Classic Eventing Nation

Sunday Links by SmartPak

For less than the price of a nice saddle pad, you can “spice up your love life” with a personalized video message from Boyd himself. I’m going to need someone to confess their love to their crush via BoydMail this year; his cupid power will bless your relationship forever. Brb, just going to send this link to my husband really quick…

U.S. Weekend Events:

Full Gallop Farm February I H.T. (Aiken, SC) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Pine Top Intermediate H.T. (Thomson, GA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Rocking Horse Winter II H.T. (Altoona, FL) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Links to Start Your Sunday:

Ten-Time Olympian Ian Millar is heading back to the games–only this time, as Canada’s Technical Advisor

Pippa Funnell has a groom opening, snatch this up!

British U25 champ Greta Mason tells us to focus on our own strengths this year

In Photos: Great Charity Challenge A Sweet Success For Palm Beach County Nonprofits

Trick or Treat: Enforcement of Rule Violations After Exhibitor Punished for Feeding Horse Peanut M&M’s

Weekly Pick from SmartPak: Are you looking for reliable, accurate information on your horse’s health? Check out SmartPak’s Horse Health Library. They cover everything from lameness and weight issues to behavioral problems.

Morning Viewing: I could probably use this reel sound for every video I have of me going over cavalettis as well…

#SuperstarSaturday Video Break: Ride the 2021 European Championships XC with Ingrid Klimke

Ingrid Klimke and SAP Hale Bob OLD slip into silver after cross country at the 2021 FEI Eventing European Championships in Switzerland. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We’ve shared this one here on EN before, but any Ingrid content is worth a reshare! We’re turning back the pages to the 2021 FEI Eventing European Championships, whose drama and epic storylines will be difficult to top (though there are sure to be some equally wonderful stories to come from the 2023 Championships at Haras du Pin this summer!).

They might have knocked a rail and slipped off the podium, but it’s clear how much joy it brought Ingrid Klimke to ride around a third European Championships with her best friend Bobby. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Need a refresher? Look back on Tilly Berendt’s final European Championships report here.

Incidentally, this would wind up being the last championship hurrah for SAP Hale Bob OLD, the longtime partner of Ingrid’s who was retired in 2022.

Look back on SAP Hale Bob’s illustrious career.

Ride along with Ingrid as she narrates her round, which would help solidify a podium position following cross country. Ingrid and “Bobby” would finish in fifth place individually to end the weekend.

This year’s FEI Eventing European Championships will be held in northern France at the historic Haras du Pin, August 9-13. If you want to catch the action (and preview Olympic course designer Pierre Le Goupil’s work ahead of Paris!), tickets are on sale here.

Chatt Hills to Offer $35,000 in Prize Money at Spring 2023 Events

Andrew McConnon and Bossinova at Chattahoochee Hills. Photo by Liz Crawley Photography.

Chattahoochee Hills is a stunning eventing venue in Fairburn, Georgia — so stunning, in fact, that rumor has it that it was one of the filming locations for the iconic movie Black Panther. Needless to say, it’s a fantastic venue with big, scopey cross country courses, and it has a special place in my heart, too, as I galloped around my first 4*-S there with Bendigo several years ago.

This spring, the venue is offering $35,000 in prize money at its spring events, which should attract top competitors from around the country. The spring events are March 11–12, which is running BN-A as well as the 2* and 3* levels, and March 31–April 2, which is running BN-I in addition to a feature A/I division, which will offer the 5* dressage test and a big, technical show jumping test.

I caught up with Hugh Lochore, course designer and organizer of Chatt Hills, to get an inside scoop on his plans for the spring events — and his views on how the eventing calendar has changed recently. Lochore has been designing at the venue for eleven years, and he explains that the FEI eventing calendar in America has been up in the air over the past couple of years. The FEI awards dates to eventing venues based on the levels they offer and what other events would like to run on those same dates. Especially of interest for competitors at the Advanced/4* level is the timing of 4* events throughout the year as they prepare for their long-format competitions in the late spring and fall — but another crucial consideration is that if two popular events run on the same weekend, both venues will suffer in terms of entries. The reality is that riders and horses cannot be in two places at once, even if they love both venues!

