Classic Eventing Nation

Tuesday Video from SpectraVET: Badminton Highlight Reel

Badminton 2015 has come and gone (how does time fly so fast?), and we’re already excited for next year’s edition of one of the world’s premier four-star events. The Badminton YouTube channel just released a highlight video from this year’s event, where William Fox-Pitt and the stallion Chilli Morning took home the top honors.

You can catch up on EN’s coverage of Badminton, thanks to the wonderful Samantha Clark, here. What was your favorite highlight from Badders this year, EN?

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.

 

9 Etsy Finds That Will Take Your Color Coordination Game to the Next Level

When it comes to color coordination, eventers can be a little obsessive-compulsive.

They’re not just our cross-country colors — they’re our identity — and we’ll wear them loud and proud. We wrap everything we own in appropriately hued electrical tape and God help the barnmate who borrows our hoofpick and accidentally throws it in their grooming box instead of putting it back … busted!

Electrical tape is classic, but for eventers seeking to take their color coordination to the next level there are resources out there for you. Among them: Etsy, a wonderland for horse gear custom-made by people who are a thousand times craftier than you and I will ever be.

Here are a few items I found while thumbing through the site that may be of interest to eventers seeking to live the ultimate matchy-matchy dream:

Made-to-Order Saddle Pad

BeFunky Collage

Choose two colors plus a binding and backing color — and add a monogram if you like — for a completely custom look. $80+. Etsy shop: ChestnutMareCrafts.

Custom Swarovski Rhinestone Crop, Belt, Gloves and Dog Collar

BeFunky Collage

Your cross-country colors in bling. $38-89. Etsy shop: theStonedHorse.

Custom Stock Ties

BeFunky Collage

Handmade and available in a wide array of color combinations. $69. Etsy shop: DocsDesigns1.

Custom Jeweled Browbands

Handmade and available in a variety of colors. $110. Etsy shop: GEARHORSEnHOUND.

Handmade and available in a variety of colors. $110. Etsy shop: GEARHORSEnHOUND.

Custom Fly Bonnet

Choose your base color, up to two trim colors, trim widths and style (square or rounded front). Scallop trim, crystal beads, rhinestones and additional rows of trim available. $70. Etsy shop: horsesandhome.

Choose your base color, up to two trim colors, trim widths and style (square or rounded front). Scallop trim, crystal beads, rhinestones and additional rows of trim available. $70. Etsy shop: horsesandhome.

Custom Brush Sets

BeFunky Collage

Customizable wood backed brushes — you choose color, patterns, and text options. $10-$70. Etsy shop: Emily Equine Creations.

Custom Fly Mask

BeFunky Collage

Choose your own mesh and trim colors. $22.50. Etsy shop: MMHAriginals.

Custom Lead Rope

"Got a color in mind? Well I can make it happen! Whether it be blue camo or neon pink -- if you can imagine it I can make it." $25. Etsy shop: MadzProducts.

“Got a color in mind? Well I can make it happen! Whether it be blue camo or neon pink — if you can imagine it I can make it.” $25. Etsy shop: MadzProducts.

Custom Monogram Decals

BeFunky Collage

Put your name on it! $3-7. Etsy shop: KJeqCreations.

And that, friends, is just the tip of the Etsy iceberg. Go check it out, and Go Eventing!

Mourn the Beginning of Fly Season with SmartPak’s Latest ‘Stuff Riders Say’

SmartPak’s back, y’all. New episodes of ‘Stuff Riders Say’ because let’s face it: we say some pretty weird things. With fly season approaching (or, in some areas, already here), it’s time to break out the fly spray, fly masks, and every other tactic we can think of to rid ourselves of the pesky winged bugs.

If you’re lucky enough to live in the Midwest like me, you’re in for locusts as well. Well, perhaps the locusts are coming to other areas too, but I’m focusing on the dread I am experiencing of the hoards that are on the horizon here in Missouri.

Fortunately, SmartPak’s episodes on fly spray are enough to keep us laughing all the way to the tack store as we stock up on industrial strength gallons of the stuff. Enjoy these episodes of ‘Stuff Riders Say’, and here’s to the never ending battle against bugs!

Kate Chadderton Gives Her Working Students a Leg Up

Emily Pryzborowski and her resale project, Mr. Pickles. Photo via Kate Chadderton on Facebook. Emily Pryzborowski and her resale project, Mr. Pickles. Photo via Kate Chadderton on Facebook.

