Classic Eventing Nation

Sign Up Early for EN + Ride iQ’s Exclusive Land Rover Kentucky Course Walk

It’s nearly time for the annual eventing pilgrimage that is the Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event, presented by MARS Equestrian, and this year is anticipated to be one for the books as the event welcomes back spectators for the first time since 2019.

We’re celebrating the return of spectators with a special course walk, for which we’ve partnered with the hot new coaching app, Ride iQ, as well as Dapplebay for a limited merchandise run coinciding with Kentucky – and you’re invited!

Here’s the scoop:

Join EN and Ride iQ for a special 5* cross country course walk led by Ride iQ coach and Canadian Olympian Kyle Carter as well as 5* and World Championship rider Buck Davidson on Friday afternoon, April 29. Note: the exact time and starting point of the walk will be announced at a later date.

The course walk is free to attend, but the first 50 participants to sign up here will receive a free limited edition tote bag from EN and Ride iQ, designed by Dapplebay full of goodies from our sponsors (tote bags will also be available for purchase in limited quantities). We’ll contact you during the week leading up to the walk to pick up your tote bag. Don’t wait to sign up — we expect the first 50 spots to be taken up quickly!

UPDATE: The first 50 spots have been filled — thank you for the support! You can still pre-register for this event and you’ll be entered to win a signed tote bag or other goodies from our partners.

This swag bag could be yours! Be one of the first 50 to sign up for the course walk and receive a free limited edition tote!

By signing up for the course walk in advance here, you’ll also be entered to win a tote bag signed by Buck and Kyle + more EN and Ride iQ swag to take home! This course walk is free to attend, and advanced registration is not required but is recommended for planning and communication purposes. Updates on the time, meeting location, and starting point will be sent via email and text message the week of the event.

By submitting your information, you agree to receive emails and text messages from Eventing Nation and/or Ride iQ, including the EN Kentucky Daily Digest. You may unsubscribe from the mailing list at any point in time (but you’ll miss out on all the fun!).

Please note: you must be attending Kentucky and the course walk in person to be eligible for the free tote bag.

We hope you’ll join us for what’s sure to be a fun and educational tour of what Derek di Grazia has up his sleeve for this year’s 5* competitors! We can’t wait to see you in Kentucky.

Weekend Winners: Stable View, Galway Downs, Morven Park, Rocking Horse

It’s important to remember that competing and showing isn’t just about winning — especially in this sport! It’s one of the things that makes equestrian sports so unique: yes, you want to be competitive, but you’re also partnered with a living being that also has its own thoughts, feelings, and emotions. Sometimes, that makes for a big win, others make for homework, lessons learned, or maybe even a bruised ego. No matter what your result this weekend, remember to also celebrate the small wins — a point shaved off a dressage score, a clear jumping round, or just a happy, healthy horse is just as much cause for celebration as a win or a ribbon!

This week’s Unofficial Low Score Award was earned at Galway Downs, where Melissa Nice and Fun and Games won their Novice division on a score of 20.8. Nicely done!

Stable View Spring 2*/3*/4* (Aiken, Sc.): [Website] [Results] [EN’s Coverage]

CCI4*-S: Will Coleman and Chin Tonic HS (28.0)
CCI3*-S: Jennie Brannigan and Connory (30.3)
CCI2*-S: Hannah Sue Burnett and Stakkato Bronx (25.8)
Advanced: Ariel Grald and Leamore Master Plan (35.8)
Open Intermediate: Kyle Carter and Reddy Or Not (34.2)
Open Preliminary: Isabelle Bosley and Paper Doll (28.6)
Preliminary Rider: Elle Choate and Paddrick (27.4)
Modified Rider A: Chloe Paddack and Hawthornstud Fortunate Love (26.5)
Modified Rider B: Abby Foltz and Absolute Zero (33.9)
Open Modified: Maxine Preston and Cooley Muze (27.5)
Open Training A: Jenny Caras and MBF Saratoga Springs (21.1)
Open Training B: Katie Lichten and EHF Casiro Royale (29.3)
Training Rider: Sarah Coltrin and Ballyengland Whisper (31.5)

 

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Galway Downs International H.T. (Temecula, Ca.): [Website] [Results]

CCI4*-S: Alex MacLeod and Newmarket Jack (65.3)
CCI3*-S: James Alliston and RevitaVet Calaro (37.3)
CCI2*-S: Erin Kellerhouse and Bon Vivant GWF (36.6)
Advanced: James Alliston and Paper Jam (65.0)
Open Intermediate: Kaylawna Smith-Cook and Passepartout (42.1)
Open Preliminary: James Alliston and Cooley Rock Star (33.5)
Preliminary Rider: Pip Hayes and So Cool (29.7)
Open Training: Tommy Greengard and Leonardo Diterma (21.9)
Training Rider: Raney Wolfers and Annabell (36.2)
Novice Amateur: Anastasia Keyser and Bellatrix (27.2)
Novice Rider: Anastasia Keyser and Samson (25.9)
Open Novice: Melissa Nice and Fun and Games (20.8)
Beginner Novice Rider: Georgia Gobos and Black Gold (30.0)
Open Beginner Novice: Whitney Tucker Billeter (27.7)

 

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Morven Park Spring H.T. (Leesburg, Va.): [Website] [Results]

Open Intermediate: Ema Klugman and Bronte Beach Z (29.6)
Jr/YR Open Preliminary: Jillian Dean and Kingcarra Cooley Diamond (33.4)
Open Preliminary A: Kim Severson and Cooley Criminal Mind (24.0)
Open Preliminary B: Rebecca Lee and Bradley Cooper (30.0)
Jr. Training Rider: Clare Brady and Rhythm and Blues (38.1)
Open Training A: Rebecca Barber Tyler and Lassban Royal Minstrel (32.2)
Open Training B: Daniel Clasing and Butts Arthur (28.1)
Training Horse: Linden Wiesman and Silver Ruby (34.1)
Training Rider: Kate Bearer and Justfollowmylead (33.1)
Jr. Novice Rider: Lucinda Donaldson and Let ‘Em Roll (30.6)
Novice Horse: Kendyl Tracy and Justified (28.3)
Novice Rider: Melissa Fox and Tito Tonight (30.0)
Open Novice A: Rebecca Barber Tyler and FE Marco Polo (28.4)
Open Novice B: Fylicia Barr and Jimmy Choo (28.6)
Beginner Novice Rider: Christine Raymer and Dobby is a Free Elf (28.5)
Jr. Beginner Novice Rider: Erin Kidwell and Tango (32.1)
Open Beginner Novice: Robin White and Simple Twist of Fate (31.5)

 

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Rocking Horse Spring H.T. (Altoona, Fl.): [Website] [Results]

