Classic Eventing Nation

Thursday News & Notes Presented by Stable View

A fun jump into the water at Tryon CCI4*-L! Photo courtesy of USA Eventing.

The eventing season wraps up this weekend, with our last major event at Tryon already underway. November always brings mixed feelings for me, because each year with horses is such an extraordinary journey of learning, failing, succeeding, and muddling about searching for a way to become a better horseman. This year for me hasn’t been much in terms of competition, but a lot in terms of learning, so overall I consider it a success. I’m looking forward to turning that improved knowledge into competition success next year, and can’t wait for the spring season to arrive!

U.S. Weekend Preview

Dutta Corp. Tryon International Three-Day Event (Mill Spring, NC): [Website] [Entries] [Volunteer] [Shannon Brinkman Photo] [Orders of Go] [Live Stream] [XC Course Maps] [Scoring]

Horse Trials at Majestic Oaks (Ocala, FL): [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

River Glen Fall H.T. (New Market, TN): [Website] [Entries/Times/Scoring]

Major International Events

Montelibretti CCI4*-L: [Website] [Schedule/Scoring]

News From Around the Globe:

Have a brand that NEEDS to be on everyone’s holiday list this year? We’ve just opened up spots for our 2022 Holiday Gift Guide with Horse Nation. Info/book your spot here.

It’s the final CCI4*-L of the 2022 season and 18 horse and rider pairs have made the trip to North Carolina for the Tryon International 3-Day Event and The Dutta Corp./USEF CCI 4*-L Eventing National Championship. In addition, the TIEC will also host an additional 196 competitors for their CCI1*-L, CCI2*-L, CCI3*-L, CCI4*-S, and the three USEF Eventing Young Rider Championships presented by USEA divisions- the CCIJY2*-L, the CCIJ1*-L, and the CCI3*-L. [Tryon Fast Facts]

It’s often said that four-leaf clovers bring good luck, and Valerie Vizcarrondo Pride is particularly adept at finding them. The Maryland-based FEI five-star rider, trainer and “S” judge—and owner/operator of the aptly-named Blue Clover Eventing—is chasing dreams and creating her own luck as she excels in the grueling sport of eventing. “I guess if I had a super-power, it would be x-ray vision,” Valerie says. “I can actually look in a field and spot a four-leaf clover anywhere.” [Chasing Dreams, One Step at a Time]

If you’re in Florida this winter, don’t miss the Winter Wonderland at WEC. This family friendly event is back for the second year, and the WEC Grand Plaza will be covered in the glow of more than a million lights. Starting November 25, Winter Wonderland will spread Christmas cheer Thursdays through Sundays from 5pm to 9pm leading up to Christmas Eve. The halls of the Grand Plaza will be decked with all the traditional regalia of the season, along with larger-than-life ornaments and a Christmas tree maze, dedicated kid’s zone and a 45-foot walk-through Christmas tree. Families can meet Santa Claus, send letters to the North Pole, and even get tickets to share breakfast with Jolly Old Saint Nick. [Winter Wonderland at WEC]

Sponsor Corner:

Heading to Aiken this winter? You’ll be the envy of your barn buddies back home with venues like Stable View so close by. Check out the pro schooling option below, and if you’re in the area don’t miss the next Eventing Academy and Schooling Day, November 18, 19 (Schooling Days) and November 20 (Eventing Academy Horse Trials)

 

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Wednesday Videos from Kentucky Performance Products: Celebrating Classic Moet and Faerie Dianimo

With news breaking yesterday of the retirement of 5* winners Classic Moet and Fairie Dianimo, we’ve collected a few highlight reels from just some of these two incredible mares’ careers.

You can read much more on these #supermares and their time as top event horses in Tilly’s retirement story here.

You will be sorely missed, gals!

Classic Moet’s World Equestrian Games highlights:

Classic Moet’s 2018 Badminton win:

Fairie Dianimo’s 2018 Luhmühlen win:

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There is still time to grab your 2022 fall sticker at KPPusa.com/fall22.

Strides for Equality Equestrians Awards Winter 2023 Ever So Sweet Scholarship to Micah Green

Strides for Equality Equestrians (SEE) is pleased to announce the award of its Winter 2023 Ever So Sweet Scholarship to Micah Green, 23, of Jacksonville, FL. As the fourth recipient of the Ever So Sweet scholarship, Micah will receive fully-paid training and mentorship from Sara Kozumplik at her winter base in Ocala, FL.

