Classic Eventing Nation

Morven Park CIC3*/Advanced Cross Country Course Preview

Photo courtesy of CrossCountry App.

Photo courtesy of CrossCountry App.

The Morven Park cross country track has been unveiled and the course is ready for your virtual viewing, courtesy of our friends at Cross Country App.

The Tremaine Cooper course will be the same for both the advanced and CIC3* divisions, with a total of 36 jumping efforts across a little less than 4,000 meters. The optimum time is set for a quick 6:55.

It will be interesting to see how the time comes into play with the current weather conditions; Leesburg, Virginia is forecasting a day of steady rain showers and a high of around 61 degrees. The good news is, it’s not sleet, snow, or hail, and there’s no accompanying winds gusts. Just another day in the life of a Virginian eventer.

Keep it locked on EN this afternoon, as we’ll be bringing you a full report on the CIC3* and Advanced Divisions.

Morven Park Links: WebsiteScheduleEntry StatusRide TimesLive Scores

Go Eventing!

Michael Jung Among Entries in Toronto Royal Horse Show Indoor Eventing Challenge

Photo by Cealy Tetley

Photo by Cealy Tetley

If right off the bat The Royal Agricultural Winter Fair in downtown Toronto doesn’t sound like your cup of tea, here’s a little sweetener you could add to the deal: Individual Olympic Eventing Champion Michael Jung will be headlining the $20,000 Horseware Indoor Eventing Challenge on November 4th and 5th!

The invitation-only event is limited to 8-10 riders, and will also include members of the Rio Olympic Canadian eventing team and other entries yet to be announced.

If you’re unfamiliar with the indoor challenge format, it’s quite a clever concept. There is no dressage — rather, they feature a show jumping phase and an indoor cross country phase which incorporates solid efforts and water obstacles for a thrilling showdown. The scores and times from the two phases are added together to make a total cumulative score for each pair, and the combination with the lowest faults will be named the winner.

Fallen rails in show jumping are five penalties, refusals in either phase are ten penalties, a refusal which dislodges a fence on cross country incurs a time correction of six seconds plus ten penalty points.

The heights and speeds are set to one-star levels, and horses must have completed at the one-star level to be eligible to compete.

For their efforts, the winner goes home with a cool $6,000, and if you’re anyone besides Michael Jung, you also win the incredible bragging rights to say that you beat Michael Jung. The highest placed Canadian will also take home the Colonel Michael Gutowski Award.

Nick Skelton and Big Star. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

Nick Skelton and Big Star. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

If you’re also an unabashed (or highly covert) show jumping fan, this is double the fun: Individual Rio Golden man Nick Skelton will also be attending with the one and only Big Star to compete in the $135,000 FEI World Cup class on November 9. Four-time Canadian Show Jumping Champion Yann Candele of Caledon, ON, Tiffany Foster of Vancouver, BC, and Amy Millar of Perth, ON, will all compete at this year’s Royal Horse Show, as well. 

“The Royal Horse Show consistently attracts some of the world’s best competitors and if you didn’t make it to Rio this summer, you have the opportunity to see Olympic Champions in action right here at The Royal,” said Charlie Johnstone, CEO of The Royal Agricultural Winter Fair.

You can get information at the Royal Horse Show website.

Go Eventing!

Saturday Links from Tipperary

Nothing like bringing home some war-wounds. Heal quickly, Gina! Photo from Gina Economu's Facebook page. Nothing like bringing home some war-wounds. Heal quickly, Gina! Photo from Gina Economu's Facebook page.

It’s been a wild week for one of our West Coast Favorites, Gina Economou. She headed east a short while ago to compete at Morven Park this weekend. Between a trip to New Bolton and a trip to West Chester Emergency, she has kept us all on our toes via Facebook with her regular updates from the road. I’m keeping my fingers and toes crossed that things settle down and are a bit less eventful for her during the competition!

U.S. Weekend Action:

Stoneleigh-Burnham School Fall H.T. [Website] [Live Scores]

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

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

Fleur de Leap H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times]

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

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

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

Saturday Links:

PHC Event College: Bandaging with Max Corcoran

Skyline Eventing brings extreme equestrian sport to Sanpete

Young riders star at national equestrian championships in Thailand

Retired racehorses get second chance from Thoroughbred Rehab Center

HOYS to crack down on riders of unsuitable weight

From Horse Nation: 9 Small Things That Equestrians Find Oddly Satisfying

Saturday Video:

Here’s Gina Economou at Rebecca Farm earlier this year.