Intermediate Rider: Lea Adams-Blackmore and Frostbite (31.6)
Open Intermediate A: Sara Kozumplik and Otta B Quality (29.6)
Open Intermediate B: Lisa Barry and Rosie’s Aventadora (35.8)
Intermediate/Preliminary: Zoe Crawford and Francelia (36.0)
Open Preliminary A: Sharon White and Corona Life (25.2)
Open Preliminary B: Tik Maynard and Galileo (24.9)
Open Preliminary C: Riley Onega and I’m Special VG (27.1)
Preliminary Rider: Lauren Romanelli and Act Three (32.4)
Open Training A: Stephanie Jackson and Ballycapple Fernhill (32.4)
Open Training B: Ben Noonan and Street Fighter (26.9)
Preliminary/Training: Kristin Rubash and Capone (30.5)
Training Horse A: Tik Maynard and Kayan (29.3)
Training Horse B: Megan Edwards and Global BGK (27.1)
Training Rider: Ella Marinucci and Kindred Spirit II (27.9)
Jr. Novice Rider: Claire Roddy and Goodness Gracious (26.4)
Novice Horse: Nicole Parkin and Capture the Music (24.2)
Open Novice: McKena Knott and Alice Alice (27.9)
Sr. Novice Rider: Sierra Lesny and Sebastian (25.6)
Jr. Beginner Novice Rider: Cassidy Stafford and Mischief Mayhem (52.8)
Jr. Beginner Novice Rider – Saturday: Iselin Byars and Bloomfield Pocket Money (30.6)
Open Beginner Novice A: Delaney Emerson and Redfield Lavei (27.8)
Open Beginner Novice B: Callie Heroux and Legolas (31.6)
Sr. Beginner Novice Rider: Kristen Mumme and Darby Rose (30.3)

 

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Focusing on Fundamentals: Learning with Tamie Smith at Stable View

Tamie with some happy clinic participants. Photo by Amber Heintzberger.

In her first clinic on the East coast, California event rider Tamie Smith spent three days teaching at Stable View in Aiken, Sc. The Monday-Wednesday clinic was sandwiched between the Carolina International Three-Day Event, where Tamie competed several horses, and the spring 4* at Stable View, so the facilities were buzzing as preparations were underway for competitors to arrive.

Tamie had a fall at Carolina, but it was before the event that she sprained her ankle while leading an unruly horse, and then broke her hand while jump schooling another. Spending time seated in a golf cart while she was teaching gave Tamie a chance to ice and elevate her ankle, and despite hobbling around on crutches to offer advice and corrections to riders she looked to be in better shape at the end of the clinic than when it started.

Riders ranged from Beginner Novice to Intermediate level, and Monday started with dressage work and basic fundamentals in riding. Tamie used a simple exercise on a circle, with ground poles set up for trotting and cantering if horses and riders were ready for the exercise.

Tamie emphasizes the basics of the German training scale in her teaching, encouraging riders to focus on learning to establish a systematic program. Each session over the three day clinic began with a patient and focused warm up.

She encouraged riders to ride the horses from back to front, focusing on transitions to help the horses become better balanced. She emphasized the importance of the canter depart and explained to riders how to keep a mentally disciplined structure when trying to execute transitions. Riders worked on maintaining overall balance in each of the gaits during all three phases.

Photo by Amber Heintzberger.

On Monday afternoon the Beginner Novice and Novice groups schooled jumping exercises in the arena, with a double bounce to a one-stride, and a couple of verticals set to practice turning to the fences and keeping a steady rhythm and balance on the approach and landing and between jumps. She had riders focus on riding in a balanced, steady rhythm that is safe for the horse and rider rather than using speed and momentum to get over the jumps.

“I feel like the one key ingredients to successful riding is learning how to keep your horse in a good balance,” she said. “That the horse can stay in front of the leg without being fast and out of balance; if it is behind the leg, or running through you, transitions are a super way to get the horse pushing and not rushing.”

Both Monday and Tuesday evenings featured gatherings at the Pavilion at Stable View, with charcuterie boards by Board in Aiken, and drinks from the pub at Stable View. These were sponsored by Haygain and Nutrena Feed, respectively, and gave clinic participants the chance to ask Tamie questions and enjoy a visit with the clinician. Joanie Morris also did a demo with her Haygain hay steamer and answered questions about their products.

Tuesday was spent on the Boyd Martin/Eric Bull Equine Construction Schooling Cross Country Course at Stable View. The course is usually only Training level and up, but course builder Sam Nichols was nice enough to add a selection of Beginner Novice and Novice-sized portable cross country jumps to the mix so that all of the riders could school.

“We worked on taking momentum away to execute terrain jumps that didn’t have height, like a ditch and a bank,” explained Tamie. She had horses walking over ditches and up and down banks, teaching the riders to stay with the horse and stay in balance.

Photo by Amber Heintzberger.

“Although these exercises can be intimidating because you aren’t using speed, it is very eye opening how much you and your horse will gain confidence if you practice walking non-height questions. Eventually you will both understand it’s much easier and not as scary as you think.”

There was obvious improvement in horses and riders over the course of the clinic. Carol Tresan, whose daughter Devon brought two horses to the clinic from their home in Alpharetta, Ga. said, “My daughter has a talented horse, Zavallo, who can be quirky and a bit complicated to ride. Even when the horse acted up Tamie remained patient, encouraging and supportive. She gave Devon tools and a training system that allowed Zavallo to relax and show us his abilities; there was such a profound different by the third day, the auditors didn’t even believe it was the same horse!”

Danielle Downing, a professional trainer from New Hampshire, rode an eight-year-old horse that had previously campaigned by Tamie to the Intermediate level. Danielle has also competed to Intermediate, but it’s been a long time. She said. “I’ve had him for about a year now, and it was really helpful to get her opinion on what to work on with him.”

Photo by Amber Heintzberger.

She and the horse had a fall last year and had some confidence to regain, and she hadn’t schooled cross country in a while. “Tamie helped me stop riding him like a green horse. I hadn’t done upper level stuff since about 2012, and today was definitely out of my comfort zone. I also hadn’t been on a cross country course since November and I felt a little rusty, but Tamie helped me tremendously.”

Downing also rode a Novice horse and had several students riding in the clinic. “Over the three days I felt a lot of improvement overall,” she said.

Training level and up show jumped on Wednesday morning in a big arena with a full course of jumps. Tamie had them start with an exercise on a large circle, using a ground pole and cavaletti and using transitions between these to get the horses in a good balance, in front of the leg, and not falling behind the motion. She explained that the riders need to be disciplined in the warm-up as they learn to ride the horses from back to front and help the horses learn to coil like a spring so that they could release that energy over the jumps.

“Overall, I see a common lack of understanding of having horses in a good balance,” she said. “We must teach this to our students and help them understand that balance over all things is the priority. We must create a simple system in our day-to-day training that allows us to train correctly and gain better balance overall.”