Micah, who is a repeat applicant for the Ever So Sweet Scholarship, demonstrated determination and a clear-cut vision of his intentions should he be chosen as an ESS recipient.

“My hope as I excel in the horse world and obtain a name for myself through competing and networking [is that] I will showcase that your upbringing and your skin color do not affect your ability to excel in a sport,” Micah wrote on his application.

“As an African American male, this sport isn’t something that’s necessarily in my field,” Micah said in an essay for Optimum Youth Equestrian. “My friends didn’t exactly bully me, but they would tease me for riding “My Little Ponies” and would call me ‘the horse boy.’ This sport is something that is seen as feminine and people would always say to me, ‘you should be playing basketball,’ or ‘you should be playing football.’”

Micah began riding at a western barn when he was eight, eventually transitioning to riding English via his sixth grade science teacher. Since then, he’s competed primarily in the hunter, jumper, and equitation rings and has ridden for the University of Florida’s hunt seat team during his tenure as a student.

Micah is looking forward to using his time as an Ever So Sweet Scholarship recipient to improve his riding, try out eventing, and work on his networking skills, recognizing that this opportunity not only provides riding mentorship but also the chance to make valuable connections within the industry.

Strides for Equality Equestrians thanks Edy Rameika, Sara Kozumplik, and the USEA Foundation for their continued support of its mission to increase visibility and opportunity for riders of diverse backgrounds through once-in-a-lifetime educational opportunities such as ESS.

Strides for Equality Equestrians (SEE) is an allyship program for the equestrian community. Founded in 2020, we seek to address the lack of racial and ethnic diversity in equestrian sports by supporting access programs and professional pathways for BIPOC equestrians and by engaging and educating allies. Recognizing that we must be the change we wish to see in the world, SEE will encourage equestrians to stand shoulder-to-shoulder to fight for equality and justice. Not quietly, not anonymously… but proudly and loudly.

Learn more about SEE at www.stridesforequality.org/mission. Make a donation to support SEE’s mission here: www.stridesforequality.org/donate.

Wrapping 2022 in Style: Preview the Dutta Corp. Tryon International

2021 USEF National 4* Champions Woods Baughman and C’est La Vie 135. Photo by Sally Spickard.

We’re sliding into the final FEI event on the North American calendar this week with the Dutta Corp. Tryon International Three-Day Event. This event serves as the USEF CCI4*-L National Championship as well as Championships for Young Riders.

A full slate of action begins in earnest tomorrow with dressage, and you will be able to follow the 4*-L competition live on the USEF Network all week. Viewers can watch live and on demand for free with a USEF Fan account or take 40% OFF an annual USEF Subscriber Membership with promo code Tryon22. Edit on 11/10: The updated USEF Network broadcast schedule can be found here.

The tentative schedule (subject to change — we’ll update if we see changes!) for the 4*-L is as follows (full schedule here):

Thursday, November 10
4 p.m. EST – 5 p.m. EST: Dressage

Friday, November 11
8 a.m. EST – 9 a.m. EST: Dressage

Saturday, November 12
11:45 a.m. EST – 12:55 p.m. EST: Cross Country

Sunday, November 13
2:50 p.m. EST: Show Jumping

A total of 18 combinations will come forward to compete for the USEF 4*-L National Championship. Highlights of the entry list include:

  • Hallie Coon and Global Ex, who were 7th individually at Boekelo last year
  • Phillip Dutton and former Esib Power ride Azure will do their first 4*-L together, the 10-year-old mare’s second attempt at the level
  • Jacob Fletcher, on a hot streak this year with the 12-year-old Fabian, make their first 4*-L as a pair
  • Liz Halliday-Sharp has re-routed Ocala Horse PropertiesDeniro Z here after an untimely hoof bruise kept him out of competition at Maryland last month
  • Dan Kreitl brings forward Carmango for both his and the horse’s first go at the 4*-L level, coming tantalizing close to winning the Lexington 4*-S in April of this year
  • Top 3 at Bromont in her first 4*-L, Contessa stands with a competitive shot for Boyd Martin this weekend

We’ll also be following along with the 1* and 2* Junior/Young Rider Championship divisions, which feature 19 and 18 combinations, respectively, and will be held in team format. We’ll provide more information on this competition as it becomes available.

For anyone in the area who wants to help out, there are plenty of volunteering opportunities still to be had — click here to sign up.

