Classic Eventing Nation

#WaybackWednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Head Back in Time to Vintage Rolex

And yes, this time we actually can get away with slipping up and calling it Rolex – because back in 1982, the Kentucky Three-Day Event, now so generously supported by Land Rover, was still known by its title sponsor’s name. That was the year that Kim Walnes and The Gray Goose, who had finished second the year prior, returned to take a popular win – and in the years to come, they’d battle back from a near-catastrophic injury, take another podium place at Kentucky, win team and individual bronze at the World Championships, and become stars of the silver screen when they acted as competition stunt doubles in the classic eventing film Sylvester. These days, The Gray Goose lives on as part of the event that was such a pivotal part of his career: after his death in 2000, at the ripe old age of 30, his ashes were scattered at the Horse Park. Whenever we see a great grey tackle those jumps with particular guts and gumption, we see a little bit of the horse — and the rider — who inspired so many young riders to chase down their dreams.

Check out a recap of that extraordinary win — and the week of competition that preceded — in this hour-long round-up that was helmed by Nigel Casserley and Denny Emerson. It’s a real treat for fans of sporting history and fairytale wins, and it’ll definitely get you in the mood to see another dream come true next week.

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USEF Names Team for FEI Nations Cup at UK’s Houghton Hall

The Nations Cup podium at Houghton International 2019: Germany take the win, USA finish in second place, and Ireland scoop third. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

US Equestrian has announced the four combinations who will represent the Land Rover U.S. Eventing Team at the FEI Eventing Nations Cup leg hosted at Houghton Hall in Norfolk, UK, from May 26-29, 2022, led by Chef d’Equipe Leslie Law. The US team has previously enjoyed success at this historic venue, taking team silver there in 2018 and bronze in 2017.

“I am really looking forward to returning to Houghton with another team of up-and-coming American athletes. It should be a valuable experience for all and one that we are very lucky that USEF is providing us with,” says Law. “I very much hope that the U.S. team will reap benefits from this experience in the future when perhaps some of these athletes get pulled up for a senior team.”

The following combinations have been selected to represent the Land Rover U.S. Eventing Team and are listed in alphabetical order.

Isabelle Bosely and Night Quality. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Isabelle Bosley (Cochranville, Pa.) and her own Night Quality, a 2011 Irish Sport Horse gelding

Cornelia Dorr and Daytona Beach 8. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Cornelia Dorr (Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass.) and Daytona Beach 8, a 2010 Oldenburg mare owned by HCS Syndicate

Allie Knowles and Ms. Poppins. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Allie Knowles (Lexington, Ky.) and Ms. Poppins, a 2011 Westphalian mare owned by Katherine O’Brien

Caroline Martin and Islandwood Captain Jack. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Caroline Martin (Miami Beach, Fla.) and Islandwood Captain Jack, a 2009 Irish Sport Horse gelding owned by Caroline & Sherrie Martin

Bosley and Martin have also both been selected to participate in the USEF Eventing European Development Tour, designed for athletes participating in the USEF Eventing Development and Eventing 25 Programs to gain international experience, achieve results at European events, and to develop future team athletes by emersion in a team environment.

Competition will begin on Thursday, May 26, and continue through Sunday, May 29, taking place at the Houghton Hall grounds as a part of the Houghton International Horse Trials. Eventing Nation will be on site covering the Nations Cup CCIO4*-S in its entirety.

A Walk to Remember: Your Guide to Celebrity Coursewalks at Badminton

Course designer Eric Winter walks the line at the KBIS Brush Village. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Heading to the Cotswolds for Badminton Horse Trials this year? You lucky duck – not only will you get to be on site for the first Badminton in three whole years, you’ll also get to see arguably its best-ever field of competitors in action. And even better? Course designer Eric Winter has put together a course that’ll make that long absence feel worthwhile.

Of course, there’s nothing quite like getting out into the parkland yourself to get a sense of how big and tough these fences are – and if you’d like a bit of expert insight to accompany your hike around the estate, you’ll find plenty of great options for celeb-helmed walks throughout the week. We’re rounding up all the offerings so you can make your plan of attack on this big, bold, faintly terrifying track – and we’ll be updating it as more walks are announced, so keep it bookmarked as your handy guide to the week to come.

Note: coursewalk tickets do not provide entry to the site. You’ll need to purchase your passes directly through Badminton’s website – and all tickets must be purchased in advance. There will be no ticket sales on the gate this year.

TUESDAY, MAY 2

  • Grassroots Walk with Andrew Williams and Vicky Tuffs – 4.00 p.m.

Tackling the Voltaire Design Grassroots Championship this year? Take a spin around the course with professional insights from Andrew and Vicky, who can help you unpack the challenges presented on this exciting course.

This is a free coursewalk that’s open to all. Meet at the grassroots star box near Huntsman’s Close.

THURSDAY, MAY 5

  • Voltaire Design Walk with Andrew Williams and Vicky Tuffs  – 11.00 a.m.

Fancy breaking up a morning full of dressage tests with a jolly stomp around this year’s five-star track? Join in with a free coursewalk with Andrew Williams and Vicky Tuffs for expert insight and plenty of fun. There’s no cost to join in and the walk is open to all. Meet at fence two.

  • Walk with Georgie Spence — 2.00 p.m.

A popular and prolific name on the British circuit, Georgie is back at Badminton this year with the excellent Halltown Harley – and before you get ready to cheer the pair on over the weekend (you’ll be able to spot them by Georgie’s signature pink colours!), get some tips on how she plans to tackle Eric Winter’s tricky combinations with a tour around the course.

The coursewalk is open to all, but must be prebooked as numbers are strictly limited. Tickets are £15 and booking information will be released shortly – watch this space!

  • Emily King Eventing Club Coursewalk (time TBC)

Emily King, daughter of eventing legend Mary, returns to Badminton with her impressive debutant Valmy Biats – and you can find out all about how this talented young pro has prepared an up-and-coming horse for the greatest challenge of her career in an exclusive coursewalk.

This coursewalk is open to members of The Eventing Club and their guests only. You can join The Eventing Club for an annual fee of £25, and book your tickets for the walk, which are priced at £10 for members and £20 for guests, here.

  • Nick Turner BHS Coursewalk (time TBC)

Nick is one of the trainers to the stars, and his coursewalk with the Association of Fellows and Instructors of the British Horse Society will lend some incredibly interesting insight to Saturday’s action. This will be a particularly good option for coaches and trainers, who’ll likely glean some fascinating tips on preparing riders for tough tracks.

This coursewalk is open to all. Members of the Association of Fellows and Instructors can book on for £15; non-members can book on for £20. To reserve your spot, click here.

FRIDAY, MAY 6

  • William Fox-Pitt Eventing Club Coursewalk (time TBC)

Join two-time Badminton winner Lanky Will on Friday for an in-depth and entertaining tour of the course. He’ll be riding two horses around it on Saturday, so expect plenty of insight into how top-level questions can be answered differently depending on the kind of horse you’re on.

This coursewalk is open to members of The Eventing Club and their guests only. You can join The Eventing Club for an annual fee of £25, and book your tickets for the walk, which are priced at £10 for members and £20 for guests, here.

  • Event Horse Owners Syndicate Walks with Emily King and Ben Hobday

The friendly folks at EHOS will have two exclusive course walk opportunities available on Friday. The walks are open only to members of the Event Horse Owners Syndicate, but both Ben and Emily are competing horses that are syndicated with the group, so if you buy your annual membership, you won’t just get the chance to go on these seriously fun walks – you’ll also have be able to legitimately tell people you’ve got a horse competing this year! Annual membership costs £95 for a share in either Ben Hobday’s Shadow Man or Emily King’s Valmy Biats. Click here for more info and to join the club.

ENTER TO WIN EXCLUSIVE COURSEWALKS

This year, several brands and charities are offering money-can’t-buy coursewalks with some of the sport’s biggest legends. Put your name in the hat for a chance to see Eric Winter’s tough track up-close-and-personal with your heroes.

  • WEDNESDAY, MAY 4: Win a coursewalk with Lucinda Green and PetPlan Insurance

It takes a special kind of gumption to win Badminton, but what about winning it six times — on six different horses? There’s a reason Lucinda Green is every top rider’s heroine, and the insight she’ll give you into this course will be second to none. She’s also bloody funny, too, which certainly helps when you’re peering into the Vicarage ditch line. Click here to submit your free entry before the April 28th deadline.

  • THURSDAY, MAY 4, 2023: Win lunch and a coursework with Ginny Elliott and Spinal Research

We can’t stress enough that this one will take place next year – but it’s well worth getting an entry in now, because not only will you get to walk the Badminton course with this absolute legend of the sport, you’ll also get to enjoy a VIP lunch with her and find out all about life in the golden era of eventing. There are four pairs of tickets up for grabs, plus a tonne of other great prizes including gin hampers, clothes, and bougie handbags. Entries cost £5 each and all proceeds go to Spinal Research.

‘WALK’ THE COURSE ONLINE

Can’t make it to Badminton this year, or want to get to grips with the track before you arrive? You’ve got plenty of options .

EN headed to the estate to walk the track with course designer Eric Winter dive into our long-read preview, packed with images and insights, here.

Prefer to watch? Sign up to Badminton TV for a video preview with Eric and 2017 winner Andrew Nicholson, hosted by presenter Nicole Brown. The subscription fee is a one-off payment of £19.95, but you’ll need this to access the livestream this year, which is being exclusively shown behind the paywall.

