Classic Eventing Nation

Who Jumped it Best: That Frightening First Water at the FEI European Championships

Who Jumped It Best?

Saturday’s cross-country challenge at the FEI European Eventing Championships didn’t boil down to style, really: with achingly tough conditions and a seriously challenging championship track, it was all about two things: horsemanship, and function. Throughout the day, we were delighted to watch riders put their horses first, taking a foot off the gas and letting their mounts fill their lungs without being chased around the course. We also saw horses and riders alike dig deep and find that classic cross-country grit and gumption that allows you to stay balanced, safe, and effective throughout all sorts of hitches and wobbles.

And so our short and sweet WJIB? today looks at those qualities, rather than, say, a perfect line from elbow to bit. The fence we’re looking at today is the first water complex at 6ABC and 7 — and, specifically, that final element. At this point, horses and riders alike had had a bit of a slap ’round the face from the course; the footing in the very early stages was arguably the worst of the day, though the warm-up arena’s ground hadn’t been terrible, so as they jumped the first couple of fences, riders had to be extra conscious of keeping their horses’ confidence up through the dishearteningly heavy going. As they approached this first water, they did so knowing they were coming to one of the toughest questions on course — but the huge throngs of enthusiastic crowds picked them up and carried them through, and many riders found making it to the other side of this question an enormous confidence boost, both for themselves and the horses.

First, they popped a large table atop a hill, before cantering down to a large drop, followed swiftly by a brush-topped wall into the water with a huge drop on the landing side. Then, they had to gather up the knitting to meet this fence, a big, brush-topped skinny in the water, on a stiff left-handed turn. After that, they could gallop freely on out of the water.

With all that in mind, take a look at this selection of horses and riders. They’re jumping the final element – so which do you think has brought the most energy and efficiency through the question with them? Who’s showing the best balance, and the most confidence? Which pair, to you, gives the impression of security in the midst of a tricky question on an enormously tough course? Cast your eye over them, and then scroll down to cast your vote!

Andrew Heffernan and Gideon (NED). Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Giovanni Ugolotti and Swirly Temptress (ITA). Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Malin Hansen-Hotopp and Carlitos Quidditch K (GER). Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Robin Godel and Grandeur de Lully CH (SUI). Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Kitty King and Vendredi Biats (GBR). Photo by Tilly Berendt.

EN’s coverage of the FEI European Championships for Eventing is brought to you with support from Kentucky Performance Products.

#Euros2023 : Website | Live Stream | Entries | Startlists & Scoring | EN’s Ultimate Guide | EN’s Form Guide | EN’s Coverage

“He Was Meant to Be With Me”: Catching Up with Burghley Sophomore Phil Brown

Phil Brown and Harry Robinson. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though he’s moved back home to Yorkshire recently to base his business closer to his family, for many years, eventer Phil Brown was based just next door to Burghley: so close, in fact, that he could see the famous façade of the house from his arena as he worked his horses, day in and day out, come rain or shine.

“That was major motivation,” he says with a smile. “You could see it from our fields, from the arena — and having that there made it all the more special when I finally got there as a competitor.”

That ‘finally’ moment came last year: riding the then-fourteen-year-old British-bred gelding Harry Robinson – and yes, a horse with a human first and surname IS the most charming thing you’ll stumble upon today — he didn’t just make a long-anticipated debut at the event that had fuelled his drive for so many years, he completed the thing, too.

“We went quite steady!” he laughs, referring to the 62 time penalties he picked up while piecing together their clear round. “We were a good two minutes over, but he just kept plugging along, because he really loves his job.”

Harry’s not alone in that: as a local rider, Phil came to Burghley — which wasn’t just his debut at the event, but his debut five-star, too — with a large and enthusiastic support crew of friends and family. But as the week unfolded, and as everyone on site universally fell in love with the sweet, floppy-eared, splashy-faced gelding, it was impossible not to take note of how much Phil, too, was relishing the moment. Their dressage score, a respectable debut of 35.3, didn’t have them challenging the leaders, but Phil returned to the mixed zone for a post-ride debrief with journalists with the joy of someone who’d taken the lead; likewise, when he returned from cross-country, he did so buoyed by sheer thrill, gratitude, and a palpable love for his horse. By the end of the week, it was impossible not to root for Phil, and not to catch that contagious smile as he embraced both the extraordinary learning opportunity around him, and the realisation of a dream he’d held throughout his career.

“We had a bit of a laugh about it in the talk area last year, but I chose to do Burghley as my debut because — well, nobody in this country dreams of Pau, do they? That probably sounds like quite a bad thing to say, but we do grow up dreaming of Badminton and Burghley. I’m from Yorkshire, and so Bramham was always a really big thing for me, and once we’d done that [Phil jumped a swift clear in 2016 with Miss Brodie], I thought, let’s try for a five-star. Because I was down in the same area, it felt like the obvious one — but also the most scary!”

Phil Brown and Harry Robinson. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Part of what made last year so special for Phil was the realisation that no matter how tightly you hold onto a dream, and how close you think you’ve come to grasping it, it’s never guaranteed that you’ll get there.

“I actually came so close to getting here six years previously,” he says. “But then that horse broke down; the rules had changed and we had to do another long format event for our qualification, and the horse picked up an injury there. So we never got our chance, and it’s taken six years to work myself back to that stage.”

If someone had told him that it would be Harry Robinson with whom he’d finally tick the box, Phil admits, “I wouldn’t have believed them!” Though they’d been together since the gelding’s six-year-old year, he was sold when he stepped up to Advanced — but within nine months, he’d bounced back to Phil’s yard, “because they just didn’t get on with him that well; they found him a bit much,” he explains. “They rang me and asked if I’d like him back, and because my horse had picked up an injury, I said, ‘yeah, why not?'”