While we don’t have a reporter on site this weekend, you can still find daily reports and updates right here on EN, so be sure to stay tuned for much more from this exciting fall finale!

Dutta Corp. Tryon International Three-Day Event (Mill Spring, NC): [Website] [Entries] [Volunteer] [Shannon Brinkman Photo] [Live Stream] [Scoring]

Wednesday News & Notes from Haygain

As we wind into the holiday season, we’re gearing up for gift-giving with our upcoming Holiday Gift Guide, created in partnership with our sister site, Horse Nation. As a part of our holiday campaign, we’ll be donating a percentage of proceeds earned from the sale of Gift Guide placements to a handful of nonprofit organizations. We’re also encouraging our brand partners and Gift Guide participants to take part in Give Back Week, November 21-December 4, 2022.

During this period, we will publish a list of brands who are donating a percentage or dollar amount to a nonprofit (one of our choices or one chosen by the brand), as well as any promotions or deals that brand is offering. If you have a brand or business that would like to participate in Give Back Week with us, please click here to sign up! No contract or purchase is necessary to participate in Give Back Week.

In the meantime, we’re also looking for help from you to choose our benefitting nonprofits! In particular, we’d love to support nonprofits dedicated to diversity, equity, and inclusion in the horse world — but please feel free to nominate any organization here. We’ll make an announcement on the organizations we’ve selected in the coming days.

U.S. Weekend Preview

Dutta Corp. Tryon International Three-Day Event (Mill Spring, NC): [Website] [Entries] [Volunteer] [Shannon Brinkman Photo] [Live Stream] [Scoring]

Horse Trials at Majestic Oaks (Ocala, FL): [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

River Glen Fall H.T. (New Market, TN): [Website] [Entries/Times/Scoring]

Major International Events

Montelibretti CCI4*-L: [Website] [Schedule/Scoring]

Wednesday News & Reading

Have a brand that NEEDS to be on everyone’s holiday list this year? We’ve just opened up spots for our 2022 Holiday Gift Guide with Horse Nation. Info/book your spot here.

It’s Day 3 of SmartPak’s 12 Days of Deals, and today you can receive 50% off SmartSupplements in SmartPaks using code 22Deal3. [Click here to stock up]

The conversation on accessibility in the horse world is an ongoing one, and there are multiple viewpoints on the topic to be found. We’ve shared this bit from The Plaid Horse before, but it’s well worth a reshare as junior rider Katarina Ostrov shares her thoughts on “making it”. “It’s never too late or too often to discuss these issues in our sport,” she wrote. [Read the full essay]

The late Col. Harry Chamberlain is the fifth and final inductee for the 2022 USEA Hall of Fame class. On top of his riding accomplishments, Harry Chamberlain’s riding and training philosophies have become canon in American riding. The 2022 class of inductees will be honored at next month’s USEA Annual Meeting & Convention in Savannah, GA. [Harry Chamberlain joins USEA Hall of Fame]

Before you hit the road with your horse next, give the latest episode of the “Equestrian Voices” podcast on Noelle Floyd a listen. Host Caroline Culbertson sits down with full-time sporthorse vet and event rider Dr. Kevin Keane to talk about travel stress and how it affects horses. [It’s well worth a listen]

If you follow the junior equitation circuit at all, you’ve likely heard the name Augusta Iwasaki multiple times recently. Crowned the 2022 ASPCA Maclay winner this week in Lexington (and, before that, the WIHS Equitation Final and the USEF Talent Search – East Final), Augusta’s record speaks for itself. But it hasn’t been a straightforward trip to the top for the Asian-American rider who has also dealt with criticism of her “non-standard” body type. “She has the athletic build we might associate with other sports, not necessarily our own. From other trainers ‘being helpful’ by mentioning these things, owners not offering catch rides in these divisions, and commentators commenting on her height, weight, and ethnicity, we heard it all from a young age,” her mother said. [Read all about Augusta in this great story on The Plaid Horse]

What goes into developing young horses for future success? Will Coleman knows a thing or two about this, and he said down with the USEA’s Kaleigh Collett to answer some burning questions. [Will’s thoughts on training for success]

Sponsor Corner

Now through 11/12, all Haygain Hay Steamer purchases will ship with an accompanying Starter Pack!