Kate Chadderton knows what it takes to make a living (or some semblance of one, anyway) in the horse industry. Growing up in a modest household in Australia, she gained some experience bartering and selling horses at a young age.

Now, she’s passing along her knowledge to her working students in a unique way: giving them each a green horse to work with, retrain, market, and sell during the summer months. Her hope is that she can give them exposure to what is involved in being an equine professional, minus a few of the green mistakes she herself had made along the way.

“I had this pony growing up that was too small for me,” Kate remembered. “These neighbors moved in on the street and they had a horse that I thought was quite handsome. So I rode my pony up to their house, and they explained that their horse was a bit too big. I said, ‘Well, my horse is too small, yours is too big, want to swap?’ And I rode that new horse back to my house. That was my first taste of the horse business, and I kept doing it through high school to earn money.”

As she’s grown into the professional she is today, Kate has learned many lessons along the way. “I’ve made plenty of mistakes, especially with my communication,” she said. “Now with my girls, I am hoping they can learn the ins and outs of the industry, hopefully without making the same mistakes I did.”

She started this project last year, obtaining green horses to give to her working students as summer projects. “I would advertise for project horses, and I would do the initial work for them,” she said. “I would sift through the many responses, looking for the right age, generally good conformation, breed, and suitability. Obviously with a resale horse you’re going to have some parameters.”

This year, Kate selected two ponies for her working students, Emily Pryzborowski and Melissa Lempicki, to handle as resale projects. “They came from the same place, and I let the girl each pick who they wanted,” she said. “They will do everything with them. I’ll be there for the first ride to make sure nothing goes wrong, and I’ll be around to keep an eye on things but this is their project. I want them to figure it out, and I’ll give them goals along the way to meet.”

Emily and Melissa will be in charge of preparing the ponies for sale, advertising them and fielding inquiries in the a timely manner when the responses begin to come in. No matter what, though, Kate wants to make sure the ponies are trained correctly and not just glossed up to “flip.”

“At the end of the day, these are still my product that they are selling,” she said. “I want them to be trained with lasting results, not just a temporary fix for any problems. I fund everything myself, so I want these to be horses I am proud to sell.”

At the end of the day, Kate hopes that this process will help her girls figure out if pursuing a career in horses is something they want to do. “One of the questions I get asked a lot is whether or not someone should go to school,” she said. “Most working students want to figure out if they want this as their career. I think this process helps them figure out if they it’s something they want to keep doing, and if they do hopefully it will instill some knowledge and skills that they can use in the future.”

As she keeps a watchful eye on her working students and their projects, Kate is happy she can pass along the things she has learned over time to a new generation of young equestrian professionals. “It’s difficult to come into the business side from a rider’s perspective, and I’ve made my share of mistakes. This is the girls’ opportunity to experience things for themselves, only they will hopefully skip the mistakes I made along the way and become more familiar with the equine business world at the end of the process.”

Looking for a working student position of your own? Check out our frequently updated page of listings here to find one that fits your needs! 

Tatendrang Cleared for Return to Full Work

We’ve been closely following the ADM Alliance Nutrition feed controversy since January, when it was revealed that ADM feed at multiple eventing barns tested positive for monensin, a substance that is toxic to horses. Numerous horses are now undergoing continuous testing, treatment and monitoring while owners search for answers as to why this has happened and what it means for their future. You can follow along with EN’s coverage at this link.

Andrew Palmer and Tatendrang at Fair Hill. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Andrew Palmer and Tatendrang at Fair Hill. Photo by Jenni Autry.

After being sidelined from work since January of this year, the Trakehner stallion, Tatendrang, has officially been cleared to return to work after being exposed to monensin via ADM Alliance Nutrition feed.

Initially, the 9-year-old stallion owned by Anissa Cottongim passed blood tests and echocargiograms, the results of which indicated no problems. However, a stress test did reveal potential problems, so the recommendation was made to scale back “Tate’s” work load to prevent any overload on his heart.

Yesterday, an update was posted on the Tatendrang Facebook page, announcing that Tate was cleared to return to full work, which means we’ll soon be seeing him back out on cross country:

I have some REALLY REALLY good news! Tate went for his follow up appointment with Peterson and Smith today for the monensin poisoning. His echocardiogram showed that he is HEALTHY!! His heart looks “great” and he is CLEARED to go back to full work! Now he has to build back up and he has a slight strain that is also being looked at while he’s down there, but the light at the end of the tunnel is finally starting to get bright!