Nigel and Susie Bushby, who are old family friends of Phil’s and live just down the road from his parents’ house, decided to join in on the gamble, and bought the horse under the banner of their own family business, Orbit Electrical Services Ltd. And then, everyone got to work, building a partnership with a horse that, Phil confesses, is a bit of a quirky soul.

“He’s so kind on the ground, like a really lovely, big Labrador,” he says fondly. “He’s the most loveable horse and everybody that works on the yard loves him — and I love him; his owners love him. But to ride he’s a real hothead. He’s kind of a Jekyll and Hyde — there’s absolutely no nastiness in him, but he’s always so overeager to get the job done that if you try to over-control him, he can have a bit of a tantrum.”

But, he continues, that’s what makes him a great partner for the biggest courses in the world: “Because he’s like that, he loves his cross-country. He just wants to get on with the job and do it for you — and one thing about Harry is that he just keeps trying, no matter what. When you look back at photographs and videos from last year, from the beginning to the end of that course, his ears are pricked and he’s loving what he’s doing.”

Phil Brown’s handsome Harry Robinson. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

There’s a wobble of emotion in Phil’s voice when he talks about what Harry means to him — not just as the horse that found his way home, nor just as a rallying point for his family and family-by-proxy in the Bushby clan, but because he carried him to the zenith of his dreams.

“Joanne, who was the woman who bought him for that nine months or so, sends me messages saying, ‘it was just meant to be’ — it’s so special,” he says. But he’s not resting on his laurels, either: with that dream accomplished last year, he’s got his sights set on a return for this year’s Burghley, with everything he learned last week guiding and influencing him.

“Last year, my goal was just, ‘let’s just get there’,” he says. “When we arrived, I was like, ‘whatever happens…”, but then it went so beautifully that we came away thinking, ‘wow, I’ve done that now, what now?!’ But then to go into this season not just knowing how to prepare, but also not having to chase down qualifications and MERs, that’s felt a bit weird! It’s been the goal all year, and we’ve been steadily building up to it with some four-star runs. The biggest thing, though, is that I now know I’m capable, and I know he’s capable. Getting him fit enough was a big priority for me last year; I thought, ‘even if it means he blows up in the dressage, he has to be fit enough’. And now, knowing that that system works gives me so much confidence in the fact that it can happen.”

But, he adds sagely, “it’s five-star. Just because you’ve done it once, doesn’t mean you can take that for granted. But I do feel a bit more relaxed about it. Last year was the unknown; you think you’re doing everything right, but you can never actually know for sure until you’re doing it. He’s not a lot of Thoroughbred — he’s warmblood and Irish, but I found that he’ll just keep going. But until you’re in that situation, you just don’t know if they’ll cope with that next step. You have to go into it thinking, ‘we’ll give it a go and just be sensible, and if it’s right, it’s right, and if it’s not, I’ll pull up’.”

Smart clears in the CCI4*-S classes at Bramham and Aston this year will put them well on the right track, while Harry’s once-annual 20, which he picked up at Hartpury last week, will give them those last-minute sharpeners to work on — but whatever happens, Phil and his ‘boomerang’ horse will be enjoying every step of the way. And if you want to follow along with them and give them a cheer as they tackle Derek di Grazia’s tough track, just follow the cheers — as the young rider coach for the East Midlands, he’ll have voracious support scattered throughout the track. Lend them your voice, too; you’ll be rewarded with a display of horse-first eventing and a tangible, ineffable love for the sport.

Thursday News & Notes

“This cow looks weird” Photo by Wendy Steele.

This summer has really tested my hoof management experience and skill, I tell you what. With weekly rains (which is unheard of in Virginia summer), unprecedented grass growth, and a barn full of horses that are tricky to shoe even in the best of times, it’s been a season of challenges. I learned long ago how to adapt my management for the usual Virginia summer, which is dry as all hell and hard as concrete, but I was thrown by the excess of rain. I can’t imagine moving to another climate and having to learn all over again how to keep all my horses sound. Honestly, hats off to all the west coast riders who come to the east for any period of time, just the hoof skills alone might defeat me.

U.S. Weekend Preview

Caber Farm H.T. (Onalaska, WA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Full Gallop Farm August HT (Aiken, SC) [Website] [Volunteer]

Genesee Valley Riding & Driving Club H.T. (Geneseo, NY) [Website] [Entries] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Ocala Summer H.T. II (Ocala, FL) [Website] [Entries] [Volunteer]

The Event at Archer (Cheyenne, WY) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Waredaca Farm H.T. (Laytonsville, MD) [Website] [Entries] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Major International Events

Nations Cup CCIO4*-S (Arville): [Website] [Entries/Start Lists/Scoring] [Schedule][YouTube/CMH.TV]

While exercise off the horse is always useful to improve a rider’s cardio fitness, strength, and flexibility, there’s still no substitute for time spent in the saddle. If you’re looking for some variety in your training and have a safe, reliable horse, lunging can be a useful tool to improve your seat, strength, and coordination in the saddle. ECP Level V Coach and ECP Faculty Member Mary D’Arcy says that longing the rider can help improve position faults, posture, core strength and fitness, improve the use of the aids, and develop an independent seat. It can also improve the horse’s gaits, transitions, and lateral suppleness. [The Art of Lunging with Mary D’Arcy]

If you think the equine vet shortage is bad now, unfortunately I don’t have good news for you. Equine veterinarians across the globe are warning of a looming crisis as a shortage of practitioners persists, particularly in rural areas. As the number of graduates taking up specialist roles continues to diminish in an industry already struggling to attract fresh blood, equine vets say a “massive” shortage is coming. [Equine Veterinarians a Rare Thing Indeed]

Area I was hit with some massive flooding this summer, and the beloved GMHA facility took a fair amount of damage. But eventers are tough, and honestly Vermonters are even tougher. A massive group of equestrians and family members and friends and local folks banded together this week to clear fields of debris off the competition land, and I never thought I would love a video of people picking up rocks more. [Area I Fights Back]