Wednesday Video Break

Since we talked about Augusta Iwasaki’s win streak earlier, here’s a look at her Maclay-winning final round (click here if you can’t see the embedded Instagram post below):

Tuesday Video: Every Millennial’s New Favorite Dressage Freestyle

Ok, if you’ve known me awhile, you know I have a penchant for fun songs used in dressage freestyles. There are so many possibilities — as neatly exemplified by Steffen Peters in Tokyo last year — and so every time I hear a familiar jingle as the music begins, I get a fresh tingle of excitement to see what the rider and their producer have put together.

This freestyle comes to us from the FEI Dressage World Cup stop in Vilhelmsborg, the National Equestrian Center of Denmark. Danish Olympic pair Carina Cassøe Krüth and the 11-year-old Danish mare Heiline’s Danciera took home the Grand Prix Freestyle crown with this performance, set to the tunes of millennial music legends such as New Kids On the Block, Backstreet Boys, and One Direction (ok, not sure how millennial One Direction is, but we’ll take it). Carina and Heiline’s Danciera earned a percentage mark of 85.925% to take the win by a healthy margin over second-placed Nanna Merrald Rasmussen and Blue Hors St. Schufro.

Spoiler alert: you definitely want to stick around for the “Bye-Bye-Bye Tempis”!

Now I’m curious: what would your freestyle song be? Leave your vote in the comments!

“I Owe Them Everything”: Jonelle Price Announces Retirement of Five-Star Winning Mares

It’s a day we all knew, deep down, was coming, but it certainly doesn’t make the announcement any less poignant: Jonelle Price has officially retired Classic Moet and Faerie Dianimo, the dynamic mares with whom she won back-to-back five-stars in 2018.

 

“With the season drawing to a close, sadly the time has come to officially call time on these two incredible mares’ careers and break the news to Molly [Classic Moet] that she won’t be going to Badminton,” writes Jonelle of the mares, both of whom are owned by Trisha Rickards, who also bred Faerie Dianimo. “They have done so much for my career — taught me how to compete on the world stage and together made many dreams, reality. I will miss them hugely and forever be indebted to them for all that they did for me. Trisha Rickards, not only their owner but one of the most knowledgeable horse ladies I’ve met, thank you for entrusting me with Molly and Maggie’s journey. I owe them everything.”

Both mares enjoyed call-ups for Team New Zealand at Championship level: Faerie Dianimo at the 2016 Rio Olympics, where she finished seventeenth individually and the Kiwis were fourth as a team, and Classic Moet at the World Championships in 2014 in Caen, where she was fourth as an individual, and in 2018 at Tryon, where she was nineteenth individually and the team was seventh.

 

 

Jonelle Price and Classic Moet check out their new piece of silverware at Badminton 2018. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

But it was at the five-star level where each mare truly shone. Though enormously different in their characters and styles, both mares shared a common characteristic: an excess of grit, which helped them to log fruitful, lengthy careers.

Classic Moet (Classic x Gamston Bubbles, by Bohemond) amassed 31 FEI eventing starts — plus a number of FEI jumping rounds in her winters on the Sunshine Tour — and ten of those, non-inclusive of World Championships, were at the five-star level. In seven, she finished in the top ten — and never finished outside the top twenty at the level, nor did she ever pick up cross-country jumping penalties at five-star. Across her career, though, she was most famous for her extraordinary penchant for easy speed, which led her to make the time in seven of those ten five-stars — and amass just 6 total time penalties at the level.

Jonelle Price finishes her round and realises that she and Classic Moet have scooped Badminton. Priceless. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

“She’s so unspecial that she’s very special,” said Jonelle after cross-country at Badminton in 2018, where they finished just one second over the optimum time and ultimately went on to win. “She’s so quick that she makes me look good – I’m dreading the day she retires and people realise it’s all her! The partnership is so cemented – she trusts me. I got her as a ten-year-old and did a two-star on her at Hartpury and I thought, ‘I just don’t know how fast she’s going to be.’ But she’s proved me wrong, and she’s like a best friend. She wouldn’t be everyone’s cup of tea – she has a pretty peculiar way of going.”

‘Molly’s’ career began with British team stalwart Karen Dixon, who produced her to CCI3*-L before handing the reins to Darrell Scaife. He enjoyed two international runs on the mare before Ireland’s Esib Power took over, though her run with the mare was even shorter, with just one international start. New Zealand’s Caroline Powell was next up to bat, and she ran the mare in one FEI event before the unique mare landed at her final destination: Wiltshire’s Mere Farm, under the auspices of Jonelle. That was the latter half of 2013, and by late June of the following year, Molly was a five-star horse, finishing twelfth on her debut at Luhmühlen.