Y’all have no idea how hard the past 6 months have been for all of us to be sitting on the sidelines so to get this news today was a joyous and thankful occasion for all of us! I’m hoping that we will have a plan of his first horse trial in the next few days – but for now a huge weight has been lifted off my shoulders and my heart is light for the first time in a long time.

We are thrilled to see that Tatendrang’s time off seems to have cleared him of residual issues from the exposure to monensin. We’ll post more updates on Tate and the rest of the horses from Andrew Palmer’s barn as they become available.

Go Tate.

Tuesday News and Notes from Cavalor

"Vroom," © 2010. Artwork by Lindsey Kahn

We’re over halfway through May, which means that flowers are blooming, foals are frolicking, clinic and show seasons are underway, and (in my case) I’m finding more and more artistic inspiration in the animals I encounter and the scenery I see everyday. In addition to teaching riding lessons, managing a business, and writing for the glorious website that is EN, I also fill my time with visual art. I’m excited and honored to have been invited to showcase my portfolio at several amazing art shows in Minnesota this year, which has made my spring suddenly much busier (and more awesome).

To see progress pics and updates on my art, please check out my Facebook page. For a ridiculous trip down memory lane, check out EN’s (in)Famous Spooking Styles. If you have some fun ideas for a new (in)Famous illustrated article, shoot me an email at [email protected]!

Events Opening Today: Kelly’s Ford Horse Trials (VA, A-2), Chattahoochee Hills H.T. (GA, A-3), Camelot Equestrian Horse Park Horse Trials (CA, A-6), South Farm H.T. (OH, A-8), Coconino Classic 3-Day Event (AZ, A-10)

Events Closing Today: GMHA June HorseTrials (VT, A-1), Genesee Valley Riding & Driving Club Spring Horse Trials  (NY, A-1), Plantation Field H.T. (PA, A-2), The Middleburg H.T. (VA, A-2), River Glen June H.T. (TN, A-3), Roebke’s Run CCI & CIC2/1* & H.T. (MN, A-4), Texas Rose Horse Park Summer H.T. (TX, A-5), Copper Meadows H.T. (CA, A-6), Arrowhead H.T. (MT, A-7), Derbyshire Farms H.T. (MI, A-8)

News and Notes: 

Want to join the most eclectic team of eventing journalists around? Then you’ll want to enter our Fifth Annual EN Blogger Contest for your shot! We’re looking for our next victim talented writer to join our team, and entries are open until tonight at 8 p.m. EST. [EN Blogger Contest]

Thinking about entering the Great Meadow International CIC3*? Clarifications have been posted regarding the entry process on the Omnibus listing, and event organizer Darrin Mollett has released the following statement: “The CIC3* is open to all qualified competitors and is not an invitational.  Entries will be accepted until the maximum of 25 entries are received in the order in which they are received by postmark.  Riders are limited to two horses.  In the case of excessive entries, the entries from the top 10 athletes on the USEA Overall Leaderboard as of June 1, 2015 will receive priority over all other entries, regardless of entry postmark date.  Non-US based athletes will be chosen based on FEI horse/rider ranking as of June 1, 2015 rather than US national ranking ( i.e., non-US based compared to US based using the FEI horse/rider ranking). If you have any questions about your qualifications, please contact Steve Symansky at 540-687-6333 or [email protected].

MK’S Concord Dawn leads PFEE’s Thoroughbred Competitive Series: The Plantatian Field Equestrian Events’ Thoroughbred Competitive Series has garnered a great deal of interest as it highlights and recognizes eventing Thoroughbreds. Molly Kinnamon’s MK’s Concord Dawn (by Smart Guy out of Delta Street) is currently leading the series after winning two Novice divisions at Plantatian Field horse trials. There are currently 61 horses competing in the series, with 23 earning points toward the award. The winner of the Thoroughbred Competitive Series wins a $5,000 cash award, which is generously sponsored by Kathleen Crompton. [PFEE Press Release]

Rekindle your passion for equestrian life: The Equestrian Trailblazers Summit is a video series gathering 24 successful and innovative leaders in the equine industry, beginning on June 1st and running for 11 days! “It will be a celebration of the amazing equestrian innovations taking place around the world,” says creator June Burgess. Join experts such as Monty Roberts, Lisa Diersen (Equus Film Festival), Beth Rasin (COTH) and many more as they share the secrets behind their motivation and success. The website is open for registration for this free video summit. [Equestrian Trailblazers Summit Press Release]

