professionals do this for a living, it does not make them any better than us amateurs,” she tells us. “Dream big, as good things come to those that wait and who are deserving of it.”

The CIC2* Senior European Eventing Championship is a bi-annual event that provides a unique eventing format: a ‘team dressage’ test, an individual dressage test, the cross country round and finally the show jumping phase.

Sharon’s fellow British team members are: Simon Ashworth and Sunny III, Steve Garrod and Ufonzo, Nicky Hill and MGH Bingo Boy, Victoria Leabeater and Dolces E, Indiana Limpus and Bronze Dandylion, Lauren Mclusky and Ballycreen Milord, and Jack Pinkney and LB Liberator.

Fab Freebie: Horseware Rambo Fly Buster Vamoose Sheet & Fly Mask

Photo by Kate Samuels

Fly season is in full swing across North America, and we’re excited to team up with Horseware to help you combat flying foes. The Rambo Fly Buster Vamoose Fly Sheet is one of our top choices this season thanks to the design, fit and fabric.

Let’s start with the fabric. It’s self-healing. How many times have you brought a horse in from the field only to find that he rolled on a stick and ripped his fancy new fly sheet in half? But with the Fly Buster Vamoose you don’t have to worry. Holes and indents are easily fixed, and the fabric remains as strong as ever.

Think that sounds too good to be true? Check out this video Charlotte Dujardin posted on Instagram showing how easy it is to repair a hole in the Rambo Fly Buster Vamoose:

It’s like magic! Even better, the sheet features Horseware’s patented Vamoose technology, which means the fabric has been treated with permethrin. In addition to repelling mosquitos, ants, ticks, flies, midges and chiggers, the permethrin treatment can survive 70 trips through the washing machine.

The Rambo Fly Buster Vamoose Fly Sheet is on sale right now for $200. Horseware also just launched a fly sheet trade-in for U.S. and Canadian residents. If you trade in a clean, used flysheet from ANY blanket brand, you can get $30 off any Rambo fly sheet. The trade-in runs through July 21. Click here to find a participating retailer near you.

And now it’s time for one lucky EN reader to win a Rambo Fly Buster Vamoose Sheet and Fly Mask from Horseware! Enter using the Rafflecopter widget below. Entries will close Sunday at midnight EST, and we will announce the winner in Monday News & Notes. Go Eventing.

Thursday News & Notes from Nupafeed

Just two foxes in Middleburg VA enjoying a snooze! Photo by Scott Stephens.

You guys. You guys. I went a WHOLE day wearing shorts this past weekend. I was at a ground handling clinic taught by Trevor Carter and hosted by Days End Farm Horse Rescue (which was awesome by the way) so I felt comfortable bringing out my blindingly white legs for one of the days. Because, if horse people won’t understand why your legs are so damn pale in June, who will, right? Anyway, I’m pretty sunburnt now.

National Holiday: National Bomb Pop Day

U.S. Weekend Preview:

Horse Park of New Jersey I H.T. [Website] [Entry Status]

Chattahoochee Hills H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

South Farm H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Live Scores]

News From Around the Globe:

William Fox Pitt announced yesterday that his 4* partner Oslo will be retiring from competition. The 15-year-old gelding has a slew of 3* wins to his name, as well as his 4* debut at Pau in 2011. He has been in William’s yard since the age of 4, winning Le Lion as a 6-year-old and coming runner up the next year as a 7-year-old. Unfortunately, he’s proven to not enjoy much soundness as an older horse, so they’ve decided to call it a day and let him enjoy an early retirement. [Oslo Retires]

Do you listen to At The Races with Steve Byk? It’s a long-running and highly popular Thoroughbred racing news show, and the recent Equestrian Scene segments hosted by Leslie Knauf have featured eventing! Both Laine Ashker and Marcia Kulak have been guests on the show to talk about Kentucky CCI4* and the sport in general. [#1 with Leslie Knauf] [#2 with Laine Ashker] [#3 with Marcia Kulak]

Fly season, tick season, Lyme season. A fair number of horses are diagnosed with Lyme every year, and there just isn’t a good way to prevent them from ever getting a tick bite, so undoubtedly you’ll come upon it once in your horse owning career. There are proven medical treatments to use, but Horse Nation also found a few holistic supplements that help boost your horse’s immune system while the antibiotics do their work. [Holistic Treatments for Lyme]

He’s 20, he’s a Thoroughbred, and he’s still winning Grand Prix classes. Just another plain brown wrapper he is not, as Panache keeps on kicking when he is usually the oldest, and definitely the only thoroughbred in the competition. He proved age is just a number this past week in Iowa by winning three $20,000 Grand Prix classes and two of the three Welcome Stakes at Mid States Horse Shows. No biggie. [Panache is Peaking at 20 With Grand Prix Win Streak]

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Ultimate Drill Team

The Household Cavalry Mounted Regiment is perhaps one of the most high-profile mounted units in the world, primarily used now for ceremonial purposes. The famous twice-daily ceremony of the Horse Guard is perhaps the best-known example, but the traveling musical ride is also a banner event wherever it’s performed.

