Classic Eventing Nation

Thursday News & Notes from SmartPak

Sinead Halpin and Forrest Nypmh. Photo by Sally Spickard.

Sinead Halpin and Forrest Nypmh. Photo by Sally Spickard.

Eventing Nation is sending well wishes to the feisty Forrest Nymph as she is heading home for some R&R after getting cast in her stall in Florida. Unfortunately, even though she seemed fine after getting cast, it turns out that she has five rib fractures, and will need some time off. While we were all looking forward to an Advanced debut from the pony, we will just have to wait until later in the year! Get better soon Farrah!

U.S. Weekend Preview:

Three Lakes January at Caudle Ranch H.T. [Website] [Entry Status]

News From Around the Globe:

Charlotte DuJardin is using her powers for good by auctioning off Valegro’s things for charity. Charlotte held an auction featuring boots, hats, numbers, and even his shoes used at the Olympics and World Games on her champion from another universe, raising over £7000 for The Brooke, an international equine charity that benefits working equids in third world countries. [Charlotte Raises Money for The Brooke]

Are you hosting clinics, lessons or special events for eventers this winter? Send in your event listing for EN’s new weekly What’s Going On This Winter series. Be sure to include cost, location, contact information and any forms or flyers you’d like included Send listings to [email protected].

The EN team is on an eternal quest to make this the best eventing website in the land, and the more we know about our readership the better we can shape the site into exactly what YOU want it to be. Help us out by answering a few questions  — it only takes a minute and we’ll send you a great big heaping scoop of EN karma in return! [EN Gallop Poll]

Hanging out in Aiken in March? You should head on over on March 3rd to the night of celebration of U.S. Eventing at Stable View, featuring a masterclass with Boyd and Phillip, followed by a night of revelry with a bar, food and live entertainment provided. Contact Bryn Wells [email protected] for information regarding tickets.

Help a fellow Eventer out! Evelyn Juckett is a sophomore in the Math, Science and Technology program at duPont Manual Highschool in Louisville Kentucky. She is doing a science fair project regarding horses, and needs your input for her survey! It only takes a few seconds, and it will be greatly appreciated. [Survey Here

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Marbach Eventing Trailer

Marbach is a prime destination for many European eventers, boasting a CIC3* that attracts the best of the best. Michael Jung and Halunke FBW were the 2015 winners of the CIC3*, and there is plenty to look forward to for the 2016 edition.

If you want to find where some of the best event riders call home, you’ll definitely want to add Marbach to your list of events to attend — it is, after all, in the homeland of Michael Jung, Ingrid Klimke and many others!

Check out this great trailer for the action to come, all hosted by Marbach Eventing. We can’t wait to see more this year!

And Now Entering the Ring … Jumper Nation

Photo: Creative Commons Photo: Creative Commons

It’s always been our goal here at Nation Media to give the people what they want. You tell us what’s important to you, and what we can do to help you be a more informed, inspired and in-the-know member of the eventing community, and we’ll try our best to make it happen.

A while back we started hearing some rumblings from our friends in the hunter/jumper world. They wanted what we had: a one-stop source for discipline-specific news made available in a timely manner, intermingled with dashes of color commentary.

These days we’re all more crunched for time than ever; nobody has the time to go scrounging around the Internet trying to figure out what’s going on. And while the sport’s PR outlets do a bang-up job of cranking out horse show reports, a lot of it never sees the light of day.

Rather than letting it drift away in the cyber-breeze, what if someone came along and raked it all up into one big tidy pile?

We’re excited to roll out the red carpet for the newest member of the Nation Media family: Jumper Nation.

JN-logoCustom-curated for hunter/jumper enthusiasts, the site features aggregated horse show news, results, rider profiles, videos, training tips and much, much more. Its mission is to be a virtual in-gate for the h/j world, a place where riders and fans can gather to watch, learn, sympathize, laugh and cheer one another on.

We’re still getting warmed up so please excuse the construction, and we’re letting readers dictate which direction to take things so expect a fair amount of evolution over the next few months. On the bright side it already looks a lot spiffier than Eventing Nation v. 1.0, which I’m pretty sure John built himself on his iPhone 1G.

So go check it out, and pass the word on to your hunter/jumper buddies, and be sure to get hooked up with JN on social as well.

Thanks for your support as we push outward into new equestrian media frontiers. We couldn’t do it without you.

Avery Klunick Goes With the Flow in 2016

With the recent naming of the 2016 Eventing 25/18 Training Lists, there are a lot of talented young riders who are ready to take the eventing world by storm. This winter, we’ll be spotlighting the E25 and E18 riders as they prepare for their training sessions with Leslie Law.