2018 Badminton winners Jonelle Price and Classic Moet. Photo by Kit Houghton/Mitsubishi Motors.

Her WEG debut would follow that year, and in 2015, Molly would make her first trip to Badminton, where she jumped clear inside the time on Saturday, giving everyone a taster of what was to come from the exceptional little athlete. A frustrating first phase and two rails down on the final day meant they had to settle for twentieth place — but that would be the lowest Molly would ever finish at the level. That autumn, the pair were fifth at Burghley, and when they returned to Badminton in the spring, it was to take tenth place. A few months later, they were third at Burghley — and by now, everyone had clocked that the mare was truly a vintage sort of competitor, and one perfectly suited to the ‘Big Bs’. When she won Badminton eighteen months later, after Jonelle’s return from maternity leave, it felt like a bit of fairytale kismet come true: the unassuming champion ridden by one of the world’s fiercest competitors, taking her very first title at the level. In 2019, they followed it up with a decisive win in the British Open Championship at Gatcombe, which would be their last international run before Covid-19 hit.

Though the pandemic robbed us of, perhaps, another Classic Moet five-star victory, we’ve been lucky to witness her greatness around the world since eventing’s return. She’s been aimed exclusively at national level competitions as prep and five-stars as ‘real-deal’ runs, and in 2021, was seventh at Kentucky and eighth at the inaugural Maryland Five Star. This year, at the age of nineteen, she was eleventh at Badminton and fourth at Burghley, which would also serve as her final run. There, she was also awarded with the inaugural Avebury Trophy, given by Captain Mark Phillips to the horse and rider deemed to have delivered the best cross-country round of the day. They were the only pair to finish inside the optimum time, despite a stopwatch malfunction that meant that they had to rely solely on rhythm.

Jonelle Price and Faerie Dianimo at Aachen in 2019. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Faerie Dianimo (Dimaggio X Faerie Dazzler VII, by Catherston Dazzler), for her part, made 37 FEI starts in her career, first bursting into the spotlight in earnest back in 2014, when she picked up her first international win in the Blenheim Eight- and Nine-Year-Old CCI4*-S. She then went on to make her five-star debut a month later at Pau, finishing fourth, and would follow it up with an impressive second place finish the following year at Luhmühlen. Two consecutive top-ten finishes in the tough CCIO4*-S at Aachen bolstered her resume, leading to her selection for the 2016 Rio Olympics, and on her return to five-star at Pau in 2017, she was once again in the top ten.

The next year, just over a month after Jonelle took her first five-star title at Badminton with Molly, ‘Maggie May’ gave her her second at Luhmühlen.

“Faerie Dianimo is pint-sized,” Jonelle told EN back in 2018 after that Luhmühlen win. “She is tiny. She thinks in her head she’s about 18 hands high — and it’s that attitude that has seen her get to the very top level of the sport. She fights me a bit on the cross-country, and in the dressage she can get a bit hot, but it’s these qualities that make her such a competitor. It was almost like she knew how important it was today.”

Jonelle Price and Faerie Dianimo put a run of bad luck behind them to take third. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

In the couple of years following that win, Maggie May was the victim of a bit of bad luck — but was also well-preserved by her rider, who never ran the horse when circumstances made them uncompetitive. She started at Burghley in 2019, but activated a safety device for 11 penalties, after which Jonelle decided to save her for another day; the next year, she travelled to Pau but delivered an uncharacteristically high dressage score, and so Jonelle withdrew her before the cross-country. In 2021, Maggie May was one of five horses to make the big, two-week journey to Luhmühlen with the Prices, who cleverly worked around travel restrictions by competing abroad and basing with the Netherlands’ Tim Lips, but a freak stumble on course saw her and Jonelle hit the deck while in a competitive position. This year, though, they returned to Germany and took a decisive third place finish in the CCI5*, proving that the good stuff had been there all along, despite some mishaps along the way.

“She’s just had a few unlucky years,” said Jonelle at Luhmühlen. “In 2019 at Burghley she had a reaction to a jab in her neck and wasn’t quite right, and then last year here I had a stupid crash. She hasn’t really been off form, but we just haven’t had a clean run – and she only does one big event a year, because she’s made of glass, so when you only do one a year and you fuck your chance, it’s a long old way to the next!”