When viewed from above via time lapse, it really sinks in just how masterful the Mounted Regiment is for this ultimate drill team performance:

The musical ride is typically performed as a special event at horse shows, agricultural fairs and major British events (such as this display at Olympia in 2015). This particular performance shown above was held during an Open Day, in which the public is welcomed to Combermere Barracks to watch the regiment’s equestrian skills on display.

The Household Cavalry also has front-line combat duties in an unmounted capacity, and most members of the Mounted Regiment will serve on both units. Very cool!

FootWise: Poor hooves causing lameness? Ask your vet about FootWise™.

  • Aids in the elimination of dry, flaky hair coats and brittle manes and tails
  • Maintains healthy hoof tissues so they are less susceptible to developing hoof problems such as thrush and white line disease
  • Sustains a strong, resilient hoof wall, reducing the incidence of cracks, chips, and lost shoes
  • Supports the regrowth of healthy hoof after injury or surgery

For more information, visit KPPvet.com.

Announcing the 7th Annual EN Blogger Contest Finalists!

The 7th Annual Eventing Nation Blogger Contest drew its usual massive number of entries, and the chinchillas judging panel narrowed the submissions to eight finalists. This is an international contest that once again attracted attention from all over the world, and we have to thank everyone who took the time to enter.

We will be publishing the finalists’ first round entries over the next week, so be sure to keep checking back to EN. Give us your feedback in the comments, and please offer your encouragement and support to the finalists! We hope you enjoy their creativity, insight and love of the sport.

Without further ado, congratulations to the finalists:

Rebecca Barber
Tilly Berendt
Madelyn Floyd
Amber Leone
Amy Nelson
Drew Palmer
Jolynn Wagner
Renee Wright

Now our finalists will be hard at work on their round two submission. Here’s the prompt:

Eventing has been approved for inclusion in the Olympics through 2024 under an altered format, but the sport still faces uphill battles both in the U.S. and abroad. What can we do to make eventing more appetizing, engaging and understandable to the mainstream public? Share your ideas in an interesting, funny, informative and creative way.

Entries are due Wednesday, July 5 at midnight EST. Good luck to all the finalists! Go Eventing.

Meet the 2017 USEF Eventing Selectors

With the U.S. team for the Nations Cup at Great Meadow CICO3* expected to be named at any time (click here to view the selection procedure), let’s take a look at the USEF Eventing Selectors for the 2017 season.

Jan Byyny is the newest selector, taking the place of Marcia Kulak, who served as a selector during the 2013-2016 seasons. Bobby Costello remains the chair, and Phyllis Dawson, Debbie Furnas and Derek di Grazia also remain selectors.

Jan has had a busy spring to kick off her new role, acting as a selector at Carolina International, Kentucky and Luhmühlen. She also has her top mount, Inmidair, making a return to the three-star level at Great Meadow.

Stay tuned for an interview with Jan as we catch up on all the latest with her, and read on to get to know the five USEF Eventing Selectors.

Bobby Costello at Luhmuhlen in 2014. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Bobby Costello garnered a slew of top results during his career as an international event rider, including placing eighth individually at the 2000 Sydney Olympics aboard Chevalier. He also won team gold at the 2003 Pan American Games with Dalliance. He has served on the boards of the USET, USEA and USEF; chaired the USEF Active Athletes (2001-2008) and USEF Eventing High Performance (2009-2012) committees; and is chair of the USEF Eventing Selectors.

Jan Byyny and Urrem at Bromont 2016. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

Jan Byyny is an international event rider with numerous top results to her name, including winning individual bronze and team gold with Shared Dreams at the 2003 Pan American Games at Fair Hill. She was selected as an alternate for the 2004 Athens Olympics and also represented the U.S. with Task Force at both the 2005 World Cup Final in Malmö and the 2006 World Equestrian Games in Aachen. She has competed at Kentucky, Badminton, Burghley, Luhmühlen and Pau.

