Classic Eventing Nation

Watch the Trailer: Tamie Smith and Heather Morris Featured in New Video Series

Eventing- A True Story of Horse and RiderWhat does it take to become a top equestrian in EVENTING?
Starting from nothing, international riders Tamie Smith and Heather Morris share a true story of how their friendship turned their dreams into a reality in building Next Level Eventing!
Stay tuned for more episodes!

Posted by Professional’s Choice – English on Thursday, July 28, 2016

Professional’s Choice has launched a new video series featuring Tamie Smith and Heather Morris of Next Level Eventing. Through each episode we will get to know these two best friends and their journeys to the top levels of the sport. Get a sneak peek of what we can expect in upcoming episodes in the above trailer and stay tuned for more!

Pegasus for a Day: How the Olympic Horses and All Their Gear Get to Rio

Photo by Hippo Foto/Dirk Caremans. Photo by Hippo Foto/Dirk Caremans.

The first groups of Olympic horses have been arriving in Rio over the weekend from all corners of the world. Team USA took to the skies out of Miami, Fl. on Friday and we’re happy to report that the horses and riders have all arrived safely.

Getting the world’s top dressage, show jumping and eventing horses to the Olympic Games is no small undertaking. Besides the necessary delicate handling of live animals, there are thousands of pounds of baggage and gear to organize and transport, too.

The FEI’s Jon Stroud followed along to the London Stansted Airport as 34 Olympic event horses from ten nations were loaded onto an Emirates SkyCargo Boing 777-F and captured some awesome shots of the equestrian world’s most precious cargo settling in for the journey.

When it’s all said and done, more than 200 hundreds will have departed from London on nine different flights and make the 12 hour flight to the Rio International Airport en route to the Olympic Equestrian Centre in Deodoro Olympic Park. More horses will fly from Liege Airport in Belgium.

By necessity, sending a horse 30,000 feet in the air and touching down in another part of the world is a highly organized affair. First things first, each horse must have a passport, microchip and health certificate, and a veterinarian will check them over carefully before they begin the loading process.

The FEI reports that each horse has an allocated baggage allowance by weight for feed, hay, bedding and equipment plus the weight of the horse itself. In their “stall,” the horses are allowed 40 litres (about 10 gallons) of water, a large haynet, a personal bucket and a small bag with a spare halter and rug.

The Emirates SkyCargo Boeing 777-F aircraft is a freight plane especially equipped for equine transport. The Olympic horses are traveling two to a pallet in stalls that are 44 inches wide. The staff aboard the aircraft are trained to fly with horses and ensure their safety and well-being throughout the flight and of course there is a vet on board.

See you in Rio!

Area III Eventer Erika Adams’ Trailer Stolen from Tryon International Equestrian Center

You clearly weren't Tebowing hard enough, Erika! Photo courtesy of Erika Adams. You clearly weren't Tebowing hard enough, Erika! Photo courtesy of Erika Adams.

For Erika Adams, whose trailer was stolen from Tryon International Equestrian Center a little more than a week ago, the first stage of grief was denial.

Erika is a familiar face in Area III; her Road Less Traveled Eventing Team is based at Yellow Wood Farm in Lenoir City, Tenn., about a three-hour haul from Tryon. She was at the site of the upcoming AECs getting her green eventer Iffy some show jumping mileage and at first all seemed well: she got in, had a school and a good look around the by-all-accounts spectacular new facility, and tucked Iffy in for the night.

But when she pulled into the trailer parking lot at around 6:45 the next morning to grab a bale of hay and her gear from her four-horse Sundowner … it wasn’t there.

Erika was accompanied by her friend Val Gibbons, who shares Erika’s peculiar sense of humor, and at first they assumed that it was some kind of joke. Maybe a clueless horse show boyfriend had hitched up the wrong trailer and, upon realization, re-parked it in a different spot. Or maybe they really were just losing their minds and were mistaken about where they’d parked it themselves. They drove around the lot a few times, waiting for the morning coffee to kick in and the trailer to present itself.

“We kept waiting for the other shoe to drop,” Erika recalls. “Where is it? It’s not really gone. We’re getting senile. Where did we put it?”

The show had competitors park their trailers in a new two-tiered parking lot with a separate entrance from the barns, and Erika says she’d had a bad feeling leaving it there the night before. Not because it ever crossed her mind that it might get stolen — who ever thinks about that? — but because the lot had a grade to it and she was worried it might roll down the hill. Being the careful, thinks-of-everything graduate “A” Pony Clubber she is, Erika piled rocks in front of the wheels in addition to her chocks as an extra barrier.