If you want to brush up on minute markers and alternative routes, the Cross Country App has released a guided walk with Eric and Lucinda Green that leaves no stone unturned. You can access this for free via their website, or for free with optional, purchasable extras, via their app.

Finally, Horse&Hound has posted a sneak peak of their course photos online, ahead of their in-depth walk with Andrew Hoy, which will be in the April 28th edition of the magazine and will be accompanied by video content on their website on the same day. You can find the magazine at your local newsstand (if you’re UK-based!) or access it digitally here.

 Badminton Horse Trials: WebsiteEntriesEN’s CoverageLive Stream, Course PreviewEN’s Twitter, EN’s Instagram

Land Rover Rookies: Alex MacLeod and Newmarket Jack

Alex MacLeod and Newmarket Jack at Twin Rivers last weekend. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

After Alex MacLeod and Newmarket Jack (Newmarket Jewel – Newmarket Chantepie, by Newmarket Venture) won their second 4*-L, the Area VI fall finale at Galway Downs last November, the question started coming: are you going to Kentucky?

In truth, Alex hadn’t really considered the option seriously. It wasn’t that she felt she and ‘Jack’, her partner since 2014, weren’t ready for the next step – he’d made easy work of this 4*-L, finishing on his dressage mark to seal the win – but rather that it was inopportune timing for her, professionally.

Alex has been featured on EN multiple times throughout her career, and common among all of them is the fact that she’s always preferred to have variety in life. After pursuing horses full-time for a short period, in fact, she found that she missed having something else, too. “I thought I would really like that,” she recalls. “Because I thought I would be happy to focus on just this. And then, as crazy as it is, I really didn’t like it the way I thought I would.”

This observation has led her to now, where she’s in the midst of a specialty diagnostic imaging internship, working full-time and managing Jack’s training and competition in between. In 2021, she moved to Los Angeles for the first part of her residency, splitting her time between work and commuting to and from the barn in the tangled L.A. traffic. In July of this year, she’ll pack up and move once more, this time to begin her residency in Massachusetts.

“I would like to have some more flexibility,” she concedes. Luckily for me, I had caught her in between destinations with some time to catch up on her drive to the barn (the one time L.A. traffic has worked to my advantage, I suppose). “I’m hoping to eventually have a bit more autonomy in my life so horses don’t have to be in the middle of the night. But I definitely like having horses not be the only thing I do.”

Balancing a full-time career with a pursuit of the highest level of a sport is a tall order; arguably, it’s tougher to be in this scenario than it is to be a professional rider. There are less opportunities to practice, less overall time in the saddle, and a limited amount of days you’re allowed to skip work to go off to an event.

For this reason, when Kentucky first began to materialize as a hint of a plan – “I just started daydreaming a little over the winter break and started to sketch out which events I’d like to do, and when I was done I realized the schedule set me up for Kentucky,” Alex explains – one of the first thoughts she had was: “how am I going to get the time off from work?”

Like all working amateurs, Alex has to balance a predetermined amount of paid time off with her event schedule. When a rider is competing at the Advanced and 4* level, travel becomes a necessary part of the gig – but travel eats up vacation days. By the time Alex’s schedule got her to Kentucky, she would need to ask for a whole extra week’s worth of time off.

“I’m very lucky to have a boss who is also a horse person,” Alex said. “She was really supportive and said we’d work out how to get the time off, and I’m really grateful for that.”

It was all systems go for a 5* debut, though it wasn’t what younger Alex would’ve pictured, necessarily. “I always thought I’d be further along in my career, maybe,” she laughs. “Or at least not in the middle of residency with so little flexibility!”

Alex MacLeod and Newmarket Jack put the finishing touches on their Kentucky prep with a steady cross country to finish third in the Advanced. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

A Slight Change of Plans

But the best-laid plans almost came to a screeching halt when the news hit: California was in the throes of a devastating EHV-1 outbreak. Suddenly, the shows she’d circled as her prep events were canceled: first Twin Rivers, followed by Copper Meadows in March. No one wanted to leave the safety of their barns – and the virus even found its way into barns with no in/out traffic. For the month of March, many barns went into lockdown, including Alex’s.

That left Galway Downs, whose date on the first weekend of April lay devastatingly close to the initial date of the competition ban pullback. Organizers at Galway Downs made several adjustments to make the event work, implementing strict biosecurity protocol to mitigate risk.

“All the credit to Galway for pulling the event off,” Alex said. “They really bent over backwards to not only make the event happen but to make it happen in a way where we all felt safe.”

The timing was close, but Alex could still grab two prep runs: one at Galway and one two weeks later at Twin Rivers, giving the pair two weeks in between Twin Rivers and Kentucky. Jack had come back into work feeling incredible, but she’d let the prep runs tell her for sure whether or not her plan was a go.

She needn’t have worried. “He was incredible,” she says of the first run at Galway, where they won the 4*-S. “We didn’t get much practice at all coming into that, and he did really well.”

One more run at Twin Rivers, where they finished third in the Advanced, gave Alex the good feeling she needed to kick on with the plan.

Photo by Sherry Stewart.

‘Where I Want to Be’

We have to imagine that a first time at a big, lifetime goal-caliber event like Land Rover Kentucky can go by in an absolute whirlwind. As much as every rider treats this event like any other, there is still anticipation and build-up – especially this year. Spectators will return to the event for the first time since 2019, and ticket sales are reportedly near record highs. It’s safe to say it will be a special year.

Alex says she’s reminding herself to stop and enjoy it, amidst the excitement and nerves. It’s something she’s dreamed of doing for as long as she can remember. For those of us looking on, it’s a representation of what could be done, even if you aren’t a full-time professional with a string of horses. Even if you hold high career aspirations that lie outside of horses – it can still be done.

“If you want to do it at this level, you’re not really going to lead a balanced life,” Alex says. “But you can do it, and it’s the way I do best. Mentally, I am happier at competitions – maybe I’m not as good at handling pressure as others, but when it’s your career and everything you have and are is riding on that, I find I don’t enjoy it as much. I’m very competitive, I’ve always wanted to do this at a high level, but I also want to have a career.”

That she comes to Kentucky with Jack, the horse she fell in love with despite the fact he was so ‘feral’ that Phillip Dutton, whom she worked for at the time, told her she was not allowed to jump him until his flatwork improved, makes the realization of a longtime goal even more special. The horse may not have been the easiest, but isn’t that often the most rewarding, in the end?

“I’ve never had a doubt about the horse’s ability,” she says. “He doesn’t look particularly impressive when he jumps, but he feels easy and nothing feels like he’s finding it mentally tough or big.”

Of course, Alex explains, she’s tempered her expectations – you don’t know if you’ve got a 5* horse until you have a 5* horse. She’s setting out with a similar attitude to the one she took up at Fair Hill in 2019, ahead of her and Jack’s 4*-L debut.

“At Fair Hill I wanted to be fast where I could, but the time and making the time were irrelevant,” she says. “That wasn’t the point. The point was to have a good, positive ride and to ride him well all the way through, and that’s my goal for Kentucky as well.”

But for Alex it’s largely about appreciation of the horse. Some toil for years and never find an Advanced horse, let alone a 5* horse. Some find one and don’t find another for decades in between. Alex knows this opportunity is special, made even more so by the fact that her family, including her parents Carla and Scott MacLeod, and many close friends from vet school and beyond, will be at the event to cheer her on.

“I don’t know when I’m going to be able to do this again,” she explained. “Of course I hope I’ll do it again with this horse, but you don’t know. I want to take in the moments, not just be so anxious and worried the whole time. I want to remember that I’m where I want to be.”

EN’s Got Talent: Intention Makes the Difference for D’Luxe Steel and Andrew McConnon

Andrew McConnon and D’Luxe Steel. Photo by Brant Gamma Photography.

Sometimes setbacks are opportunities disguised in ugly wrapping — at least, that’s what Andrew McConnon told himself last summer as he heard and felt an uncharacteristic and ominous pop in his leg. He’d hit his leg on a jump while competing and knew it wasn’t good news right away.

The resulting injury — a spiral fracture to the tibia and fibula — would require surgery, rod placement, and the rest of the year spent out of the saddle.

The thing about riding injuries is that they always seem to occur when you’ve decided to put your big boy/girl britches on and tick off one of those pesky big goals on your bucket list. For Andrew, it was a rare opportunity to compete in the prestigious FEI World Young Horse Breeding Championships in Mondial du Lion, France.

He had just the right horse for it in Jeanne Shibo’s D’Luxe Steel (Up to Date – Nicola D, by Iroko), in his final year of eligibility for the competition at seven years old in 2021.

“No exaggeration, the first thought I had when I got off that day was, ‘oh no, we’re not going to France’,” Andrew says now. “But things happen for a reason, as tough as that was in the moment.”

With horses, it’s very much a balance between “strike while the iron is hot” and “patience pays off”. Andrew, who spent some time working for William Fox-Pitt a few years ago, errs on the side of patience with his horses. And despite this ill-timed setback, he says more time never hurt anyone.

“Dean”, as the now-eight-year-old is known at home, was found via prominent event horse producers DHI Event Horses, based in Yorkshire, England. Jeanne Shibo liked what she saw off of a video of the gelding, who was four at the time, and put him on a plane to the U.S. He displayed raw talent, but Andrew classifies him as a bit of a late bloomer.