And finally, in the news of truly weird and disturbing, there seems to be a black market for horse tails in Colorado. There has been a sudden uptick in equine tail thievery recently, with owners arriving at the barn only to find their horse sporting a bob on the back-end. Eight tails were stolen from a single facility in one week, prompting them to beef up security against tail theft. [Tail Chopping in Colorado]

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Ride Around Burghley with Piggy March

I’m buzzing around on pony-mad cloud nine this afternoon, for one very simple reason: this morning, I got to make the long, sunny drive up to Burghley House to take a first look at the cross-country track that Derek di Grazia has laid out for this year’s competitors. It’s a seriously cool track — more on that in the coming days! — but what was even more special was getting to sit down with the likes of Andrew Hoy, who shared his memories of competing there way back to the seventies; Phil Brown, who competed there for the first time last year after a lifetime of dreaming; and younger rider Greta Mason, who’ll make her Burghley debut this month. And on the subject of memories? Who could be more interesting to chat to than the remarkable Piggy March, who vlogger Victoria Brant got the once in a lifetime opportunity to go hacking with over the estate recently. Tune in to the video to find out everything they spoke about on their ride (and try not to be as achingly jealous as I am!).

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Kyle Carter Shares His Knowledge in Alberta at Young Rider Clinic

Kyle stands with a group of riders aiming for the 2023 USEA Eventing Young Rider Championships, as well as High Performance and Alberta Young Rider Coach Leahona Rowland. Photo by Jessica Kerschbaumer.

Last weekend, the Alberta Horse Trials Association welcomed top Canadian eventer Kyle Carter back again to Alberta for a three-day Young Rider Clinic that took place at Prentice Creek Equestrian Centre near Rocky Mountain House, Alberta. This clinic was organized and subsidized by the Alberta High Performance program, and the event also received a generous club funding donation from the Alberta Equestrian Federation.

This clinic was open to riders who are 25 years of age and under, competing at the EV75 (Pre Entry) level and above. The rider spots in this clinic were split between young riders who are attending the USEA Eventing Young Rider Championships; young riders from the Alberta High Performance/U18 program and young riders who are not on the High Performance team. Auditing was free to anyone who wanted to come out and watch and learn.

Kyle is one of Canada’s most successful riders, representing Canada multiple times at the 2010 World Equestrian Games, 2008 Olympics in Beijing, 2007 Rio de Janeiro Pan American Games, and 1999 Winnipeg Pan American Games. In addition to his personal accomplishments, Kyle is also a highly regarded coach and clinician, and has had great success bringing his students up the levels in eventing. Several of his students have gone on to compete at the 5* level, and he holds the coaching record for having the most students win gold medals in eventing at the USEA Eventing Young Rider Championships. Kyle continues to focus on competing at the highest levels of eventing and hopes to again represent Canada at the Olympics. He and his wife, Jennifer, own and run 5 Ring Stable, a successful 5* eventing barn in Citra, Florida.

The hot summer sun shone down on 22 riders who attended the clinic, as they rode in dressage, show jumping and cross country lessons over the weekend. There were many different horse and rider levels, from EV75 (formerly Pre-Entry) all the way up to EV115 and EV120 (previously Intermediate and Advanced).

In all three phases, Kyle emphasized strong basics, utilizing exercises that strengthened each horse and rider’s foundation and skills. Exercises and feedback were tailored to each horse and rider, some were more experienced combinations introducing some new concepts and challenges as they plan to move up the levels or hoping to attend the Eventing Young Riders Championships, and others focused on perfecting skills and solidifying the basics, focusing more on the developing their partnership for the future.

Kyle’s teaching style is very effective, blunt and honest, with a generous dash of comedy thrown in. Many stories were shared from his past success and failures, to help educate and explain the madness behind the methods. He has a great way of making his points clear and getting the information across, and he really takes the time to ensure horse and rider are understanding what he is explaining and the questions and exercises being asked of them.

Throughout the weekend Kyle spoke a lot about working smarter, not harder, as he explained the intricacies of training of the horse and setting them up for success using small steps and a progression that builds confidence and makes sense. He emphasized the little things, like the quality of transitions, working on the balance by transitioning down on a circle and on an uphill slope, not a downhill.

Kyle instructs a group on how to negotiate mounds. Photo by Jessica Kerschbaumer.

He encouraged riders to really think about the steps and the little details, and instead of trying to force the horse to do what we want them to do, use movements and exercises that naturally help them do what we are trying to accomplish. The goal was not perfection, but to ensure that the exercises we ask the horses to do help us end up with a better horse at the end. “Don’t tell your horses NOT to do something, instead, give them something to do. SHOW them what you want them to do.” Kyle explained.

On show jumping day, each group started off with some basic pole exercises at trot and canter before moving onto some course work that included bounces, combinations, riding up and down hills, skinny jumps and lots of technical turning exercises. Each course he had the riders do required accuracy and very organized riding, and Kyle was great about pinpointing what each horse and rider needed to improve and then taking the time to really explain how to do that. Kyle included poles and technical footwork exercises not just at the beginning, but throughout the courses, to ensure horses and riders were staying organized and focused at all times.

Cross country day started very early and saw the first group warming up with the rising sun in the cool morning air. Kyle focused on using different exercises utilizing show jumps as well as terrain during each lesson to work on the education of both horse and rider. Riders warmed up over some hills and different cross country fences to practice their rhythm, galloping and balancing positions, before moving onto some exercises working on angles.

Kyle emphasized that even on cross country riders needed to still be training their horses between each fence. Then the groups moved on to some mounds where some show jumps were set up to help the riders and horses practice riding up and down terrain, and then each group progressed to adding some angled approaches to the jumps on and around the mounds as well. Kyle is a big fan of using show jumps on cross country to introduce new questions and challenges, as they are much more forgiving than a solid fence during the learning process. Riders finished at the water complex, practicing some different lines and questions that Kyle had again incorporated some show jumps into.

