Classic Eventing Nation

Tuesday Video from SpectraVET: Can Michael & Rocana Win Again?

Michael Jung and fischerRocana FST return to the Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event seeking a third consecutive win, an achievement that would give these two yet another stamp in the history books. Our friends at EquiRatings noted that if Rocana wins, she would join the the great Winsome Adante, who won Rolex three times with Kim Severson in 2002, 2004 and 2005.

Winning three times at the same venue is no small feat, but it’s hard to bet against the dynamic duo of this double Olympic gold medalist and the Rolex Queen herself. You can relive their cross country round from a rainy day at last year’s Rolex thanks to this video — and let’s all hope for drier weather come Saturday!

#RK3DE Links: Website, Schedule, Entries, EN’s Coverage, Live Stream, EN’s Twitter, EN’s Instagram

Why SpectraVET?

Reliable. Effective. Affordable.

SpectraVET is committed to providing only the highest-quality products and services to our customers, and to educating the world in the science and art of laser therapy.

We design and manufacture the broadest range of clinically-proven veterinary therapeutic laser products, which are represented and supported worldwide by our network of specialist distributors and authorized service centers.

Weekly OTTB Wishlist From Cosequin: Kentucky Edition

Heading to Rolex? In the market for an OTTB? You’ve come to the right place.

Not only does the Kentucky Horse Park offer some fantastic OTTB window shopping via its own Maker’s Mark Secretariat Center, you’re in the heart of Thoroughbred country! Take the opportunity to find the OTTB of your dreams.

Here are three OTTBs available through CANTER Kentucky that we’d love to see in a cross country startbox someday.

Photo via CANTER Kentucky.

Little Hali (Alphabet Soup – Tough Heart, by Lion Hearted): 2014 16.0-hand New York bred mare

Little Hali is an adorable grey/roan filly with dapples galore! Hali is almost 16 hands and still growing. She has raced only five times to date and is being retired 100% sound. She is 2017 Thoroughbred Makeover eligible.

She has clean, tight legs with no previous injuries. Hali will need an experienced rider and handler because she is young and energetic. She is being retired because she gets too nervous at the race track so she would be better suited for a different discipline. This lovely lady is a nice mover and could go in any direction with some additional schooling! If you are looking for a youngster with a clean slate to grow with then Hali will be the perfect horse for you.

Located at Turfway Park in Florence, KY.

View Little Hali on CANTER Kentucky.

Photo via CANTER Kentucky.

Rontos Society (Street Sense – Wander Storm, by Storm Bird): 2012 16.0+ hand Kentucky bred gelding

Rontos Society is a handsome, nicely put together dark bay gelding. He is by 2007 Kentucky Derby Winner Street Sense, and out of Wander Storm, with great bloodlines.

He has only nine starts and is being retired because he is not competitive on the race track but could easily transition to a new career. His trainer says he is easy to handle with a pleasant disposition and a great appetite! She says he is quiet, loads well and has no bad habits on the ground or under saddle. His connections at CANTER think he could go in any direction with some additional training.

Located at Turfway Park in Florence, KY.

View Rontos Society on CANTER Kentucky.

Photo via CANTER Kentucky.

Syd and Liv (Maclean’s Music – Dowd Chapel, by Stormy Atlantic): 2014 16.2-hand Indiana bred filly

Syd and Liv is a beautiful dark bay filly with nice bloodlines that include Distorted Humor, Fortyniner and Storm Cat.

She is an impressive 16.2 hands and still growing!! This young lady is UNRACED and 100% sound. She was just too slow to even make it to the race track but could easily excel in a variety of disciplines with some additional training. Syd and Liv has clean legs with nice conformation. Once she fills out and gets some more muscle tone she will be stunning and sure to turn heads in the show ring! If you’re looking for a young, blank slate to grow with, Syd and Live will be the perfect project.

She is located at her owner’s farm in Union, Kentucky.

View Sig and Liv on CANTER Kentucky.

EN’s Annual Rolex Pick ‘Em Contest, Presented by Omega Alpha

Take your best guess! Take your best guess!

It’s Rolex time, and you know what that means! It’s EN’s Contest Week! And it wouldn’t be EN’s Contest Week without our annual Pick ‘Em Contest brought to you by Omega Alpha. So we challenge you, dear readers, to pick the winner of Rolex.