“I figured if I was gonna die, I was gonna die with my horses.” In 2013, Vietnam veteran Rodger Howell was told he was dying from exposure to Agent Orange. He decided that the best way to spend his remaining time on Earth was to travel the country with his horses Sunny and Dancer and his Border collie Banjo, traveling and living out of a horse-drawn wagon. While the veteran and former police chief’s journey was originally designed to help him get away from people, Howell has found many friendly and welcoming people along the way. Read all about Howell’s ongoing cross-country journey here: [Veteran travels country by horse-drawn wagon]

Video of the Day: After getting teary-eyed while watching American Pharoah kick butt in the Preakness Stakes, I just had to go back and rewatch Secretariat’s phenomenal victory at the 1973 Belmont Stakes. I cry every time. There’s just something about watching Big Red surge ahead of the field and keep on building momentum that absolutely shatters me.

Monday Video from Tredstep Ireland: Mustang Helmet Cam from CHC International

Team Tredstep rider Elisa Wallace and her magical mustang, Hwin, had a great run in the Novice Horse division at CHC International this weekend, finishing third out of 18 with just four jumping penalties in show jumping added. You can really see Hwin blossoming as she steps up to the plate as an event horse, and her confident run in this week’s helmet cam is really fun to watch.

Congratulations to Elisa and Hwin on a successful weekend! We can’t wait to see the next helmet cam! To follow along with more updates from Wallace Eventing, click here.

Omega Alpha Blogger Challenge: Conga Finds a New Solution with Sinew-X

We recently selected a few bloggers to try out a 30 day supply of Omega Alpha’s popular joint supplement, Sinew-X. These bloggers have received their supply and will be starting their horses on a 30 day regimen, all while blogging about their observations and results! We can’t wait to see how their horses take to the supplement, and we hope you enjoy following along! Ute Shepherd sent in her recap blog of her experiences using Sinew-X on her OTTB mare, Conga.

Photo by Ute Shepherd.

Photo by Ute Shepherd.

Conga finished her final dose of Sinew-X a little while ago now and I can’t be more pleased with the results. We have been working with her on the lunge line and under saddle again now that the weather is cooperating a little more, and she has been doing wonderfully.

As a matter of fact, she has done so well on the Omega Alpha Equine Sinew-X that I will continue her on it. Lucky for us, it is available at the tack and vet supply store that I frequent, so I don’t have to worry about trying to locate a dealer. It is very affordable and available in a 1 liter bottle as well as a 1 gallon jug.

Her movement has been fluid and she has had no issues with stiffness or soreness or inflammation.

Conga is very young and will benefit from a joint supplement due to her previous injuries from the race track. I am please how she continued to eat the supplement added to the top of her grain without any problems. That in itself is huge for me. She likes the taste and I don’t have to worry about her sifting through it and wasting it. During turnout she has been feeling good and if my horse is happy, I am happy.

It is very important to me that the Omega Alpha products are all natural and uses the best ingredients. If I had a question, a knowledgeable person would respond quickly and answer all questions. I am thankful for having been selected as one of the guest bloggers and the opportunity to try this product. I have already bragged and recommended Omega Alpha Equine’s Sinew-X to my other horse friends.

 

Weekly Training Tip from Kate Chadderton: Warm-Ups

Kate Chadderton is an Australian native who operates a competition and training business in Maryland. She recently began offering weekly tips and advice, and we're pleased that she's graciously allowed us to share them here on EN. Keep an eye out for a new tip each week from Kate!

Kate Chadderton and Buckharo. Photo by Jenni Autry. Kate Chadderton and Buckharo. Photo by Jenni Autry.

After weeks (years!) of training and lessons, your performance at a show largely comes down to your warm-up. My warm-ups vary from horse to horse and between the phases. For the dressage phase I start with some slow stretching in walk, trot and canter. Once my horse is relaxed I bring his/her frame up and start to work on the movements. 

Typically I’ll go straight into the ones I know will be more difficult for the horse, eg. shoulder in, half pass. Once I’m comfortable I have the horse on my aids I will finish with the easier movements which are more fun right before we go in the ring. I want my horses to be happy and confident as they head down the centreline.

For example, (VS McCuan Civil Liberty) LOVES medium and extended trot. And he’s really good at it! So I’ll finish my warmup with a couple of really big ones and I swear he feels like the biggest and greatest horse in the warmup! That’s the feeling I try to take into the ring. For the younger horses it’s the same concept but I might use canter as it’s an easy and soothing gait for a baby.