Kyle really took the time for each horse and rider, explaining things multiple ways until they understood, and often took more time than allotted for each group. You can tell he is very passionate and loves to share his knowledge, and he put in an incredible effort with each group from the very first in the morning, to the last group of the day.

“Knowledge is power” were some of the parting words as he wrapped each group up. He encouraged every rider to keep working hard, no matter what size their goals are, and to take every opportunity possible to keep growing and learning, and to focus on training and bettering the horse, not just winning. “Being competitive is NOT the same as being a good horseman” Kyle stressed.

Each horse and rider came away with lots of constructive criticism, encouragement and feedback, and were excited to take what they’d learned from Kyle and practice hard to keep on improving. We look forward to having Kyle back for another clinic in the future!

Huge thank yous go out to the Alberta Horse Trials Association, Alberta High Performance, Kathleen Ziegler for organizing, Canadian Eventing Development Foundation for their sponsorship, and Alberta Equestrian Federation‘s generous club funding donation.

We are so incredibly fortunate to have clinicians of this caliber come to Alberta, and are very thankful to the Alberta Equestrian Federation for their support in making this happen, and we hope to collaborate on more of these opportunities in the future!

If you aren’t a member yet, the Alberta Equestrian Federation provides many opportunities and benefits for all of their members. From clinicsand shows, insurance and coverage, to programs for the recreational rider, AEF has all your bases covered! Consider becoming a member of the Alberta Equestrian Federation! For more information see: https://www.albertaequestrian.com/membership/

2023 Defender Burghley Entry Preview: Who’s Tackling the Fall’s ‘Big B’

Boyd Martin and On Cue. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

It’s nearly time to turn our sights to the penultimate CCI5* event of the season — hard to believe, but we’re already here! The Defender Burghley Horse Trials will take place August 31 – September 3 at the iconic Burghley House in Stamford, Lincolnshire.

Entries have just closed this week, and while we may see a couple of tricklers added to the list the roster is mostly now complete with 67 combinations entered. This includes a strong North American contingent that includes Maryland 5 Star winners Boyd Martin and On Cue (as well as Tsetserleg), Will Faudree and Mama’s Magic Way, Jennie Saville and FE Lifestyle, Tiana Coudray and Cancaras Girl, Grace Taylor and Game Changer, and Jessica Phoenix and Wabbit.

Can you guess which U.S. pair sent us these pictures the day their entry was sent?

From there, the entry list is a veritable who’s who of the 5* circuit, though we will see a few heavy hitters missing with the recent conclusion of the European Championships. This opens the door for a close race for the $300,000 in prize funds, though it’s very much anyone’s game and will come down to the combination that can best navigate the notoriously grueling Burghley cross country, designed now by Derek di Grazia.

The roster as of publication is:

RIDER HORSE
Aistis Vitkauskas COMMANDER VG
Alexander Bragg QUINDIVA
Alice Casburn TOPSPIN
Andrew Heffernan HARTHILL PHANTOM
Arthur Duffort TORONTO D AUROIS
Austin O’connor COLORADO BLUE
Boyd Martin ON CUE
Boyd Martin TSETSERLEG TSF
Bubby Upton COLA III
Bubby Upton MAGIC ROUNDABOUT IV
Christoffer Forsberg CON CLASSIC 2
Christopher Whittle SKIP MILL
David Doel GALILEO NIEUWMOED
David Doel FERRO POINT
Emily King VALMY BIATS
Emma Thomas ICARUS X
Francis Whittington DHI PURPLE RAIN
Grace Taylor GAME CHANGER
Greta Mason COOLEY FOR SURE
Gubby Leech ROYAL HARVEST
Harry Meade AWAY CRUISING
Harry Meade CAVALIER CRYSTAL
Harry Meade TENAREZE
Harry Meade RED KITE
Harry Mutch HD BRONZE
Harry Mutch SHANBEG COOLEY
Holly Richardson BALLY LOUIS
James Rushbrooke MILCHEM ECLIPSE
Jennie Saville FE LIFESTYLE
Jessica Phoenix WABBIT
Julia Norman ARDEO BERLIN
Kristina Hall-Jackson CMS GOOGLE
Lauren Innes GLOBAL FISION M
Lauren Lillywhite BILLY BEAUFORT
Lauren Lillywhite HACIEN
Louise Harwood NATIVE SPIRIT
Luc Château VIENS DU MONT
Matthew Heath ASKARI
Michael Owen BRADELEY LAW
Nicky Hill MGH BINGO BOY
Oliver Townend COOLEY ROSALENT
Oliver Townend TREGILDER
Oliver Townend SWALLOW SPRINGS
Oliver Townend BALLAGHMOR CLASS
Padraig Mccarthy HHS NOBLE CALL
Phil Brown HARRY ROBINSON
Piggy March BROOKFIELD INOCENT
Pippa Funnell MAJAS HOPE
Richard Coney POETRY IN MOTION II
Richard P Jones ALFIES CLOVER
Richard Skelt CREDO III
Rosalind Canter PENCOS CROWN JEWEL
Sam Watson BALLYBOLGER TALISMAN
Sarah Clark LV BALOU JEANZ
Sophie Fouracre LORDANA VH LEYSEHOF Z
Tiana Coudray CANCARAS GIRL
Tim Cheffings GASTON
Tim Price VITALI
Tom Bird REBEL RHYME
Tom D Crisp LIBERTY AND GLORY
Tom McEwen LUNA MIST
Tom McEwen TOLEDO DE KERSER
Tom Rowland POSSIBLE MISSION
Will Faudree MAMA’S MAGIC WAY
Wills Oakden ARKLOW PUISSANCE
Wills Oakden OUGHTERARD COOLEY
Zara Tindall CLASS AFFAIR

If you’re wanting to keep up with the action live, you can do so by subscribing to Burghley TV. This is a small purchase of about $25.40/£20 and you can pick up your pass here.