Avery Klunick and It It to Win It. Photo by Sally Spickard.

Avery Klunick and It It to Win It. Photo by Sally Spickard.

“So, what are you going to do after you graduate?”

It’s the inevitable question that every college senior dreads hearing, but it doesn’t seem to bother 22-year-old Avery Klunick much. “I don’t exactly have a five year plan right now,” she shrugged. “But I’m really content doing what I’m doing. I have an awesome horse and I’m excited to see what we can do together, whether it lasts for a year or for ten.” 

The end of the 2014 season didn’t go quite as planned for Avery and In It to Win It. After her infamous save at the AECs, an unfortunate fall at the Fair Hill International CCI3* brought their season to an abrupt end and Avery decided to put her hopes of being a Rolex Kentucky competitor on hold.

Instead, she focused on flatwork and school work in the winter and came out strong with second place finishes at the Chattahoochee Hills CIC3* in May and the Copper Meadows CIC3* in June on “Winston.”

In August, the pair tackled the inaugural CCI3* at Rebecca Farm ending with a sixth place finish.  Avery also received a Rebecca Broussard Travel Grant which enabled her to bring her younger horse, Ringwood Army, along too.

Though she’s selling him for financial reasons, Avery has enjoyed bringing “Army” up the levels. “Army is really straightforward on the flat and in stadium jumping — which is the opposite of Winston — so it’s given me a lot of confidence as a rider.”

Avery is very grateful for the opportunity to have brought both her horses out to Montana to compete. “The Event at Rebecca Farm is definitely my favorite event in the world that I’ve been to so far,” she said.

Originally, Avery had planned to finish out her and Winston’s season with another try at Fair Hill, but it turned out not to be in the cards. “I hit a bit of a breaking point,” Avery recalled. “There was no way I could go to Fair Hill and do well in school so we scratched sort of at the last minute. It was pretty disappointing, but all in all I think I would rather have graduated than stay in school another semester!”

Avery Klunkick and In It to Win It at Richland CIC3*. Photo courtesy of Kasey Mueller.

Avery Klunkick and In It to Win It at Richland CIC3*. Photo courtesy of Kasey Mueller.

As a newly minted college graduate, Avery can finally breathe a sign of relief. The Midland, Texas native has bounced back and forth from the Lone Star State to the Golden State relentlessly since 2013 between training with Bea and Derek di Grazia in Carmel Valley, California; working on her degree in finance from Texas Christian University; and competing Winston and Army primarily across Areas V, VI, VII.

Now she no longer has to worry about balancing riding competitions with school courses. “It feels amazing and I’m thrilled,” Avery said about being done with school.

But just because she’s completed her degree doesn’t mean that it’s time to sit still; Avery hit the road again on New Year’s Day, this time headed east to begin working for Boyd Martin.

“I knew it was time for me to come to the East coast,” said Avery. “I’ve been out west multiple times now and the events out there are awesome, but they’re fewer and farther between. I figure it’s time to expose myself to new events, new people, and new ideas.”

Less than week after moving in at Windurra USA’s winter home at Stable View farm in Aiken, South Carolina, she hit the road again for Ocala, Florida to take part in the Eventing 25 Developing Rider Training Session.

Avery has been named to the Eventing 25 Developing Rider list twice before in 2013 and 2014. Having missed 2015, this is her first time training with coach Leslie Law. “I’m really excited for one-on-one attention and to get the new season going,” she said. “I’m looking forward to learning some new exercises and getting critiqued with a fresh set up eyes.”

Avery Klunick and In It to Win It. Photo by Sally Spickard.

Avery Klunick and In It to Win It. Photo by Sally Spickard.

She credits her first year in the Developing Riders program with opening the door for much of her future success. “It’s cool how just that program made a lot of things happen for me,” Avery said. “It was a game changer. It opened my mind to a lot of things I’ve never heard of or thought of.”

It also gave Avery the opportunity to meet new people. “No one knew me the first year,” she said. “I was the random girl from Texas and I was just walking up to people and introducing myself.” 

It was during that training session that Avery introduced herself to Mackenna Shea. “We’re best friends now, but she told me later that she thought I was really weird!” Avery laughed. Mackenna, in turn, has introduced Avery to Tamie Smith and also encouraged her to call up Boyd to ask for a job. “Its amazing what a small world eventing is!” 

Avery played the role of groom during Mackenna’s four-star debut at Rolex Kentucky last spring. “It was a really cool experience,” she said. “I walked the course with her and got to be behind the scenes. I’m really glad I got to do that and be with her for her first four-star.”