Jonelle Price and Faerie Dianimo. Photo by Ben Clark/Event Rider Masters.

Of that last run, Jonelle continued: “It’s kind of a relief, and just a pleasure to have her here, because she’s been such a phenomenal mare. She went Advanced when she was eight — she did the CCI4*-L at Blenheim at eight and won the eight- and nine-year-old CCI4*-S there as a nine-year-old, so she’s been a pretty special mare. It’s nice to finish up on a good one.”

“As much as she’s brilliant in every respect, she’s a right madam and she’s as hot as you like. So the dressage is quite hard work, and it’s not because she’s not capable. She can easily go from an 8 or a 9 to a 3 or a 4, and I’m afraid that’s just her. Even though she’s seventeen years of age, she’s not got any better. We sort of managed to keep a lid on it on Friday, but certainly when I was stood in the prize giving, I couldn’t help but think what might have been.”

“It was a relief, really, to tick the box and do all the right things, and she gave me a really lovely ride. She’s a little bit unorthodox; I think she’s got double-jointed front limbs or something, because you see one leg up there and one leg up there, but you know that she’s always fighting for the fence and looking for the flags. I always liken her to a tumble dryer — you sort of just sit on top and get rocked around, but she’s always trying to do the right thing.”

The well-earned retirement of these two extraordinary mares opens the door for Jonelle’s enviable ‘second string’, including this year’s Pau winner Grappa Nera and team bronze medallist McClaren, to step to the forefront of her line-up — but their unique characters will no doubt be missed aboard the Price lorry.

Happy retirement, girls — and thank you for all the great story fodder you’ve given us over the years! It’s been a pleasure and a privilege.

‘The Rider Should Never Find a Distance…’: An Excerpt from In the Middle Are the Horsemen

Photo courtesy of Horse & Rider Books/Lauren DeLalla.

In this excerpt from his international bestselling memoir In the Middle Are the Horsemen, eventer Tik Maynard ponders a controversial theory from the jumping coach of one of the best riders in the world.

A riding apprenticeship in Germany means twelve-hour days, or more, wearing long underwear all winter. It means starting work in the dark and finishing work in the dark. It means being replaceable. It means feeling replaceable. But it also means knowledge. At Hinnemann’s, I saw horses learning piaffe and passage every day. At Ingrid Klimke’s, I learned flying changes aboard Abraxxis, a horse that’s worth at least half-a-million dollars. (Seriously!)

Although I didn’t get as much formal instruction as I’d perhaps hoped for, every day I could learn by watching and learn by doing. And the more I learned, the more I realized how little I knew. I felt as if I were a high school student trying to stay afloat in a doctoral program. I was definitely in over my head. But every once in a while I would surface and look around and realize I wasn’t just treading water, I was actually making a little headway.

One of the highlights at Ingrid’s was being able to watch her jumping lesson. Her jumping coach arrived confident and prepared. He was slim with short brown hair, probably in his fifties—still
young as far as equestrian coaching was concerned. Ingrid liked his matter-of-fact style. During her lesson I would set the jumps and ask him questions. His grasp of riding theory was impressive, and I saw the sense in everything he taught—that is, until he answered one question toward the end of one session.

He liked the rider to be in a slightly forward seat, thus allowing the horse to move more freely. He encouraged the rider to ask for more engagement from the horse when the horse was not working hard enough. Usually this is simply a matter of clearer communication, but it might also be the other half of training that is missing: motivation. Leg! His ideas on rider balance and its relationship to the horse’s movement and balance reflected an inquisitive mind and an excellent eye.

And so I asked him if he could recommend any exercises for helping riders find a distance to a jump. Just like with a human long jumper or high jumper, the takeoff point for a big jump on horseback is vital to distance or height attained. My dad taught me to count “1-2-3-4-5” for each stride as I approached a jump. It helped me focus on slightly lengthening or shortening the stride length in order to get to the jump at the right spot. But I’d found that finding a distance was one of the hardest concepts to learn and to teach a student.

Other riders had different methods for finding a distance, most of them centered on the notion of paying attention to the rhythm of the horse’s stride—for example, by counting “1-2, 1-2.” Still others, including Ingrid, didn’t count at all. They could just “see” a distance. To me, that ability was amazing and something I’d love to acquire. So I was curious what her coach thought.

