Classic Eventing Nation

Saturday Links from World Equestrian Brands

You’ll have to wait until September to win one of these awesome grooming totes from Larkin Hill sponsor, Wahbee’s Woodworking! Photo via Wahbee’s Woodworking on Facebook.

Hopefully this information has already reached those impacted, but today’s event at Larkin Hill has been cancelled due to the recent deluge of rain across the Northeast. While Larkin Hill has not been subjected to the same level of flooding that our Vermont venues have, the recent rain has submerged much of the parking area and cross country course making it unsafe to run today’s event. Entry fees will not be refunded, but competitors will have the option of transferring it to their September event or using it for an upcoming schooling event (date to be determined).

If you’re still looking to get out and about this weekend though, you’re in luck! Ronan Moloney of Kinnitty Capall Stables in Ancramdale, New York, just 45 minutes south of Larkin Hill, is stepping in and offering a cross country derby this morning. Courses will be ready to walk at 9:00 AM and the derby starts at 9:30!

US Weekend Action:

Champagne Run at the Park H.T. (Lexington, KY): Website | Scoring | Entry Status & Ride Times

The Maryland Horse Trials at Loch Moy Farm (Adamstown, MD): Website | ScoringRide Times | Entry Status

Links to Start Your Weekend:

Winner Of The Week: Reloaded, America’s Most Wanted Thoroughbred Of 2018, Tops A 2*

Trainer and Student Take Coconino Classic Three-Day Wins for the Second Year in a Row

Summer 2023 Ever So Sweet Scholarship Awarded To Sabrina Sharpe

Kentucky Horse Council Releases Results Of 2022 Equine Survey

Climate Change and Sport Horse Management

Sponsor Corner: World Equestrian Brands rider Lea Adams-Blackmore was a part of the Bromont Rising Program for the second year in a row. EN caught up with her to discover what life lessons the program taught her.

Morning Viewing: Doug Payne and Quantum Leap are putting in the work on their flying changes this summer!

All Signs Point West: 19 Riders Receive Rebecca Farm Travel Grants

Taylor McFall and Stoneman. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Each year, riders are given the opportunity to apply for travel grants to offset costs to get to Kalispell, MT for the legendary Event at Rebecca Farm. Administered by the USEA Foundation and hosted by the Broussard family, these grants are just one way the family continues to support the sport of eventing — riders will also have a chance to interview before a committee for the Rebecca Broussard Developing Rider Grants given out at the end of the year.

A total of 19 riders will receive financial support to assist with travel costs for competition in the 3* or 4* divisions next week at Rebecca Farm. Congratulations to:

  • Ashley Adams
  • Helen Alliston
  • James Alliston
  • Amber Birtcil
  • Aimee Bowers
  • Sophie Click
  • Gina Economou
  • Jordan Linstedt-Granquist
  • Heather Gillette
  • Marc Grandia
  • Taren Hoffos
  • Emilee Libby
  • Andrew McConnon
  • Taylor McFall
  • Liz Halliday Sharp
  • Alyssa Phillips
  • Lucia Strini
  • Madison Temkin
  • Skyeler Voss

We’re keen to get on the ground next week, and Allie Heninger will be taking the reins for EN all week from on site. If you can’t be there yourself, you will be able to follow along live at no cost on Horse & Country. Click here to bookmark the live stream page and click here to view the tentative event schedule. We’ll be back with much more, so stay tuned!

EN’s coverage of Rebecca Farm is brought to you by Kentucky Performance Products. You can learn all about Kentucky Performance Products’ full line of trusted, science-backed nutritional supplements by visiting kppusa.com

The Event at Rebecca Farm: [Website] [Entries/Times/Scoring] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

A Sporting Weekend in the Country at Millbrook Horse Trials

Allison Springer & Business Ben. Photo by Abby Powell.

While riders enjoy the top class competition at the 2023 Millbrook Horse Trials (July 26–30), spectators, sponsors and volunteers are also in for a treat. Social events at the summer horse trials in picturesque Dutchess County, NY have long been an attraction and this year promises something for everyone.

General admission and parking is free of charge. Family entertainment includes the vendor village and weekend Millbrook Market, as well as food trucks featuring a variety of cuisines. A petting zoo and arts and crafts tent are sure to keep young children entertained.

Zoe Crawford and K.E.C Zara at Millbrook. Photo by Abby Powell.