As for 2016, Avery is looking forward to exploring some more of the east coast events; The Carolina International and The Fork are on her tentative schedule. As far as Rolex goes, Avery has qualified again, but she’s going to roll with the punches before deciding whether to enter. “I would love it if it worked out, but I’m going to wait and see what I have this spring,” Avery said. “I would love to go, but I won’t die if I can’t.”

For now, Avery is happy and grateful to be where she is. “I’ve never really been able to focus on just my riding before,” she said. “So I’m excited to be riding professionally for a little while and forge my path and see what doors open.” 

Is Sam Arlen the Eventer’s Good Luck Charm?

Sam Arlen and Rick Wallace pal it up at Red Hills. Photo by Patricia Dileo. Sam Arlen and Rick Wallace pal it up at Red Hills. Photo by Patricia Dileo.

If there is anyone feeling pressure today, it’s Sam Arlen. He’s the man you’ll be watching this evening as those little white balls are chosen one by one to determine the fate of the record-breaking $1.5 billion Powerball jackpot.

It’s a small world, though, as it turns out Sam and eventer Rick Wallace are close friends — Sam even ventures out to Red Hills each year to hang with his favorite equestrians. Perhaps this is the good luck charm we’ve all been looking for!

When it comes down to business, though, Sam takes his position very seriously. “I started working with the Florida Lottery and then did a law school gig after that. When I came back, I did more work with the Florida Lottery, and then PowerBall decided to move to Tallahassee,” he said.

“I remember vividly thinking, ‘One of these days, I’m going to be doing Powerball.’ I certainly didn’t know it would happen and, to my knowledge, I wasn’t even on the radar. But when Powerball decided to move to Tallahassee, they asked if I would be interested. It was kind of a full circle moment for me to be able to host the biggest lottery in the country.”

Tonight will be a history making moment for Sam, who will either draw a set of winning numbers or will draw a set that sends the jackpot skyrocketing even further into outer space.

“I will be really freaking nervous,” Sam laughed. “But I’m also excited. I feel like I’m sharing a collective excitement and energy about the game and the hope someone might win.”

“I don’t know if this comes across on TV, but it requires a lot of focus up there, to call the numbers right and without a teleprompter. I’ll be more focused than ever tonight — I’ll be in the zone, so to speak.”

“It’s one of the best things to ever happen to me, and I’m extremely grateful to be the host. Though I can’t play myself, I can channel this sort of international energy that surrounds Powerball and the hopes and dreams so many people share.”

I tried to give Sam a list of numbers that I wanted him to draw — unfortunately, he said that wasn’t exactly how the process worked. His advice to the eventual winner, however, is to “hire a lawyer and get a CPA! And maybe buy a horse.”

We’ll take that advice and run with it, Sam! Best of luck to all lottery players tonight — no pressure, Sam, but the entire eventing community is now depending on your to pull our numbers.

You can follow Sam on Twitter and Facebook to get the latest from the Powerball stage. Many thanks to Sam for his time and to Rick Wallace for connecting him to EN!

2016 EN Gallop Poll: Tell Us About Yourself!

Photo by Leslie Wylie. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

“Gallop poll,” haha. Get it? Bad puns aside, it’s time for the smart, good-looking citizens of Eventing Nation to stand up and be counted.

The EN team is on an eternal quest to make this the best eventing website in the land, and the more we know about our readership the better we can shape the site into exactly what YOU want it to be. Help us out by answering a few questions  — it only takes a minute and we’ll send you a great big heaping scoop of EN karma in return!

Last but not least, how can we improve your EN experience? Feel free to contribute your comments and suggestions in the comments section below or you can email them to [email protected]. All feedback is greatly appreciated!

Thank you so much for taking the time to participate in our survey. Karma’s in the mail!

Go Eventing.

Wednesday News and Notes from SmartPak

Madeline Backus and P.S. Arianna under the watchful eye of Leslie Law. Photo via USEF High Performance FB page. Madeline Backus and P.S. Arianna under the watchful eye of Leslie Law. Photo via USEF High Performance FB page.

You know it’s competition season when the high performance sessions start, and we are kicking off first with the U25 sessions under Developing Rider coach Leslie Law. Two days ago the riders went through their paces on the flat and now they’ve moved onto jumping. I’ve got to give a particular shout-out to my current barn-mate Madeline Backus who rocked around her first Advanced and CIC3* last year at the tender age of nineteen, as well as former barn-mates Avery Klunick and Jacob Fletcher, who all made the list this year. Soak it up!