Friday Video from World Equestrian Brands: Your Daily Dose of Adorable

We’ve long considered combined driving to be the thrilling sister sport of eventing here at EN, and we are loving this tiny dynamo of a pony showing these two pint-sized drivers the ropes around a cones course. It’s Friday, so bonus points if you watch with the volume cranked up for the techno soundtrack. Go, little team, go!

Thanks to HN reader JoAnn Eaton Strauss for the tip. This video originally appeared on Horse Nation.

Kim Severson & Hannah Sue Burnett Top Morven Park Leaderboards

Kim Severson and Cooley Cross Border. Photo by Valerie Durbon Photography. Kim Severson and Cooley Cross Border. Photo by Valerie Durbon Photography.

The rains came down in typical Morven Park fashion today as the fall horse trials kicked off in Leesburg, Virginia. To be fair, the precipitation that fell didn’t require anyone to build an ark, unlike last year’s deluge that saw a chunk of cross country canceled during the competition.

Kim Severson and Cooley Cross Border are sitting in familiar territory once again, leading the CIC3* after dressage and show jumping just as they did last year. The 9-year-old Irish Sport Horse gelding owned by the Cross Syndicate set the early bar in dressage with a 46.7 and held onto the lead with a double clear round over Chris Barnard’s challenging course.

Will Faudree and Pfun. Photo by Valerie Durbon Photography.

Will Faudree and Pfun. Photo by Valerie Durbon Photography.

Just five pairs in the division managed clear rounds inside the time in show jumping to shuffle the leaderboard. Will Faudree and Pfun delivered one of those rounds to move from fifth up to second place on their dressage score of 49.8. The 9-year-old Irish Sport Horse gelding owned by Jennifer Mosing is our Dark Horse pick to take the win this weekend.

Booli Selmayr delivered her first double clear show jumping round at the CIC3* level aboard Jaeda to move from sixth to third on 53.4. This 12-year-old off-track Thoroughbred mare owned by Kelly Morgan was one of just four horses to make the time in her three-star debut at Plantation Field earlier this month, so look for her to be in her element tomorrow.

Booli Selmayr and Jaeda. Photo by Valerie Durbon Photography.

Booli Selmayr and Jaeda. Photo by Valerie Durbon Photography.

Will Faudree has a second ride in the top five in Hans Dampf, who sat in second place after dressage on 47.0 and added one rail and four time penalties in show jumping to move to fourth place on 55.0. Colleen Rutledge and Escot 6 round out the top five on their dressage score of 56.0, with a clear show jumping round inside the time boosting them up from 10th place.

Looking to the Advanced division, Lynn Symansky and Mary Ann Ghadban’s Cascani led after dressage on 28.8, but two rails and four time penalties over the tough show jumping course dropped them down the leaderboard to eighth. That boosted Hannah Sue Burnett and Under Suspection, also owned by Mary Ann Ghadban, up from second to lead on their dressage score of 30.7 thanks to the only clear round inside the time.

Rails came tumbling down in the Advanced just as they did in the CIC3*, with time penalties proving equally influential. Four combinations jumped clear rounds with time penalties, including Meghan O’Donoghue and Chase Shipka’s Palm Crescent to move from seventh to second on 34.5 with just one time penalty added to their dressage score.

Colleen Rutledge and Escot 6. Photo by Valerie Durbon Photography.

Colleen Rutledge and Escot 6. Photo by Valerie Durbon Photography.

Lauren Kieffer and D.A. Duras, owned by Debbie Adams and Jacqueline Mars, round out the top three, adding two show jumping time penalties to their dressage score to move up from equal fifth place to third on 35.2. Buck Davidson and Carlevo initially sat third in the division on 35.0 after show jumping but have since withdrawn ahead of tomorrow’s cross country.

Mara DePuy and Congo Brazzaville C lead the CIC2* after the first two phases on a score of 40.0, with Lauren Balcomb and Guido Hatzis in second on 47.7. We have to send a special shout out to Gabby Dickerson and Kim Severson’s former upper-level ride and 2014 World Equestrian Games mount Fernhill Fearless, who sit in third in the CIC2* on 52.1.

Jessica Phoenix and Bentley's Best. Photo by Valerie Durbon Photography.

Jessica Phoenix and Bentley’s Best sit 10th in the CIC3*. Photo by Valerie Durbon Photography.