Tailgating is available during cross country, with each space comfortably accommodating 10 people. Bring your own tent, chairs and picnic and show your personal style, or enjoy delicious cuisine from our food trucks and the Simply Gourmet concession tent. For a refreshing cocktail, the elegantly converted horse trailer bar The Fizzy Filly will be conveniently located next to the tailgating area.

Enjoy giving back to the sport that you love? Plenty of volunteer opportunities are still available, from shuttle drivers to cross country jump judges. For more information visit the Millbrook website. A welcome party for competitors and volunteers takes place Friday evening, sponsored by Purina and Triple Crown.

Millbrook is one of the few remaining horse trials in the Northeast. It is by far the largest, and it is the only one that still runs all levels through Advanced. The event typically attracts world-class equestrians as well as grassroots competitors. The Millbrook area is characterized by large areas of open farmland and has a strong equestrian tradition. It boasts a local Pony Club, thriving foxhunt and active polo club, and is home to riders of all types. The Horse Trials features natural cross country courses over preserved countryside, world-class competition, first-class social events, and entertainment for the whole family.

For sponsors and patrons, social events include a Saturday morning brunch at the Yellowframe Farm Waterview tent, overlooking the water complex during upper-level cross country, and a Sunday luncheon in private ringside tents overlooking the show jumping arena, where the culmination of the competition can be viewed in style.

Sponsorship opportunities are still available. Sponsors this year include Yellowframe Farm, Goldman Sachs Gives, Danbury Porsche and Audi, Taylor Harris Insurance, HW Guernsey at Compass, Bank of Millbrook, Purina, Triple Crown, Millbrook Equine, and Millerton Agway as well as numerous families, farms and individual patrons. For more information visit www.millbrookhorsetrials.com.

 

“I Have to Put Last Year Behind Me”: Checking in with Lara de Liedekerke-Meier at Aachen

Lara de Liedekerke-Meier and Ducati d’Arville brave the elements at Aachen. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Aachen is always a crucial event in the global calendar for a few reasons: first of all, that it’s an invitational, and nations must first be given the go-ahead by the competition to enter teams, based on strict performance guidelines, and then each nation is in charge of selecting its own team – and so the field of entries, horses and riders alike, tends to be the very best of the best. Secondly, it’s blessed with an extraordinary atmosphere that comes hand in hand with its multidisciplinary model – as the self-styled ‘World Equestrian Festival’, it features the biggest and most prestigious classes across jumping, dressage, combined driving, and vaulting, too, alongside the eventing – and urban location. Its main stadium, which is so often packed to the brim with spectators, seats 40,000; its cross-country day yields upwards of 30,000 scattered around the tight track; at any given point, the cheers from across the venue are deafening.

Both of those primary factors work together to create a pressure-cooker of an atmosphere and, as a result, the best simulation for a major championship that any team could possibly hope for – and the results of an Aachen showdown are telling ahead of a ‘real’ team competition, even though it’s run as a CCIO4*-S, rather than the long format favoured at championships. Teams that go well here can be safely considered on-form ahead of, say, next month’s European Championships; teams that mar their copybooks with avoidable blunders, conversely, leave with a blueprint of what they need to work on in the month or year to come.

For the casual spectator, it’s always great fun to see the battle at the top – one that, this time, saw home nation and inarguable powerhouse Germany take the spoils, followed by the USA, who continue on their spectacular upward trajectory, and the Brits, the most formidable team in the world at the moment, in a surprising third. For the true eventing nerd, there’s more to uncover beyond the podium – especially if spotting nations and horses on the rise takes your fancy.

There’s plenty that could be written about, say, Switzerland – the swiftest-rising nation of this Olympic cycle – who fielded a team for the first time at Aachen this month, logging an educational, rather than competitive, week. Or we could talk about Sweden, who sent just one individual in Frida Andersen and Box Leo, and still managed to nab a top ten finish on the leaderboard, proving that when the going gets tough, the Swedes more than capable of overcoming their current national tendency towards middling dressage marks. But the real story, if you ask me, is that of the Belgians.

Like Sweden, Belgium didn’t qualify to send a team to Aachen this year. What they did do, though, is earn themselves a couple of individual spots, which they used wisely: one went to 22-year-old Jarno Verwimp and his eleven-year-old World Championships partner Mahalia, and the other, to Belgian powerhouse Lara de Liedekerke-Meier, riding the excellent thirteen-year-old Hanoverian Ducati d’Arville.