After the announcement of the cancellation of Red Hills from the eventing calendar last year, many riders wondered what the first feature 4* of the year would be on the East Coast. The early March Red Hills date went to Chatt Hills, but the venue will not be running a 4* — instead, the feature class will be the Advanced division, which will have $10,000 in prize money up for grabs. Lochore mentions that this new date is desirable because it does not clash with the Bruce’s Field Eventing Prix, and he expects lots of entries there.

The second Chatt Hills event is now the first weekend in April. Lochore spoke with enthusiasm about hosting an A/I division with the 5* dressage test, 5* show jumping track, and a championship-style cross country course. That class will have $25,000 prize money and is designed especially for horses heading to the Kentucky Three-Day Event.

“I have always thought that choice was a good thing,” Lochore explains, remarking further that when riders have the ability to tailor their calendar to their horse’s needs, they not only produce horses more thoughtfully but also drive up competition between venues, pushing all of the venues to make improvements to attract more competitors. However, there are drawbacks to having too much choice: entries can suffer overall if they are divided up among too many shows. For example, Lochore explains that previously, riders bemoaned the fact that Chatt Hills and The Fork fell on the same April weekend. This meant that the entries for both venues were reduced, and riders who would have liked to benefit from running at both venues could not do so, at least not in the same season.

“The new calendar does mean that people have fewer options [of where to run their horses],” Lochore says, but he also notes that there is always a push and pull with the calendaring process, which will be under review again after this year. There is another drawback to having less choice on the eventing calendar. When there are fewer events, there is less competition among events, so they have less incentive to offer prize money. Whether riders choose events based on prize money is hard to say, especially because of the dearth of prize money in eventing generally, particularly compared with show jumping. However, it is always an attraction for riders when a venue does offer generous prize money.

Chattahoochee Hills will provide exciting incentives for competitors in 2023. Php

A lot of riders are starting to understand the complexity of calendaring changes and how that affects their schedules and the dynamics of producing horses. While there will always be benefits and drawbacks to any changes that occur, it is important to think about the amount of planning that goes on behind the scenes to put on these top-tier events.

“The economics of the show are in the lower levels – we don’t make money off of running the 4* level,” Lochore expounds. Venues are often known for their upper-level divisions, which provide the greatest spectator draw and media interest and attract the ‘star power’,  but the reality is that the costs associated with building these big, technical courses and hiring the officials to run FEI divisions often exceed the entry fees that they bring in. Thus, when venues plan their budgets for these events, they depend on the lower-level entries. One benefit of having upper-level divisions is that the riders competing in them will often bring their young horses and students with them to the same shows, so while they may pick their venues based on what works best for their upper-level horse, that will also determine the additional entries they bring in for those shows.

An analysis of the economics of eventing venues is perhaps the subject of a different article, but it is notable to say that Chatt Hills runs 32 horse shows per year (including jumping and dressage shows), as well as seven full events per year, so they do bring in considerable entry fees. The facility is permanent, with hundreds of stalls on site. This high number of shows means an overall total of several thousand entries per year, which does give them the flexibility to offer prize money for their feature events. Furthermore, the venue hosts music festivals during the summer months, so it is a versatile property that makes great use of its space.

Another reason that Chatt Hills can offer prize money is that Lochore himself works for free — he designs the courses purely for the love of the sport, and thus, the venue does not have to pay for his course designing. Other venues have different business models, but it is worth thinking about how venues plan their own calendars and investments in jumps, facilities, and the like to stay viable.

Just as no horse person gets into the eventing industry to make big money, it is also true that no venue gets into the eventing industry to make money. It is all, in the end, about the horses and the competitors.

“We want the positive energy,” says Lochore, whose enthusiasm for the venue and for the sport is palpable. He emphasizes that they are always making improvements to Chatt Hills’s facilities, and he continues to imagine and build more diverse cross-country courses for competitors.

With the discontinuation of the fall Tryon CCI-L event, which has run in November for the last couple of years, the eventing calendar has also shifted further south. Now the Terranova Equestrian Center will host the fall CCI4*L championship in November, and Chatt Hills has stepped in to host a 4*S as a preparation event for that long-format show.

The opening date for the March Chatt Hills event was January 24, so you can send your entries in now. The April date opens on February 14.

 

Saturday Links from World Equestrian Brands

Photo via Paris2024.org

Behold! The official pictograms for the 2024 Paris Olympic and Paralympic Games have been released! Paris has reimagined the simple icons, “elevating them from mere visual aids to striking coats of arms serving as rallying cries for sports fans.” What do you think of our eventing pictogram, fellow citizens of EN? Honestly I really dig it and I’d like to order a t-shirt ASAP, please. Check out all 62 pictograms here.