Andrew and D’Luxe Steel at Young Event Horse championships. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

“He took a while to mature and gain the muscle and strength,” he explained. “He’s always had a fantastic brain and has been very trainable. He took to cross country really easily, so in his five-year-old year we aimed him for the Young Event Horse championships.”

D’Luxe Steel found all of this excessively easy, and soon enough he’d finished in the top 10 overall at the 2019 East Coast YEH championships at Fair Hill and was on his way to becoming a Preliminary horse. It was here that some of William’s philosophy came to mind.

“While I was working for William, he was under the belief that horses as a six-year-old don’t need to do a long two-star,” Andrew explained. “He felt that getting quite a few Prelims under their belt was better for qualifiers and experience. They do a lot of growing in this year and he felt it was better for them to stay and gain some lower-intensity mileage in this period.”

 

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With a horse that exhibits such natural talent and enthusiasm as D’Luxe Steel does, it’s more than a little tempting to push just a little farther here, a little farther there. Andrew says he used to be more intensely determined to always be pushing forward, as well.

“I think a couple of years ago, I was guilty of the same thing,” he said. “I was really wanting to go to every event and keep taking all these lessons and pushing and training. William really helped me with that – he has a very relaxed approach. The horse trials were not to be won, necessarily. He would pick one here and there and allow them to move on – which is important to practice. That’s something I’ve carried on with me; I don’t feel the need to be competitive at every competition and that helps me be more selective about when I’m pushing and how hard.”

Of course, you can intend not to be competitive and still be sat on a horse with enough raw talent that winning comes naturally. Andrew laughs at this thought: “It’s easier at Prelim and below to win more often because you don’t have to go as quick to make it around clear.” But he also knew that stepping up to Intermediate might bring with it some growing pains – and he wasn’t going to push for the wins. Here, Andrew expressed gratitude for Jeanne Shibo – an owner who understands, trusts, and invests in the process, not just financially but emotionally and mentally.

 

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But a win is still a win, and you can see that much in looking at D’Luxe Steel’s competition record: 15 wins in 33 USEA competitions dating back to the pair’s debut together in 2019. They’ve finished outside of the top 10 just twice and have never incurred a cross country penalty. Most recently, they won the 3*-S at Bouckaert International in Georgia.

So, while D’Luxe Steel was showing all the promise in the world to go and make a statement in France, Andrew accepted the unfortunate turn of events with the understanding that this would only help the both of them in the long run. The start to their 2021 proves this to be true.

“Things happen for a reason, and it meant that [D’Luxe Steel] could have an earlier holiday,” he said. “He grew a couple of inches and developed, so it was really good for him.”

As for the future, it’s a one day at a time scenario, but Andrew would love to see the gelding tackle the 3*-L at the Maryland 5 Star in October. “I think it would be a great progression,” he said. “So we’ll aim for that. He’s only eight and he doesn’t need to be stepping up to Advanced til later on in his nine-year-old year. So I do plan to keep him at the Intermediate level to gain experience, strength, and education before we think about that.”

But as it is with the really special ones, it’s always tempting. At the same time, it’s not a hard decision for Andrew to take his time.

“I think we as riders have the responsibility with the athletic and capable horses that are really willing to not ask more of them just because they’re willing to,” he said. “We almost have to protect them and respect the fact that they are able to and be willing to wait. I feel like I have a duty with this horse to stick to a plan instead of what he physically or mentally might be able to just accomplish, and he’s really shown me that this is the best way forward.”

Wednesday News & Notes from Haygain

 

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Last week, 12 riders from Cool Ridings, the program founded by Lydia Heywood to encourage more diverse youth to pursue opportunities within the sport, enjoyed a day of training with Italian three-time Olympian Vittoria Panizzon with support from Ariat. It’s a really cool program Lydia’s got going in the UK — you can learn more about Cool Ridings here.

U.S. Weekend Preview

River Glen Spring H.T. (New Market, Tn.): [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Scores] [Volunteer]

Sporting Days H.T. (Aiken, Sc.): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Scores] [Volunteer]

Unionville Spring H.T. (Unionville, Pa.): [Website] [Entry Status] [Scores] [Volunteer]

Wednesday News & Reading

Want to stay in the know for all things revolving around the Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event and Badminton Horse Trials? We’ll be sending out our Daily Digest email beginning Monday, April 25 for Kentucky and Tuesday, May 3 for Badminton. It’s the best place to keep up with our coverage and all of the latest news from the big spring 5* events — and, it’s free! We’ll also be giving out prizes (think exclusive EN merch and sponsor goodies!) throughout each event, so you definitely don’t want to miss out. Sign up here.

The 2022 Intercollegiate Eventing Championships are just one month away! This event has grown in popularity so much in recent years that it nearly reminds me of the old NAJYRC days — but with even more team/school spirit. The Championships will be held at Bouckaert Farm (Chattahoochee Hills) in Fairburn, Ga., May 21-22. Find out more here.

Results from a 2021 study on equine body temperature and heat patterns as they correlate to exercise were recently summarized on TheHorse.com, and the findings are interesting. Using a variety of testing scenarios instead of a controlled, treadmill environment used for most laboratory studies, this study found data suggesting that conventional standards for cooling down may not apply as universally as we think. You can read more here and find the full study papers here.

In World Equestrian Brands’ new blog series, “1% Better”, top riders are sharing the ways they make small differences to improve their performance and wellbeing. The series launched with advice on rider fitness from Canadian 4* eventer Jill Thomas-Smith, who also competes at the upper levels of dressage and show jumping. Read it here.

We’ll have a full list of our sponsors’ deals and events happening at Kentucky (and Badminton!) coming your way early next week, but for now we’ll let you in on a secret: there’s going to be a lot of fun things going on at the Haygain booth next weekend! Think autograph signings with two very popular riders, a veterinary Q&A session, AND a big giveaway. Definitely put them on your list of stops on your shopping tour — they’ll be at booth 100 indoors. If you get lost, just follow the smell of the steamed hay that’s always at a Haygain demo booth!

Wednesday Video Break

There’s one fence that has a lot of fans chattering after reading through Tilly’s Badminton course preview: that vintage Broken Bridge. Take a look at how this new “old” fence was built:

Land Rover Rookies: Woods Baughman and C’est La Vie 135

Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Woods Baughman was around six years old when he accompanied his grandfather to “some horse thing happening over at the horse park” in Lexington, Ky.

That “horse thing” was what was then known as the Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event, but to Woods and his grandfather it was mostly just a fun activity to do together. Woods had already shown an interest in horses, but this was new territory.

“I was awestruck,” he recalls now.

Of course, three-day eventing wasn’t the sport Woods had his eye on before this. In fact, his earlier ambition had been to be a bull rider. “I was totally convinced,” he said, recounting how he’d “irritated my mom enough” that she finally signed him up for some English riding lessons. “The deal was that if this phase wasn’t over in two years, I could switch to Western and rodeo riding.”

But then, Woods got his first glimpse of cross country jumping.

“All I had really seen to that point was my up-down lessons,” Woods, who is 25 now, laughs. “So to see those horses cruising around like that…I was totally into it.”

Roots and Changes

Woods Baughman and Maverick McNamara competing in the CIC3* at Luhmühlen in 2018. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Growing up in Lexington is any horse person’s dream, and Woods was in the right place to learn the foundations of his newfound obsession. He originally started learning the ropes of jumping and eventing at Champagne Run under the tutelage of Maggie Wright – in fact, he’d remain a student of Maggie’s from the up-down days all the way through his first Intermediates.

“I remember a young, quiet boy in the front seat of my truck driving home from the Horse Park one day,” Maggie recalls. “As a conversation starter I talked about Kentucky Three-Day. We talked all the way home and he said he wanted to compete there one day. I am so proud of and happy for Woods as we have had many fun times and miles since in the truck from his first Mini-Trial up through Young Riders and Intermediate Horse Trials. The dream of Kentucky was always there.”

Woods exhibited natural talent that didn’t go unnoticed; in 2014 he represented Area VIII at Young Riders with Truckee Bash and was later named to the USEF Eventing 18 Program. It was through the Young Rider program and regular clinics with then-Area VIII coach Sharon White that made a connection that would shift the trajectory of Woods’ career.

“Sharon was one of the Young Rider coaches, so I rode with her for the first time at Young Rider camp,” Woods recalls. “She used to come up to Louisville about once a month, so I would always drive up to take some lessons. I really liked her and after I made Eventing 18, I was looking for somewhere to go in Florida for the winter.”

Sharon offered Woods a job for the winter, which was more than he’d hoped for – “I was going to be thrilled if I got to be there even a week!” – and soon enough, he was packing the trailer to move south for the upcoming months.

Working for Sharon is an immersive experience. The days are long, the work is tough, but the goal is the same: be the best rider and the best human you can be in pursuit of excellence. “You’re either all in, or you don’t bother,” Woods describes.

It was just the environment that suited the hard-working, competitive young rider – and he’s remained there, eventually stepping up to become Sharon’s assistant trainer and rider, to this day. “I guess I wasn’t anticipating being there for eight years!” he laughs now. “It went from ‘can I stay for one week’ to eight years later really quick.”

Through Sharon, Woods was connected to German Olympian Dirk Schrade, and it was while spending a year in Germany under Dirk’s instruction that he found C’est La Vie 135.