Perhaps you skim-read past those names when the Aachen line-up was first revealed. That’s fair enough; without a team, it’s easy to get lost in the shuffle, to be overshadowed by the likes of Will Coleman and Tom McEwen and not one, but two Prices. But in the end? They beat them all. Jarno finished fourteenth, adding just 9.2 time penalties across the country to his first-phase score of 34.4, while Lara and Ducati finished tenth, securing their spot at the business end of the leaderboard after delivering one of the fastest rounds of the day in the influential cross-country finale.

 

Lara de Liederkerke-Meier and Ducati d’Arville. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though many of Lara’s horses with the ‘d’Arville’ suffix, a nod to her home base, Arville Castle in Belgium, are homebreds, Ducati isn’t – and his entry into her string ticks all the boxes of a classic horse girl shopping spree.

“I found him at an auction when I was pregnant, so I couldn’t ride him, and my husband, Kai [Steffen Meier], tried him for me instead,” she remembers. “He was called Ducati just like my previous horse, who I’d ridden at Badminton, and just like that Ducati, he couldn’t make the flying changes! So it was a bit that he reminded me of him and I wanted another similar to him, but also that I loved his Diarado breeding, so I bought him.”

While Kai offered to produce and compete the horse at the beginning of his career, Lara was so excited about her new prospect that she used him as motivation to get straight back in the saddle after giving birth – and before long, they’d logged the results required for him to make his Six-Year-Old World Championships debut at Le Lion d’Angers. He finished sixth – his first FEI top ten. That’s been followed by placings at every level through CCI4*-L and, in 2021, a senior championship debut at the European Championships, where he performed competitively in the first two phases but sadly had to be withdrawn at the final horse inspection.

“I thought from the beginning he would be a good horse, but he’s not just the easiest  to manage health-wise,” says Lara. But with her team at home at Arville, she says, “we’ve found the tricks to managing him – and now he’s so consistent. I think he’s now a much stronger horse thanks to my team at home, and the vet who really tries to understand him and is dealing with him really well.”

Though Lara was disappointed to tip two rails in the showjumping phase at Aachen, which is set in that busy, bustling main arena, she was the first rider of the day in the final phase to really give the optimum time – which no one would catch – a proper run for its money. She and Ducati executed a classy clear, adding just 2.8 time penalties, which helped them close the book on a weekend that had seen them go from first-phase 11th all the way down to 28th, and then back up to tenth.

“He was clear here last year so it was a disappointment to have two rails. He felt really stressed against the bridle, which is a shame, but if I had to sign again for the top ten at the beginning of the week, I think I would! So yes, it’s just really special,” says Lara with a smile. “He’s a fantastic horse — he’s really looking for the flags and he really makes my life easy. Unfortunately, I lost a shoe at fence three, and then later on after the two skinnies I lost another on the line and I thought okay, now the two corners without  shoes in front is going to be tricky! I had to have an extra pull here and there to really ensure that he would stay in between the flag and not have a slip. So maybe it’s saved me a place in the top ten, but I do have a little frustration, because I could have kicked here and there maybe a bit more! But on the other hand, he was just so focused and tried so hard for me, and I think Aachen is one of those tracks where you have to be 100% concentrated from start to finish, and he gave me just the best feeling.”

Lara and Ducati. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Ducati, who’ll be aimed for an end-of-season run at Boekelo to help qualify him for Paris, is just one part of a string of horses that’s looking particularly strong for the rider: there’s Formidable 62, an “incredible little horse” who overcame a cancer of the eye to win her first CCI3*-L at Kronenburg this year; homebred Hooney d’Arville, a daughter of Lara’s Young Riders-to-World Championships mount Nooney Blue, who finished tenth in Luhmühlen’s tough CCI4*-S last month; and Hermione d’Arville, who went to last year’s World Championships as just a nine-year-old and was seventh in Luhmühlen’s CCI4*-S. Both Hooney and Hermione are just ten year olds this year; Formidable, for her part, is only nine, as is the impressive Origi, who was ninth in the Seven-Year-Old World Championship in 2021 and has now returned after a year out. Not only does Lara look set to have horses in droves for Paris, but for Los Angeles, too, all being well.