We’ll provide more updates on the Burghley entries as they evolve in the next few weeks, plus some in-depth insights into this years course this week – and, of course, we’ll be bringing you our traditional 5* coverage from on the ground and remotely. It will be a busy week here at EN with American Eventing Championships also running the same week in Kentucky. Bring it on!

Burghley: [Website] [Entries] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

EN’s coverage of Burghley is brought to you by our friends at Kentucky Performance Products. You can learn more about their full line of science-backed nutritional support products here.

Wednesday News & Notes from Ocala Horse Properties

I’ve loved looking through the social media posts following the European Championships last weekend. From the tributes to horses, grooms and owners, to the reflections on things not going to plan, and the celebrations for those who saw all their prep come together at just the right moment, it’s cool that we get to be a part of the eventing journey outside of competition live streams.

Yesterday we shared Ros Canter’s post showing the new European Champion, ‘Walter’ (AKA Lordships Graffalo), congratulating himself on his greatness with a good ol’ roll in his field. Today we have Kitty King’s Vendredi Biats – ‘Froggy’ to his friends – arriving home with his team gold and individual silver medals to find his stall decked out befittingly for ‘simply the best unicorn’.

With two more Olympic spots seized at the Euros, those teams still seeking qualification for Paris will have the chance to add vital points to their tally this weekend in Arville – the penultimate leg of the Nations Cup. Keep up to date with what goes down in Belgium:

Nations Cup CCIO4*-S (Arville): [Website] [Entries/Start Lists/Scoring] [Schedule] [YouTube/CMH.TV]

As it’s National Tell a Joke Day, it would be remiss of me not to gift you a horsey howler. To be or not to be…? That is the equestrian. If you fancy a bit of a giggle, you’ll find the best horse gags right here. Sorry (not sorry).

And whilst we’re acknowledging one national day, it seems only right we raise a glass to National Rum Day also. So, make mojitos and go eventing – just not in that order!

U.S. Weekend Preview

Caber Farm H.T. (Onalaska, WA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Full Gallop Farm August HT (Aiken, SC) [Website] [Volunteer]

Genesee Valley Riding & Driving Club H.T. (Geneseo, NY) [Website] [Entries] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Ocala Summer H.T. II (Ocala, FL) [Website] [Entries] [Volunteer]

The Event at Archer (Cheyenne, WY) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Waredaca Farm H.T. (Laytonsville, MD) [Website] [Entries] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Major International Events

Nations Cup CCIO4*-S (Arville): [Website] [Entries/Start Lists/Scoring] [Schedule] [YouTube/CMH.TV]

Wednesday News and Reading

With horses, it’s fair to say that the path doesn’t always run smooth – something AEC entrant Melissa Fox knows all too well. From heartbreaking loss, through injuries to both her and her horse, and even a truck fire on route to a training session, Melissa’s AEC dreams have been put on hold multiple times. But this season, all’s so far so good for Melissa and OTTB Tito Tonight, who’ll be heading to Kentucky to contest the Novice Amateur division. [A Bumpy Ride]

“Do not let your skin color, size, or level of experience hold you back. There is a barn, trainer, and lesson program out there for you.” Chandra Thurman felt completely stuck – she wanted to train in dressage, and knew she had the horse for it, but opportunities were lacking and she faced discrimination over her race and size. She decided to take a leap of faith, and discovered she could fly. [“If we were meant to stay in one place, we’d have roots instead of feet”]

The increasing commitment to the aftercare of OTTBs is encouraging – now we need to consider racing broodmares too. There are a number of organizations working to help rehome these pro moms, who, with their wealth of experience and ‘been there done that’ attitude, are wholly deserving of a fulfilling retirement. [Pro Moms]

We’ve probably all said it, but what does ‘woah’ mean? Horse Journals’ Jec Ballou considers when ‘woah’ really does mean ‘woah’. [Woah, There]

Forget about the Barbie Dreamhouse, the Breyer Horse Headquarters is every horse nerd’s dream. Through the archive room full to brimming with Breyers of all breeds and colors, to the factory where the horses are meticulously molded and accurately airbrushed, take a trip down memory lane with EQ’s Jill Medinger. [Horse Nerd Heaven]

Sponsor Corner

Sara Kozumplik’s biggest goal when buying a farm: finding a peaceful environment for her horses. Of course, it’s not just a facility that creates a peaceful environment for your horses, how you manage that property makes a massive difference in the happiness of the horses as well. Discover Sara’s biggest secret to great farm management: Creating a Peaceful Home for Horses (and please join us in wishing her well after she suffered some injuries in a fall recently! Get well soon, Sara).

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With Burghley fast approaching, here’s a throwback to a Burghley of yesteryear – namely 1971, when Great Britain’s Princess Anne (whose daughter, Zara Tindall, will be contesting this year’s event) became European Champion.

Her Royal Highness the Princess Royal has recently become President of the British Eventing Support Trust , a charity which helps riders “deal with the physical and mental health demands placed on them by our sport”.

Find out more about the royal appointment, and Princess Anne’s equestrian career, here.

Skyeler Voss Chosen as Rider for Kim Walnes Documentary

Kim Walnes and The Gray Goose. Photo by Peter Gower.

Six years after the famous “Cinderella horse” Snowman passed away, another gray horse stepped onto the USA center stage, but this time it was the world of eventing who welcomed a gray superstar. Kim Walnes and The Gray Goose took the eventing world by storm. In 1982, they not only won Rolex Kentucky, but also won two World Championship medals. Kim and “The Gray” were so iconic that he was inducted into the USEA Hall of Fame in 2012 and they’re now the subject of a new documentary.