“The rider should never find a distance,” he said patiently. Instead, he explained, it was the horse’s responsibility to find a distance. “Every horse can see a distance to a jump four strides away.”

“And if he can’t?” I asked.

“Well then, get a new horse.”

I looked at him, quiet.

“The proof,” he said, “can be found by watching a horse free-jump. Without a rider, a horse will always find a distance to a jump.”

Assuming he meant a “good” distance, and not just any distance, it was all a little hard for me to believe. A good distance is usually about six feet out, although it depends on the height and type of jump. It is the distance that allows for the smoothest bascule to clear the fence. Hearing him was like listening to a passionate environmentalist lecture on conservation, then hearing him slip in that he was paid by the oil industry. It made me go back in my mind and replay everything he had said before. It made me question all his theories.

In a way I could see what he was getting at. If a horse, especially a green horse, attempted to clear an obstacle from an awkward distance, he might hit it if he got too close or land on it if he jumped from too far away. If the horse found a “deep spot” and hit the jump, then he might learn to rock back and lift his knees the next time, or shorten his stride in time to find that “sweet spot,” where the takeoff was just right. The more athletic the horse, the less he might care about finding a “bad spot,” because he could clear the jump easily anyway.

When the rider stayed out of the way, it really shouldn’t matter to the horse where he left from, as long as it didn’t feel too awkward to him. When the rider caught the horse in the mouth, on the other hand, or lost her balance and landed on his back—well, that certainly
worked to turn a horse off jumping. What I found made a big difference to a horse learning to jump and to find a good spot was his level of anxiety. Lots of horses rushed toward an obstacle, and it was almost always because they were worried, not because they loved jumping.

Relaxation and understanding were two sides of the same coin. And they led to confidence. An unconfident horse, however, might start to rush or would jump flatly. Maybe even refuse.
With an experienced horse jumping at the Grand Prix level, a lack of confidence could be dangerous. Sometimes those jumps were as big as the horse! And what about a tight turn in a jump-off when the horse didn’t even see the fence he was expected to clear until he
was one stride away? In this scenario, could we still trust the horse to find his distance?

Ingrid’s show-jumping coach did not have answers to these questions, but he still maintained, “It’s my theory, and it’s the best theory.”

I pondered it. Perhaps he was right—maybe it was all a matter of finding the right horse. I liked his confidence. Was such assuredness typical of the German mindset, or just typical of somebody who had studied horses a long time?

Ingrid Klimke was anything but typical. At thirty-eight with a six-year-old daughter (and a very supportive husband), she was competing at the highest levels of eventing and dressage. She
was always presentable. I never heard her raise her voice, yet every word she spoke carried the weight of her family’s dynasty. Her late father was perhaps the only person I would consider to be a better rider.

It would be years before I thought about the difference between riding a horse and understanding a horse. Or between training a horse and showing a horse. But these months in Germany provided the germ of such ideas, for Ingrid could do it all.

My last day at Ingrid’s came too quickly. I had only been there a few weeks to replace what would have been my last month at Hinnemann’s. I was sad to be leaving but had already made plans for where I was going next.

I was supposed to meet Ingrid for a final talk after the horses were all ridden. A “talk” such as this would make any guy nervous, but I had prepared notes and questions. I knew that this would be different than my final talk at Hinnemann’s. There I had been nervous about how wrong it might go; this time I was nervous about how well it might go.

Maybe she will invite me back.

This excerpt from In the Middle Are the Horsemen by Tik Maynard is reprinted with permission from Trafalgar Square Books (www.HorseandRiderBooks.com) In the Middle Are the Horsemen is now available as an audiobook from your favorite audiobook retailer.

Tuesday News & Notes from Ocala Horse Properties

 

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There are two things I really, really love, perhaps above all else: impromptu shopping sprees and horsey fairy tales. Last week, while reporting on Pau, I got to be a part of both when my great friend and yard owner Kate Tarrant ventured down for a jolly at the event with our pal Helen Howell. One of the lesser-known things about Pau is that it also hosts a rather informal horse sale on Saturday evening, and Kate and Helen had watched some of the young horses registered for the sale as they’d loose-jumped a few days prior — with no intention to actually buy, of course.

That is, until they spotted Ipanema Classic. Tall, beautifully put together with legs up to here; sired by World Champ Banzai du Loir’s sire Nouma d’Auzay and packed with talent on the dam side, too; equipped with big, clever radar ears and kind eyes and a clever, curious countenance — she was perfect. And so, a few pink wines and a little bit of enabling later, they snuck off into the crowd as the sun set over the auction and minutes — and some cobbled-together French — later, came back with a horse they now own between them, a big five-star dream, and a bottle of champagne. What a whirlwind!