Get your calculators, Excel spreadsheets, FEI rider rankings, your Magic-8 Ball, your lucky T-shirt, maybe say some “Hail Mary Kings” and attempt to predict who will walk away with that coveted Rolex watch come Sunday.

Here’s how you play: Give us the name of the horse/rider combination you think will win and their overall score. As a tiebreaker, include your guess for who will finish 2nd (score not required).

The contest entry with the correct horse/rider, closest score (and correct runner-up, if necessary) will win a prize package from Omega Alpha! The prize package includes:

  • 1 gallon of Sinew-X Plus HA (joint, muscle & ligament formula with hyaluronic acid and no MSM)
  • 1 500 ml bottle of RegenerEQ (appetite stimulant and G.I. regenerator)
  • 6 tubes of Chill Ultra (calming with focus for the mind while relaxing the muscles)

Please email your entries to [email protected] with “Pick ‘Em” in the title. Contest closes Thursday at 8 a.m. EST before the first dressage test. Entries are only open to readers in the U.S. and Canada.

Here’s the entry list. Go Eventing.

EN Has An App!

What are you waiting for? Go download the app!

That’s right, EN readers! After all these years, EN is finally becoming just a bit more technologically savvy by launching our very own app. Just in time for Rolex, we’re hoping the app will offer you one more way to read and interact with your favorite eventing website.

Here’s a handy FAQ about the new app:

1. How do I download the app? Just search “Eventing Nation” in the iOS App Store or Google Play Store on your phone or tablet. It’s free!

Download the EN app for iOS

Download the EN app for Android

2. Why should I use the app? There are some super cool features, like being able to save stories as favorites so you can read them later, even offline! You can also activate push notifications so you know the minute we publish a new story.

3. Is the app working perfectly? I’m glad you asked. The answer is no! Please bear with us as the chinchillas work out the final bugs.

4. What if I think the app is the coolest thing ever? The chinchillas give their sincere thanks. If you could give us a 5-star rating in the App Store, you will earn eternal EN karma.

Questions? Comments? Concerns? Email [email protected]. We’ll be rolling out some new features and fixes to better the user experience in the next update. For now, enjoy the app!

Go Eventing.

William Micklem: Fit to Do the Job, Part 2 – Keeping You and Your Horse Safe

We are pleased to introduce a new series on the subject of fitness from guest columnist William Micklem. Click here to read all of William’s guest columns on EN. Many thanks to William for writing, and thanks for reading. Go Eventing.

“The horse’s intuition is being trained out of them and they are waiting for instructions from the athlete without thinking for themselves.” — Mike Etherington-Smith & Capt. Mark Phillips, Safety Conference Tattersalls 2017. Photo by Shems Hamilton.

The first three keys to producing a fit horse are covered in the first part of this series. Click here to read William Micklem: Fit to Do the Job, Part I – So Much More Than Canter Sets.

4. Hills and varied terrain are golden

… do you use hills? Use them and you can reduce both speed and distance by up to 33%

‘Don’t Fence Me In’ is not just a song title, it is the key requirement

It needs to start early but slowly, especially for event horses. Up and down hills, over banks and through water, slow hacking and gradual exposure to their working lives. Not forgetting plenty of time … plenty of time to develop both physically and mentally.

The phenomenal success of the Irish event horses, and even their soundness and longevity, undoubtedly has both nature and nurture components, and the nurturing component is done well in Ireland. We have space and relatively little flat land, and hundreds of small breeders with just one or two mares who largely avoid the hurry and worst excesses of equine factory farming, with too many horses in small paddocks and small arenas being fast tracked to sales. But the right nurturing needs to start early when horses are in the equivalent of their child and teenage years, otherwise the chance is missed.

The New Zealand young horses also have an upbringing that is similar to those in Ireland and their hills and space are good for their riders as well. Andrew Nicholson and the majority of the New Zealand international riders started their riding over varied terrains and all these riders believe this has been a significant factor in the eventing success of a country with very few event riders. As an interesting comparison there are currently over four and a half times as many registered international riders in the USA as there are in New Zealand, so the New Zealand riders punch well above their weight.