As is often the case with hungry young riders, the first horses one takes to international and upper-level competition are often horses that are safe, “get the job done” types – anything to gain experience on, that you can afford. Woods calls himself lucky to partner with two Thoroughbreds, Truckee Bash and Montesquieu, found through Maggie Wright as he was coming up through the levels.

“They both had hearts of gold and they both tried so hard,” Woods says ruefully. “When I go back and watch the videos, I think ‘there is no price for those horses’. They tried so hard while I was doing so much weird crap – but it does take a little bit of that to get up the levels. I think that’s why a lot of times you see some riders’ first horses aren’t that competitive – they go through accidental torture for awhile!”

Woods and his family sold Montesquieu to fund the Germany trip, sending the experienced Maverick McNamara with him to gain more mileage on. While his original plan was to bring back a young horse to develop, it would be the then-ten-year-old C’est La Vie who stamped his ticket back to the States. “Dirk told me then that this horse would be my five-star horse,” Woods says.

Woods and C’est La Vie 135 at Tryon in 2021. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

About Determination

The striking Hanoverian gelding, who is now 14, carries similar personality quirks to his sire, Contendro (after whom he received his barn name of Contendro). Woods describes his relatively quiet “poker face” that can quickly transform into stubborn behavior at the flip of a switch. As he and Contendro got further down the road, he figured out how to stay relaxed and patient. “The more I’ve gotten to know him, the better it’s gotten – but we’ve spent plenty of time just standing in the driveway,” he says. “Everyone laughs because he’s great at shows and no one thinks he ever does anything bad, but they haven’t seen him at home.”

The methodology of patience and relaxation carries over into riding, too. Woods has dealt with growing pains as he’s progressed with C’est La Vie – though they’ve experienced marked success too, winning the USEF CCI3*-L National Championship in 2019 as well as the USEF CCI4*-L National Championship in 2021. “I’ve had to learn how to ride him, with control, without him feeling restricted,” Woods describes. “But where I’m also not flying around like a yahoo. You have to find a happy balance and Sharon’s been really useful for that because she is endlessly patient with us.”

That patience was put to the test last year after Woods experienced what he calls one of the lowest points of his riding career. 2021 started off well enough, but the pair had had a few blips as they stepped up to the Advanced and 4* level, all of which came to grief at the Kentucky 4*-S in April when the gelding hung a leg and pitched Woods over his head. Woods broke two lumbar vertebrae in the process.

Determined to return to riding — and be competitive — Woods rehabbed from the injury and was back in the saddle a few weeks later, but it wouldn’t be the comeback summer he’d hoped for. He and Contendro still struggled with control and, more dangerously, confidence. Woods recalls cross country at Virginia, his first competition back after Kentucky, and adding so many strides to a right-handed corner that he eventually halted in front of it. “I wasn’t ok,” he says now. “I was pulling like hell, I did not want to go to that jump.”

After more trouble unfolded into the summer, it was time to rethink the plans. At Sharon’s suggestion, Woods and Contendro backed off. They went back to the drawing board to reestablish fundamentals that had been shaken. They ran some Preliminary-level events – slowly. This revisiting of the basics helped Woods relieve himself of the guilt he felt at being “the hindrance” in the relationship. “It’s one of those things where I know the horse is fantastic and then I feel like I’m the problem,” he explains. “Maybe he didn’t need to go back like that, but it still made him better and it made me better.”

The USEF CCI4*-L National Championship was hosted at Tryon International Equestrian Center in North Carolina last November. Woods and Contendro rose to the occasion and made good on their promise to come back better in every sense of the word: they took home the title, just edging out Sharon with her own rising star, Claus 63, for the win.

Woods and longtime coach Sharon White. Photo by JJ Sillman.

A Goal Realized

Which brings us to now, the week ahead of Woods’ official and long-awaited 5* debut. More importantly, it’s a homecoming – yes, he competed in the 4* here last year, but now comes realization of a goal he’s eyed since he first discovered “some horse thing” all those years ago.

“My whole family, the whole barn, and all my friends are going to be there,” he says. “I’m not sure if they were joking, but there was talk of t-shirts. I know they have at least three tailgating spots. So for me, that’s exciting because it’s one of those things that everyone says they want to do when they’re little and now I’ve somehow actually stuck with it long enough.”

Making it to that centerline and that start box in Kentucky is representative of a million small steps culminating in one moment. It requires diligence mixed with stubbornness, and a real desire to never give up.

“He hasn’t given up,” Sharon described last year at Tryon. “And that’s the thing. You put one foot in front of the other, you figure it out, and you’re willing to go through the agony. You keep on soldiering through, and you learn from it. He is closer to being an expert now, with his year, because that is how you learn — by it all going wrong.”

“It’s Worth Tacking Up for Cross-Country if You’re in 60th Place”: Walking the 2022 Badminton Track with Eric Winter

“You think this is big? I’m just getting warmed up.” – Eric Winter, probably.

“There’ll be no one single fence that should catch them out — it’s a test of being able to deal with terrain and a number of different varieties of question,” says Badminton course designer Eric Winter as we cruise through the course he’s been incubating since early 2020. Since his appointment as designer in 2017, he’s created a flavour for the course that’s uniquely his: he’s never worried much about set stride patterns, choosing instead to reward those riders who can show adaptability on the fly, and he’s always been in favour of a well-rounded animal that’s comfortable crossing terrain and picking its way through the kinds of questions that might be encountered on a day’s hunting, for example.

And after three years without Badminton? Eric’s ethos has been to keep the challenge at the level it would have been if the pandemic hadn’t happened – and in fact, this year’s course is almost exactly the one he’d designed for 2020’s cancelled competition. What does that mean, in a practical sense? Well, mostly that it looks big. We’ve not seen anything this dimensionally beefy in a long time: Pau, Luhmühlen, and even Kentucky tend not to be as colossal, while Bicton’s pop-up five-star course was intentionally built smaller because the terrain was so tough. Tokyo and the European Championships, for their part, were four-star courses, and we’ve not seen a Badminton or a Burghley since 2019. It feels a little as though we’ve forgotten what it’s like when a designer and his team of builders really flirt with the maximum dimensions – but we’re getting a wake-up call now.

“I’m aiming for a 50-60% clear rate,” he says. “And just a couple inside the time. You’ve got to get people through the gate, and at 70%, there’s not enough happening — and people want to see something happen. Nothing disastrous, of course, but things have to change, and I want to create a course that means that if you’re in 30th place, you can still tack up and go fight for a spot in the top five. It’s worth tacking up for cross-country if you’re in 60th place because you could still end up in the top ten. That sort of thing. This is a day that makes you famous: look at the likes of Alex Bragg. In 2017 nobody had ever heard of him; he was a Somerset Intermediate rider with a few horses, and then he sat as the leader of Badminton from 12.30 until 2.30, and it put his name in front of a group of people who could then buy into him. On days like that, riders are made.”

In many ways, this year’s course feels like old-school Badminton: it’s jam-packed with variety, and it doesn’t have many of the super-skinny accuracy questions we tend to see at most major events these days. This is part of a conscious effort by Eric, who wants to reward boldness, adaptability, and those riders who take their horses out of the arena and train over terrain. As such, he’s starting to explore previously under-utilised areas of the estate – a healthy bit of pioneering that he assures us we’ll see lots more of in the years to come.

“We’ve moved away from the Colt Pond at the bottom and tried to move to the hillier sections,” says Eric, who wants to transform the typically flat-ish challenge into a more classic test of horsemanship. “And we’ve changed the track quite dramatically down at the Vicarage ditch line – that’s quite an intense route, and there’s some really big ditches down there. There’s a ditch down there that makes the Vicarage Vee look jumpable!”

Well, as they say, rather them than us. We headed to the Badminton estate for a closer look at the track to come with Eric himself – and here’s what we learned along the way.

Note: we only photographed the key combinations as we zoomed around with Eric, and the fences hadn’t yet been dressed for the main event. We’ll update this preview with further photos as we get them. 

The course map for 2022.

Fence 1: The Spillers Starter

Photo courtesy of the CrossCountry App.

This year, the course runs counter-clockwise – but that decision isn’t just an arbitrary one. Each running of Badminton sees the course change directions, which means that an Olympic or World Championship year is built counter-clockwise and a European Championships year is designed to run clockwise. Though Eric has focused his attention this year on playing with terrain and undulations more so than he has in his previous three courses here, running in this direction, he explains, gives horses and riders a bit of a flatter start, which allows them to simply focus their attentions on getting into a positive rhythm. That’s extra important, because the middle section of the course is so intense and will rely so heavily on that positivity – so if you squander your chances of getting going on the right foot now, you’ll face the consequences later.

To that end, the first few jumps are simple, straightforward, sizeable single fences, designed to get horses in the air. And the first fence they’ll meet? A familiar one in the Spillers Starter, which is situated in the arena and will get them underway with an appreciative roar from the crowd. The fence itself isn’t massive, but the butterflies — and the grim resolve riders will feel — will be. 3, 2, 1: have a good ride!

Fence 2: Haywain

The Haywain. Photo by Rachel Dyke.

There’s not an awful lot to say about this single fence, except that it’s a wagon, it’s pretty big, and it’s usually somewhere on the course. It looked like this in 2018 and 2019, and we still don’t really fancy jumping it ourselves, if we’re honest — but for competitors here, it’ll be no problem at all.