In the jumping phases I use a similar approach. It’s so important to me that each horse wants to do and enjoys his job. Of course there are particular fences that are more difficult for the individual than others, so I like to prepare them for that.

After jumping a couple of warmup fences to get them going I then start to get specific. For example, (Buckharo) doesn’t always pick up on angles right away, so I’ll jump 6 or 8 fences on an acute angle to get his eye in. Generally it’ll be three times off each rein, but sometimes a warm-up will be fenced so I can only do one way. Then I always finish by jumping something big and easy from a gallop, again so they head to the start box feeling awesome!

Megan Moore Welcomes Full Bay My Hero Sibling to the U.S.

Megan Moore and Mooney Maguire after winning their first outing together this weekend. Photo by Howard Moore. Megan Moore and Mooney Maguire after winning their first outing together this weekend. Photo by Howard Moore.

It’s not too often we see a full sibling to a four-star winner in the U.S., but Megan Moore’s most recent acquisition, Mooney Maguire, is just that. After a recent horse shopping trip to Europe, Megan found herself enamored with an 8-year-old full sibling to 2014 Rolex Kentucky winner Bay My Hero, and now she’s welcomed this exciting new talent into her program as an upper level prospect.

“We went on a shopping trip for clients and we were very successful and were pretty much done,” Megan recalled. “On the day we were due to fly out, our friends there called and said they had one more for us to look at, and that he was showing that weekend.”

Megan went and had her first look at Mooney Maguire, a towering Irish Sport Horse standing 17 hands. “I said I would love to sit on him, and we just clicked instantly,” she said. “I had been thinking of him for a client, but unfortunately they wanted a small horse so he was just too big for them. I wasn’t really supposed to be sitting on anything for myself, but I just instantly fell in love.”

Mooney Maguire (Cult HeroBing Power, by Tomgar Power Crest) is one of four full siblings to Bay My Hero bred by Bryan Mcguire. Sourced by Chris and Sue Ryan, Mooney competed through Prelim in Ireland before making the trip to the U.S. Mooney Maguire is the second youngest of the four. Hip Hop Hero (2005) currently competes at the three-star level with Ruth Edge, Be My Hero (2001) at the one-star level, and Mooney Amach (2008) who is aiming for the Junior Europeans with young rider Jessica Kuehnle.

Megan had the opportunity to spend some time chatting with breeder Bryan Mcguire while in Ireland, who told her the details of horses sired by the late Cult Hero. “Bryan said that (Mooney Mcguire) needs a bigger track — he needs a 1.30m track,” she said. “He’s not the most extravagant horse over smaller fences, but I get the feeling that I would want to be cantering down to a big fence on him. I feel that often the really good horses aren’t necessarily the best at the lower levels, and he’s not enormously impressive but he gives me a great feeling.”

Megan and Mooney Maguire in their first U.S. outing together. Photo by Howard Moore.

Megan and Mooney Maguire in their first U.S. outing together. Photo by Howard Moore.

“Bryan also said Cult Heros really come into their own at age seven,” she continued. “They’re not really ones to do the young classes on because they tend to mature a bit later.”

Mooney does have a smattering of show jumping rails marring an otherwise clean record featuring no cross country jumping faults. Megan is up for the challenge, however, and she and Mooney proved how well they clicked by jumping clear in their first CT together this past weekend to earn his first U.S. blue ribbon.

“I’ve had some experience fixing (a high number of rails in show jumping), and I love working with quirky horses, which he is,” Megan said. “Cult Hero offspring are said to be a bit quirky and spooky, but I don’t like to be bored. I have very high aspirations for him.”

Megan will now spend some time cementing her new partnership before she plans to bring him out at Prelim next month. “I’m going to play it by ear. He’s settled in beautifully and we just get along like peas and carrots. I just need to get him out cross country schooling to see where we’re at. I’m really excited about him. He’s going to be one of my top horses coming along.”

Megan’s father, Howard Moore, stepped into bring Mooney Maguire to the U.S., an opportunity for which she is immensely grateful. “I’ll be selling some horses or putting together a syndicate to pay him back,” she said. “It was incredibly kind of him. This is the first time I’ve ever had a horse that knew anything — we’ve always broken our own or started them off the track, so this is a new experience for me. He was beautifully produced, so we just got very lucky that we happened to stumble upon him.”

We’ll be following Megan and Mooney as they progress with their partnership, but suffice it to say we’re excited to see what the future holds for this pair. Welcome to the U.S., Mooney!