But this year’s successes aren’t just an exciting boon for Belgium in their own right – they’re also a long-awaited uptick of fortunes after a 2022 that Lara would love to leave well behind her. Though there were some great results, with placings at numerous internationals, there were also colossal disappointments – none worse than the World Championships at Pratoni, where Lara suffered a shock fall at the first fence on the cross-country course. That blow came just one year after she made her Olympic debut at Tokyo — a long-awaited one, after having missed out on previous call-ups due to pregnancy — but had to make the correct, but heartbreaking, decision to withdraw before cross-country as her horse wasn’t quite right.

“I think I have to put what happened in the past behind me,” she says sagely. “Falling at fence one at Pratoni was quite something. When I felt my head on the ground, I was like, ‘no way, I’ve got to wake up, there’s no way – it’s a nightmare’. But no, I never woke up. It was reality. I mean, everything happens for a reason — you don’t always know why, but I’m confident it will come along, and considering that the horses I have are good, I just need to keep producing them the right way.”

Part of Lara’s rebuilding process was in finding herself as a rider again – a process that had been complicated by the fact that her husband and confidante, German eventer Kai Steffen Meier, has stepped into the chef d’equipe role for the Belgian team, changing a dynamic that has so long functioned as the two of them working together. To help her regain her mojo, and to give the rest of her teammates, and her husband, the chance to work on solidifying as a unit, she opted to step back and sit out two of the early-season Nations Cup competitions.

“I  have to say I put myself a bit behind the team, because I needed to find myself as a rider again — because it was difficult to share my husband as the team manager and everything,” she explains. “So I let them go to Chatsworth and Millstreet, while I focused on the horses and getting the ten-year-olds to Luhmühlen.”

That plan paid off with that double of top-ten finishes – and great results for the Belgian team, too. Bolstered by their win at the first Nations Cup of the season at Montelibretti, where Lara finished fourth individually with Ducati, the team logged podium finishes at both Chatsworth and Millstreet, cementing the feeling that everything was beginning to go in the right direction for the Belgian efforts.

“Luhmühlen was really something for me – being that close to the top three, and at Aachen, as well, to be top ten… I’m feeling like I’m getting back in shape,” says Lara. “It takes a village – the trainers, but also my grooms. I’m so thankful to to have all these people who kept believing in me despite what happened last year, which was not really helpful.”

Team Belgium winners of the FEI Eventing Nations Cup™ 2022 Arville (BEL). From left to right: Jarno Verwimp; Julien Wergifosse; Maarten Boon; Lara de Liedekerke-Meier; Kai-Steffan Meier (Chef d’Equipe). (FEI/Libby Law)

So what does this mean for Belgium, who are one of several teams fighting tooth and nail for their first Olympic team qualification since London 2012? It’s a heartening step in the right direction, certainly, for a team that — like its lynchpin rider — is on the up and up in 2023. While gaining that team ticket is hot on their minds – as the eighth-placed team out of sixteen at Pratoni, they missed gaining qualification there by one frustrating place – they’re in a strong position at the midpoint of the season, and results like these will only bolster their resolve. Right now, they have two remaining opportunities to gain qualification: the first could come at next month’s European Championships, at which there’ll be two team tickets up for grabs for the highest-placed as-yet-unqualified nations, while the second – and, actually, the very last ticket of them all – would be the team qualification awarded to the highest-placed unqualified nation in the overall season standings of the 2023 FEI Nations Cup series, which Belgium leads after four legs by 65 points.

And right now, while we’re one day into leg five at Jardy? They sit third with just Lara left to deliver her test with Hermione d’Arville – and the best of those unqualified nations. The job is far from done; the Dutch, Italian, and Spanish teams certainly won’t be letting those team spots go without a fight over the next few months, but something is shifting in the Belgian eventing stratosphere, and there’s a quiet confidence beginning to crystallise around each of the riders within its orbit, from Lara, who hopes to have four or five horses qualified for Paris, to Jarno, who has put himself on the global map while still barely out of Young Riders, to national champion Tine Magnus, who has a horse I’ll put forward now as one of the most exciting in the world in Dia Van Het Lichterveld Z, to longtime leading rider Karin Donckers, who continues to throw down top ten placings on the world stage – and beyond, too, to up-and-comers such as Sanne Vervaecke, Wouter de Cleene, and more beyond. Belgium has always been a particularly competent equestrian nation: after all, a third of the horses who took part in the Tokyo Olympics across the disciplines were bred in the country, and it has long been one of the great exporters of top-class sport prospects. Now, if they can retain some of that horsepower, they’re starting to get on the right track to make best use of it.