Fence 3: Badminton Logs

Photo courtesy of the CrossCountry App.

“The good thing about living locally is that in the winter, me and James [Willis, course builder] can go out in the woods and pick out some trees and play around,” says Eric, indicating the natural fallen tree trunks on a mound that make up fence three. “While we were out there, we saw two trees that had fallen down just like that, so I said, ‘that’ll be fantastic off that bank!’ Anyway, it took ages to get them up, and make them stand, and get them in the right shape. We had a crane and everything, and then [former Director] Hugh Thomas drove down and said, ‘you know what? That’s probably the most expensive and time-consuming 1.20m rolltop I’ve ever seen!’ It was difficult to argue with at about five o’clock in the evening after we’d just been working on that one fence.”

Fence 4ABC: HorseQuest Quarry

Here, you can see the left-handed line from the A element of the Quarry, visible in the back right of the image, and the B element of the direct route, which is the stone wall in the foreground. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Finally, they’ll pop out over this fairly sizeable box, which will be covered in fresh brush akin to a steeplechase fence. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The first combination on the course comes up reasonably quickly at the Quarry, but it’s not a particularly tough question – and even here, Eric has provided a long route for those who might need a slower, steadier start to their round – or, more likely, those who find themselves landing in a bit of a muddle after ballooning over the first element, because those who make a concrete plan to go long here from the get-go might want to reconsider how prepared they really are for this course.

The straight route takes our competitors over a girthy, inviting log, which has been positioned further from the lip of the quarry than in previous years to ensure that horses land on the flat, rather than diving to the bottom.

Then, they’ll hook to the left, up and out of the quarry over a 1.20m stone wall. It’s a pretty upright, solid fence, but squaring off that turn will set horses up well – and any horse who’s been out hunting will have no concerns about a piddling little thing like this. That, as it turns out, is exactly what Eric is hoping for: “I think the way we make the sport safer is by building the kind of questions that encourage you to train outside of the arena — to take your young horses out and get them used to topography and terrain and make them footsure and quick off their feet.”

Finally, before they depart at a gallop, they’ll turn to the right and pop a narrow-ish brush box, which will be dressed in thick boughs of greenery – just like the brush boxes at the Lake in 2019.

Fence 5: RDA Fund Raiser

Photo courtesy of the CrossCountry App.

This single fence shouldn’t cause too many issues, but it’s not quite a run-and-jump breather fence: the skinny log with a ditch in front will encourage an attacking approach and can provide a test of line, as it’s approachable at an angle. Mostly, though, its role is to act as a speed bump.

“I hated the old days, when you could do three long routes and win because you could do 800mpm from the Quarry to Huntsman’s,” says Eric. “These days, it’s getting more like a one day; you land and can already see your next fence. You used to land and go across four fields before the next fence.”

Fence 6ABC: Voltaire Design Huntsman’s Close

From the Quarry, there’s not an enormous amount of space before you reach Huntsman’s Close, which is a much more significant question, and the ditch and log at fence five is essentially a speed bump en route to it. But even the speed bumps should be used tactically: riders who make sure their horse is adjustable and rideable to this ‘gimme’ fence will stand a much better chance of finding their line and sticking to it when they come to the first real challenge on the course.

Huntsman’s comes up early this year and presents the first significant challenge on the course with its tricky bending line. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

And boy, what a challenge Huntsman’s Close is. There are a few things that contribute to making this combination tricky: there’s the line itself, which snakes you over (or past, if you haven’t done your homework) three tall, relatively wide angled hedges. The three-stride line between A and B looks easy enough, but the first time you walk it, B to C looks almost like an optical illusion – and it’s not until you walk it backwards and find a more creative line between the first two hedges that you start to find your way to the third. There’s some room for interpretation, depending on the kind of horse a competitor is sitting on: they could jump all three elements on a swooping arc, or angle the first and ride a curve to plan a straight line from the second to the third, or right direct from A to B and make a quick, sharp turn to the final element. It’s a great way to test how well competitors know their own horses, and how well they can interpret what their horse is giving them on the day – those who are easily influenced by other riders’ plans of action probably won’t do themselves any favours here.

“It’s really how you deliver to the second one of these hedges that gets you to the third one,” says Eric. “If you don’t deliver well to the second, and you arrive there a bit straight, especially on one that’s a little fresh, you’re stuffed — but they’re all there to look at different horses. Bettina Hoy’s big black thing that she used to ride that would really run through the bridle at the start of the course, if you got there on that on a straight line, you’d be stuffed. But if you’re on a little pony you can turn and pop them and do what you want, because there’s enough distance to S-bend them a bit. It’s a bit about what you’re sat on, but around the whole course, I’ve tried to look at the training of everything — so some bits suit those [run-and-jump] horses, while some bits suit the little, nippier ones.”

The weather will also play a major role here, because it’s the most shadowy part of the course: a very sunny day could cast high-contrast shadows that move through the day and lend an element of visual trickery to the questions, so riders will need to have a solid plan and be firm in how they communicate it.

This is the first point on the course where we’ll expect to see some broken hearts: it’s not at all hard to imagine even a very good horse dipping out to the left-hand side of the C element, or a particularly naughty one grabbing the bit between his teeth and galloping headlong down the welcoming gap down its right hand side. We’ll see our first moments of agricultural riding here – but function over form is what Eric so often rewards.

Visually, though, this feels like a much nicer prospect than the Huntsman’s Close of 2019, which came late in the course and was made up of white birch rails, spectral and primed to fall like some kind of aggressive wooden spiderweb.

Fence 7: Pedigree Kennels

Photo courtesy of the CrossCountry App.

Eric Winter is a kind, benevolent man, and he doesn’t want you to feel intimidated by your first Badminton experience in three years — so as a little present, he’s given you a table that’s so large the Tories are charging bedroom tax on it. A breather! A little break! How nice!

Fence 8: Lightsource bp Lower Lake

Photo courtesy of the CrossCountry App.

This is the first chance our competitors will have to get their toes wet (or, preferably, their horses’ toes, rather than their own). As they approach the lake from the house end, they’ll pop an inviting brush fence and arc through the water. The aim of the game? Letting horses and riders get ahead on the clock now, because they’ll lose plenty of time in the middle section of the course as they traverse the Vicarage ditch line.

Fence 9 and 10AB: Badminton Lake

The lake looks a little different this year without the trucks of previous years – but riders will have enough to focus on as they find their way in over this hefty brush log…

…after which they’ll pick their way out over a double of skinnies, before flying back down the length of the lakeside. Photos by Tilly Berendt.

The iconic Badminton lake, with its sweeping vista of the house’s facade (and a lot of drunk people enjoying the hospitality in the lakeside marquees) looks a little different here – in this, the first running post-Mitsubishi sponsorship, we’re not actually making horses jump truck beds. A shame, really — though my offer to park my Peugeot 208 a couple of strides off of the A element was quickly rejected, which seems like evidence of a worrying lack of creativity to me.

Anyway, the defining feature of this year’s journey through — and around — the Lake is really that turn into it. So often, we see the first element sit roughly where the B element of 10 is now, but this time, our competitors will jump into the lake nearly facing the house, having ridden directly at the crowd and then hair-pinned back. The big, brush-topped log at 9 isn’t too dissimilar to the one we saw in 2019, though it’s been relocated – and the lack of a big fence beforehand, the role those trucks used to fill, means that the turn in isn’t set up for the riders. Instead, they’ll need to manufacture the adjustment in the canter and create the turn themselves, rather than hairing around at a gallop and firing over the log.

The rest of the question looks, at first glance, to be a lot more straightforward than in any of Eric’s previous years. Competitors will have a choice of two skinnies in the water, depending on how and where they land, and then they’ll cruise out over the same question on dry land at 10B. The line from the log to the right-handed skinny is a little bit easier, but makes the B element on dry land a much more angled question; if riders can plan their line well and get a neat jump over the log that lets them get to the left-handed skinny, they’ll find the line out much easier. In 2019, we saw a step up out of the water to a capacious brush mound; in 2017 and 2018, there was a much less obvious line between the skinny elements Eric opted to use, and his signature use of variable striding caught plenty of people out.

That’s what’s key to remember here: though the question and the line look straightforward, Eric leans heavily on striding challenges, and wants to see that his competitors can make rapid-fire adjustments depending on the jump they get into the lake. The answer to the question isn’t to find your striding in your walks and commit to it come hell or high water – instead, it’s to know the distances that are available to you so well, and so intrinsically, that you can rework how you use them if something doesn’t go quite to plan. With that big drop on the landing side of the log in, it’s likely that most competitors will find themselves landing in a very different place to the one they’d planned — and they need to be able to tackle the rest of their line accordingly.

Fence 11: World Horse Welfare Lakeside

The water-feature table at the Lake Is unchanged from 2019 (shown here), but will be jumped in the opposite direction. Photo courtesy of Badminton Horse Trials, CrossCountry App and Jill Martin.

This enormous 1.20m (3’11) lakeside table returns for its sophomore appearance after causing very little concern in 2019. It’s a unique fence, and a frightening looking one, because not only is it somehow both beefy and airy, it’s also topped with a water feature. This was inspired by a fountain Eric spotted in an Oxford restaurant while wining and dining his wife, Lizzel, back in 2018 – and though there’s little opportunity to throw a coin into this one and wish for a fairytale ending, it comes up at enough speed that the horses don’t even notice the moving water. More frightening, frankly, is that 2.30m (7’6) base spread.