U.S. Weekend Preview:

Three Lakes January at Caudle Ranch H.T. [Website] [Entry Status]

The march of bad news continue as we hear of the passing of two more four star competitors. Highland Lad, who won the 2002 Burghley under William Fox-Pitt, has diead at the age of 22. Additionally, Chris Burton’s 2008 Adelaide winner Newsprint passed away on January 5th due to liver disease. Both horses were retired in England [WFP’s Second Burghley Winner Dies] [Tribues Paid to Very Special Four Star Event Horse]

HH Azur made a big impression on Chronicle writer Catie Staszak . Catie once had the fortune to meet Barbaro, prior to his win in the Kentucky Derby. She was immediately struck by his presence and had no doubt of his future greatness. Catie hadn’t had the same feeling upon meeting a horse until she laid eyes on McClain Ward’s show jumping mare HH Azur.  [HH Azur is Show Jumping’s ‘It’ Girl]

The CEO of the USEF has left his position. Chris Welton was hired eighteen months ago, but has now left to pursue other interests. In the meantime, William Moroney has been appointed as the interim CEO until the position is permanently filled. Moroney is currently the president of the USHJA.  [USEF Announces CEO Departure]

Matt Brown knows he has to break out of his comfort zone to make it big. Matt has sacrificed a lot in the past year, uprooting his wife and moving across the country while leaving a thriving training business behind to pursue his dream of representing the U.S. Yet sometimes the biggest obstacles are ourselves, and he is now having to learn how to be a salesman as well as a rider, something he has never felt comfortable doing. [The Diary of a Reluctant Salesman]

The Fair Hill Inn is generously donating a portion of their bills to Fair Hill International. On Thursday, January 21, the Fair Hill Inn will donate 20% of your bill to the event if you mention the name “Bodgie” to your server. You aren’t sure who Bodgie is? Then you definitely need to show up and find out! [Fair Hill “Squared” Fundraiser]

New event venue Stable View is holding a fundraiser for the USET. On Thursday, March 3, Boyd and Phillip will hold a Master Class which will be followed by an after party. Tickets are available to both the Masterclass and After Party, or just the Masterclass. All proceeds will benefit the Land Rover U.S. Eventing Team in their journey to Rio. [Eventing Aiken]

This week on the Eventing Radio Show: Ben Hobday and Caroline Martin. Hosts Liz Halliday-Sharp and Paul Tapner with U25 rider Caroline Martin, who is building up a string these days. Ben Hobday stops by for an update on his health and competition plans. [Eventing Radio Show]

SmartPak Product of the Day: One thing I’m absolutely a stickler for is having a spare halter around. You never know when you’ll see a loose horse running by your trailer and need to snatch something quick. Or for that matter, when you buy a new horse, might be nice to put a pretty new halter on his head… [SmartPak]

Three-star horse Under Suspection is back in action after a year’s hiatus, now with Hannah Sue Burnett in the irons.

 

 

Tuesday Video from SpectraVET: Pony Rally, Eventer Style

Many thanks to Beth Davidson for sending us this clip of eventers hopping on the pony express this weekend at the Ocala Horse Properties Winter I HT.

In the video foreground is Clayton Fredericks, with Buck Davidson in the furthest lane. Other competitors included Daisy and Richard Trayford, Jen and Kyle Carter, Joe Meyers, Jessie and Silvio and the kids from the Lemon-heads games team, who competed last year for the Sunshine State Region at the Prince Phillip Cup at Rolex.

Looks like fun! We’d love to see more video if anyone has it! If you happen to have some, send it our way to [email protected].

Why SpectraVET?

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East Coast Eventing 25 Training Sessions Underway at Meredyth South

The East Coast edition of the Eventing 25 training sessions kicked off yesterday at Ms. Jaqueline Mars’ picturesque Meredyth South Farm in Ocala, Florida.

The five-day clinic includes mounted lessons under the guidance of Developing Rider Coach Leslie Law…

U25 Developing Riders working on show jumping today with coach, Leslie Law at Meredyth South.

Posted by USEF Eventing High Performance on Tuesday, January 12, 2016

… lectures on the ground …

U25 lunch lecture with Max Corcoran on traveling overseas and stable mangement at Red Tail Ridge Farm South.

Posted by USEF Eventing High Performance on Monday, January 11, 2016

… and, of course, various assorted shenanigans.

Zach Brandt was doing something to impress the ladies, not sure what?Then Jenny Caras put him to the test. And he failed…

Posted by David Frechette on Tuesday, January 12, 2016

The USEF High Performance Eventing Facebook page has been doing a great job of posting photos from the sessions, so be sure to keep an eye on that. What a tremendous educational opportunity for some of our country’s most talented rising stars.