For those of us who backed the Swiss team and reaped the rewards (mostly in bragging rights and great vibes) when they stepped up to the plate on the world stage over the last few years, the Belgians look a particularly sweet prospect. Ignore them at your peril.

EN’s Coverage of CHIO Aachen is brought to you with support from Kentucky Performance Products and Ocala Horse Properties.

CHIO Aachen: [Website] [Entries] [Schedule] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

Friday News & Notes Presented by Stable View

Massive flooding in Vermont. Photo courtesy of Huntington Farms.

While competitors enjoyed beautiful weather last weekend at Huntington Farms HT, Vermont was hit with massive rainfall this week, which has caused a pretty massive change of scenery for a lot of farms. Aggressive flooding has been reported at GMHA as well, with pretty decent damage to several of their competition areas. Huntington was offering a schooling show this weekend, but it has been cancelled as they struggle to deal with the remaining flooded areas and assess damage. To all my friends up in Area I, I hope you’re doing okay!

US Weekend Preview:

Champagne Run at the Park H.T. (Lexington, KY): Website | Scoring | Entry Status & Ride Times

The Maryland Horse Trials at Loch Moy Farm (Adamstown, MD): Website | ScoringRide Times | Entry Status

Larkin Hill H.T. (NY): Website | Scoring

News From Around the Globe:

Following that whole Rich Fellers situation, maybe it’s time that equestrian sports need to look into prevention for the future. In the last eight months, eight arrests of coaches related to sexual misconduct in the equestrian community. More and more headlines are exposing this systemic issue to the world, as sports coaches from youth, college and elite levels across the globe are being investigated for sexual misconduct with athletes. Almost all of these cases involve minors, and their participation in our sport isn’t going away. So how do we move forward to prevent this from happening to future young riders? [Let’s Start Talking Prevention]

We were sad to hear of the loss of Dick Owen this week, who practically defined the VIP Volunteer.  After attending one horse show, Dick decided to buy a horse and learn to ride in his 50s. Soon after, he joined an internet chat group about horses and saw a post about the Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event needing volunteers, so he got in touch and made his first trip in 1999. He also started volunteering at Fair Hill (Elkton, Maryland) close to home. After a few years, he became the chief steward of competitor and owner shuttles and the cross-country jump videographers’ chief steward at Kentucky. Dick was named Area III’s top volunteer of 2022, and he also won the U.S Eventing Association’s Volunteer Incentive Program Volunteer of the Year for 2022 with 489.5 hours of service. [RIP Dick Owen]

Charlotte DuJardin ain’t no one-hit-wonder, and Imhotep might be stepping into some very blueberry shoes. The 10-year-old chestnut finished second in the CHIO Aachen CDI5* Grand Prix Special and third in the Grand Prix and freestyle just a few weeks ago. He celebrated by getting home and going out in his field all night, which is in fact how he lives his life with his turnout buddy Jaguar. In a world where more and more sport horses are not enjoying more than a few hours of turnout, I’m a big fan of this. [Imhotep’s Outdoor Life]

Things I did not know about Boyd Martin, which, let’s be honest, seems impossible because the man is not in want of any interviews and honestly it feels like the entire US knows all of the names of his cats. However, color me surprised as I learn that Boyd has been to seven major championships since 2008 – no other rider has been to more than that. He has 49 runs at CCI5* (including five-star championships) since 2008, putting him equal second in the highest number of a runs from a US rider. He joins Piggy March, Tim & Jonelle Price, and Andrew Hoy as Burghley Ambassadors this year, and between them they sport a mere 16 five-star victories. Check out the video below:

Thursday Video: At Home with the Lipizzaners

There’s something very special about Lipizzaners, and it’s not even really got anything to do with the high school classical dressage movements, the Hapsburg-era palace they perform in in Vienna (very cool, though, if you’ve not been), nor the incredible story of how they very nearly perished in the Second World War but were saved in a remarkable rescue mission. Instead, I’m talking about their universality for horse-crazy kids. They’re the ubiquitous pony magazine centrefold – like Akhal Tekes, they were one of those breeds none of us would ever actually encounter but we all knew so much about. Horse breed encyclopaedias highlighted them, VHS tapes on the beauty of the horse showed them in all their glory, and model horse companies shilled many a white horse into the clutches of a little girl. That’s why, at the age of 32, I think I still find myself transfixed by them – and why I was so excited to see that the FEI’s RIDE magazine put out a new episode focussing on their true home, the Lipica Stud in Slovenia. I’m already SkyScanner-ing my next holiday, frankly.