Will Coleman and Cooley Off the Record lead the Open Intermediate A division on 25.2 after dressage and show jumping, with Lauren Kieffer and Landmark’s Ginger Rogers leading the B division on 21.5. Marilyn Little sits in second place in both divisions with RF Demeter and RF Overdressed, respectively. Kim Severson and Ringfort Fighting Chance are third in the A division on 25.7, with Jennie Brannigan and Waterford rounding out the top three in the B division on 30.7.

It’s a busy weekend at Morven as many pairs squeeze in their final prep run ahead of the Dutta Corp Fair Hill International. Click here for live scores from all the divisions.

You can preview Tremaine Cooper’s CIC3*/Advanced cross country course here thanks to our friends at CrossCountry App, and keep it locked on EN for more beautiful photos from Valerie Durbon Photography throughout the weekend. Go Morven!

Morven Park Links: Website, ScheduleEntry Status, Ride TimesLive Scores

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Stable View Advanced Cross Country Course Preview

Jump into the arena at #3! Photo by Kate Samuels.

Jump into the arena at #3! Photo by Kate Samuels.

I just got a chance to zoom around the cross country course at Stable View Farm for the inaugural Advanced horse trials on a golf cart with the organizer, Anne Dearborn. All of the jumps for this level are brand new and are just waiting to be christened tomorrow by the first on course. Designed by Capt. Mark Phillips and built by Eric Bull, this course is definitely full of decent questions for the level, as well as terrain and turning that will add an extra facet of difficulty.

The course starts out confidently, with two good fences before the unique third fence, in which you drop down a little dip and then jump over an angled log into the arena where you just recently completed your dressage test (the arena sides will be removed, obviously), gallop across the ring, and then out over an airy log oxer at four, which features a frangible pin system on both front and back logs. This course is littered with frangible pins at every possible location, making every effort to ensure the safety of horse and rider should something go awry.

Two table fences away from this, we encounter the brand new water complex in the derby field, which serves as the first of three water combinations on the course. This is a simple 7AB with a straight shot in over an inviting fence and down to a relatively friendly chevron. I should mention that all of the fences have been beautifully decorated by Diane Dzingle, who has been a nurseryman for more than twenty years; 95 percent of the course decorations are live all-natural plants.

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The new water complex in the derby field. Photo by Kate Samuels.

We get to have a little gallop after this before coming down to an iconic Mark Phillips fence, the Elephant Trap at 8. This fence looks mighty impressive coming up to it, but it has a lovely inviting slope to the front and will ride quite well. I think the jump at 9 is a surprising question, as the fence initially seems to the horse like a plain table, but the ground is higher on the backside, so it is more like a step up and the riders won’t want to come banging down to it and shock their horses on the offside.

The Little Murray Water Complex sports a solid 6-foot drop over a brush log and then quite a few strides to a very decent brush corner after you exit the water. For those trying to get close to the optimum time of 6 minutes and 19 seconds, they will make a very quick right-handed turn and put on the gas to the hanging log oxer at 11.

The question at 12ABC is certainly where things start to get serious, and if you had trouble at the right-handed corner at 10B, you might be considering the time-costly black flag option for this next right-handed corner, which slopes off down the hill. Down you gallop after that to the Flying Cross, which is another impressive fence courtesy of Mark Phillips’ design style.

Fence 13. Photo by Kate Samuels.

Fence 13. Photo by Kate Samuels.

After that we have a terrain question along with two separately numbered corners, where the riders can decide to take the quick route or do a loop if they’re having an educational round. There are a fair amount of very experienced horses here this weekend, but there are also a good number of horses moving up to the level, so the course has provided options along the way for horses who might not be quite ready for some of the questions.

As we head to the back of the property, we finally get some real galloping time, plus some big tables to re-establish a rhythm. The Sunken Road Complex at 18ABCD is the type of question we don’t get to see much anymore, but will reward straight and bold riding, as well as courageous and scopey horses.

Fence 18. Photo by Kate Samuels.

Fence 18. Photo by Kate Samuels.

After the sunken road, the horses get to gallop up a good hill nearing the end, and then the riders have to make a decision about how they contour their U-turn to the final water complex at 19AB, with the cabin on the hill and the boat in the water. There are lots of pine trees dotted here and there in this course, and riders will really have to walk their galloping tracks to be sure of the route that best works for their horses and their time goals. With $60,000 in prize money on the line, riders (ahem, Doug Payne) might have some interesting inside turns up their sleeves.