U.S. Weekend Action

Full Gallop Farm February I H.T. (Aiken, SC) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Pine Top Intermediate H.T. (Thomson, GA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Rocking Horse Winter II H.T. (Altoona, FL) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Links to Start Your Weekend:

Understanding Sport Horse Injuries to Limit Them

USEA Emerging Athlete U21 Program Applications Are Open

We Talk Horses with ChatGPT

AAEP Health Coverage: Advances in Sports Medicine

Coolest New Equestrian Products

An Ode to Lesson Horses

Sponsor Corner: World Equestrian Brands sat down with 5* rider Woodge Fulton to talk about setting and achieving your goals for 2023. They cover everything from working your horse in winter, breaking down your goals into bite-size chunks, and more. Read more here!

Morning Viewing: Who’s your pick for the Super Bowl? Connor, a Belgian Draft belonging to the Kentucky Horse Park thinks he knows who’s going to win Sunday’s big game.

The Optimist: An Excerpt from ‘Still Horse Crazy After All These Years’

In this excerpt from his autobiography “Still Horse Crazy After All These Years”, three-time Olympian Jim Wofford talks about that time he came back from retirement to win Kentucky. “Still Horse Crazy After All These Years” is available in multiple formats, including audiobook, on HorseandRiderBooks.com.

Jim Wofford competing with The Optimist at Kentucky in 1986.

Me, the Optimist

I got a call from Diana and Bert Firestone in the fall of 1985. Karen O’Connor (née Lende) was named to the 1986 World Championship team that would compete in Australia. Because the seasons below the equator are reversed, the Championship would take place in the spring, which meant Karen could not ride their horse, The Optimist, at Kentucky. Would I like the ride? With a recent Bill Steinkraus comment about getting better after retirement in the back of my mind, I didn’t give it much thought before I said, “Yes”.

Purchased by the Firestones as a ride for their son, Matthew, The Optimist (“Bill”) had turned out to be spectacularly unsuitable in that role. Matt was quite strong, but fairly short, and Bill was an enormous bull of a horse. I had been watching him go for a year or so and had always secretly liked him, even as I watched him run away with a succession of riders. I have a soft spot in my heart for 16.3-hand mealy-nosed brown geldings from Ireland, but at first glance it was hard to have a soft spot for Bill. He was unattractive: plain bay with no markings, slightly lop-eared, Roman-nosed, and pig-eyed, with a dull expression. He had a thick neck, massive shoulders, and powerful hindquarters. At first glance, in other words, he was the epitome of a thug.

The Firestones had several additional horses in training with Karen at Fox Covert, and I was fortunate that Bill’s groom, Janice Hilton, came with him. Janice was extremely knowledgeable, having worked for Lorna Sutherland Clarke in England before emigrating. She told me that if we got to Kentucky, it would be the one-hundredth Classic event she had worked at. (She didn’t tell me until much later that in all that time, she had never groomed a winner.)

Much to my surprise, within a couple of weeks of starting to ride Bill in January, I was thoroughly demoralized. No matter what I tried, we were not on the same wavelength, and I could tell we would not be successful if this trend continued. He resisted my efforts to get him on the bit and charged every obstacle in his path with a frighteningly powerful rush. After I had ridden him early one Saturday morning, once again with a signal lack of progress, I handed him over to Janice and went to teach some lessons in my indoor arena.

Bill, I See You!

Bill’s stall was next to the arena, and I had already noticed that he would hang over his stall webbing and watch my lessons. He focused his attention on the activity, and if I raised my voice, he lifted his head and pricked his outsized ears until the arena settled down. On this day, Janice returned him to his stall, and he audited the rest of my lesson until I finished. Then he turned his attention to his hay.

I didn’t realize it at that moment, but when I stepped from the arena into the barn aisle that day, I was stepping into the shadow of the rainbow once again. Bill heard my footstep outside his stall, and when he raised his head and looked at me, he looked directly into my eyes. His ears were up, his visage was attentive, and his eyes glowed with recognition and intelligence. Startled, I looked back at him—but suddenly it was as if his face were melting. In a flash his eyes were dull, his ears at half-mast, and he had assumed his normal lack of expression.

Laughing, I pointed at him and said, “Too late, Bill, I saw you!”