Creating a Peaceful Home for Horses with Sara Kozumplik

Sara Kozumplik and Rock Phantom. Photo by Sally Spickard.

Five-star eventer. USEA Governor’s Award Winner. Grand Prix show jumper. Sara Kozumplik is one of those highly experienced riders who has been there and done that. A life-long horse woman, Sara has been wintering in Ocala since 1999, when she was a teenager. After renting facilities for a number of years, she got the opportunity to create Overlook South, the sister farm to her Virginia facility, Overlook Farm, thanks to her long-time owner Edith Rameika.

I caught up with Sara to talk about her farm shopping journey and to get a bit of a barn tour through her top-notch facility. Bonus: she lets us in on her number one farm management secret.

Everyone has different goals when it comes to looking for their dream farm. Sara had a list of goals for her long-time friends and owners of Ocala Horse Properties, Chris and Rob Desino and Matt Varney. “The number one thing was a good property for the horses, a peaceful property, not on a busy road,” Sara said. “And I needed an area with enough hacking for my horses, as I do a lot of training on different surfaces.”

Sara was also looking for a farm with a good grass area for riding, plenty of turnout, and possibly a road that was suitable for hacking. Besides a peaceful location, Sara’s penultimate priority for the property was a concrete barn. “I didn’t want to have to build a barn. I wanted to be able to get into the situation without a whole lot of extra stress and hassle. So for me, that was really important. I wanted to be able to have the horse side of it as turnkey as possible,” Sara said. “I prefer concrete barns in Florida. Concrete barns are cooler and wood barns don’t last as long, thanks to all the heat and humidity.”

Because Edith,  or “Edy,” was going to be investing in the property, Sara wanted to make sure it would be a good investment. To that end, she wanted it close to the World Equestrian Center and the University of Florida. She and Edy chose to work with Ocala Horse Properties to find the perfect property – and it wasn’t just because Sara has had a close relationship with Chris and Rob since they first started their business nearly two decades ago.

According to Sara, the Ocala Horse Properties team knows Ocala and the surrounding area better than anyone else. “I use the best farriers and vets and trainers. Of course I’m going to use the best realtors, too,” Sara said. “They know exactly what I need as a sport horse rider, they know exactly what I’m interested in investment wise, and I don’t have to mess around.”

“Those guys have ridden and they’ve been athletes to the highest level of rowing,” Sara said. “So that makes them unique in the fact that they have a real understanding of upper level sport and equestrian sport.”

In the end, Sara purchased Overlook South because it checked the boxes on almost her entire checklist. Overlook South is located half a mile down a private road, which gives Sara the road hacking access she wanted. Covering 60 acres, Sara’s horses have plenty of room for both turnout and hacking. While it originally came with the gorgeous 18-stall concrete barn Sara wanted, she did install a large ring with top-notch Wordley-Martin footing and laid out her own pastures for turnout. The property also has a beautiful pond with a bridge that you cross to get back to Sara’s house, which she describes as “a heck of a lot nicer than I need.”

Overlook South covers 60 acres, but a third of it is heavily wooded. While this started off as a negative aspect of the property, it quickly became her favorite. “I thought well, that’s a lot of land that we’re not using, so that was a negative tick for me. But it ended up being the most positive aspect of the farm,” Sara said. “And the reason being is it’s provided us with peace and quiet. We’re a half mile from route 27, but I can’t hear anything. You can walk to HITS from where I am, but unless the wind is perfect, you can’t hear anything. My horses love it here because it’s so quiet.”

Creating a peaceful environment for her horses is hugely important to Sara — and her realtors were keen to prioritize that for her, too.

“Matt knew that I would love this property and I needed to come see it and he knows how much I like peace and he knows how much I want my horses to feel calm,” Sara said. “When there’s a lot of farms and a lot of stuff going on right next door, that energy can transfer over and stress everyone out. And I just didn’t want to deal with that. Matt said, ‘No, you need to come to see this property because I promise you you’re gonna love it.’ And he was right.”