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

Matt Flynn’s Wizzerd demonstrates optimal knees-over-nostrils form while jumping one of Thoresby’s wide tables. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

What a treat it is to be back out eventing! I often read EN’s early-season coverage with a pang of envy, because everything gets going so much earlier Stateside. But that makes it feel all the sweeter when my first reporting gig of the season rolls around, and the inaugural Thoresby Spring Carnival of Eventing truly didn’t disappoint, offering five-star bound competitors a real challenge to prepare them for a certain couple of events coming up over the next month. As of today, we’re officially one month away from the first horse inspection at Badminton – and I, for one, am giddy with excitement about how it could all play out!

National Holiday: It’s National Window Safety Week. Whatever happened to fun?!

US Weekend Action:

Stable View Spring 2*/3*/4* (Aiken, Sc.): [Website] [Results] [EN’s Coverage]

Galway Downs International H.T. (Temecula, Ca.): [Website] [Results]

Morven Park Spring H.T. (Leesburg, Va.): [Website] [Results]

Rocking Horse Spring H.T. (Altoona, Fl.): [Website] [Results]

UK Weekend Results:

Thoresby Spring Carnival of Eventing: [Results] [EN’s Coverage]

Oxstalls: [Results]

Your Monday Reading List:

Horse&Hound‘s series of exposes on the poor conditions in many grooms’ jobs continues on apace. This time, the groom in question was put through so much hell that she was actually glad, in the end, to suffer an injury on a par with being hit by a car, because it gave her an escape route from her miserable job.

Poor treatment and crazy hours aren’t the only issue grooms face in many jobs. Our industry has historically been a pretty unregulated one, at least as far as employment law is concerned, and I wrote this piece for Noelle Floyd a few years ago examining how working students should actually be compensated. Spoiler alert: most positions aren’t actually legal.

You probably spend plenty of money every month on top quality hard feeds and supplements for your horse. But how much thought are you putting into his forage? HorseSport dives into the nutritional science of this cornerstone of the equine diet and offers some great advice for keeping the hindgut healthy even if hay isn’t an option.

Researchers are searching for answers as to why some horses bleed into their lungs during intense exercise. The condition — called exercise induced pulmonary haemorrhage, or EIPH — can be seen in some upper-level event horses, and often manifests itself as a nosebleed that can, over time, be career-ending. Find out more about the physiology of EIPH and whether it’s being considered a major cause for concern here.

If you’ve ever PayPalled someone for a cup of spunk, this one’s for you. COTH blogger Camilla Mortensen has been working on picking out a long-distance husband for her mare, Cairo, and found that the process of picking Mr Right takes rather a lot of thought.

The FutureTrack Follow: 

Hallie Coon and last year’s Seven-Year-World Champion Cute Girl are quickly establishing themselves as a force to be reckoned with, with two second-place finishes notched up in the smattering of weeks they’ve been together. Give Hallie a follow to watch their journey unfold — hopefully all the way to Paris in 2024.

Morning Viewing:

It’s always interesting to see how other riders prepare their youngsters for an eventing debut – and here’s how vlogger and amateur eventer Meg Elphick is managing her spring with her green bean.

Beware the Rides of March: Piggy Takes First Four-Star of 2022 at Thoresby

No longer a bridesmaid: Brookfield Inocent takes the Grantham Cup with Piggy March, giving his connections plenty to celebrate ahead of his Badminton debut. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The first CCI4*-S of the British season is always an excellent early indicator of form ahead of Badminton, and though this year’s fixture took place at a new venue – Nottinghamshire’s grand Thoresby Spring Carnival of Eventing, rather than the nearby Belton House that ran its last in 2019 – the competition felt like a  familiar jumping off point for a typically top-class field of athletes.

106 combinations came forward to deliver a first-phase performance over the last few days, representing a cross-section of some of Britain’s top horsepower and brightest up-and-coming talent, and 94 of those would opt to leave the start box in today’s action-packed finale. Like Belton before it, Thoresby’s season-opening four-star was built with five-star preparation in mind – but unlike Belton, the Thoresby estate has a much smaller swathe of land to work with. While Belton’s capacious grounds allowed for a run-and-jump pipe opener to get the season going, Thoresby delivered a tighter, more technical track, which required focus and control to get the best of. Time, too, was predictably tough, with just five combinations coming home inside the 6.29 optimum – a challenge, inarguably, for this early stage of the year, but one that provided a necessary wake-up call after a long winter off games.

For some riders with five-star entries looming, that wake-up call might feel bittersweet: Badminton-bound competitors such as Ireland’s Susie Berry and John the Bull, Clare Abbott and Jewelent, and the USA’s Matt Flynn and Wizzerd picked up frustrating jumping penalties on course, though with five weeks until cross-country day in the Cotswolds, the opportunity to fine-tune will no doubt be warmly welcomed. There were also some non-completions among the Badminton contingent: Sweden’s Sofia Sjoborg and DHI Mighty Dwight parted company in a harmless, but wholly uncharacteristic, moment of miscommunication at 15AB, an airy set of timber rails on a tight four or open three to an offset brush, while Simon Grieve opted to retire a very fresh Mr Fahrenheit III. Mishaps were kept to a minimum, though, with nearly 82% of competitors coming home sans jumping penalties – a very different story to the tough showjumping course, which yielded just a 51% clear rate.

Ultimately, the win would go to the combination that had led the way from day one. Piggy March and the excellent Brookfield Inocent, a thirteen-year-old Irish Sport Horse owned by John and Chloe Perry and Alison Swinburn, added nothing to their first-phase score of 23.9 in today’s jumping phases, and their three polished performances felt, Piggy explains, like a significant step up in the horse’s development.

“He’s a cross-country horse above all, provided he’s not too spooky and fresh and we don’t do something stupid, so it’s the other two bits that were really cool here,” she says of her European Championships individual silver medallist, who won Blenheim CCI4*-L in 2019 and took second in his five-star debut at Pau in 2020. “We were so excited about the dressage, because I definitely felt it was the best test he’s done yet – and then the others [in the class] did really well, and he was still in front. His frame, his strength, everything has definitely gone up a notch.”

It might seem incongruous that a horse who has consistently scored in the low 20s at four- and five-star could be in need of any improvement – but while the difference might not be immediately apparent to the casual viewer, the major change has been in ‘Arthur’s’ newfound ability to relax into the work and focus, which allows Piggy to push for even more expressive steps. But, she says, she’s not about to get complacent.

“I know as well as anyone that keeping that or getting that again is not as easy as it sounds, and just because we’ve done it today doesn’t mean it’s going to happen [at Badminton]. But you know that it’s in there,” she muses. “He’s always been a very consistent horse, but it’s just great when you know there’s that extra bit in there, and he really gave me that the other day, so I’m really proud of him and where he’s come on in his character. He’s growing up, and I know he’s thirteen, but they’re all different – it wasn’t even a year ago that I was still trotting around and thinking, ‘don’t spook at the flowerpots! Don’t do this, don’t do that, don’t do whatever.’ So it’s nice to relax and feel that he’s showing himself off rather than still feeling like we could have had a silly mistake.”