Once they’d rung their husbands to admit to what they’d done, we got down to the business of celebrating — and now, Penny Pau, as we’ve christened her, has arrived back in England, every bit as perfect as she was in France. We’re all redownloading DuoLingo so we can actually talk to her, and in the meantime, she’s had her first short lunge and will enjoy her inaugural ride on English soil today. We’ve all got a great feeling about this one, and I can’t wait to follow her through the age classes all the way up — we hope — to the very top of the sport. Expect to see plenty more of EN’s unofficial new English mascot.

Events Closing Today: Pine Top Thanksgiving H.T.

Tuesday News & Notes from Around the World:

Have a brand that NEEDS to be on everyone’s holiday list this year? We’ve just opened up spots for our 2022 Holiday Gift Guide with Horse Nation. Info/book your spot here.

We’re on Day 2 of SmartPak’s 12 Days of Deals! Today, you can snag a free saddle pad with a Buy 2, Get 1 Free deal using code 22DEAL2 at checkout. Click here to shop.

Two years into their five-year contract, The Jockey Club has withdrawn from its role in running England’s Blenheim Palace International. This major blow to eventing comes as a result of the current economic climate in the UK, and leaves the prestigious event — which hosts one of just three CCI4*-L competitions in the country alongside the enormously important eight- and nine-year-old CCI4*-S — with an uncertain future. [A blow for Blenheim]

I don’t follow racing much, but after I saw the viral video of Flightline’s owner quietly crying as he watched his horse run away with the Breeder’s Cup, I needed to know everything about the race, the horse, and the circumstances that led to such an emotional moment. [Here’s the full story]

What’s the difference between being a rider and being a horseman? That’s the question at the heart of a new book by hunter-jumper trainers Traci and Carleton Brooks Balmoral, and this article, which condenses the answer down to ten essential bullet points. The key? Communication — and setting aside your ego to do so effectively. [Become a horseman]

Are you planning a move-up? Brushing up on the expectations at your intended level is never a bad idea, and can help you stay safe as you amp up the difficulty. The USEA Eventing Handbook by the Levels was developed by the USEA Eventing Coaches’ Program’s members, and is jam-packed with useful information — and best of all? It’s a free download, so there’s no excuse not to be clued up. [Get it here]

Last winter, EHV-1 once again triggered a major circuit shutdown and plenty of fear among horse people. Nearly a year on, what have we learned from it, and how can we best prepare to avoid outbreaks and manage situations in which they occur? USEF is hosting a free webinar on Tuesday, November 15 at 5 p.m. ET covering these topics and more, with a panel of experts discussing best practice and prevention. It’ll be well worth the watch. [Sign up here]

The Ocala Horse Properties Dream Farm of the Week:

How sweet is this barn-and-apartment combo? It’s got eight stalls and six paddocks, and it’s perfectly located just a couple of minutes from WEC. While the property comes with plenty of space to build a huge main residence, I actually love the idea of just moving into an apartment and closing those big gates so me and my horses can enjoy our little slice of heaven without any input from the real world. Is that a realistic dream? Maybe not — but who among us hasn’t dreamed of looking out our bedroom window and seeing our happy horses, knowing that it’s just and them tucked away in a perfect little oasis? Bliss.

Watch This:

Check out how dressage has changed — and how it’s remained the same — in this vintage training footage.

Monday Video: Your Area VI Intro Champions, Janet Nelson and Phantom Spanish Pants

Let’s take a moment on this fine Monday afternoon to flashback just a couple weekends ago to the USEA Area VI Championships, which took place at Ram Tap Horse Park from October 21-23. Nine area champions were crowned that weekend from Preliminary through Intro divisions.

Let’s talk about the Intro championship division for a minute. Ram Tap treated their Intro riders to dressage judges seated at both C and B — how’s that’s for a high-pressure championship test? Janet Nelson and Ava Chase’s 19-year old Pony of the Americas, Phantom Spanish Pants (Yes, Phantom Spanish Pants — I don’t know what that means, but I love it), sat in second place after the dressage and then went on to jump double clear in the next to phases to finish on their dressage score and clinch the championship. Enjoy their cross country round above! Congratulations, Janet!