Welcome to the dark side, kiddos! Photo via Sara Kozumplik Murphy on Facebook.

Sara has managed to maintain a peaceful environment for her horses, but also host clinics, a schooling show series, and camps, like the 2023 EA21 National Camp, thanks to the unique layout of the property and a house that’s perfect for entertaining. When you drive down the road to Overlook South, the main boarding and training barn is off to one side, while the competition/riding area is on the other. “The horse shows and clinics and the like are quite aways from the house and the turnout for the horses, but it’s close to the arena and some of the barn,” Sara described. “It’s plenty of room, but it’s also quite a consolidated area on one section of the farm, where the clinics and the horse shows and stuff like that are held. So, they don’t go all over everything and that makes it a little bit more peaceful by nature.”

While she’s all about keeping a peaceful environment, Sara is not going to shelter her horses either. “It’s not a bad thing for horses. Like, they can have peace most of the time,” She said. “But sometimes they’ve got things going on with their lives. They don’t always get peace, but that makes them a little bit more used to a big environment. Then when the day is over, everybody’s gone, and everyone gets to have a breath. And it still turns right back into that quiet home very quickly.”

[Side note here about the Winter Schooling Series I mentioned: if you’re in the Ocala area, I highly recommend you take advantage of this series. Here’s what Sara had to say about it: “It’s essentially just so that we have a place to practice over professionally designed courses with proper footing and proper jumps. It’s nice to be able to go and do a $40 round over a quality course as well and not have to break the bank every week. So we’ve been doing that for about seven years.”

You cannot beat a professionally designed course on great footing for $40 a round. Okay, back to business!]

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. When I asked Sara what her number one farm management tip was, she said, “The biggest secret to success is having the right people in the barn. You can have the most amazing facility going and you can still have very miserable horses if you don’t have the right people in the barn.”

For Sara, consistency is key. “Having new people show up every six months is not a good thing. I’ve been very lucky in that I’ve had the same team for a long time. But it’s also a two way street – the happiness of the workers has to be a priority.”

Because Sara travels often, she needs a team that she feels comfortable leaving unsupervised with her horses. “I also have to be on the road a lot in order to make enough money to keep everything going. So my main thing is that I have to trust people. I have to trust everybody that I have on my team, that they’re going to do what I asked them to do with my horses.”

 

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Once you have the right team in your barn, then Sara suggests having your horses outside as much as possible. “That is so, so, so important, right? Horses need to be able to get out and move around. It keeps them sound and keeps them happier,” Sara said. “They 100 percent have to have something to eat in front of them all of the time. Sometimes you have to have a Jenny Craig paddock so they don’t blow up like a balloon, but they still need something to pick at.”

Sara also had a tip that applies to all riders, not just farm owners. To put it simply: give your horse some downtime after you ride. “Horses need a second to have an opportunity to catch their breath, have a pee, and a drink,” Sara said. “You know, I’ve seen situations where people were riding their horses for an hour or even longer. Then they come back into the barn and they go straight to the wash stall. That drives me mental, like that horse is going to colic or something.”

“Our primary goal has to be a happy environment for the horses, and happy people create a happy environment,” Sara said. “The reason we work so hard is for them to be content, because they don’t ask for this life, you know?”

This article was sponsored by Ocala Horse Properties, the number one in Ocala farm sales for 15 years and counting. Find your dream farm, just like Sara Kozumplik. Start by browsing their listings here.

Write (or Video!) Your Way to Free Training from Great Meadow International with the Jimmy Wofford Essay Contest

Kristen Bond and Enough Already at Great Meadow. Photo by Jenni Autry.

One of the things that I always most loved about Jimmy Wofford was that all his (extensive!) equine knowledge and wisdom was so eloquently imparted: he was as good a writer as he was a rider and trainer, and I learned as much about the art and craftsmanship of creating brilliant sentences as I did about riding positively to a fence when reading his books and columns over the years.

Now, his extraordinary legacy is being honoured in a way that reflects his love for sharing knowledge, with the Jim Wofford Essay Contest, presented by Davis Equine. There will be two prizes on offer at this year’s MARS Great Meadow International (August 24–27): the Scholarship Prize “will be awarded to a GMI competitor based on their submission and their sportsmanship and horsemanship demonstrated throughout the weekend”, while the Development Prize is open to “all spectators, competition staff, volunteers, grooms, and participants of GMI for the current year.”