It wasn’t until she spotted her chocks and the rocks moved to the side that reality hit. It was really gone.

“We drove to the barn in shocky silence,” Erika says. “We fed Iffy, and after we fed If I turned to Val and said, ‘I think my trailer was stolen.’ And she said, ‘You know, I think you’re right.'”

Having your trailer is stolen is bad enough, but for many packrat eventers (guilty as charged!) our trailer tack rooms double as storage for all our gear. Fortunately, Erika’s trainer Harrison C. Ford had offered to let Erika throw her tack in his tack stall the night before, but her trailer was still filled with thousands of dollars worth of clothes and equipment. The inventory: her shadbelly, top hat, cross-country vest, skull cap, whirlpool boots, ice boots, cross-country boots, a drawer full of bits, and a lifetime’s accumulation of eventing “stuff.”

Also, Erika’s entire horse show wardrobe. “It just so happened that I’d emptied out my closet and brought ALL my show clothes,” Erika says. “I was going to a hunter show and I didn’t know what I’d need to wear — you hear ‘bring your pearls’ and ‘wear only tan pants,’ I’m an eventer, I don’t know — so I literally brought EVERYTHING.”

Erika and Val went to the show office; the police came and filed a report. With nothing else to do but wait, Erika made a valiant attempt to go through with the morning classes she’d signed up for. The show must go on!

“I was wrecked,” Erika says. “I had 17 time faults. I managed to jump every jump in order and he never stopped; I just kept getting stuck in corners with no idea where I was going. I could hear Harrison in the background shouting ‘turn! turn! turn!’ I wish I had it on video. I’m sure it was hilarious.”

(And yes, inquiring minds, she WAS wearing pants — luckily she’d stuffed a couple pairs in her bag.)

“It was an insane morning,” Erika says. “Between 6:45 and 10:30 a.m. I had discovered that my trailer was gone, dealt with security, the cops came out, I walked my course, did two classes and had multiple breakdowns. I’m glad it happened that way, though. If there had been more time it would have been more traumatic. I just had to keep rolling.”

The question Erika kept asking herself: of all the nice trailers in that lot (it was a fancy hunter/jumper show, after all), why would someone take hers? The 1999 four-horse slant load was no spring chicken, one fender that had been busted up in a blowout was held together with twine and there were stickers all over the back. If you’re going to steal a trailer, at least steal one with swanky living quarters, geez.

With so many identifying markers and considering the expense of welding the aluminum fender back together, Erika assumes the trailer wasn’t stolen for resale but to be stripped for parts: “I don’t have much hope of it resurfacing. Someone came in with intent and an order to fill — Sundowner, four-horse, slant load — and I’ll never see it again.”

Erika says the upper-tier lot is visible from the interstate and close to the interstate entrance ramp. Making it even more tempting to potential thieves, it was set well apart from the show grounds with a separate entrance, unguarded, unfenced, ungated and poorly lit. After Erika reported her trailer stolen, show security stepped up to the plate to make sure the lot of was secure, but she’s bummed that her trailer had to be the sacrificial lamb.

It will be weeks before Erika has any answers about whether she’ll be able to recoup anything from insurance — she had it covered but not for replacement — but even if she does, her trailer was worth more to her than its value on paper reflects and will be difficult to replace: “I kid about it being held together with duct tape and baling twine but it was in really good shape and was doing its job.”

If Erika gets choked up when she’s telling the story now, it’s less about her stolen trailer and more about the response she’s gotten from the community. First things first, Erika’s trainer Harrison referred her to local tack store The Farm House, which immediately took her under its wing, and Ariat International pitched in to replace her show jacket, breeches and show shirt for free.

“I walked in with tears in my eyes — ‘I need some clothes’ — and they were awesome and amazing. They gave me a hug, ran to the back, got a bottle of wine and shoved me in a dressing room: ‘Try on these clothes.’ I felt like a princess, and the discounts they gave me … I’m sure they paid for half of what I’m wearing.”

Erika gives Val a lot of credit for keeping her laughing throughout the whole ordeal. One of Iffy’s owners, who was making the three-ish hour drive to Tryon to watch anyway, brought a trailer up to get the horse home. And since then, Erika says, she’s been shocked by how many people have been canvassing classified ads on her behalf and sending her links to anything that looks like it could potentially be hers.