Though their 2021 season ultimately ended with two medals at the European Championships, it wasn’t all easy – they were originally selected as travelling reserves for the Olympics, but withdrew after Arthur’s team of owners and Piggy decided not to put the horse under the strain of such significant international travel if an Olympic run wasn’t actually guaranteed. For Piggy, the disappointment was quickly shelved in favor of taking the opportunity to focus on what she could control.

“We never stop learning as riders and as partnerships. Every day you into the school, you figure out something different – it’s not alway the same shit every day, is it? There’s always something that you think, ‘oh, I think that was better — do I try that again?’ Or, ‘I think he’s got more core strength’, or ‘maybe I should ride him a bit more this way, or that way’,” she explains. “Last year was a very pressured year. He’s not a natural dressage horse; he’s more of a Thoroughbred horse, and he’s slightly downhill. He has really nice, balanced paces, but he’s not fancy, and his presence in his character is something you have to work on – so there’s a lot of things you need to squeeze the best out of him and get him to believe in it. After the Olympics didn’t happen I definitely wanted to take a bit of the pressure off myself and him, to not be unnatural with it and just get him to be a good, consistent horse.”

Now, as Arthur shelves his bridesmaid status to take his first win of the year, Piggy’s enjoying the extra confidence boost that comes with finding new depths to her horse’s ability.

“He’s been second so many times, and it’s fine – and now I’m just enjoying a nice horse that I’m getting ready for Badminton. And you know, I might not get this performance or that dressage feel for another six months, but the good thing is I know it’s there. I know our training is doing something, and that means it can come another time – and I’m going to try to keep getting it.”

Brookfield Quality gives Piggy a great feeling to finish just outside tenth place. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Piggy also logged a great run on Brookfield Quality, who added 1.2 time penalties in showjumping and a further 5.2 on cross-country to his 25.7 dressage score to finish in 12th place – and though he might have lost out on a spot in the top ten, his bold, focused performance was considerably more exciting to his rider than a placing might have been.

“He was really great in all three bits – though I messed up in the jumping by adding the time penalties,” she laughs. “He doesn’t need 1.2 time in the showjumping, because I know I’m going to lose that on cross-country. I don’t find him as easy to be quick on as Arthur; he’s a very different kettle of fish, and I nearly gave him another OI run instead, as it usually takes him a few runs to not jump so up and down and get so high and waste a second and a half over every jump. But then it was like, does he actually need another run? With him, it’s all about the building blocks at the beginning of the year – and that was a lot of blocks built today.”

Those blocks, says Piggy, came as the result of clever course design, which offered a fair challenge for the first major run of the season – and minimised the need for further runs in the lead-up to this spring’s long-format events.

“There was enough questions, it rode twisty enough, and the time was tight enough to get – and there were different sorts of questions. There were real rider questions that made you think about whether you wanted to hold for your distances or go for your distances. It was a good enough test at this stage of the season that if my horse doesn’t run again before Badminton, he’s had enough to do. That’s all that matters, rather than thinking, ‘shit, I need to have another run, because that’s not given us enough of a wake up or enough to think about before we go.”

“It’s the stuff of dreams, really”: Bubby Upton takes second place with Cola III – and that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

There’s no one who multitasks quite as impressively as 23-year-old Bubby Upton, who dismounted from her final ride of the day and immediately commenced a mad dash to Heathrow Airport. There, she got on a plane back to Edinburgh University, at which she’s in the final throes of her last year studying Sports Management. She’s spent the last few days writing essays in her lorry whenever she’s not riding, and today she had five horses to showjump and take cross-country across the Advanced and four-star sections – but her frenetic pace and hyperfocus paid off when she was crowned the leading rider of the event for having earned the most points across the weekend.

“What a weekend – it’s the stuff of dreams, really,” says Bubby, who also won the prestigious Polly Phillips Memorial Prize, given to the highest-placed British rider who hasn’t yet ridden on a senior championship team. “It’s been, and it still remains, a very stressful time with university, and it’s all pretty overwhelming, so it was great – and really, I’m quite proud of my team and I for the resilience and strength we showed this weekend with six horses and essays and dissertations and everything. Going back to the lorry was essay time; there was no time to relax, so I’m really proud of what we achieved.”

Her second-place finish in the Grantham Cup certainly contributed enormously to that honour. She and her Badminton entrant, Cola III, were the only pair other than the winners to finish on their dressage score, and their stylish, educated round saw them deliver a masterclass in tactical time management as they eked fractions of seconds out of their chosen lines.

“He really is an unbelievable horse,” she says. “He started off the year kind of acting like a four-year-old, and he was quite ridiculous in the showjumping at Lincoln Horse Trials, to be honest. But we kept the faith, and he was just fantastic this week, he really was.”

Part of the pair’s success this week can be contributed to a change of bit – after years of struggling with Cola’s tricky oral conformation, Bubby has found the sweet spot with a Bomber Happy Tongue bit for the first phase.

“He did a stunning test – we’ve really got to the bottom of [the bitting] issue, so he was lovely and light and soft, though I did mess up one of my changes,” she says.

Bubby, who made her five-star debut at Pau last autumn, has always been keen to put herself up against the highest standard of competition, and this weekend’s field provided a fitting challenge ahead of her first Badminton.

“It was a hell of a competitive section, and I do scroll through the results and think, ‘oh my god!’ for a second,” she laughs. “I know what [my horses] are capable of, but to put it all together and to beat some of those names is truly amazing. I think what massively played to my strengths today was the cross-country time; that’s his strength and it’s my strength, and he really shone in that phase, which was just fantastic.”

Bubby Upton’s Cannavaro takes sixth in early preparation for a trip tp Luhmühlen CCI5* in June. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Bubby also finished sixth on Cannavaro, with whom she scooped the national under-25 title at Bicton’s Bramham replacement feature last June. He added just 0.4 time penalties in showjumping to his first phase score of 29.5, proving his mettle early on ahead of his intended entry at Luhmühlen CCI5* in June.

“He’s a dude, and he’s the one that just keeps exceeding all our expectations,” she says. “I am kicking myself for that time fault, though – when you’re sat on a jumper like that, you just spend too much time in the air. I rang my showjumping trainer and was like, ‘I had a time fault’, and she said ‘Bubby — you idiot! You’re clearly just sitting and having far too nice a time!’ And that’s it! That is the issue – I just sit there and enjoy it so much. He’s such a privilege to jump; he’s just class, and I’ll probably never have a jumper like him again. And then I go and get a time fault!”