So what are those submissions? Well, although this is ostensibly an essay competition, it’s actually broader in scope than that – you can enter an essay, a video submission, or a quote concerning Jimmy’s training techniques. (If I were to be eligible to enter, I reckon I’d go down the route of a Woff-inspired cross-country day preview and predictions piece, which used to be the highlight of my horse-magazine-guzzling year. You’re welcome to take that idea and run with it, writers and vlogger types.)

Jim Wofford and Chinch share a moment.

The prizes, which are generously sponsored by Davis Equine, Ride Safe, the Virginia Equine Rehab Center, and the GMI organising committee, are fittingly educational: the winning contestant of the Scholarship Prize will receive a training stipend of $2500 to train with one of the trainers from a pool of trainers who previously trained with Jimmy, who will be selected by the organising committee, and will also receive a perpetual trophy. The Development Prize winner will receive a collection of Jimmy’s “most influential books about training techniques”, to be provided by Davis Equine, and an award certificate.

“Jim Wofford was a horseperson beloved by the local equestrian community and beyond,” says Dr. Chad Davis of Davis Equine. “Many of the riders at GMI have been influenced by Wofford. We wanted to honor his contributions to the sport, not only in this year, but for many years to come with the support of the community and this local event.”

Ready to enter? Click here and give it your best shot. Submissions are due on August 15, 2023 and winners will be awarded at Great Meadow International (August 24-27). And, as always, Go Eventing!

Thursday News & Notes

 

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With limited context to work with, I’m going to give you this gem of a photo to start your Thursday off right: it’s Mariah Carey, babyyyy, and her daughter Monroe, who appears to be a newly-confirmed horse girl and I am HERE FOR IT. Now we just need to get the Elusive Chanteuse on a horse.

US Weekend Preview:

Champagne Run at the Park H.T. (Lexington, KY): Website | Scoring | Entry Status & Ride Times

The Maryland Horse Trials at Loch Moy Farm (Adamstown, MD): Website | ScoringRide Times | Entry Status

Larkin Hill H.T. (NY): Website | Scoring

News From Around the Globe:

So often, simplicity is the key to great riding. Simplicity and – you guessed it! – great basics. That was the name of the game on day two of the EA21 West clinic, which took place in Washington state and focussed much of its attentions on the quality of the canter. Here’s what the participants learned, and some great inspiration for your weekend jump school.

We’re not the only people obsessed with Aachen. In Andrew Nicholson’s latest op-ed for Horse & Hound, the former winner espouses the event as the ideal showcase of our sport to a wider audience, and we couldn’t agree more. As an aside, it’s always a funny little thrill of sorts to bump into this absolute legend of the sport at the media centre coffee machine in the morning before he heads off on coaching duties. We’ll let it slide that he nicks our beverages, because he does write rather well.

Rich Fellers has pleaded guilty to being Not A Great Dude, Actually, and will likely serve four years in prisonWhile that seems like a pretty short sentence for a sexual abuse charge, it’s still heartening to see a case of this kind actually yielding some kind of punishment. Unrelatedly, this week, disgraced US Gymnastics ‘doctor’ Larry Nassar had a very bad time in prison after telling his fellow inmates that he wished the women’s tennis match at Wimbledon, which they were watching together, was being played by girls. Oh dear.

Watch This:

Time for a classic rewatch – this time, from 2009, where a baby-faced Michi Jung made his 5* debut at Luhmühlen with La Biosthetique Sam…and won it.

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Desert Fun on the Coconino Training XC Course

The Coconino Horse Trials in Arizona just completed their Summer I and II series this weekend, and once again delivered another fabulous event. For us here in Utah, traveling to the annual two-week show is a big treat, and nearly half my barn team ventured into the mountain desert of Flagstaff this month to participate. The second weekend also includes the Area X Western Underground, Inc. Classic 3-Day Event series, which is always very exciting to see!

Ride Coconino’s Training course here with Brett Youssi and Finny’s Macho Man, who finished 4th in the Training Rider division on their dressage score in both weekends’ events — just their second and third recognized rides at the level. Congrats to all the riders on their success in the mountains!

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