Fence 12AB: Clarence Court Egg Boxes

Photo courtesy of the CrossCountry App.

Look familiar? You’ve seen these odes to chicken ovulation before – a couple of times, in fact. They’re usually a mainstay of Burghley’s course, but they’ve made their way south-west this year to make their mark on Badminton. It’s actually quite rare for ‘novelty’ fences like these to show up on Badminton’s course, because designers tend to lean into the traditional, rugged features of the countryside and aim to build timeless fences that look natural, rather than creating showpieces for their sponsors, but that makes the few rare instances on this course stand out in a bright, sunny sort of way.

Though this is a combination fence, it’s certainly not one of the complicated ones on course, and it’s not actually designed to present much of a question to competitors at all. Instead, it’s a perfect example of Eric’s own brand of sneaky ingenuity: here, he’s given riders a cheat code, and now he can sit back and see who’s clever enough to use it.

The egg boxes are set on two positive strides and are slightly angled, and they’ll be quite easy to cruise over in a nice rhythm and use as a let-up fence. And if your horse is absolutely on his game, listening to your aids, and behaving marvellously? Fantastic – save his energy, and your own, and use them as such. But from here on out, the course is getting very, very serious indeed, and this is your final chance to install some nuance to your aids.

“I wanted somewhere before the guts of the course where, if they’d had a sticky jump at the lake, they could just give their horse a tap and wake it up a bit,” says Eric. “If you make it too complicated in the build-up and they haven’t got them in front of their leg, they won’t have a good time – so this fence and the next fence are really fences just to get them set up and going forward again. They’re for rebuilding.”

As riders clear the egg boxes, they’ll head into the middle section of the course: a section so intense, and so exciting, that we’re hereby dubbing it the Devil’s Playground.

Live footage of this year’s competitors walking the middle section of the course.

Fence 13: Ford Broken Bridge

The old-school broken bridge at 13 feels like a real blast from the past, and while it shouldn’t rack up too many penalties, it’s a real test of how riders prepare for the next fences. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

What a novelty! The broken bridge at 13 was teased to us all for 2020, and though we were robbed of our chance to go truly 1949 and see the dressage take place in front of the house, we’re very excited about this truly old-school effort that’ll yield some — ugh, can we bring ourselves to say it? — iconic photos from this year’s event.

Though these fences were commonplace decades ago, many competitors this year will never have met anything quite like it. For horses, it’ll look pretty straightforward: the rails on either side channel them down to the little upright rails at the end of the bridge, and as long as they’re ridden in with a positive, forward pace, they’ll land well clear of the revetted lip on the landing side. It’ll look — and feel — a little bit like jumping off the edge of the world, and we don’t really recommend looking down, because it’s all a bit vertigo-inducing. Ultimately, it’s a rider frightener – and as is often the case with those, the answer is to keep your eyes up and kick like the devil’s on your tail. He is, and he’s wearing a Schoffel gilet and carting a Labrador around with him.

“Ride it fast. You can’t be going quick enough,” says Eric sagely. Butter wouldn’t melt.

Fence 14ABC: KBIS Brush Village

The trio of colossal brush-topped tables and corners of the KBIS village come up fast after the footbridge. Here’s a glimpse at the dimensions of the A element…

…and a look at the line between B and C. Photos by Tilly Berendt.

Think back, if you will, to those eggboxes a scant few moments ago. How did you ride them? Did you cruise through without a care in the world, or did you sit up, ask your horse to change his stride length, and use them as a schooling exercise? You did the latter, didn’t you – and that was jolly clever of you, because now you’re going to reap the rewards of your commitment to forward thinking. The KBIS Brush Village is a lot of things: dimensionally massive, first of all, which feels like rather a surprise after a couple of years of smaller jumps even at the top level, and technically complicated, which is a serious bit of strategic building after that run-and-jump broken bridge.

The key thing about this combination that can’t be understated is that it comes up incredibly quickly after landing from the bridge. Riders will have only a short space to readjust their stride and get their horse’s head up, and if they land running and their horse is inclined to go through the bridle or fight against the contact, they’ll be in trouble by the time they get over the first element, a very wide brush-topped table.

If the rideability is there, the left-handed line to B and the forward three strides to C will come up well – but we’re expecting this corner-to-corner question to exert a fair amount of influence.

“The relationship between the bridge and this is crucial — how they set up will be key,” says Eric. “They need to woah and canter down to this. The real superstar horses will make the adjustment look easy.”

Fence 15: MARS Equestrian Footbridge

The iconic and influential footbridge is back – and it doesn’t look any smaller after a couple of years in hibernation. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

From the brush village, riders will head straight into another kind of test of line and commitment – the footbridge, a sprawling angled oxer and ditch combination on a slightly downhill approach. This is one of Badminton’s mainstay rider frightener fences, which is sometimes used instead of the Vicarage Vee to make use of this natural ditch in the estate. This year, though, our lucky competitors will get to jump both, plus a new addition to the course. We’re sure they’re delighted.

Fence 16: Countryside Alliance Roll Top Brush

Just a nice, normal, easy fence. Nothing to worry about. All good. Everything’s fine.

This is one of those ‘let-up’ fences that appears on the course every year and never, ever looks any more like an act of generosity: at 1.45m (4’9) high, with a base spread of 2.30m (7’6), it’s among the course’s biggest fences. But for all that, it has a sloping, kind profile and a smattering of brush on top that’s basically the equestrian equivalent of singing your ABCs.

Fence 17AB: MARS Equestrian Sustainability Bay

The water complex at 17AB, as photographed in 2019. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This water complex is effectively unchanged from 2019: again, there’s a waterfall drop in at the A element, which will see competitors pop a little (70cm/2’3) log with a hefty drop in of 1.80m (5’10). Then, they’ll make a left-handed turn to the B element, a trough in the water. This is 1.14m (3’9) tall, but it’s not the dimensions that could cause an interruption – it’s the waterfall element, which will require positivity to conquer, but shouldn’t be one of the major influential questions on course because of where it appears.

“Last time, it was the first water on course, but this time, they’ve already got their feet wet,” says Eric. “I was surprised at how much trouble it caused last time — I think it’s difficult to know how much pace you want to it, because you roll back to it. You don’t want to chase to it, because you’ve got the other fence very close to it, so you want to pop off it — but then you’re really reliant on the horse being confident enough to roll on and jump the B element.”

Fence 18ABC: LeMieux Leap

The first element of the LeMieux Leap is a tall but reasonably inviting hedge. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Don’t look down, for the fiftieth time on this course.

This is an interesting combination — and almost certainly an influential one — because of its eye-wateringly huge open ditch, which had several of us scrambling to check the rulebook for dimensional limitations. Previously, we’ve seen this ditch feature as the yawning underbelly of a trakehner, but this time, horses and riders will pop an upright hedge on a downhill slope before leaping over a crevice deep and wide enough to park a car in. After that, they’ll need to gather up the knitting and unclench the bumcheeks quickly, because a sharp downhill to a skinny element at C comes up fast. It’s an interesting cross between a coffin complex and a Normandy bank, and it’ll make or break a few rounds. Upper level horses with hunting mileage are rare these days, but there are a couple in this field — and we’ll be looking to them to make the best of this novel question.

Fence 19AB and 20: Nyetimber Corners

The airy timber corners at 19AB and 20 will present a serious challenge…

…particularly as they’re clipped with more sensitive yellow MIMS devices, which will activate easily if a horse makes an untidy effort. Photos by Tilly Berendt.

Keen followers of eventing will have an almost visceral reaction to the words ‘yellow MIMS’: though we’re all for safety technology, these new, ultra-sensitive versions of the classic red clips have caused their fair share of disappointments since the FEI mandated their use on open corners. The Tokyo Olympics were undoubtedly affected by them: Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH were among the combinations to activate them, and without the 11 penalties they received after the fence fell strides after landing, they’d have taken the individual gold medal.

The yellow MIMS clips at the Nyetimber corners are the only ones we’ll see on this course, but it’s not hard to imagine that they could end up being one of the primary stories of the day. They feature in the latter part of the most intense section of the course, so horses and riders alike will be mentally and physically tired at this stage, but they’ll need to pull it all back together to effectively showjump through this tight left-handed line. The short approach in and the dip in the ground between the two jumps should help them out: both will help set horses back onto their hind ends, but even so, this will take some serious riding and we could see it exert a dramatic influence on the leaderboard.

Fence 21 and 22: Rolex Rails

Most riders wonder if the Vicarage Vee will be present on any given year’s course. This time, they forgot to ask if Eric would build it a brother fence that’s on steroids. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

As I drove home from Badminton, my overworked phone buzzed away with question after question after question from riders who’d spotted my revoltingly self-indulgent ‘teasers’ on social media, in which I showed absolutely nothing of the course and bleated a few tepid takes like, “it’s big” and “it’s Badminton.” 95% of those messages said the same thing: “will I be jumping the Vicarage Vee this year?” I ignored them all and have never felt more in-demand. 10/10; highly recommend.

Anyway, the answer to that question, finally, is yes – twice. As if eventing’s most notorious rider frightener wasn’t enough on its own, Eric has opted to build another one, and its ditch is considerably bigger and more frightening. There’s a long route here if riders don’t fancy ageing themselves by 30 years simply from the stress of it all.