The final question is two skinny triple brushes at the end of the course to test the mental awareness of both horse and rider, as well as straightness and honesty. Stable View decided to run the event as a one-day, which is unusual for this level in the U.S., and with the course being a full 3,850 meters, some of the horses might be feeling a bit tired either mentally or physically at the end.

There are several course walks available tomorrow morning, starting with Mark Phillips at 9:30 a.m. and Boyd Martin at 10:30 a.m., if you’re in the area and want to get an up close and personal look at the fences. Boyd kicks off the action with dressage at 7:30 a.m. on Tsetserleg.

Stable View Links: Website, Entry Status, Ride Times, Live Scores

 

Stable View Merging Modern Course Design with Emphasis on Safety

A MIM clip on one of the Advanced fences. Photo courtesy of Stable View. A MIM clip on one of the Advanced fences. Photo courtesy of Stable View.

The weekend is rapidly approaching at Stable View’s inaugural Advanced horse trials, the courses are all set and the competitors are pulling into town. The event coordinators, staff and volunteers have been working tirelessly to prepare for Aiken’s first Advanced Horse Trials, which runs tomorrow along with the Preliminary divisions. Beginner Novice through Training level divisions will run on Sunday.

Stable View’s event organizer Anne Dearborn is pleased with their preparation for the Advanced horse trials, stating that Barry and Cyndy Olliff have brought together an excellent team of designers, builders, staff, officials and volunteers.

“We have stepped up our preparation by doing things like holding a training session and course review for our cross country jump judges prior to the event to familiarize them with the layout of the course,” Anne said. “We have hired a control person with four-star experience. We are spacing the Advanced riders out at three-minute intervals, so there should only be two horses on course at any time.”

Modern Course Design with an Emphasis on Safety

Course builder Eric Bull and course designer Capt. Mark Phillips worked on the new Advanced course for more than a year and have also steadily made improvements and updates to the Beginner Novice through Preliminary courses. There is an advantage to having Eric and Capt. Phillips working side-by-side for the past five years on the expansion of all the courses, as they have had ample time to strategically develop each track.

A heavy emphasis on safety has been placed on the new course, with multiple jumps incorporating frangible pins and MIM clips. There is one vertical fence with frangible pins, one reverse pinned oxer and one reversed pinned corner, as well as MIM clips on two skinny triple brushes and seven brush jumps. The Preliminary course also includes MIM clips on the triple brush.

The cross country track and footing have been carefully managed, groomed and improved. Stable View practices regular aeration and utilizes a K-Line irrigation system, which is a flexible, movable pipe that can be directed towards specific areas of the course to manage the consistency of the footing.

Photo courtesy of Stable View

Photo courtesy of Stable View

The new track is a “challenging national Advanced level cross country course, and it is a good prep for horses going to Fair Hill International,” Eric said. His team at ETB Jumps has built the course at Fair Hill for the past 18 years, so this insight comes with in-depth knowledge.

Stable View is also proud to have Safety Officer Dr. Mike Quinn, a pulmonary critical care physician who has served in the military for more than 20 years. His wife is involved with horses, and his son Brendan Quinn has competed through the one-star level.

The Quinn family lives locally at Fort Gordon, and after his last tour in Afghanistan, Dr. Quinn volunteered to work at his first show at Stable View in September 2014. Since then he has given recommendations on safety and emergency planning, as well as medical response protocols in the event of an emergency.

Parties and Entertainment

If you are at the event this weekend, don’t forget to join the Saturday morning course walks hosted by Capt. Mark Phillips, Boyd Martin and Richard Jeffery, which will be followed by the formal ribbon cutting ceremony of the new Advanced cross country course.

Throughout the weekend there will also be plenty of entertainment in addition to the actual competition. There are activities for the whole family, including Aiken Horsepower’s Fall Fling car show, a Giant Jenga competition and complimentary happy hours from Carolina Moon Distillery and River Rat Brewery.

The team at Stable View is delighted to have all of the competitors with them this weekend celebrating Aiken’s first Advanced horse trials and wish all the competitors a fun and safe event. For a full schedule of competitor and spectator information, please click here.

Stay tuned for an exclusive fence-by-fence preview of the new Advanced course, and in the meantime we’re excited to bring you a first look at the course map here. Go Stable View!

By the Numbers: Stable View Advanced

Jon Holling and Downtown Harrison. Photo by Leslie Wylie. Jon Holling and Downtown Harrison. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Stable View Farm has stepped up to host Aiken’s inaugural Advanced horse trials this weekend. With all three phases running on one day tomorrow, this show will mimic the format of Advanced events held in countries like England. Only a handful of events in the U.S. use the one-day format for the Advanced levels, so competitors with multiple horses will be quite busy.