Cannavaro followed up that classy – if, okay, one second slow – showjumping round with a foot-perfect trip across Stuart Buntine’s cross-country course, romping home as one of the fastest of the day.

“He’s just coming on and on and on – you wouldn’t think it’s a time for them to be improving, at [the age of] fifteen, but he really is,” says Bubby, who also finished second and third in Advanced section K with Billy Liffy and Magic Roundabout. The sheer variety among her rides, which included two self-made horses, a prior Chris Burton ride, a Thoroughbred, and an inherited mount with a topsy-turvy record, meant that even her time away from her dissertation was something of an academic pursuit.

“It was really cool, because I had five go around the same track, and so it was so interesting comparing them. They all jumped everything so differently, and my minute markers went off at different times, and it was really interesting seeing where they all made up time or lost time.”

Though her pace isn’t set to slow down anytime soon — Bubby’s final university dissertation deadline is set for the Monday after Badminton, a fact she resignedly says “doesn’t bear thinking about” – she’s able to maintain her stride with the help of an excellent team, which includes head girl Katie Dumas and mum Rachel. Together, they even managed to find a solution when Bubby’s second groom for the weekend tested positive for COVID-19.

“That was pretty stressful but luckily it all got sorted – Katie’s friend, who’s a showjumping groom, ended up coming and being our knight in shining armour,” she says. “Katie’s just an absolute rock in my team, and I couldn’t do any of it without her. I’m so grateful to her, and my family, and my trainers and everyone, because to say it’s a team effort with what I put on my plate is an understatement. I couldn’t do it without any of them, and I’m just the lucky one that gets to pick up the prizes.”

Gold medallists Laura Collett and London 52 sail through the weekend on superb form for third place. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Olympic team gold medallists Laura Collett and London 52 have become the benchmark to which everyone compares themselves, and their excellent form continued on apace with a third place finish in this class. They earned a 24.8 in yesterday’s dressage and added just 2 time penalties across the country today, making light work of the course’s technical questions along the way.

“He felt amazing, really confident – he’s come out super from last year, and it was a good run before Badminton,” she says. “It’s been a very long time since he did an event, because he finished in August, so it’s just an absolute pleasure to have him back out. He’s a phenomenal horse to ride, and I just feel very honoured and lucky to ride a horse like him – so I try to enjoy every stride and every moment, because I know he’s so special.”

Like Piggy, Laura was pleased with the course’s level of technicality, which she felt offered sufficient preparation for next month’s five-star effort.

“It rode really nicely. It had good questions, and positive riding was rewarded, which I think is really good for the sport. I really enjoyed riding it – and now the goal is just to keep him in one piece,” she says with a laugh.

Laura also enjoyed a double feature on the leaderboard: she claimed fifth place with her Aachen runner-up Dacapo, who continued last year’s upward tick of mature performances across the phases.

Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir look ahead to a Kentucky debut after a successful season opener. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This weekend’s competition was something of a test run for last year’s Blenheim winners, 25-year-old Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir: if it went well, fulfilling their entry for this month’s Kentucky CCI5* would become a much more likely prospect. Their eventual fourth-place finish, in which they added just 3.2 time penalties to their first-phase score of 26.4, certainly makes them hot contenders for what will be the French-bred gelding’s first five-star.

“It’s the first international of the year, and you’ve got to come out of the box and go for it, really – and I’m so pleased with how he’s been in all three phases,” she says. “Obviously the dressage is always where you can gain marks, and with him being very able and lovely to look at, just trying to squeeze every mark out of him in the dressage is very important, because it’s all in there. And his jumping is usually very solid; he’s very consistent in that phase. On cross-country you put them in a situation to see how they’ll react, and today I had that: at the birch rails to the corner at 15AB I was a little bit off on the three, and he had an opportunity to run out, but there wasn’t a doubt in his mind that he was going between the flags. Those moments give you a lot of confidence, and it’s nice to know that he’s feeling that way and wanting to go. There’s lots to take away from today.”

Though their placing was a welcome bonus, Yasmin’s aim wasn’t necessarily to chase down a lightning-fast round this week, but rather to use the run for some fine-tuning – and along the way, she was pleased to take stock of his impressive reserves: “The time was fairly tight, and I wasn’t going hell for leather everywhere, so there was definitely more in the tank, but I think for this run, it was more important to get the combinations right. It would have been nice to make the time, but I’m not going to lose sleep over it – at a long format there’s so much more galloping, and I think that suits him better anyway.”

Now, Yasmin hopes, the wheels are well in motion for Kentucky — administrative details notwithstanding.

“I think we’ve been very last minute with it, because the entries shut earlier on this week – so we had to get the entry in to have our Plan A. It was all a little bit riding on today to make sure he was in a good frame of mind and feeling well, and I think we’re pretty good to go, though there’s a lot of extra logistics to think about — it’s a long old trip over the ocean,” she laughs. Though fans of the pair may have been surprised to see them opt to go abroad rather than to Badminton, for Yasmin and her longtime owners, Sue and Jeanette Chinn, it’s a move that makes sense this year.

“It wasn’t a decision that we made overnight. We thought about both, and then decided that Badminton might be better for him next year. It hasn’t been on for two years, so it’s going to have anyone who’s anyone there and it’s going to be big and bold, as Badminton always is. Sue and Jeanette have had horses compete at Kentucky before, and it’s an event they’ve loved and enjoyed – so the Kentucky option was very appetising for them, and it’s a great opportunity for me and the horse at this stage to hopefully go and do well.”

European Champions Nicola Wilson and JL Dublin are on form for a top-ten finish. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Five-star entrants largely dominated the bottom half of the top ten, too: in seventh place, Nicola Wilson and JL Dublin looked on excellent form in their first international since they became European Champions, and Emily King and Valmy Biats climbed to eighth place after crossing the finish line just one second over the optimum time. Both pairs are aiming for Badminton next month.

Emily King’s Badminton entrant, the micro syndicate owned Valmy Biats, quietly steps onto the leaderboard after three professional phases. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

British-based Italian Giovanni Ugolotti propels his Swirly Temptress to something of a dark horse finish, taking ninth place out of 109 starters. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It was a welcome surprise to see Italy’s Giovanni Ugolotti step into the top ten with the ten-year-old Swirly Temptress, who took ninth place after adding 1.2 cross-country time penalties to her dressage score of 30.5. This is a best-ever four-star placing for the mare, who finished third in 2019’s seven-year-old national championship but has taken some time to get consistently competitive in all three phases.

“She’s getting there! I always thought that she was going to be a very good horse, and everything is slowly coming together,” says Gio, who is based in Gloucester with his wife, Canadian eventer Kathryn Robinson.

Today, the mare hit two major milestones: she delivered her quickest cross-country round at four-star, and her first clear showjumping round, too.