Fence 23AB: Holland Cooper Vicarage Vee

What’s more fun than jumping one of the world’s most iconic rider frighteners? Jumping two of them on a related distance. Here, you can get a sense of the proximity of the Rolex Rails in the foreground and the Vicarage Vee in the background. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Actually, though, the Vee itself looks much more jumpable this year, partly because it’s so dwarfed by the ditch at the Rolex rails, and partly because larger timber makes it look less airy and intimidating. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Of course, there’s a bright side to everything — and here, it’s that the Rolex Rails ditch is so big, and so mean looking, that by the time you get yourself to the Vicarage Vee itself, it actually looks…kind of small? That’s helped along by the new, thicker timber used for the rails, which are more visually appealing than they’ve been in their skinnier years of yore. There’s a lesson in body positivity in there somewhere, but more importantly, there’s a very precise line to be ridden here, or you’ll end up in the ditch. Once again, there’s a long route option — but if you take both long routes through this dastardly related distance, you might still be out there on Sunday.

Fence 24ABCD: Lightsource bp Solar Farm

It’s important for riders to have a plan in the forefront of their mind at the solar panels, because there’s a lot to look at here. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Those who opt for the straight route, though, will have a nice direct line, one less fence, and – interestingly – a bounce question ahead of them. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This is, in effect, a sort of sunken road complex, and it has two distinctive routes that can’t be mixed and matched. The direct route on the left-hand side takes competitors over a single solar panel at the top of the quarry, after which they’ll canter down and then back up over the lip before popping over a bounce of solar panels. For those who don’t fancy their chances over a bounce late in the course, there’s a right-handed route that serpentines over four panels on a related line – but this long route probably won’t be used that much, as most riders won’t want to give their horse an extra jumping effort this late in the game.

Fence 25: Badminton Collection Flower Boxes

Photo courtesy of the CrossCountry App.

Fence 26AB and 27: MARS M

Photo courtesy of the CrossCountry App.

Fence 28: The Brewers Barrel

Photo courtesy of the CrossCountry App.

Fence 29AB: Savills Hay Feeders

Photo courtesy of the CrossCountry App.

At this point, we’re on the home stretch – but the silliest thing a person can do is get complacent over the final questions on a five-star course. Though there aren’t any questions that match the intensity of the middle section of the course at this stage, they’re still big fences that require attention and care, because well-placed competitors have seen their day end in this final stretch before, and they may well do again.

Fence 30: Joules Keepers Ditch

It’s a rare thing to see a skinny question so late on this course – but this one, just before the arena, could exert some late-stage influence if riders don’t have their wits about them. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“It’s like the longest foreplay to an event ever,” bemoans Eric with a grin as he surveys the course that he designed and actually put out all the way back in 2020. For all that the time could have been spent panicking over the finer points of the course, though, it remains largely untouched – and it’s not hard to see why. It’s a creative, bold, and exciting track with some surprising elements – the use of terrain and those hefty ditches; the relative shortage of tiny skinnies and accuracy questions; the commitment to producing a real run-and-jump course and horse. In fact, some of the few skinnies on the course come very late on, as competitors head back towards the arena and its final efforts.

In 2019, we saw Eric use a pagoda as an unjumpable, flagged element that riders had to go through – and this is a clever move, because it doesn’t add extra effort for the horses, but it does make the line to their next fence more defined and thus, more tricky. Last time, competitors crossed a skinny ditch beneath the pagoda, but this time, they’ll canter through, cross a dipped, ditchy bit of ground, and pop a skinny house at the lip of the slope. They’ve got a left- or right-handed option here to play with, and they’ll want to make a sensible decision if they find themselves on tired horses at this very late stage. It’s very different to the usual chase fence we’d see here.

Fence 31: Rolex Trunk

Photo courtesy of the CrossCountry App.

After clearing the final combination, the red and white livery of the arena is in sight – here, you know you’ve very nearly done it. But there’s still two fences to come, and it would be a crying shame to come off at one of them, so there’s a bit of a weaving approach to keep you awake into fence 31, the Rolex Trunk, which is a big, straightforward hanging log.

Fence 32: Platinum Jubilee

Photo courtesy of the CrossCountry App.

As is tradition, the final fence is set in the arena — and after tackling Eric’s playground of doom, they’ll be glad for the thick crowds in the grandstands, who’ll cheer them home and into the waiting arms of their support teams. How does it feel to cross the finish line at Badminton? According to riders in years past, it’s beyond words; a feeling of elation and magic mixed with intense relief; it’s like a kind of numbness that’s unique to chasing a childhood dream and catching it, fleetingly, between your fingers. How will it feel after three years away from the world’s best-loved venue? Like coming home, we expect.

Badminton: [Website] [Cross Country Ride Times] [Live Scoring] [CrossCountryApp Preview] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage] [EN’s Ultimate Guide] [EN’s Instagram] [EN’s Twitter]

Education Alert! Developing a Partnership You Can Count On Away from Home

Photo courtesy of Kaitlin Hartford.

How often have you thought or said, “My horse never does this at home!” or “We practiced this at home last week and now it’s like he’s totally forgotten it!”

It can be so frustrating when you’ve done the preparation at home, only to leave the property and hardly recognize your horse or his behavior. Chances are, you’re also nervous (whether you realize it or not) and frustrated, which only complicates things further. But there’s absolutely nothing fun about your horse impersonating a kite on a windy day while you’re trying to tack him up, or acting terrified of other horses in the warm up ring, or… the list goes on…

That’s why, for this year’s 2022 New England Spring Symposium, Tik and Sinead Maynard will do a two-day intensive clinic on building a partnership with your horse that can be stronger than the variables of leaving home that cause you and your horse to fall apart. The important thing to understand is that it’s a two-way street and we often don’t realize the full extent of how we’re contributing to the problem. You can’t control the water truck driving by, but you can control how you prepare for it and react to it, and how you react to your horse’s reaction to it. This clinic will focus on giving you those tools.

Don’t know Tik and Sinead? Sinead has competed at the top levels of eventing internationally for over 20 years. She represented the United States at the World Equestrian Games in Normandy in 2014, Traveling to London for the 2012 Olympics as first reserve, and was reserve for 2016 Rio Olympics as well. Tik is an Olympic team reserve rider shortlisted Canadian eventing team rider, two time Retired Racehorse Project Thoroughbred Makeover Freestyle winner and author of In the Middle Are The Horsemen.

The clinic runs May 7-8, 2022 at Unexpected Farm in Wales, Maine. Get your auditing passes on Strider here.

Topics will include:

  • Getting a relaxed horse at the show
  • Cross country warm up for a smooth round
  • Horse and rider responsibilities to improve your show jumping
  • Flatwork to help your jumping
  • Raising the difficulty without raising the height
  • How your focus helps your horse focus
  • Cross country positions for every situation
  • How to create a winning partnership in dressage

Email [email protected] with any questions. See you there!

Twin Rivers Spring International Has Best in West Looking Ahead to Big Goals

James Alliston and RevitaVet Calaro. Photo by Ride On Photo.

The 2022 Twin Rivers Spring International held over Easter Weekend in Paso Robles, Calif., was a key event for some of the West Coast’s top riders to assess their horses, and it proved to be a confidence booster for their journeys to the upper levels of the sport. In the first event of the year held at Twin Rivers Ranch, horses and riders faced questions on cross country presented by new cross country course designer Morgan Rowsell.

India McEvoy returned to competition for the first time since August 2021 and eight weeks after giving birth to her first son, Sam, to reunite with E’zara and win the CCI2*-Long in the black Oldenburg mare’s FEI debut.

Andrea Baxter’s Laguna Seca turned in his best score in an FEI event to win the CCI3*-Short for the bay Holsteiner gelding’s first blue ribbon since last year’s Twin Rivers Spring International at the CCI4*-Short.

James Alliston and RevitaVet Calaro followed up their CCI3*-Short victory at the Galway Downs International earlier in April with a win in the CCI3*-Long. Alliston also used Twin Rivers as the final prep for Paper Jam before the Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event. Paper Jam was second at Advanced to Alliston’s other mount at the level, Nemesis. Plus, Irish Pop won at Intermediate for Alliston.

Helen Alliston successfully returned to the CCI4*-Short level aboard Ebay for the first time since breaking her hip and pelvis in May 2021.

And, Castle Larchfield Purdy, now 20 years old and making his first start since competing at the Tokyo Olympics with Lauren Billys of Puerto Rico, won the Preliminary Rider B division with new rider Maddie Smith. The bay Irish Sport Horse gelding and Billys were also Olympians in Rio in 2016.

Welcoming New FEI Cross Country Course Designer Morgan Rowsell to Twin Rivers

India McEvoy and E’zara. Photo by Ride On Photo.

The Twin Rivers Spring International marked the first time for the event that the FEI cross country courses were designed by Morgan Rowsell (FEI Level 3 and USEA “S” course designer).

“I think ultimately the West Coast riders really want to have these courses up to snuff so that they can prepare for Kentucky and international competitions without having to spend all their time, money, and effort going out East,” he said. “My three-year plan would be to get some more infrastructure out to the racetrack [at Twin Rivers] and notch it up to the standard. We have a great event.”