2016 Eventing 25 Riders:

Madeline Backus (Larkspur, Colo.)
Jenny Caras (Cartersville, Ga.)
Jacob Fletcher (North Little Rock, Ark.)
Savannah ‘Woodge’ Fulton (Ocala, Fla.)
Alexandra Green (Loudon, Tenn.)
Avery Klunick (Midland, Texas)
Caroline Martin (Miami Beach, Fla.)
Lexi Scovil (Ocala, Fla.)
Chloe Smyth (Poway, Calif.)
Lizzie Snow (Southern Pines, N.C.)
Mackenna Shea (Temecula, Calif.)

Excited that I am apart of this program and what an incredible opportunity. Doors always open when you need them the most. #GoUSA

Posted by Alex Green on Monday, January 11, 2016

The East Coast E18 training sessions take place next week, Jan. 18-22, also at Meredyth South. The West Coast E25 and E18 will be held simultaneously Feb. 1-4 at Tucolota Creek Ranch in Temecula, California.

[Complete Roster of E25 and E18 Riders] [Training Session Dates and Locations]

The Difference a Trainer Can Make

Eventing is as much a mental game as it is a physical one, and the best trainers can have a positive impact on both fronts. Maialisa Jensen, a Bio-Behavioral Health major at Penn State, explains the difference between good stress and bad stress and shares the story of how trainer/4* rider Allie Sacksen helped get her head back in the game. Thank you for sharing, Maialisa! 

Photo by Kirsten Jensen.

Photo by Kirsten Jensen.

Eventing and rider-confidence are symbiotic; the safety of the prior is dependent on the security of the latter. As riders, we get our confidence from our skill sets and we develop our skill sets with experience and with help from our trainers.

I believe there are two relationships that are vital to becoming a successful event rider. They apply to every level of competition and arguably to every competitor. From a young rider to an adult amateur to a professional, these two relationships affect all of us who wish to compete in this challenging and exciting sport.

Naturally, the first is the relationship between horse and rider, as cross country riding takes a special kind of trust and bond. The second is between rider and coach; a relationship that peaks my interest both as it relates to my sport and my education, and on which I plan to focus here.

I recently completed my seventh semester at Penn State University. I am a Bio-Behavioral Health major in the college of Health and Human Development and am focusing on neurophysiology and developmental psych. I have taken several classes concerning eustress (beneficial stress) versus distress (the fear response) and their subsequent effects on health and performance in school and in the workplace.

I have also been riding with Allie Sacksen, of von Sacksen Eventing, since 2012 at which time I was struggling to get around Novice courses with a mare that fell a bit on the “disinclined-to-acquiesce-to-your-request” side of the spectrum.

Allie saw me through my first, albeit unimpressive, move up to Training with the mare. She helped me achieve my C-3, B, and H/A certifications in Pony Club. She helped me make the tough decision to sell the mare. She aided me in getting used to my new OTTB gelding and got me through the rough patches with him in the beginning. Allie was with me at the start and finish of my first clear Training cross-country and at the start and finish of my first Preliminary this past fall. I could not have done any of those things without her help and I owe her so much.

So how do my areas of academic interest and my experience in eventing coalesce into a concept that I feel strongly enough about to share with my peers? Stress! I think everyone who competes in eventing feels some degree of stress — either when you’re stepping up a level, or before an important event, or before you contest a particularly big course. Having a good coach can make the difference between feeling eustress or distress.

Eustress is beneficial, it is normal, it is the result of challenging yourself but having confidence in your ability to overcome the stressor. Distress is the opposite. In eventing, it is entering the start box and getting that sinking feeling in your stomach that tells you: A) you don’t feel prepared (or able) to meet the challenge which lies ahead and B) you are unsure of your ability to finish the course in one piece.

I have experienced both of these feelings in the box, and when your most convicted thought as you thank whomever counted you down is “why am I doing this” you know there is a problem. Thank goodness, my trainer helped me see this, we were able to make changes, and I am now borderline bubbling-over with excitement to get back out and compete.

It is so critically important to find a coach who understands you, your horse, and how the both of you work together. Someone who can gauge both your confidence and your horse’s confidence and who can help you both have fun and stay safe. I would encourage anyone who has goals in eventing at any level to find a trainer who not only looks good on paper, but one who feels right, who makes you feel like they care about your goals, and who you care about in return.

At the end of the day, eventing is all about confidence, preparation, keeping red on the right, white on the left, and adding just a pinch of insanity in between.

Thank you for sharing, Maialisa! Have a story to tell? Email it to [email protected].