“Today she gave me a great feeling in both phases — for her, the showjumping is always the tricky phase, and today she probably jumped the best she ever has. On cross-country she’s always been very, very good; she’s not the quickest, because at the end of the day she’s dressage-bred, but today I wanted to see if she could gallop — and she did, so I was super pleased. The fences are never a question — for her, it’s about learning to stretch her lungs.”

Though a call-up for this September’s World Championships could be on the cards for the pair, Gio is largely focused on continuing to develop her with an eye on the future and a focus on her strengths – and she’s certainly keeping it interesting for him along the way.

“She’s quite a bit of a princess, and we do actually call her Princess at home,” he laughs. “But I broke her in; I’ve known her since we was three, and we know each other inside out. She’s a bit of a spicy mare, but when they come good, they are really good. And to finish in the top ten in a field like this? It’s very exciting.”

Pippa Funnell gives Kentucky-bound Maybach a confidence-giving ride to round out the top ten. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Finally, Kentucky-bound duo Pippa Funnell and Maybach rounded out the top ten after delivering a solid round across the country for 4.4 time penalties. Though the 12-year-old Swedish Warmblood has largely gone under the radar in Pippa’s impressive string, in part because he missed the 2019 and 2020 seasons, he’s now clocked up four top-ten finishes at four-star and comes forward as a dark horse contender for top spot at his five-star debut.

Tune in tomorrow for plenty more bonus content from this exciting inaugural British event — plus, we’ll be bringing you lots of analysis on the field’s five-star entrants in our upcoming Badminton and Kentucky form guides. Until next time: Go Eventing!

The final top ten in Thoresby’s inaugural CCI4*-S hints at a hugely exciting five-star double-feature to come.

Thoresby Spring Eventing Carnival: [Website] [Live Scoring] [EN’s Coverage] [EN’s Twitter] [EN’s Instagram]

Sunday Links from Fairfax & Favor

Hannah Sue Burnette and Captiol HIM. Photo by Shelby Allen.

With Stable View’s FEI divisions all wrapped up (catch up on our coverage here!) and the first British CCI4*-S  of the season well underway, the big spring five-stars finally feel well and truly on the horizon. We’re less than four week away from Kentucky now … but who’s counting?

U.S. Weekend Action:

Stable View Spring 2*/3*/4* (Aiken, Sc.): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Live Scores] [EN’s Coverage]

Galway Downs International H.T. (Temecula, Ca.): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Photographer] [Volunteer] [Live Scores]

Morven Park Spring H.T. (Leesburg, Va.): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Volunteer]

Rocking Horse Spring H.T. (Altoona, Fl.): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Live Scores]

Sunday Links:

2022 USEA FEH and YEH Championship Judges Announced

Footing, Flatwork, and Over-Jumping: A Must-Read Soundness Q&A with Dr. Paul McClellan

Jobs with horses: A mix of satisfaction, enjoyment, sacrifices and exhaustion

Research Update: Psychological Skills Training With Equestrian Athletes

Another Record Low for Catastrophic Injuries in Racing

Saturday Video: Tamie Smith shares some wisdom with riders in her Stable View clinic:

Fairfax & Favor Find of the Week:

Thoresby Day Two: Laura Collett Closes the Gap Ahead of Jumping Phases

Laura Collett and London 52 pose the greatest threat to day one dressage leaders Piggy March and Brookfield Inocent, who nonetheless remained unsurpassed at the culmination of the phase. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

When Piggy March and her European silver medallist Brookfield Inocent put a slick 23.9 on the board yesterday, there were just a few horses on today’s line-up that we could feasibly eye up with a view to overtaking them – and the frontrunner, Laura Collett‘s Tokyo team gold medallist London 52, certainly gave it a jolly good go. But though he certainly gave them the old razzle dazzle, as the theatre kids say, his 24.8 wasn’t quite enough to usurp them. And so, as we look towards tomorrow’s jumping phases in the CCI4*-S at Thoresby, we’re looking at a head-to-head between two of the hot favourites to go and win Badminton in a scant few weeks.

Or are we? After all, the first CCI4*-S of the season isn’t an end goal in and of itself, and because Thoresby is effectively a brand new event – it hosted the British Six- and Seven-Year-Old classes and associated CCI2*-L and CCI3*-L ordinarily held at Osberton in 2020, but the launch of its Spring Carnival has been put on hold throughout the pandemic – there’s a strong sense that many horses will be run conservatively. It’s not just because it’s a new event and, as such, an unknown quantity to riders, either – it’s also quite an intense track, certainly when compared to the former fixture at Belton House that it replaces. There, we saw a lot of open space and galloping fences to serve as a pipe-opener at the beginning of the year; here, we’re looking at a smaller event site, and that means that the track is tighter as a matter of necessity, with plenty of technical questions.

Of course, this isn’t necessarily a bad thing. There are certainly plenty of pros to a run-and-jump four-star track at this point of the year: for many horses, a pipe-opener takes the edge off and gets them going again after a long winter of training, while riders are able to glean feedback on fitness levels and weak points ahead of their major spring run. But a track that demands focus and accuracy knocks a different kind of rust off, and while it may mean that many riders opt to ride more deliberately (and thus slowly) to avoid risking a frustrating run-out, it does allow them to make sure the power steering is all working as it ought to. Exposing a weakness in the training now might feel frustrating – but with just over a month to go before Badminton, it does allow some modicum of time to do something about it.

But before we do too deep a dive into tomorrow’s challenge, let’s take about our top two, who are both horses with plenty of experience over tight, twisty tracks: Brookfield Inocent was second at Pau in 2020, the year that London 52 won it. Both horses were debutants at the level, too, and each has since gone on to claim a gold medal on a championship team. And though we’re used to seeing London 52’s work rewarded with low-20s scores, both look on superb form after a winter out of the spotlight.

“He’s been a bit frisky in his OI runs,” laughs Laura, “but luckily he does know that when it’s a big arena, he has to behave properly! I think he just gets a bit offended by a smaller ring. But he came out really professionally today, and the main thing is that he was with me and rideable – sometimes, he looks better than he feels, but today he felt really nice.”

This is a feeling that Laura hopes to further refine out on course, where the challenges come in droves and even her excellent gelding — who’s become something of a flag-seeking missile across the country — will need to pay attention to find his way through sans penalties.

“I think everything’s going to come up thick and fast. You’re not just jumping a combination — you’re doing a turn back to the next thing and it’s all coming up fast, so you just have to be on it from the beginning. It’s going to test their — and my — reactions, really.”

Laura also sits in provisional eighth place with Aachen runner-up Dacapo, who posted a 26.6, and 61st with the former Alex Bragg ride Hester, who scored a 35.6.