The research also shows clearly that using hills for canter work can reduce both the speed required and distance covered by up to 33% to get the same effect as by using flat areas. The obvious huge advantage this brings is the reduction in risk for tendon and ligament damage, and generally less wear and tear. In a sport in which long term soundness is vital using hills is therefore a no brainer,

So the bottom line for both physical and mental fitness is that ‘Don’t Fence Me In’ is much more than a Bing Crosby song title, it is a key requirement for success. 

5. Fifth leg training

… is essential for mental fitness for cross country

… do you teach your horse to stand on his own four/five feet?

It’s all about how much your horse can do for you

Andrew Nicholson is rightly critical of modern training that doesn’t prepare a horse for the inevitable surprises across country and the inevitable times a rider will make a mistake. He wants a horse to use their intuition, to look after a rider and respond in times of need, and to find what I call the fifth leg to get them out of trouble. I describe some of his schooling exercises to achieve this in my report of his presentation at the International Eventing Forum in 2016.

I often say that the sign of a good coach is not how much they have to do for their student but how much they can do by themselves, and the same applies to good horse training. So in everything you do there should be an effort to avoid over riding and avoid over organising. It is often hard to do, particularly if you find seeing strides easy. But it is vital.

Allowing a horse to go in a natural outline with a natural head and neck position, making sure the rein contact is a communication point rather than a support point is the foundation of fifth leg training. This should happen in all activities including both the dressage and show jumping, and it can be very helpful to jump grids with no rein contact.

They can also be jumped without a rider, just as they do with National Hunt racehorses. National Hunt steeplechasing in the UK and Ireland is not for the faint hearted. Horses gallop flat out over a standard 1.40m fence and also do this at the end of a race when tired. So there is a big emphasis on good jumping and all the leading trainers regularly jump their horses loose. So I often suggest to a group of riders that they get together and hire a suitable facility and coach to loose jump their horses.

It is also possible and helpful to put sleepers or small solid fences between fields and in other places where the horse has to go slowly on a daily basis. Banks can also be built near stabling and along the side of access roads so that your horse has to regularly look carefully and develop care and dexterity when you ride them out. This should be done slowly, with the horse in walk or slow trot. It can form part of an overall fifth-leg programme combined with riding out over varied terrain and progressive exercises in the school as described by Andrew Nicholson and shown by Michael Jung as he jumps schooling cross country fences on the lightest of rein contact.

You can read more about fifth leg training in my article entitled Safety and Responsibility. 

6. Strength and suppleness comes before speed

… is all your horse fit to go faster?

Can they easily do a 2 hour hack including 20 min trotting up hills?

Slow canter is very safe, gallop is high risk

Strength, suppleness and and a good basic fitness should be developed before doing any faster galloping work. It is an obvious necessity but as ever so many are tempted to cut corners, especially with talented horses and riders who are tempted with big prizes in the short term. This will inevitably lead to injuries and long term delayed and restricted progress.

On average most horses will take about 2 months to get to this stage but it depends on each horse: 1) whether they have ever been fit before 2) how much weight they are carrying 3) how long a holiday they have had 4) what type of horse they are, and 5) what exercise they have been taking when turned out. Therefore some will take three months to get to this stage and others just one month.

Many trainers just walk their horses for the first three or four weeks but I prefer the method that Jack Le Goff often recommended, of alternating the walking with short periods of lungeing. The problem with long periods of walk is that there is no variation of muscle group use and the riders weight stays exactly the same for long periods. So it can be tough on the horse’s back. When trotting and cantering is introduced this is not a problem but until then quality lungeing sessions will do what is required and can help the way of going enormously.

Good lungeing can put the horse ‘in gear’, thinking forwards with contro;;ed impulsion. Being ‘in gear’ does not mean going fast but going fast requires being ‘in gear’. So the sooner this is established the better for your cantering and galloping programme. It is also obviously detrimental to every aspect of your training program if your horse gallops with a stiff or inverted back or in a manner that is out of control.

You rarely get into trouble with slow cantering but going faster, and in particular going close to a horse’s maximum speed, increases the risk of injury exponentially. This is why it is so important for event horses to have plenty of gallop so they can go well within their maximum speed. It is no coincidence that the majority of long lasting upper level event horses in the USA are TB or have at least 75% TB and we should not be led astray to using horses that are impressive in the dressage and show jumping but short of gallop and endurance.