Phyllis Dawson, right, serves in many roles within the sport, most recently sitting on the USEA Board of Governors. Diane Pitts presented Phyllis with an award at the 2016 USEA Convention for her excellent sense of humor as seen during the BOG Joke and Talent Night. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

Phyllis Dawson competed at many of the world’s most prestigious international competitions during her career as an event rider at the highest level of the sport. She represented the U.S. at the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul with Albany II, where they finished 10th as the highest-placed American pair, and the 1997 Open European Championships at Burghley with Snowy River. She operates a training and breeding facility out of her Windchase Farm in Purcellville, Virginia.

Bobby Costello, Debbie Furnas and Emma Ford at Luhmühlen in 2014, the final selection trial before the U.S. team was named for the World Equestrian Games in Normandy. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Debbie Furnas worked with Torrance Watkins and Stephen Bradley before going on to manage Bruce Davidson’s Chesterland Farm during the heyday of his success. She also served as the U.S. team stable manager at the 1994 World Equestrian Games at The Hague. She later worked with the Canadian eventing team at the 2006 WEG in Aachen, going on to become Canada’s stable manager in 2007 and working with the team at the 2010 WEG in Lexington, when they won a silver medal.

Derek di Grazia still actively competes at the Intermediate and two-star level, seen here with Ringwood Justice at Twin Rivers in March. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

Derek di Grazia represented the U.S. at the 1986 Gawler World Championships with Sasquatch before becoming one of the world’s top cross country course designers. He is the course designer for Kentucky CCI4*, as well as Fair Hill and Bromont. Derek will make his championship debut as the course designer for the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo, becoming the third U.S. course designer in history to design at an Olympics. He still actively competes at the two-star level.

What’s in Your Arena? Presented by Attwood: Eventing Equitation Challenge

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.

If you’re expecting ho-hum “inside, outside, inside, outside” hunter courses think again. A Maclay Medal class can have bounces, options, angles and more. Photo via MaclayMedal.com.

We eventers think of ourselves as tough, but how would you hang in a class full of Maclay Medal finalists? I’m pretty sure I’d get dismissed from the ring before I even made it to the first jump.

Equitation classes, especially at the highest levels, are fascinating studies in form meeting function, and it’s not surprising that many winners of the Maclay Final have gone on to represent the U.S. in international show jumping competition. From legends like Bill Steinkraus, Frank Chapot and George Morris to present-day Olympians, if you can win the Maclay, the sky’s the limit for your riding career. A handful of past Maclay winners, like J. Michael Plumb and Bernie Traurig, have even gone on to contest the upper echelons of eventing!

What can we learn from these masters of style? Plenty! Stride length and rhythm. Counting steps. Riding accurate lines. Making a plan and sticking to it.

MedalMaclay.com is home to a sketch collection of over 50 equitation courses from various national medal finals from the 1980s onward, and encourages riders to print them out and set them up in their rings at home.

Here’s one, for instance, that would be easy enough to set up.

Try riding it as is, then for an extra challenge attempt the “Test” described in the lower lefthand corner, used to determine the top placings. Which of the 2008 top four riders — Jessica Springsteen, Victoria Birdsall, Zazou Hoffman and Christy DiStefano–jumped it best?

You be the judge, then click here to find out who actually won the class.

Do you have an exercise to share or is there an eventer you would like to nominate for the “What’s in Your Arena?” series? Email [email protected].

Who Jumped It Best? Essex Preliminary Rider Edition

It’s time to play Who Jumped It Best? Essex Preliminary Rider Edition! The Mars Essex Horse Trials made a triumphant return this past weekend at Moorland Farm in Far Hills, New Jersey.

Buck Davidson swept the Open Preliminary division, with Alice Roosevelt and Fernhill Zoro taking the win in the Preliminary Rider division. Thanks to Joan Davis/Flatlandsfoto, we have beautiful photos of the Preliminary Rider division tackling Morgan Rowsell’s course.

Put on your George Morris hat and vote in the poll below for which horse and rider combination you think present the best overall picture. Click here to view full results from the Mars Essex Horse Trials. Go Eventing.

Corinne Ashton and Call Calvin. Photo by Joan Davis/Flatlandsfoto.

Genevieve Faith and Burned You Too. Photo by Joan Davis/Flatlandsfoto.

Anne Hambleton and Should Expect. Photo by Joan Davis/Flatlandsfoto.

Ellie Luther and Fair Fiona. Photo by Joan Davis/Flatlandsfoto.

Stefanie Mazza and Brigantine. Photo by Joan Davis/Flatlandsfoto.

Alice Roosevelt and Fernhill Zoro. Photo by Joan Davis/Flatlandsfoto.