I suddenly realized that I had completely misunderstood Bill. He didn’t misbehave because he was stupid; he misbehaved because he was smart. (I did tell you he was Irish, didn’t I?) Bill did not need his rider to tell him what to do, or even worse, to try to make him do it. Bill knew his job; he wanted his rider to remember the test or the course—and leave the rest to Bill. If the rider tried to make Bill do something, he was just as happy fighting with the rider as fighting with the course. After all, as strong and athletic as Bill was, the jumping was not a challenge—and anyway, he didn’t care about dressage one way or another. But if a rider challenged Bill by leaving it up to him, Bill would respond.

Armed with new insight, I changed my approach, and Bill changed his way of going. I don’t mean that things were perfect after that, but we showed regular improvement. However, Bill wasn’t done teaching me new things. I’d already had my nose rubbed into the mistake of judging a horse by appearance. Now Bill taught me not to get tunnel vision when training event horses.

You can imagine that my morale improved after we won our first competition together, a nice Intermediate warm-up event in North Carolina. I had always done as little competing as possible when training Classic horses. Our cross-country and show jumping were nowhere near as technical then as in events today. I used my Classic preparatory events as a general fitness checkup and made sure my technical work was showing improvement. With only one more horse trials left before Kentucky, at Ship’s Quarters in Maryland, I felt pretty good about our chances. Our dressage work needed continual improvement, but that was no surprise. However, at our initial outing, it was apparent that our show jumping needed work. I had been lucky to leave the fences up. Even though the course had been slightly small and relatively easy, Bill had towed me around at a high rate of speed. This would not suit a big-time event.

While my conditioning plan was working, and my dressage improvement was slight but steady, I changed my show-jumping approach. I did a lot of jump-and-walk, jump-and-stop exercises, and worked on combinations with tight distances. Because I set these new problems and left them for Bill to solve, I thought I was happy with things by the time we got to our last “prep” events; it just goes to show you how wrong a fellow can be.

At Ship’s Quarters, traditionally the last event before Kentucky, everything was maximum but straightforward, not technical. It was just the right type of challenge to set horses and riders up for a Classic. I was already patting myself on the back halfway through my show-jumping course, thinking about how much better Bill was going. Then I turned into the triple combination. Set at maximum heights and spreads, it was a vertical, one stride to a maximum oxer, then two strides to another maximum oxer. I cantered quietly to the first element, Bill jumped it off a nice stride, and when I landed, what do you think I said to myself?

“Uh oh.”

I suddenly realized that I had practiced shortening Bill’s stride, but to the exclusion of increasing his stride. Long story short, I couldn’t get there from here. The only thing good to come from that particular in-and-out is that I learned not to have tunnel vision when training horses. Putting in two strides in a one-stride, three strides in a two-stride, and crashing through two maximum oxers will get a trainer’s attention. Bill’s courage and strength got me out of that scrape, but only just. Unlike my first outing with Bill, where I had won easily, I drove home in a bad mood with a lot on my mind.

My training from then until Kentucky emphasized flexibility, not just long or short. It must have worked, as I wound up winning Kentucky for the second time. Bill was not too far out of the lead after dressage, jumped clean and fast cross-country, and was in second place, less than a rail out of first, going into the show jumping. This was nerve-racking, as Bill was notorious for his casual attitude toward painted rails. However, I persuaded him to leave all the rails up, and once the rider ahead of me knocked down a rail they could not afford, I wound up a winner at my final Classic. After the disappointing finish to my Olympic aspirations two years earlier, this time I could retire on top. When I walked out of the arena following the victory gallop, I felt as if the eventing gods had reached down, patted me on the head, and said, “There, there. You were hugely disappointed not to go to Los Angeles. Now we gave you a big win, but it’s time you retired again, this time for good. Don’t push your luck.”

That was good advice, and I took it.

This excerpt from “Still Horse Crazy After All These Years” by Jim Wofford is reprinted with permission from Trafalgar Square Books (www.HorseandRiderBooks.com). Purchase your copy here.

Sneak a Peek at Early Entries for the 2023 $50,000 Grand-Prix Eventing at Bruce’s Field

Two-time Grand Prix Eventing winners Liz Halliday-Sharp and Deniro Z will return for another shot at the prize in 2023. Photo by Shelby Allen.