As a rule of thumb a higher-level horse needs to be able to go at approximately 800m/m at maximum and the majority of the basic cantering is done at half speed = 400m/m. NB: A racehorse may have a maximum between 1,000 and 1,200m/m, so you can see why our eventing half speed is much slower than a racehorse half speed.

It is important to be precise and learn how to judge speed precisely. So do you know what speed you are going and what speed is required? It is easy to measure a distance and put markers at 100m intervals and start this process even when slow cantering. For example rider needs to regularly practise going at 300m/m, 350m/m, 400m/m and eventually 500m/m and faster and know they can easily judge and control the speed. After the right direction it is the next most important component in a performance.

NB Alternative training aids for fitness: There are now many more opportunities to use training aids for fitness such as walkers, treadmills, aqua treadmills and swimming. What is important is to recognise that they all have obvious advantages and disadvantages. The major disadvantage of all these aids is the very real possibility of depressing your horse. It is impossible for a horse to understand why these aids are being used, so they should be used carefully and should be a comfortable experience for them.

I hate horse walkers that are fully enclosed and become like a never ending tunnel but more open ones are good. All round walkers also have the huge advantage of helping to put the horse in shoulder in position as they walk because they cling to the inside of the walker not the outside rail as in a dressage arena. This is a significant advantage with developing straightness.

It is also a significant disadvantage with all types of treadmills. Particularly as the come under physical pressure they become crooked as they rely more on their stronger hind leg and side. This is obviously unhelpful for the even development of a horse. While swimming is a lifeline for horses with old injuries the same crookedness can appear.

FITTENING RULES OF THUMB

 Length of time before a horse is ready to start a proper cantering program

When you can do a 2 hour hack easily, including approximately 20 minutes trotting up hills, or approximately 30 minutes on the flat, you are ready for cantering.

DO YOU KNOW HOW FAST YOU ARE GOING?

Slow Canter = 300 m/m

Novice Show Jumping = 350 m/m

1/2 Speed = 400 m/m

Basic Gallop = 500 m/m

3/4 Speed = 600 m/m

Max Speed = 800 m/m

NEXT TIME: Fit To Do The Job, Part 3 – It’s All About Balance

Rider balance and fitness, an integrated training programme, and an example of a competition cantering programme.

How to Watch Rolex Kentucky 2017 Online

Will Michael Jung and fischerRocana FST win for a third consecutive year? Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

If you can’t be in Kentucky this week to watch Rolex in person, don’t despair! If you live in North America, you can watch the entire event for free thanks to the live stream on USEF Network. If you live outside North America, FEI TV is also live streaming the event.

This year’s USEF Network broadcast will offer more coverage than ever before, as both horse inspections will be streamed live, as well as the new Champions Live! panel — hosted by Jimmy Wofford and featuring Phillip Dutton, Silva Martin and Melanie Smith Taylor — on Sunday morning.

USEF Network Live Broadcast Schedule (all times EST)

Wednesday, April 26: First horse inspection at 3 p.m.
Thursday, April 27: Dressage from 8 a.m.-noon and 1:30-3:40 p.m.
Friday, April 28: Dressage from 8:30 a.m.-noon and 1:30-4:30 p.m.
Saturday, April 29: Cross country from 10 a.m.- 4 p.m.
Sunday, April 30: Second horse inspection at 8 a.m.
Champions Live! with Jimmy Wofford from 9:30-11 a.m.
Show jumping from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. EST
Awards ceremony at 3 p.m. EST

FEI TV: For those who live outside North America, FEI TV will air each day of the competition Thursday to Sunday. Check the FEI TV schedule to see broadcast times in your area. FEI TV requires a subscription.

NBC: The NBC broadcast of Rolex highlights is scheduled for Sunday, May 7 at 1:30 p.m. EST. Go set your DVR!

If you can’t watch live, following along with EN’s open threads, presented by SmartPak, is the next best thing. Be sure to check EN each morning of the competition for a link to follow our live commentary. We’ll also be tweeting live all week long @eventingnation. Keep checking back this week for all our coverage of Rolex.