Harry Meade gives Little Fire an excellent ride under the watchful eye of William Fox-Pitt, for whom he’s deputising this week. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Harry Meade is a very busy boy indeed this week, with three horses of his own in this class – plus the last-minute addition of two bonus catch-rides, one of which partnered him to podium position at the tail end of the day. Little Fire is one of William Fox-Pitt‘s two intended rides at Badminton – the other is Oratorio II, who Harry rode yesterday to a rather spicy 35.4 – but after a tumble at Cirencester last weekend in a Novice class, William has been sidelined with a mandatory 21-day competition ban, which is delivered to any rider rendered unconscious in a fall. Harry deputised for William two days later, riding both horses around the Open Intermediate, and now will give the geldings their prep run here while William works on reaching five-star fitness independently.

Though Oratorio, who William has fondly described as an occasional ‘double handful’, tested the boundaries in some moments of yesterday’s test, Little Fire stepped up as the model pupil today with his regular rider casting a watchful eye from the sidelines. As a result, he was rewarded with a very promising 25.4, which puts him in third in this hot field of of 99.

Several withdrawals have shifted the landscape of the leaderboard even before the jumping phases begin. Izzy Taylor and Monkeying Around sat fourth at the end of the day on 25.4 but have since pulled out; so, too, has Oliver Townend, who was eleventh and equal fifteenth with Swallow Springs and Ballaghmor Class, respectively, at the end of the phase. This is par for the course for Oliver, who tends to use the first four-star of the season as test prep and runs his horses at Burnham Market instead, and we’ve seen Izzy follow suit previously, too.

Ros Canter and Allstar B deliver a very sweet test that’s surprisingly undermarked. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Izzy’s withdrawal allowed reigning World Champions Ros Canter and Allstar B to step into equal tenth place, which they share with Kentucky-bound Pippa Funnell and Maybach on a score of 27.5.

“Alby’s on really great form,” says Ros, who credits a change of routine over the winter with helping him to get back to his best. This comes after an uncharacteristic end to their 2021 season, in which they had issues on course at the European Championships at Avenches, a track that the big-striding horse struggled to find the rhythm of. Prior to that, the pair had travelled to Tokyo as reserves for the British Olympic team – a trip that cut out much of the productive running time of the summer season.

“Last year was a very long year for him, and obviously it didn’t go quite to plan in lots of ways, so I was very mindful that I didn’t want to come out with a horse that wasn’t up for the job this year,” she explains. “So he predominantly hacks nowadays; if he does do any schooling, he’ll school out on a hack, rather than doing lots of arena work – and he definitely feels happy.”

For Ros, as for so many of our five-star-bound competitors, this weekend is a question of tactics: riders have to know their horses well enough to make the call on whether they’ll benefit more from trying to catch the time or trying to refine the communication basics, which can often pick up some rust over the course of a long winter. In Alby’s case, the emphasis is set to be far more on the latter than on a fast, competitive run.

“Twisty and turny’s not Alby’s ideal, but I also wouldn’t necessarily ever try to make this a winning run pre-Badminton, so a bit of twisting and turning might just help his manners a bit, and then he’ll get to run at Badminton,” she says. “I think it’s a really interesting track; it’s lovely and open at the start, and then it’s twisty for quite a long time with a lot of questions. It’s definitely more than an OI run!”

Matt Flynn and Wizzerd put their early-season prep to the test in their first major pre-Badminton outing. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We were particularly excited to catch up with Matt Flynn, who swapped 90-degree Ocala heat for April snow flurries in pursuit of his Badminton goals. After a fruitful European trip last autumn, which saw them contest Boekelo CCI4*-L and then on to Italy for Montelibretti’s CCI4*-S and Pratoni’s CCI4*-L, Matt opted to leave Wizzerd to enjoy his winter holidays at Arville, the Belgian base of Lara de Liedekerke-Meier and Kai Steffen Meier. In December, they trained for a month from there, and in mid-January, the pair relocated to Maizey Manor in Wiltshire – a long-standing hub for American eventers on tour – and began their preparations in earnest.

“It’s just ten minutes from Tim and Jonelle Price, who have been kind to enough to lend me a lot of guidance through this trip so far,” says Matt, who also has a seven-year-old and a four-year-old in the UK with him.

Today, he and Wizzerd delivered a sweet test – with one exuberant moment in the first flying change — for a respectable 34.1, which puts them into 42nd ahead of tomorrow’s jumping phases and well and truly kicks their season off.

“Wizzerd’s been great — and he’s excited to be out,” says Matt, who admits that the British season — which starts later than the Florida one, mostly because we were buried under mud and ice here until approximately yesterday, feels like a very short one in the run-up to a five-star.

“I was anxious to get going, to be honest, because it felt like everyone at home was up and going, and it’s a little bit of a different calendar – but it feels nice to have had the time and the training on the horses I have here. And this — well, it’s a beautiful setting, and it seems like it’s going to be a great run.”

Tomorrow takes us neatly into the culmination of Thoresby’s CCI4*-S, in which the prestigious Grantham Cup will be awarded – a prize that, since its inception at Belton in 2006, has been awarded to some of the top British-based combinations, including Sam Griffiths and Happy TimesOliver Townend and Ashdale CruiseVittoria Panizzon and Borough Pennyz, and Ruth Edge and Two Thyme. Showjumping for the remaining 99 combinations will begin at 10:00 a.m. BST (5.00 a.m. EST), while cross-country will begin at 12.22 BST (7.22 a.m.). You can check out the cross-country course in its entirety here – and although we’re sorry to say there’s no live-stream available this year, we’ll be back tomorrow evening to bring you a full report and analysis, plus our views on what the day’s action means for our Kentucky- and Badminton-bound entrants.

Stay safe, kick on, and Go Eventing!

The top ten going into tomorrow’s jumping phases in the Thoresby CCI4*-S.

Thoresby Spring Eventing Carnival: [Website] [Live Scoring] [EN’s Coverage] [EN’s Twitter] [EN’s Instagram]

Will Coleman Claims Second Spring CCI4*-S Victory at Stable View

Will Coleman and Chin Tonic HS. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Though you compete on an individual basis, eventing, at its core, is much more of a team effort. It takes a village, as they say. Behind each great horse and rider combination is an army of supporters who made it all possible. No one appreciates this fact more than Will Coleman who credits todays Stable View Spring CCI4*-S win to his team.

“Success for our program — the rider is just the cover. It is as much about everybody else: my coaches, my wife, my family, our girls home at the barn, the team behind us, vets, farriers. It’s really a victory for all of them, I’m just the cover of the book, but they’re the ones making up the full story,” he said.

Will and Hyperion Stud’s Chin Tonic HS topped the division from the start — a 22.4 on the flat gave them a healthy advantage and a clear show jumping effort only extended their lead. Their clear cross country phase Saturday afternoon sealed the deal as 5.6 time penalties had them finishing on a score of 28. This is Will’s second four-star win this spring.