The dressage test is 2014 USEF A-B, the most commonly used test for Advanced divisions around the country, so a large majority of the competitors are familiar with it. Capt. Mark Phillips, who recently designed the new course at Tryon, has also created the cross country at Stable View. Richard Jeffery, the course designer for Rolex Kentucky CCI4*, is designing this weekend’s stadium course.

TOP FIVE

1. Jon Holling and Downtown Harrison: Downtown Harrison is competed very strategically, which means he sometimes flies a bit under the radar with Jon. With a veritable north meets south showdown occurring in Aiken this weekend, Jon will get a chance to prove that this horse is, as always, an extremely strong competitor.

Downtown Harrison averages a 26.3 on this test, a score that will likely put him inside the top three at the beginning of the day. Although he hasn’t recently jumped a Richard Jeffery course, his overall tendency in stadium is to put in a double clear. As with many in the field, he has no experience over a Capt. Phillips course, but averages 11.6 time penalties across the country. Even with those time penalties, this pair should end up in the top position with a score in the mid-to-high 30s.

Doug Payne and Vandiver. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

Doug Payne and Vandiver. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

2. Doug Payne and Vandiver: This pair has been in the mix more and more lately as they have solidified their partnership at the highest levels of the sport. With Doug willing to push the pace across the country, they’ve progressed from showing flashes of talent at this time last year to consistently being in the hunt for the win at each competition.

With an average of 30.2 on this test, Vandiver will be right in the top of the pack after dressage. Although he had one rail over Richard Jeffery’s course at Rolex, Vandiver is a careful jumper with Doug in the irons and tends to jump double clear. Their overall average across the country is only 9.2 time penalties, although they are getting faster with every outing, including putting in a 6.0 time penalty round over Capt. Phillips’ course at the American Eventing Championships. If they go closer to their average pace, this pair should squeak into second place with a score just under 40.

3. Phillip Dutton and I’m Sew Ready: Reunited once again, Phillip and I’m Sew Ready showed they haven’t skipped a beat in their partnership at Plantation Field, finishing third in the CIC3* after leading through two phases. With that first successful outing under their belt, Phillip is likely to pick up the pace across the country.

These two average a 31.4 on this test, which is nearly identical to their overall average together. This will be I’m Sew Ready’s first Richard Jeffery course, but he averages one rail overall. A quick cross country average of only 5.2 time penalties will aid them as they tackle the horse’s first Capt. Phillips course. A final score just over 40 would put them into third at the end of the day.

Boyd Martin and Welcome Shadow. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Boyd Martin and Welcome Shadow. Photo by Jenni Autry.

4. Boyd Martin and Welcome Shadow: Boyd confirmed to EN that he will be taking fan favorite Welcome Shadow across the pond to Pau in France to contest her first four-star in a couple of weeks. Stable View will be her final prep event, and a top-five finish would send her off in style.

This mare has really stepped it up on the flat this year, currently averaging a 33.2 on this test. A careful jumper, Welcome Shadow will take a tendency to jump double clear into her first Richard Jeffery stadium round. If she equals her overall time penalty average of 8.0 as she tackles her first Capt. Phillips course, she’ll end the weekend in fourth, with a score less than a point behind I’m Sew Ready.

5. Phillip Dutton and Mr. Candyman: We can’t forget about the winner of the Plantation Field CIC3*, and Mr. Candyman is just now hitting his stride. With more experience under his belt and as one of Phillip’s primary Advanced horses for the fall season, he should be able to keep the momentum going as he heads to Fair Hill.

Mr. Candyman averages a 30.5 on this test, which should put him in the top bunch. This horse does average one rail and one time penalty overall in the stadium phase, which would drop him down a bit. He’ll maintain his strong placing across the country if he matches his overall time penalty average of only 6.0. A score less than half a point behind Welcome Shadow should have him rounding out the top five.

Allison Springer and Arthur. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

Allison Springer and Arthur. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

THE DARK HORSE

Allison Springer and Arthur: Arthur and Allison were a bit handicapped at the AEC by being the very first pair to tackle a brand new Advanced course that turned out to be very difficult to make the time. This pair led the dressage at the AEC and delivered the best test of the American contingent at Rolex this year, plus tied for the lead at Carolina after the first phase. Their dressage prowess is legendary, and it wouldn’t be a surprise to see them on top after the first phase here.