Tuesday News & Notes from Cavalor

The eventing community has been buzzing ever since Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson posted this photo on Instagram over the weekend. Of course, we couldn’t resist asking Will Coleman what “The Rock” is like. “He’s just a great dude and loves horses,” Will told EN. As if we weren’t already huge fans of The Rock, how cool is it to know that one of Hollywood’s biggest stars is just as horse crazy as the rest of us?

We also have to send a special shout out to Will, who is competing two horses at a CCI4* for the first time in his career. “It’s a big deal for us, the owners and my sponsors to have both OBOS O’Reilly and Tight Lines entered at Rolex, and we’re really excited for the week ahead.” Best of luck to Will, Katie, Oboe and Phish!

Events Opening This Week:

Derbyshire Farms H.T. (MI, A-8), Copper Meadows H.T. (CA, A-6), Queeny Park H.T. (MO, A-4), River Glen June H.T. (TN, A-3), Larkin Hill H.T. (NY, A-1), The Middleburg H.T. (VA, A-2), Aspen Farms H.T. (WA, A-7), Roebke’s Run CCI & CIC 2/1* & HT (MN, A-4), Valinor Farm Horse Trials (MA, A-1), Plantation Field June Horse Trials (PA, A-2), Camelot Equestrian Horse Park Horse Trials (CA, A-6)

Events Closing Today:

Jersey Fresh International Three-day Event (NJ, A-2), Winona Horse Trials (OH, A-8), Spokane Sport Horse Farm 2nd Annual Spring H.T. (WA, A-7), Texas Rose Horse Park Summer H.T. (TX, A-5), Woodland Stallion Station H.T. (CA, A-6), Plantation Field May Horse Trials (PA, A-2) Grindstone Mountain Farm H.T. (MA, A-1) Texas Rose Horse Park Summer H.T. (TX, A-5) Virginia CCI/CIC & H.T. (VA, A-2), Galway Downs Spring H.T. (CA, A-6), WindRidge Farm Horse Trials (NC, A-2), Mill Creek Pony Club H.T. at Longview (MO, A-4)

Tuesday News & Notes:

It’s official! Jennie Brannigan will ride Joshua G in the Maryland Hunt Cup this Saturday, April 29 at 4 p.m. EST. Thirteen horses are entered in the 4-mile race, which is considered one of the most prestigious timber races in the country. The EN team is sending our very best wishes to Jennie, trainer Kathy Neilson and owner Armata Stable. You can read much more about Jennie’s foray into timber racing here. Maryland Hunt Cup Field

Today is the last day to enter the 2017 Dubarry Nations Team Challenge #RK3DE Fantasy League! Up for grabs to the winning team owner is a pair of Dubarry boots from our friends at SmartPak, so you’ll definitely want to set yours up. Just select one team of four riders to compete against your friends this weekend. Entries will be locked tonight at 10 p.m.! Dubarry #RK3DE Fantasy League

This blog about heart horses really hit home with us. Chronicle of the Horse blogger Meghan Holland talks about her love for a special mare named Pretty Soon. You’ll definitely be holding back (or letting loose) the tears for this one. The Ones We Love Never Really Leave Us

Tuesday Video:

Get a taste for cross country action with this look at the Advanced cross country at Belton Park:

Monday Video from Tredstep Ireland: Get Hyped for Rolex

It wouldn’t be Rolex week without some proper hype, so let’s get things cooking with this awesome video compiled by Photography In Stride featuring some of the stars of the show from 2016. Relive all of the moments and get ready to share in some new ones in just a few days’ time!

As always, we’ll be bringing you the best Rolex coverage there ever was all week, so keep it locked down right here on EN. Click here to catch up on all of our coverage so far.

Product Review: Ice Vibe Boots from Horseware Ireland

The Ice Vibe X-Full Boots. Photo by Kate Samuels.

I’ve been dying to try the Ice Vibe Boots from Horseware almost since the day they came out on the shelf of my local Dover. This is not an exaggeration. Therefore, when I was presented with the opportunity to try them and review them, my immediate answer was yes of course. Since I’ve had them, they’ve quickly worked their way into my regular equine therapy repertoire and probably won’t ever leave.

The basic idea of these boots is to offer a combination of cooling and massage therapy to the horse’s legs. The ice packs slow down blood flow to prevent swelling, while the vibration effectively encourages lymph to move, thereby draining inflammation and stimulating repair to damaged tissue.