“I thought he did everything very well. I wanted to go kind of quick without being silly. He’s still pretty inexperienced at this level so I wanted to give him a good go more than anything. He was really worked up in the warmup, so I came out a little steady in the beginning but he ran super and answered the questions really well,” Will said. “I thought the corners at the end were a pretty stiff question. It felt great when you did it. The horses really read it, I’ve got to give a credit to Mark (Phillips) for laying it out, but I definitely thought about it quite a bit. Everything rode how I planned and that isn’t always the case, so it’s nice when it goes like that.”

As for what’s next for the 10-year-old Holsteiner (Chin Champ x Wildera), Will isn’t ready to show his hand, but hinted that a trip across the pond may be in the works. “We’ve got a plan but you take it one day at a time and hopefully you also have a bit of luck,” he said. “We’ve talked about wanting to take him overseas and maybe take him to Aachen or another big event. I love Aachen.” We think Aachen loves you back, Will.

Jennie Brannigan and Twilightslastgleam. Photo by Shelby Allen.

It was a great day at the office for Jennie Brannigan who won the CCI3*-S as well as finishing second and third in the four-star.

Three-star winner Connory, a 10-year-old Holsteiner (Conrato x Hocaponta) started the weekend tied for fourth with a 27.5 on the flat, and added only 2.8 time penalties to that result as the second-fastest horse in the division.

“I know you’re not supposed to have favorites but that horse is so my type. He’s a beautiful talented horse with three good phases and I’m just so lucky to get to ride him. I’ve had him since picking him out at Clayton (Frederick’s), and Clayton was really kind and let me buy him in parts and honestly it’s just a very special horse,” Jennie said.

Though he had most of 2021 off due to a minor injury sustained while kicking in his stall, this is a fourth consecutive win for “Sean,” who is owned by Jennie in partnership with Tim and Nina Gardner. “I loved him from the beginning and put myself on the line when I was pretty poor to buy him, and it’s knock on wood turned out pretty good so far.”

Jennie Brannigan and FE Lifestyle. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Nina and Tim have been longtime owners and supporters of Jennie, and they were right against the ropes today to watch two of her other rides, Twilightslastgleam and FE Lifestyle, take second and third place in the CCI4*-S, respectively.

“Comic,” a 12-year-old Thoroughbred (National Anthem x Royal Child) bred by Nina, kept the pressure on Will by producing the fastest round of the division just one second over optimum time to finish on a result of 32.5.

“He’s just been getting stronger and stronger which is great because I think he really gives it 100%, but it’s not easy for him and he tries his heart out,” she said. “He’s fast because he’s a Thoroughbred. I was three seconds over on Foxy, so I went pretty fast (with Comic) The beginning is so gallopy that I really went for it in the beginning and just tried to keep that going.”

While Comic is all heart, Jennie calls stablemate “Foxy” the “best cross country course I’ve ever ridden.” Their 1.2 time penalties brought the pair to a final score of 35.8 in third place. “He makes everything feel easy to be honest. He’s such a lovely horse and his step is so big he looks like he’s going slow, and it helps me because I can tend to get too quick and aggressive in my mind and do stupid things, so he’s been really good for me because you can go fast on him but it feels slow so you can really ride,” Jennie said.

Isabelle Bosely and Night Quality. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Isabelle Bosley and Night Quality, an 11-year-old Irish Sport Horse (OBOS Quality 004 x Night Fly) owned by the rider, finished fourth, picking up 11.6 time penalties on cross country (45.1).

14.4 time penalties dropped Allie Knowles and Ms. Poppins, an 11-year-old Westphalian (Congress x Copa Cabana) owned by Katherine O’Brien, from second to fifth place on a result of 45.4.

Emily Hamel and Corvette. Photo by Shelby Allen.

The stunning Corvett, a 15-year-old Holsteiner (Corrido x Tina XII), showed off his athleticism around Capt. Mark Phillips’ track, giving rider Emily Hamel a clear round with 10 time penalties. Their sixth place finish serves as a stepping stone on their path to Badminton Horse Trials in five weeks time.

Buc Davidson and Sorocaima. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Cosby Green and Copper Beach were seventh (49.6). Buck Davidson was eighth and ninth with Erroll Gobey (51.4) and Sorocaima (54.6), respectively. Hannah Sue Burnett and Captiol HIM close out the top ten on a result of 55.6.

Issues remained well spread around the course. Of the 24, who started 18 finished. Three pairs retired on course and three others were eliminated, but there were no falls in the division. Of those who completed, only two earned any jump penalties, leaving the 16 clear rounds to battle it out against the clock.

Thanks for following with us here on EN. Go eventing.

Stable View Spring 2/3/4*: WebsiteLive ScoresEntry StatusVolunteerEN’s Coverage

Saturday Videos: Romp Around Carolina International with Elisa Wallace

I always enjoy a good helmet cam, and Elisa Wallace never fails to deliver! Today let’s ride along with Elisa and Let It Be Lee, a 14-year-old Thoroughbred gelding owned by Donna Biggs and Rosemarie Spillane, as they tackle last week’s 4*-S track at Carolina International. Let It Be Lee will head on to his first 5* at Kentucky later this month.

Meanwhile, stablemate Sharp Decision, an 11-year-old Thoroughbred gelding owned by Susan Day, contested the 3*-S at Carolina with Elisa:

Ian Stark’s track looked like a blast — but I think I’ll still stick with watching these helmet cams to live vicariously!

Did you miss any of EN’s Carolina International coverage? Catch up here.

Big, Bold & Beautiful: Take a Look Around the Stable View Spring CCI4* XC

Click the image above to explore the Stable View XC course.

This afternoon twenty-six competitors plan to leave the start box to face Capt. Mark Phillips’ CCI4*-S course here at Stable View. As we’ve come to expect at the premier Aiken facility, the grounds and the fences are exceptionally turned out.  The four-star pairs have 23 flagged obstacles for 35 total jumping efforts to look forward to. The track is wheeled at 3,880 meters with an optimum time of 6 minutes and 40 seconds.

The track follows its usual path for FEI events, with much of the action passing by the Pavilion where Stable View is for the first time offering 50 reserved tailgating spots. As owner Barry Olliff would say, Stable View was built by the community, for the community, and “Tailgating on the Turf” is another way Stable View is ‘A Gathering Place’ for anyone and everyone in Aiken.

The tailgaters will have a front row seat to several historically influential complexes including the Derby Field Alp, the Pavilion Splash and the Blanchard Corners combination at 19abc, which earned several close looks during rider’s course walks yesterday.

The CCI3*-S and Advanced classes will also run cross country today. Click the images below to see what they have in store.

CCI3*-S

Advanced.

The first four-star horse leaves the box at 12:06 p.m.

Stable View Spring 2/3/4*: Website, Live ScoresEntry StatusVolunteerEN’s Coverage