During recent years, we’ve come to know the $50,000 Grand Prix Eventing at Bruce’s Field to be the unofficial ushering in of the new eventing year. This year’s showcase, which features a “condensed” format three-phase competition and is for 2023 presented by Taylor Harris Insurance Services, is set to happen on March 3-4 in Aiken, SC.

EN is pleased to be your press team on the ground on behalf of Aiken Horse Park and Bruce’s Field this year, and we’re kicking off our coverage with a sneak peek at the growing entry list for this year’s event. We’ve also got it on good authority that we’ll be seeing our defending champions, Boyd Martin and Fedarman B (along with some other Martin horses), making an appearance on the list in due time, as well as a special guest from the other side of the pond. We’ll also see an appearance from two-time winner Liz Halliday-Sharp, who brings forward three stalwart competitors for a try at this year’s crown.

Phillip Dutton and Azure. Photo by Shelby Allen.

At the time of publication, the 2023 roster features some exciting combinations, including:

  • Woods Baughman and C’est la Vie 135
  • Dana Cooke and FE Glamour
  • Mary Bess Davis and Imperio Magic
  • Phillip Dutton and Azure + Z
  • Liz Halliday-Sharp on Miks Master C + Cooley Quicksilver + Deniro Z
  • Emily Hamel and Corvett
  • Lillian Heard and LCC Barnaby + Dassett Olympus
  • Dan Kreitl and Carmango
  • Colleen Loach and Vermont + FE Golden Eye
  • Caroline Martin and Islandwood Captain Jack
  • Ryan Wood and Cooley Flight

If you’re looking for a way to get on the ground at this year’s Grand Prix Eventing, tickets and volunteer spots are still available! The crew on the ground is looking for help with things such as cross country decoration, in-gate and warm-up help, and cross country jump videographers. Grab your spot to help out here. General admission tickets can be found here.

Shelby Allen and I will be your team on the ground in Aiken, and we’re looking forward to seeing you there! As always, if you can’t join us in person, our friends at Horse & Country will carry the live stream for this competition. Sign up for your H&C+ subscription here.

Friday News & Notes Presented by Stable View

The beautiful Stable View! Photo courtesy of Barry Oliff.

Stable View is taking its responsibility very seriously as it offers top riders and horses what is potentially their final training opportunity prior to Kentucky. With their spring 4* on April 7th, it will serve as a last outing for many Kentucky-bound pairs, and they’ve decided to double down on their turf management to ensure the best possible experience for all the horses. Not only are they carrying out soil tests every year and customizing the program, but they’ve got Mike Boekholder on the team, who measures moisture, density, compaction and rebound, as he does at Fair Hill 5*.

Last year Stable view purchased a Verti Drain, which is an excellent aeration machine that breaks up compaction, increasing water absorption and improving grass roots development. They use two types of Bermuda grass, which are both designed for sandy soils. In addition, they have installed over a mile and a half of underground irrigation, meaning that the entire 85-acres of cross country course can be successfully irrigated! Nobody does it better than Stable View, so be sure to head on over there if you can!

U.S. Weekend Preview

Full Gallop Farm February I H.T. (Aiken, SC) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer]

Pine Top Intermediate H.T. (Thomson, GA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Rocking Horse Winter II H.T. (Altoona, FL) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

News From Around the Globe:

For the sixth time in his career, Boyd Martin took to the stage at the USEA Convention to accept the Windy Acres Farm Trophy and the title of World Equestrian Brands USEA Rider of the Year. Claiming this title just once is an honor in itself, but to be announced as a six-time recipient is a true testament to the hard work that goes on behind the scenes all year round to conclude the season in such high standings. For Martin, the old saying, “teamwork makes the dream work,” is nothing but the truth when looking back at the 2022 season, which would not be possible without the massive team that stands behind him each and every day. [Behind the Scenes with Boyd Martin]

Interested in riding with Phillip Dutton? Good news for you, Tryon International Equestrian Center is hosting a rare clinic with the Olympic rider. The clinic is on March 13th, and you get a discount for entry if you sign up before the first of March. [Phillip Dutton Clinic]

The Chronicle of the Horse has dug up another old interview with Jimmy Wofford. We will honestly never get bored of Jimmy quotes, and I loved reading more stories from his life. [Free Rein with Jimmy Wofford]