It’s the next two phases that can be tricky for these two. If Arthur puts in a strong stadium round and Allison can use her experience to guide him quickly and cleanly across the country, this pair will end the weekend right near the top of the leaderboard.

Whitney Mahloch and Military Mind. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Whitney Mahloch and Military Mind. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

THE SLEEPER

Whitney Mahloch and Military Mind:  Expect to see Whitney Mahloch and Military Mind near the top of the leaderboard in the next few years, as this young pair has already risen to the occasion by leading the Richland Park CIC3* through two phases in their first CIC3*.

In three attempts at this level, Whitney and Military Mind have scored in the low 30s or below on the flat and finished clear and inside the time on cross country twice. Stadium appears to be the phase that has yet to fall into place, although a clear round with only one time penalty at Chattahoochee Hills in April shows that the ability is there. Once this pair has dialed in the show jumping, they’ll be serious contenders.

USEF Announces Land Rover/USEF Competition Grants for Fair Hill

Amber Levine and Carry On. Photo by Leslie Wylie. Amber Levine and Carry On. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

The Dutta Corp Fair Hill International is less than two weeks away on Oct. 12-16 in Elkton, Maryland, and the USEF has awarded Land/Rover USEF Competition grants to two West Coast combinations slated to compete in the CCI3*.

Congratulations to Amber Levine of Rohnert Park, California and her own Carry On, a 2007 KWPN gelding, and Heather Morris of Wildomar, California and Team Express Group’s Charlie Tango, a 2008 Irish Sport Horse gelding.

Heather Morris and Charlie Tango. Photo by Sally Spickard.

Heather Morris and Charlie Tango. Photo by Sally Spickard.

Entries for Fair Hill went live earlier this week, and Amber and Heather join a strong West Coast contingent slated to compete in the CCI3*, which also includes Hawley Bennett-Awad and Jollybo, Jen McFall and High Times, Mackenna Shea and Landioso, and Gina Economou and Calidore.

Click here to check out the full entry list for Fair Hill, and keep it locked on EN for all your #DuttaFHI news.

[USEF Announces Land Rover/USEF Eventing Competition Grant Recipients for The Dutta Corp. Fair Hill International CCI3*]

Happy 5,000th Episode, Horse Radio Network!

Please join us in congratulating our good friends at Horse Radio Network, who are celebrating their 5,000th published podcast episode as we speak. Coincidentally, it just so happens to be International Podcast Day as well — well played!

HRN has come a long way since its launch in August 2008. What began as a single show, The Stable Scoop Radio Show, with two hosts and one sponsor has since expanded into a vast network of fun, fresh, educational podcasts spanning every walk of equestrian life. Today, HRN features 10 shows, 27 hosts, 32 sponsors and thousands of listeners, including the popular Eventing Radio Show.[pp

We here at Nation Media are proud to have been taken in as part of the HRN family as a media partner, regularly guesting on the wildly popular Horses in the Morning show and hanging out with the crew at every opportunity. Mark your calendars for Cyber Monday, Nov. 28, 2016, when EN’s own Jenni, Leslie and friends will be once again hosting the final hour of HRN’s annual 12 Hour Live Holiday Radiothon — we’re already getting excited!

HRN Founder and CEO Glenn the Geek, says, “I am so proud of my team, who have worked endless hours to make this happen. We are highly respected in the podcasting world because of our dedication to making this technology the leading new media platform in the world.”

“Most of all”, Glenn says, “having a partner you can trust and rely on is invaluable for the success of any small business. In this case, it is my wife, Jennifer, who has devoted her time, energy and incredible knowledge to this endeavor. For that, I am truly grateful.”

Helena Bee, host of the Stable Scoop show, added: “As Glenn’s first co-host at HRN, I had no idea what kind of adventure we were embarking on. Neither of us knew where this journey would take us, but we had big visions for where it could go. Our listeners have been a huge part of our success. We cannot thank them enough for joining us on this journey, and for being such great traveling companions.”

Listening to shows on the Horse Radio Network is so easy — if you’re not already in the habit of doing so, you should be! Listeners can stream or download episodes at their convenience on iTunes, any podcast player, the HRN website, or by downloading the FREE Horse Radio app for iOS or Android.

Go Horse Radio Network! You can tell them “congrats” yourselves by calling in during today’s episode of Horses in the Morning, 9-10:30 a.m. EST.