Set to be released in 2024, “The Gray: The Kim Walnes Story” will not only chronicle Kim and The Gray’s illustrious competitive career, but it will also cover the tragic, and unsolved, murder of her daughter and Kim’s new career providing transformative life coaching with help from her horse, Gideon Goodheart. The documentary first made a splash when a casting call went up on Facebook for a gray horse and competent rider. It’s not often that an equestrian-focused casting call comes out and the filmmakers weren’t sure what type of response they would get. To their surprise, the post blew up.

“I think landscape is able to tell a story in a different way, in a kind of palpable way. We realized that we really needed the perspective of a rider to be able to show what that terrain was really like,” said co-director Shanyn Fiske. “We put out a casting call for a Virginia-based competent rider and a gray horse. I was expecting maybe 10 people to answer and we got over 100 people of every age, ability, capability, location, wanting to be a part of this and we were flabbergasted.”

Skyeler Voss riding Argyle for the Kim Walnes documentary. Photo by Shanyn Fiske

After sorting through the candidates, the team has chosen Skyeler Voss as the rider who will be filmed in the documentary. While the majority of the film will use archival footage of Kim and The Gray, as well as interviews, Shanyn wanted to get some shots of a rider galloping a gray horse along the same countryside Kim once used to condition The Gray before some of their historic wins.

“There are moments in the film that are going to be more artistically pitched, where we could have a wide angle shot of a gray horse galloping on the same terrain that Kim did and those shots are going to convey the terrain, the environment, and the atmosphere,” said Shanyn. “If people want to understand that as Kim and The Gray, awesome, but I don’t think at any moment we’re going to try to make Skyeler act as Kim.”

For her part, Skyeler is overjoyed to be chosen as part of the project and has developed a close relationship with Kim. “It is an absolute honor to have the opportunity to meet Kim and represent this historic eventing duo! I grew up wanting a gray horse because of the magical Gray Goose. I am lucky to have a few good grays myself now and cannot wait to gallop the same fields Kim and Gray tackled,” Skyeler said. “Kim is such a role model for eventing professionals and competitive horse moms. In the short time I have been in contact with Kim, she has gone above and beyond to reach out, give me guidance during Argyle’s 4*L, and has become a wonderful mentor and fast friend.”

Kim chose Skyeler to figuratively represent herself and The Gray for several reasons, the biggest of which is that Skyeler most reminded Kim of herself. “So her relationship with her horse, Giles, reminded me a lot of mine with The Gray. And Giles looks a lot like The Gray, he acts a lot like The Gray. And she is a very quiet, sympathetic, empathic rider,” Kim said. “And then I came to find out later, she was trained by Jimmy Wofford, all the way through from the time she was 12 until he died. So no wonder her style of riding is similar to what I was taught by Jack Le Goff.”

Kim Walnes meets Skyeler Voss’s horse, Argyle, on the set of the documentary. Photo by Shanyn Fiske

It will truly be a “full circle” moment when Skyeler gallops her gray horse on the same trails Kim rode a thousand times with The Gray. Not only does Skyeler have a similar riding style to Kim, thanks to her training with Jack Le Goff, but Skyeler will also be wearing Kim’s old cross country shirt, which Kim saved for all these years. It seems fated that Skyeler would be part of the team, as the shirt fits her perfectly.

Unlike the first attempt at a documentary on Kim, this iteration of the project doesn’t shy away from hard topics. While the film will still chronicle her competitive career, the real heart of the film will focus on the work Kim does now, which evolved out of the murder of her daughter, Andy. Today, Kim works with her horse Gideon to heal others via transformative life coaching.

“There are very few people on this planet that have not experienced trauma at some point in their life, not to mention all the horses out there that have experienced trauma, right? We’re taught to have a stiff upper lip, and to go forward, and leave it all behind. Well, it doesn’t. Those things just get stored in your body. They don’t just leave, they don’t just dissipate, the feelings that we do not address get stored in our body, and then they come back and haunt us,” said Kim. “I’ve always just been honest about what’s going on with me to folks because it doesn’t feel comfortable to hide it. And I feel like if this documentary can help one person who has experienced something similar, then that’s what floats my boat. I just want to help other people move through their traumas and find a life that is fulfilling for them on the other side.”

The whole team behind the documentary is on board with Kim’s goals. “We want to follow the story of Kim and The Gray Goose but we also want very much to talk about how horses have become a very important source of healing for Kim, from the trauma of Andy’s death, from various other traumas, and how she’s really working with Gideon now to help other people use their relationships with horses to heal from their own trauma,” said Shanyn.

Kim Walnes stands with Skyeler Voss onboard Argyle. Photo by Shanyn Fiske

This documentary sounds like it will be a horse film unlike any other. Far from the Hallmark-style stories about young girls moving to the country and miraculously taming unrideable horses, “The Gray” has the potential to reach far outside of the close-knit, and often exclusive, equestrian community. The team behind the film hopes that the story will give people a new perspective on the animals we surround ourselves with everyday and will focus on how animals help us heal.

“You know, one of the reasons I’m very invested in this film is because horses have saved my life personally, on a couple of occasions,” Shanyn said. “So I think anybody who has turned to animals, whether that be horses or other kinds of animals, for that repair, for that recovery from trauma, can relate to the story.”

“All of life is sentient and it communicates, we’re just the ones who don’t share a language,” said Kim when I asked her what she hopes people will take away from the film. “Humanity has called other animals dumb, meaning they have no intelligence, they can’t reason. And that’s just not true. I’m hoping people will get a message from this film that might change their perspective on the world around us.”

There are a lot of big hopes and dreams riding on the film. Shanyn and Kim have their fingers crossed that they’ll be able to show it at large film festivals, like South by Southwest, and that one day viewers will stumble across it on Netflix and click play, unaware that their lives are about to change.

The team working on “The Gray” includes co-director John Welsh, producer Tabbetha Marron, co-director Shanyn Fiske, and filmmaker Caleb Doranz. This project relies on crowdfunding for its budget. To support the film, donations can be made via Paypal here.