Trailer description: 1999 Sundowner four-horse slant load, white with black and grey stripes on the side, damaged left fender, Tennessee license plate T382699. Photo courtesy of Erika Adams.

Trailer description: 1999 Sundowner four-horse slant load, white with black and grey stripes on the side, damaged left fender, Tennessee license plate T382699. Photo courtesy of Erika Adams.

Her friends also set up a Go Fund Me campaign, “Helping Erika Replace Her Trailer,” which has already raised upwards of $5,000.

“It’s really been overwhelming, all the people who have been stepping up to help me, a virtual stranger,” Erika says. “$5,000 is … a lot. And I mean, this is a first world problem. I’ve got food on my plate, and there are starving kids in Africa. But I’m touched by it.”

Erika’s humility notwithstanding, we encourage anyone who is able to donate to her fund. Helping a sister out, especially one who’s been a cornerstone of the community for as long as Erika has been, is what eventers do best. You can visit her Go Fund Me campaign here.

Go Eventing.

HHS Cooley Euthanized Following Injury at Burgham Horse Trials

Liz Halliday-Sharp and HHS Cooley. Photo by Jenni Autry. Liz Halliday-Sharp and HHS Cooley. Photo by Jenni Autry.

We are deeply saddened to report that HHS Cooley, a 12-year-old Irish Sport Horse ridden by British-based U.S. rider Liz Halliday-Sharp and owned by her mother Deborah, was euthanized yesterday after suffering a fracture on cross country while competing in the CIC3* at Burgham Horse Trials in the UK.

Liz was hospitalized after the fall due to a fracture in the C7 vertebrae in her neck. Her husband, Al, said she expects to be released from the hospital tomorrow.

“To say I am devastated is an understatement,” Liz said. “He was my partner, my best friend, and the bravest horse in the world with the biggest heart who always tried his hardest and gave his best. He really loved eventing from the first moment and lived for the traveling and competing.”

Liz produced Cooley through the levels of eventing, taking the gelding to his first one-star event in 2011. They moved up to the three-star level in 2013, and this year Cooley carried Liz to her first CCI4* completion at Rolex Kentucky.

“I will never, ever forget the amazing clear cross country trip he gave me at Rolex and the joy of being there with a horse that I loved so much and had produced from the early stages of his eventing career up to the top. I totally trusted him and he trusted me, and what a ride we have had through the years.”

Our thoughts are with Liz, Deborah, Cooley’s groom Gemma and all those who knew and loved and him.

Sunday Links from One K Helmets

The U.S. Eventing horses have arrived safely in Rio! Photo via the USEF Facebook page. The U.S. Eventing horses have arrived safely in Rio! Photo via the USEF Facebook page.

Team USA has arrived in Rio! All the horses and riders traveled safe and sound from Miami, Fl. to Brazil and are settling getting settled in. Follow the USEF and USEF Eventing High Performance Facebook page for lots of updates from the team and be sure to keep it locked on EN all week for tons of Olympic coverage.

U.S. Weekend Action:

#NAJYRC2016: WebsiteScheduleDressage Order of GoIndividual ScoresTeam ScoresEN’s Coverage

USPC National Championship H.T. [Website] [Entry Status/Times]

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

Hunt Club Farms H.T. [Website] [Entry Status]

Saturday Links: 

Just so we’re clear, you’re not doing anything next weekend, right? The only conceivable thing you can be doing is tuning in to the Olympics, EVEN if you’re competing. For goodness sake, get your schedule set! Jenni knows all the things about Rio, and how to watch it from home. She’ll be covering the event and risking the Zika for you. [How To Watch Olympic Eventing]

Vote: who should carry the U.S. flag during the Olympics opening ceremony?

Training camp report: Mighty Nice is ready for Rio

How Team GBR’s horses deal with jet lag, legroom and passports

Rider safety: Always in fashion

#EventerProblems, Vol. 82: OCD Edition

Eventers are a quirky demographic, and almost every eventer I know has a little (or big) OCD streak in there somewhere. From perfectly groomed dirt …

After 7 months, I believe I have perfected the zigzag aisle rake. #eventerproblems

A photo posted by Gracie Rivers (@grace_riverss) on

… and perfectly groomed horses …

… to general paranoia, we’re all a little cray-cray just below the surface. Here’s your latest batch of #EventerProblems.