Rowsell said that this is the first time he has designed cross country courses on dirt and that he was pleased with the footing at Twin Rivers. The background he brought from designing up to the Advanced level at the Millbrook Horse Trials, at the Horse Park of New Jersey, at Rocking Horse, at the Aspen Farm Horse Trials, and more was appreciated by riders on the West Coast.

“I thought it was awesome,” James Alliston said. “They used all the water jumps for the 3-star long, which is great. If you have them, why not use them—there was a bounce in, a big drop in, a water-to- water jump. It had everything, so I thought it was a really, really good course. It was long, which I think is important on flattish grounds to make it an endurance test. It had every sort of fence really.”

Added Twin Rivers organizer Connie Baxter: “We were really excited to welcome everyone back to Twin Rivers this year, and we appreciate all the support from the volunteers, sponsors, course builders, staff, and officials to make it happen. We’re excited to have Morgan be part of the team and what he will continue to bring to the course design of the event.”

CCI2*-Long: India McEvoy and E’Zara

India McEvoy and E’zara. Photo by Ride On Photo.

The lowest finishing score at the FEI levels was turned in by India McEvoy and E’zara with a 30.8. McEvoy was competing on the mare that she says stands just 15.1hh for the first time since having a baby eights weeks ago.

“I’ve had this goal of a two-star for like five years,” McEvoy said. “So, it was a big weekend for us to complete and do well. It was a fun weekend.” McEvoy’s coach, James Alliston, had ridden E’zara in her two previous events at the end of 2021.

“I just started riding her six weeks ago after I had my boy,” McEvoy said.

In addition to getting back in the saddle after giving birth, McEvoy’s sense of timing also showed through by finishing her double clear cross country round on the optimum time of 7:19, giving her the tiebreaker over Taylor McFall and Stoneman, who finished with an identical score of 30.8.

CCI3*-Short: Andrea Baxter and Laguna Seca

In the CCI3*-Short, Andrea Baxter and Laguna Seca were the only pair without a rail in stadium jumping and the only pair to finish within the time while jumping clear on cross country to finish on their dressage score of 33.0. Their cross country time of 6:01 was 10 seconds below optimum and 13 seconds faster than any other competitor at the level.

“By riding him fast on the cross country, I really realized that he finds his scope out of a more forward step and gained a lot of confidence from doing that,” Baxter said. “I think going forward, I’ve discovered a new ride on him.”

Gina Economou and her bay Dutch Warmblood gelding Exclusive were second at 39.7, and Tommy Greengard and his bay Dutch Warmblood gelding Joshuay MBF were third at 39.9.

Baxter said she plans to move Laguna Seca back up to the Advanced level for his next show.

“I moved him up to Advanced last year, probably a little bit prematurely,” Baxter said. “He was going well, but not as well as I would have liked. So, I stepped him back down to Intermediate, 3-star to make it a little smoother and figure out where I could fill in the gaps. This weekend, I had the pressure on to win and finally went fast and think he had the best round he’s ever had. I’m really excited.”

CCI3*-Long: James Alliston and RevitaVet Calaro

James Alliston and RevitaVet Calaro. Photo by Ride On Photo.

In the CCI3*-Long, James Alliston and his bay Holsteiner gelding RevitaVet Calaro recorded a double- clear cross country round and added four jumping penalties to finish at 38.6 and defeat two entrants ridden by Chloe Smyth, the dark brown Thoroughbred gelding Flyin Huckleberry in second at 44.7 and the bay Belgian Warmblood gelding Guinness on Draught in third at 45.1.

“He’s a bit buzzy in the mind, but he’s really talented,” James Alliston said. “He’s just hot, and it takes a bit of work to have him relaxed in the dressage. He’s just sort of a bit lit-up in general on the show grounds, kind of nervy. He has a lot of talent, going well, and will have learned a lot this weekend.”

James Alliston completed a trifecta of blue ribbons with the chestnut Canadian Warmblood gelding Nemesis at Advanced and the bay Hanoverian gelding Irish Pop at Intermediate.

Nemesis has not been outside of the top two in seven events since July 2021. He overtook James Alliston’s other entrant at Advanced, the chestnut Hanoverian-Thoroughbred gelding Paper Jam, by jumping clear and just adding time penalties to finish on a score of 47.6.

“Nemesis is green and has only done one Advanced two weeks ago, but he’s a very nice horse,” he said. “Just giving him mileage at the level really. It was a nice, strong course, had all sort of different jumps, lots of different jumps in the water. So, I think he will have learned a lot.”

James Alliston is scheduled to compete at the Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event for the first time since 2017 with Paper Jam.

“I’m quite nervous,” said Alliston, who previously competed in Kentucky every year from 2011 to 2017. “I think when you’re going every year, it’s just sort of routine. But, I haven’t been in a while, and it’s the horse’s first time going.”

Irish Pop finished on his dressage score of 30.6 at Intermediate over Haley Turner and Shadow Inspector.

CCI4*-Short: Helen Alliston and Ebay

Helen Alliston and Ebay. Photo by Ride On Photo.

The CCI4*-Short was the 16th victory for Ebay since Helen Alliston began competing on the grey Oldenburg gelding in 2016, but she said this win was particularly significant.

“This was our first big one; we had a bit of a crash last May and I broke my hip and my pelvis,” she said. “It was a little bit nerve-racking going into this one. This was my first time back at the level, but he felt fantastic and confident. So, I was thrilled.”

Helen Alliston and Ebay also won at the level at the Woodside International in October 2019. Their win at Twin Rivers over Madison Temkin and the bay Thoroughbred gelding Dr. Hart came after a 29.1 in dressage and adding four stadium jumping penalties plus some time penalties in the jumping phases to finish on 42.3.

Wrapping Up and Looking Ahead

James Alliston and RevitaVet Calaro. Photo by Ride On Photo.

In Open Preliminary, Jordan Linstedt and the bay Hanoverian mare Lovely Lola only added 1.6 time penalties on cross country to their dressage score of 22.6 to finish at 24.2 for their fifth win in a row at the Preliminary level. Maddie Smith and the bay Thoroughbred gelding Versace won Preliminary Rider A with a score of 32.7, while Smith and Castle Larchfield Purdy moved up from 12th after dressage to win Preliminary Rider B with a score of 39.3.

Looking ahead in the 2022 calendar, Twin Rivers is scheduled to host the Twin Rivers Summer Horse Trials from June 30 to July 3, the Twin Rivers Fall International from Sept. 22 to 25, and the FEH & YEH Last Chance Qualifier and West Coast Championships from Oct. 27 to 29.

The full list of winners from the 2022 Twin Rivers Spring International:

CCI4*-S: Helen Alliston and Ebay (42.3)
CCI3*-L: James Alliston and RevitaVet Calaro (38.6)
CCI3*-S: Andrea Baxter and Laguna Seca (33.0)
CCI2*-L: India McEvoy and E’zara (30.8)
Advanced: James Alliston and Nemesis (47.6)
Open Intermediate: James Alliston and Irish Pop (30.6)
Open Preliminary: Jordan Linstedt and Lovely Lola (24.2)
Preliminary Rider A: Maddie Smith and Versace (32.7)
Preliminary Rider B: Maddie Smith and Castle Larchfield Purdy (39.3) Open Training: Tommy Greengard and Shannondale Fionn (28.1)
Sr. Training Rider A: Gabriella Ringer and Get Wild (26.4)
Sr. Training Rider B: Audrey Morrissey and Lord Limon (30.6)
Jr. Training Rider: Morgan Tyler and Livius (26.9)
Training Amateur: Kristin Terris and Rathcash Olympia (29.7) Training Horse: Rebecca Braitling and Conlino PS (29.4)
Open Novice: Tommy Greengard and Global Barouma (23.6)
Sr. Novice Rider: Sarah Ross and Fernhill Heart Throb (33.0)
Jr. Novice Rider: Abigail Huth and London Calling OHF (26.4) Novice Amateur: Margaret Crow and Gusto (30.8)
Novice Horse: Frankie Thieriot Stutes and Cooley Sky Watch (20.6) Open Beginner Novice: Caitlin Davison and Manaslu (27.9)
Sr. Beginner Novice Rider: Angela Bryson and Petite Pavarotti (29.7) Jr. Beginner Novice Rider: Gracie Pitts and Valeureux (28.4)

Sponsors and Volunteers

Twin Rivers was proud to host the 2022 Twin Rivers Spring International with generous support from sponsors.

Presenting sponsors for the season include: LEGIS Equine, horsemen insuring horsemen, Auburn Labs, manufacturers of the adaptogenic APF Formula for horses, people and dogs; Best Western PLUS Black Oak, which offers exclusive discounts for exhibitors; and Professional’s Choice, manufacturers of sports medicine boots for equine athletes.

Supporting sponsors include: Chubby Cov, makers of beautiful custom stock ties; Riding Warehouse, the horse gear and apparel supplier; and RevitaVet, a leader in preventative maintenance and rehabilitative infrared therapy devices.

For 2022 sponsorship opportunities, please contact Christina Gray of Gray Area Events at [email protected].

Volunteers play a major part of events at Twin Rivers. Twin Rivers’ generous volunteer incentive program includes vouchers for show stabling and credits for schooling between events at the beautiful 500-acre venue. That is in addition to the genuine appreciation of the Baxter family and the entire Twin Rivers team. To sign up, please visit www.twinrivershorsepark/volunteer.

Many thanks to Ride On Photo for the images — click here to shop your rider gallery if you competed at Twin Rivers this weekend!