Horse & Country To Provide Exclusive Livestream and On-Demand Coverage of the 2023 USEA American Eventing Championships

Molly Adams & Caletto’s Symphony. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photo.

Horse & Country (H&C), the leading international sports network, will provide exclusive streaming coverage of the 2023 United States Eventing Association (USEA) American Eventing Championships (AEC) presented by Nutrena Feeds on its streaming service, H&C+. The competition will be held at the Kentucky Horse Park in Lexington, Kentucky, from August 29-September 3, and will feature many of North America’s best eventing combinations as well as the sport’s rising stars.

The AEC is the USEA’s annual championship for every level of the Olympic equestrian sport of eventing, from Beginner Novice to the $60,000 Adequan® USEA Advanced Final. H&C will broadcast worldwide live coverage of all three phases of the $60,000 Adequan® USEA Advanced Final at the AEC, as well as select coverage from the Intermediate, Preliminary, Training, and Modified divisions. In addition, livestream coverage from the Novice and Beginner Novice divisions will be available for free. All of the action will be available the following day for H&C+ members to view on demand, and clips will be available for purchase. Visit www.horseandcountry.tv for the full streaming timetable.

H&C Director of Content Jonathan Rippon said, “We are thrilled to feature the USEA American Eventing Championships on our livestream schedule, and we hope that fans of the sport and competitors at the AEC will enjoy H&C’s expanded livestream coverage of all divisions this year. As one of the premier eventing competitions in the United States and a highlight on our USEA Channel, we are very pleased to share it with our worldwide audience.”

USEA CEO Rob Burk added, “We are very happy to continue our strong partnership with H&C. The American Eventing Championships showcases the best of the eventing sport, from the junior and amateur athletes to the seasoned professionals. Being able to share even more of this important competition with H&C’s broad audience in 2023 is very exciting.”

The 2023 AEC concludes 10 straight days of eventing programming on H&C, which kicks off on August 25, 2023, with the exclusive livestream of the MARS Great Meadow International CCI4*-S in The Plains, Virginia.

In addition to top-notch live sport, H&C has extensive educational content for eventing fans. Learn more about the AEC Kentucky Horse Park venue in a behind-the-scenes Barn Talk. Also, Masterclasses with U.S. Olympic eventer Lauren Nicholson and notable international eventers Sydney Elliott (USA) and Kai Steffen-Meier (GER) were recently released, joining the already impressive Masterclass line-up, including U.S. Olympic eventer Will Coleman and top international eventer Liz Halliday-Sharp (USA). A Masterclass with Ariel Grald (USA) will be available just after MARS Great Meadow International on August 29, 2023.

H&C+ members can watch online or with H&C’s mobile apps, as well as on Roku, Apple TV, Android TV, and Amazon Fire. With two annual membership options and a new pay-per-view offering, H&C+ Freestyle, there are even more ways to access H&C’s vast library of content. Full details on how to join can be found at horseandcountry.tv/select-plan.

Beyond H&C’s extensive sports coverage, both live and on demand, H&C+ members also get access to more than 1,800 hours of equestrian programming featuring content from all disciplines, masterclasses and training series, barn tours, rider profiles, and documentaries.

‘Sweet’ Win at Intermediate, ‘Wild’ Win at Preliminary, and Event’s Inaugural Modified Highlight Woodside Summer H.T.

Lauren Billys Shady and Can Be Sweet. Photo by Tina Fitch Photography.

Fresh off winning the first-ever international gold medal in eventing for Puerto Rico at the 2023 Central American and Caribbean Games in El Salvador, Lauren Billys Shady and Can Be Sweet returned to their home base of California to win the Intermediate level at the Woodside Summer Horse Trials. Then, Castle Larchfield Purdy, the horse Shady took to two Olympics and one Pan American Games, won the first-ever Modified level held at Woodside with his new partner Nadia Vogt.

At 17 years old, Vogt happens to be four years younger than the 21-year-old Castle Larchfield Purdy. Another teenage rider, 19-year-old Gabriella Ringer, continued her success at the Preliminary level, and her victory aboard Get Wild at Woodside came against her trainers, James and Helen Alliston.

The Woodside Summer H.T. marked the second of three USEA-recognized events hosted at The Horse Park at Woodside in 2023, coming between the Woodside Spring H.T. in May that unveiled new cross country courses and new custom-built show jumps and the upcoming Woodside Fall International in October that will mark the return of competition at the FEI levels to Woodside.

Shady and Can Be Sweet (Candyman x Tres Belle) won their fourth blue ribbon in their last five events competing at Intermediate with a finishing score of 38.1. Marc Grandia and GHS Calexico (Van Gogh x Penhaligon Cairo), the youngest horse in the field of 12 at the level at 8 years old, finished second with a score of 42.1. It was the bay Irish Sport Horse mare’s second run at Intermediate after they also finished second at The Event at Rebecca Farm in Montana.

“He’s quite confident, and he’s quite powerful, and he’s really different from the other horses I’ve had,” Shady said about Can Be Sweet. “He’s got a lot more [Thoroughbred] blood. He’s a lot hotter than the other horses I’ve ridden. So, for me, it was just taking my time to develop him and learn the ride, but I’ve learned a lot getting to ride him and I really enjoy riding him. I just like how fast he is on cross country. I’ve been on colder horses before, and that feeling of being able to really let it rip out there has been really fun for me. Also, just riding a horse that’s a bit smaller has been fun for me, too, because it really suits my size. I feel like I’m kind of on a pocket rocket. I can be quite efficient on him, which is very nice.”

Nadia Vogt and Castle Larchfield Purdy. Photo by Tina Fitch Photography.

Shady said that the long-term goals for her and Can Be Sweet, an 11-year-old bay German Sport Horse gelding, could be the 2026 FEI Eventing World Championships and then the 2028 Olympics. They’ve been together since the horse came from Germany to the United States as a 5-year-old in 2017 and have come a long way from the first time she attempted to ride him.