Over the last month, U.S. Eventing hosted its annual series of training sessions in Ocala, beginning with the Emerging Training Session from January 16-19 and ending with the Development Training Session and Elite and Pre-Elite Training Sessions from January 30 through February 2. The programs are part of the U.S. Eventing Pathway, which is focused on developing combinations to deliver sustainable success in team competition at the championship level. Let’s look back at a review of the action in each of the sessions. [Training Sessions Review]

Thursday Video: The Healing Power of Horses, Writ Large

The use of horses as therapy animals goes back a long time, with a number of proven applications – and as far as mental health therapy uses go, we’re still discovering just how much power they wield. A great friend of mine, who runs a yard and trains competition ponies, enrolled herself in an equine facilitated therapy course and found so much comfort, and made such progress in it, that she then underwent the long process of training to be a facilitator herself – and although many might find the idea of connecting with horses on a ‘vibrational’ level a touch woo-woo, there’s an awful lot to be said for the magic that happens when we slow down, shelve our egos, and learn to simply communicate with an animal. This documentary on Equinisity, which runs spiritual therapeutic retreats, certainly lends itself well to an interesting conversational jumping off point about how much horses can actually help us.

Burghley to Bid for World Championships Hosting Role in 2026

Pippa Funnell and Majas Hope. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

In the wake of a successful FEI World Championships of Eventing at Pratoni, Italy last year, all eyes are on which of the eligible venues worldwide could play host to the next iteration, set to take place in 2026. Very excitingly, the Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials is in discussions with UK Sport about accessing funding in order to host – a job it’s done on two previous occasions.

Those occasions were back in 1966 and 1974 — and though the sport has changed considerably since then, Burghley remains at the forefront of the industry. It has also hosted six European Championships (1962, 1971, 1977, 1985, 1989 and 1997) and one Young Riders European Championship (1978).

Land Rover Burghley is globally renowned for its stunning setting in the grounds of the historic Burghley House outside Stamford, and for the outstanding level of equestrian sport it delivers at its annual autumn event — due to be held from 31 August — 3 September in 2023.

Ariel Grald and Leamore Master Plan. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Event Director Martyn Johnson says: “Burghley is synonymous with the pinnacle of the sport of eventing. Hosting the FEI World Championships in 2026 would bring huge benefits to Burghley and the local community. It would also focus our longer-term vision for the event as we continue to invest in upgrading the permanent infrastructures for athletes and horses to improve further a world-class venue.

“As we experienced with the London 2012 Olympics, the legacy of a British World Championships would not only help our British teams win medals for years to come but also provide inspiration, opportunities and facilities for the next generation of equestrian stars through our associations with the Pony Club and grassroots riders.”

The FEI Eventing World Championships is held every four years, and since 2022, has reverted to a single discipline championship, rather than the popular World Equestrian Games format that previously required a single venue to host every discipline. The World Championships are ordinarily held in early autumn, roughly coinciding with Burghley’s first-week-of-September calendar spot, and though the venue hasn’t yet clarified what that would mean for its popular five-star in 2026 if it is successful with its bid, Britain does now have a successful ‘back-up’ five-star location in Devon’s Bicton Arena, which held the ‘pop-up’ pandemic five-star in Burghley’s stead in 2021.

The bid process for the 2026 FEI Eventing World Championships is open, and will conclude by June. Keep it locked on EN for further updates and news of competing venues!

 

Coming Up #OnStrider: Learn from Erik Duvander in Ocala

Boyd Martin debriefs with Erik Duvander. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

There’s nothing that wiles away the winter better than jumping on some seriously cool learning opportunities – and embroiling yourself in a clinic with Erik Duvander definitely qualifies as one of those. The former US team trainer, who remains in situ as the coach of choice for many of the country’s leading competitors, will be heading to Ocala at the end of this month for a jam-packed two-day clinic, which will incorporate showjumping and cross-country across the sessions, as well as individual long-term plans to build upon the work done in the lessons.

Spaces are limited: just sixteen riders will be able to take part, and the clinic is aimed at Prelim+ riders, though inexperienced horses are welcome. To secure your place, head over to Strider, where you can also register to audit the clinic – a super opportunity to take in a ton of great intel at a bargain price of just $30 for both days, and a great option if you’re not yet at the required level. The clinic will take place on February 27-28 at Liz Halliday-Sharp’s brand new Southern base, Horsepower Equestrian. As always, we’d be delighted to share your clinic experiences here on EN, so if you’re planning to attend as a rider or auditor and want to pitch a clinic report, pop us an email at [email protected]!