These twice a days are hard #eventcamp #eventerproblems #bigboypants #prelim

A photo posted by Ashley Daniel (@ashley_lucie) on

Slightly long spot #OTTB #thoroughbred #horse #eventerproblems

A photo posted by Victoria Magliaro (@vmagliaro) on

When 2 eventers go to Dover #eventerproblems #imverypoornow

A photo posted by Tony B The OTTB (@tonyb_ottb) on

When your horse is a monster #eventerproblems #bestbarnmanager @kellyyoung520 thanks for being the best ❤️

A photo posted by annmarie stockinger (@astockinger66) on

#eventer kids don’t get swimming pools. They get the #washrack #eventerproblems

A video posted by Courtney Due (@justjump3day) on

My days off be like….#farmlife #eventerproblems #buildingjumps

A photo posted by Kathleen (@katb350) on

Any given Monday ….travesuras!!! #teamcastilla #eventerproblems #ottb #purasangre #psi #greyhorse #caballo #caballospanama

A video posted by Maru Arosemena (@maru.arosemena) on

Go Eventing!

New Individual and Team Leaders After Cross Country at NAJYRC

Clara Cargile and White Indian. Photo by Sportfot. Clara Cargile and White Indian. Photo by Sportfot.

The James Atkinson designed cross country course at the Colorado Horse Park caused a significant shake up in the standings today at the Adequan FEI North American Junior and Young Riders Championship, presented by Gotham North.

CH-J*

The CH-J* kicked off the morning. The team scores were quite close after dressage with less than ten points separating the top four teams. Area I produced three double clear rounds to move into the lead from fourth place on a combined two-day score of 146.7.

Hear what team members Erica Jarrell, Katie Lichten, Madeline Lichten and Cornelia Dorr had to say about the day in the press conference video below.

Posted by The FEI North American Junior & Young Rider Championships on Saturday, July 30, 2016

Major kudos to my home Area III, who brought all four of their riders through finish double clear to fly into second place from sixth! Mikensey Johansen, Carson Richards, Parker Miller and Haley Curry got the job done in fine form today and are in a good position before the final phase on a team score of 152.8.

Team Ontario picked up a rider fall and a refusal to move down from first to third, but they’re far from out of the game on 169.8.

Camiolo Lee and Caharron V.E. Photo by Sportfot.

Camiolo Lee and Caharron V.E. Photo by Sportfot.

In the individual competition, Annick Niemuller and FE Akari moved into the lead with a double clear round and a two-phase score of 43.5. Lee Camiolo and Charron V.E. moved up from fifth to second with a fast, clear round.

There is a three-way tie for third place on a score of 45.9 between Carmen Holmes-Smith and Spartacus, Haley Curry and Resolute Protector and Haley Rosenberg and Evil Munchkin. Should they all show jump clear tomorrow, Carmen and Spartacus would win the tie breaker as they crossed the finish just two seconds under optimum time.

There were 26 double clear rounds and 35 total completions in the division of 44 starters. However there were several eliminations for refusals and two rider falls. Ruairi Smith and Fernhill Gucci were eliminated for a horse fall at the water but both horse and rider are reportedly okay.

Shelby Brost and Crimson. Photo by Sportfot.

Shelby Brost and Crimson. Photo by Sportfot.

CICY2*

The team standings in the CICY2* were completely rearranged. The three-rider scramble team of Area V and IX moved up from third to first with an overnight team score of 183.7. Close behind is Area VI/VIII on 188.8. Third is Team Ontario/Alberta, which moved from first to third with a team score of 208 after cross country.

Clara Cargile, Madeline Backus and Alyssa Phillips of Area V/IV talk about their rides:

Posted by The FEI North American Junior & Young Rider Championships on Saturday, July 30, 2016

Clara Cargile and White Indian produced one of four double clear rounds to move up from fourth to first place on the individual leaderboard. Their score of 49.5 leaves little breathing room, however, as Shelby Brost and Crimson are hot on their heels with a 50.2. Dressage leaders Elena Hengel and Zipp picked up 9.6 time penalties dropping to third, but they’re within one rail of a gold medal on a two-phase score of 52.3.

Check out the course the Young Riders tackled today in this photo gallery from the NAJYRC Facebook page. The final horse inspection will be bright and early tomorrow morning with show jumping beginning at 10:30 a.m. Mountain Time. Stay tuned to EN for more from NAJYRC.