“I did get bucked off the first day,” Shady recalled. “When he landed in the U.S., I got on him on on the mounting block, and he bucked me off at the mounting block. So, we kind started with a bang, but other than that, he’s been pretty fun to produce.”

Shady represented Puerto Rico at the 2016 and 2020 Olympics with Castle Larchfield Purdy (Karistos x Hallo Purdy), and the bay Irish Sport Horse gelding has since been teaching the next generation of eventers. Maddie Smith rode “Purdy” to success at the Preliminary and two-star levels in 2022 and the start of 2023, and Vogt began leasing him at the beginning of June.

“He’s a very cool horse; I don’t think I’ve ridden anything like him before,” Vogt said. “He saves you a lot if you mess up because he knows what he’s doing. I love riding him. Whenever I get on his back every day, it brings me joy. He’s very fun to work with—definitely tries to test you a little bit when you first get to know him, but he’s a very good horse. At home, he definitely is the horse of the property. He definitely thinks he’s the man of the barn.”

Vogt is a working student for Shady, and Purdy still resides at Shady’s barn. “It’s been so fun because I still get to ride him every day,” Shady said. “I still get to train him every day. And then, he’s teaching young girls up the levels. He’s killing it. He’s so great at it. It’s fun to have him around, and he’s kind of the life of the party. Everybody wants to see him, he’s the king, but also he’s quite grumpy. He’s just fun. He’s part of the furniture of the barn. He needs to be there. He wouldn’t want anything different. He loves to compete. He loads himself on the trailer. He really likes to be out. So, it’s good for him.”

Woodside was Purdy’s second USEA-recognized event with Vogt after they finished third at Training at the Twin Rivers Summer H.T. in Paso Robles, California. At Woodside, they were the only horse and rider out of 18 entries in the event’s inaugural Modified level to finish on their dressage score, winning on 29.5 over Sophie Tice and Viva La Vida (Versace x Daydream by D’Accord) with 30.7.

“The cross-country was great,” Vogt said. “I’ve never done Prelim, but I thought it was a very good step-up for Prelim. I like that it followed the Preliminary track, and the course rode really nicely. There were a lot of open spots to gallop. The jumps were really nice, big, and bold.”

Running a Modified level for the first time represents the next chapter in the growth of eventing at Woodside.

Gabriella Ringer and Get Wild. Photo by Tina Fitch Photography.

“It rode beautifully; people said it looked ominous, but then afterward they came off satisfied and had a great sense of accomplishment because it rode well and was so aligned with the Preliminary course that it was a good test to get them ready for that,” said Victoria Klein, who serves on the Board of Governors of The Horse Park at Woodside.

Added Horse Park Executive Director Steve Roon: “One of the keys about the Modified course is that it takes advantage of all the terrain here at Woodside. It’s through the woods and water and up and down hills with lots of terrain questions and beautiful new jumps that were built for the Modified course.”

Ringer and Get Wild (Plot-Blue x Cantana) won their fifth-straight event at the Preliminary level. The streak started at the Area VI Championships held at the Ram Tap H.T. in Fresno, California, in October 2022. At Woodside, they finished on their dressage score of 27.6, ahead of James Alliston and Cora with 29.3. Ringer trains with James and Helen Alliston at Alliston Equestrian in Castro Valley, California. Helen was fourth on Call Me Rudi.

“She always beats me—every time,” James said with a smile as the three of them rode back to their stables together after the awards ceremony. Ringer said she’s grateful for the four events that James rode “Ace” back in 2021, including three wins at Preliminary. “Being part of their barn and riding with such experts really just solidified our partnership and made us feel much stronger,” Ringer said. “He’s so careful, and he’s super scopey, and for the most part, he’s pretty brave. He’s just a really nice partner going to those big jumps knowing that he’ll clear them for sure.”

Ringer was part of the USEA Emerging Athletes U21 (EA21) Program for developing young riders this year and hopes to be selected for the Area VI team that will compete at the 2023 USEF Eventing Young Rider Championships at Galway Downs in Temecula, California, in November. Get Wild’s win was the 11th at the level for the big 17.1 hh 11-year-old dark bay Dutch Warmblood gelding.

The team at Woodside will now look ahead to the Woodside Fall International on Oct. 6-8 that will feature the event’s first-ever CCI1*-S, as well as a CCI2*-S, CCI3*-S, and CCI4*-S, along with national levels from Starter through Advanced-Intermediate.

“[Bert Wood] will be building 10 additional jumps for Derek’s [di Grazia] FEI courses, and we’re going to continue enhancing all the courses as resources allow,” Klein said.

The full list of winners from the 2023 Woodside Summer H.T.:

Open Intermediate: Lauren Billys Shady and Can Be Sweet (38.1)
Open Preliminary: Gabriella Ringer and Get Wild (27.6)
Open Modified: Nadia Vogt and Castle Larchfield Purdy (29.5)
Open Training: Ella Garcia and Wynville (31.4)
Jr. Training Rider: Anya Ostrovsky and Dassett Whisper (28.8)
Sr. Training Rider: Suzanne Miller and Kryptonite Z (27.8)
Open Novice: Helen Alliston and Barony (25.0)
Jr. Novice Rider: Emma Slocum and Patito (26.1)
Sr. Novice Rider: Lauren Masi and Far N’ Away (31.4)
Novice Amateur: Rhiannon Gorin and CSF Handsome (27.8)
Open Beginner Novice: Ruth Bley and Celest Blue (24.4)
Jr. Beginner Novice: Katherine Jackman and Prada (25.6)
Sr. Beginner Novice Rider A: Olivia Bodner and Nil Phet (34.1)
Sr. Beginner Novice Rider B: Anne Johnson and Grandios Sky (30.0)
Starter A: Daniela Zarate and Lexington DF (22.7)
Starter B: Olivia Galuppo and Mischief Managed (29.3)