Your Ice Vibe Boots come in a lovely bag for organizing and transporting. Photo by Kate Samuels.

You can use the boots with or without the ice packs, and before or after exercise, all to great effect. Using the boots with just vibration before exercise can help reduce the risk of injury, as increasing blood flow to the tendons and ligaments using the vibration makes them more elastic. On the other side of the spectrum, using them for rehabilitating an already damaged tendon or ligament is also achieved more quickly with daily therapy.

I tried the Ice Vibe X-Full boots, which offer the most coverage from right below the knee all the way down under the fetlock. You can also get the same great product in the form of knee wraps or hock wraps. For horses with joint stiffness, these are an excellent option, and you can even integrate warm packs with massage into your therapy repertoire.

There are four pockets to choose from when inserting your vibrating panels. Photo by Kate Samuels.

So, in your Ice Vibe bag you get two boots, two cold packs, two integrated vibrating panels, and a battery charger with four universal adapters (for your international lifestyle, when you go to Badminton and still need your Ice Vibe Boots). The vibrating panels charge on a USB port, so you can even charge them on your computer or in your truck at a show, which is super convenient. They charge up really quickly, in just a few hours, and last for six uses per charge.

When you unfold the boots, you can see that there are four pockets to choose from when you insert your vibrating panel. This enables you to specifically choose an area of the leg that you would like to focus on, if, for instance, there is an interest in boosting circulation to an old or current injury. The vibrating panels have three settings: setting 1 is the lowest frequency vibration, and turns off after 10 minutes, setting 2 is slightly higher level of vibration and lasts twenty minutes, and setting three is for exceptionally large boned horses or a situation with a lot of old excess scar tissue.

The cold packs fit snugly around the leg. Photo by Kate Samuels.

The ice packs are some of the nicest I have come across, because when you freeze them, they don’t become literal blocks of ice that are impossible to mold to the shape of the horse’s leg. They stay cold for up to 40 minutes, and a soft and pliable enough that you can really get a good fit around the leg of the horse, providing top notch coverage and no gaps. No need to crack and smash and stamp on them to get them to fit around the leg.

The boots themselves go directly over the ice packs, which independently velcro onto the leg, so you can be assured that they stay in place. The boots are extremely durable, as you might expect from Horseware, and they have four very sturdy velcro straps that go straight, and one that loops around and under the feltlock.

Once these boots are strapped into place, you can activate the vibrating panels on the setting of your choice, and go about your activities. This is one of the great advantages of these boots; you can literally set it and forget it. You can put your horse in the stall, in the cross ties, in the trailer, and these boots will continue to provide therapy while you tend to other stuff in the barn for 20 minutes.

The Ice Vibe X-Full Boots provide full coverage from below the knee all the way around the fetlock. Photo by Kate Samuels.

Overall, these boots are incredibly easy to use, effective, multi-functional, and well designed. There is a reason why top riders worldwide swear by them, including Michael Jung, Carl Hester and Phillip Dutton. Horseware is, above all others, a brand that I personally trust to the hilt, and after trying these boots as well as reading testimonials from many top riders in every discipline, I can only give these Ice Vibe Boots a review of two thumbs up.

One Last Ride: Arthur Will Dance in Rolex Stadium on Friday

Allison Springer and Arthur  at Rolex. Photo by Jenni Autry. Allison Springer and Arthur at Rolex. Photo by Jenni Autry.

After Allison Springer announced the retirement of her longtime partner, Arthur, last week, she confirmed today what his throngs of fans were hoping. She and Arthur will ride their final CCI4* dressage test together in the Rolex Stadium as an exhibition ride, the last ride of the day on Friday.

The dressage has truly been one of the hallmarks of Arthur’s career, with many top placings following phase one of competition thanks to his natural prowess in the sand box.

One of our favorite “Allithur” moments, Rolex 2014.

This news combined with the test ride on Thursday being performed by none other than Ballynoe Castle RM and his super groom Kathleen Murray means the bookends on the dressage phase of this year’s Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event are sure to be ones for the memory books. Be sure to keep your tissues handy; you’re probably going to need them!

Click here to catch up on all of EN’s pre-Rolex coverage, and keep it locked right here as we bring you the most extensive coverage of America’s premier event. Go Eventing.