We can’t wait to see the eventing athletes navigate the cross-country course designed by James Atkinson tomorrow! What is your favorite jump?

Check out more behind-the-scenes video on USequestrian Snapchat!

Posted by The FEI North American Junior & Young Rider Championships on Friday, July 29, 2016

Screen Shot 2016-07-30 at 3.46.19 PM

Screen Shot 2016-07-30 at 3.46.29 PM

AEC Entries Go Live: Over 400 Horses Entered So Far

AECs

Entries have gone live for the 2016 Nutrena USEA American Eventing Championships. Less than two weeks after the July 19 opening date there are already 430 horse and rider combinations entered from Beginner Novice through Advanced.

The amateurs will be out in force, with over 50 entries in each of the Amateur divisions at Beginner Novice and Training and a staggering 63 entries in Novice Amateur, which is so far the biggest class.

The Junior divisions are also typically well populated and very competitive. There are 35 Junior Training riders so far and 47 Juniors at Beginner Novice.

The AEC also serves as the Adequan USEA Gold Cup Final and thus far 18 horse and rider combinations will be vying for $40,000 in prize money. There is a total of $100,000 up for grabs during the competition and hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of prizes.

The competition will take place for the first time at the Tryon International Equestrian Center (TIEC) in Mill Spring, N.C. on August 31-September 4. Entries are open until August 16. The final count is expected to be very large and if this early look is any indication we’re in for an exciting AEC!

Click here to view the entry status for all division.

Watch Eventing at the Olympics LIVE on USA Network

Usa-network_120526091741

Two days ago we provided a complete rundown of how to watch eventing at the Rio Olympic Games via NBCOlympics.com. Since then we’ve discovered that both the cross country and show jumping phases of eventing will be televised LIVE on the USA Network!

You can still watch all phases of the eventing action live on NBCOlympics.com and through the NBC Sports App, but you do have to provide a login and password associated with a cable or satellite subscription.

USA will also show a live broadcast of the crowd favorite dressage musical freestyle individual final and NBC will broadcast the first and second individual show jumping rounds live. USA, NBC and MSNBC will be showing replays of the three equestrian disciplines throughout. Scroll down to see a screenshot of the full broadcast schedule.

You can also follow along through EN with our open threads, live reports, photo galleries and social media roundups, and don’t forget to follow our live updates each day on Twitter @eventingnationWe’ll also be posting tons of photos on Instagram.

Equestrian competition broadcast schedule:

Screen Shot 2016-07-30 at 11.12.46 AM

Burghley Entry Update: USA Contingent Up to Eight

Bunnie Sexton and Rise Against. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld. Bunnie Sexton and Rise Against. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

The Burghley CCI4* entries keep rolling in and we’re thrilled to see more Americans added to the list of accepted entries.

Bunnie Sexton announced yesterday that she and her 17-year-old off-track Thoroughbred Rise Against are Burghley bound. Bunnie and Ecko have twice completed the Rolex Kentucky CCI4* (2015, 2016) without cross country jumping penalties. Burghley will be this pair’s overseas debut!

Elisa Wallace and Simply Priceless are also on their way to their first Burghley CCI4*. In just over two years, Elisa and the now 15-year-old Australian OTTB owned by the Simply Priceless Syndicate have risen from the two-star level to having completed Rolex Kentucky twice, placing 17th in their rookie year in 2015 and turning out an impressive performance for eighth place at this year’s event.

Holly Payne Caravella and the Fox Syndicate’s 10-year-old Never Outfoxed (another full Thoroughbred, although he is unraced) are entered at Burghley for their first event across the pond. Holly and Fox were 20th at their first four-star at Rolex Kentucky in 2015. This year they were unfortunately not accepted in the Rolex Final Horse Inspection after a cracking clear cross country round, but they’ve bounced back and now have their sights set on what is widely considered the toughest four-star in the world.

Phillip Dutton is entered on two horses, but Mighty Nice will now compete in the Olympic Games instead. Phillip will still aim for Burghley with Fernhill Fugitive, an 11-year-old Irish Sport Horse owned by Thomas Tierney and Ann Jones. “Jack” was 8th in his first four-star at Rolex in 2015 and finished 13th at his second attempt this year.

This brings the USA contingent up to eight, as Libby Head and Sir Rockstar, Liz Halliday-Sharp and HHS Cooley and Leah Lang-Gluscic and AP Prime were among the early entries to Burghley.

Click here to see the full list of entries.