Classic Eventing Nation

Christmas Wish List, Done! The SmartPak Winter Apparel You Need

Images via SmartPak.

My family is so on top of Christmas shopping that they already have a group text going strong with wish-lists for each individual family member, immediate and extended, with specific sizes, colors and shopping links. Me, I’m always the weirdo who’s comes in hot on Dec. 24 like “What if all of you go in together on a seven-vial of Adequan? Ooh, and some needles and syringes would make a great accompanying stocking stuffer.”

They only took the bait once, and to be honest I think it was a deeply disappointing experience for them. These people, your loving and generous family, they want to see you out in the world actively utilizing and appreciating their gifts (“Why thank you for the compliment on this argyle sweater, it was a Christmas gift from my mother-in-law!”), not injecting their gift into an animal who may well still come up lame at exactly the wrong moment (“Thanks so much for the $300+ dollars worth of Adequan but my horse decided to pop an abscess/impale himself on a fence/other assorted act of self-destruction the day before dressage anyway.”)

Winter riding gear is the perfect solution. Instead of leaving your family to their own devices, AKA another argyle sweater, steer them toward a winter riding gear wish list at SmartPak! It has real-world applications that they can see AND you’ll genuinely appreciate. And today only, you can get 25% off Piper & Hadley Outerwear with code 12Deal9. 

To get you started:

Sport Horse Nation Spotlight: Seven 17+ Hand Eventers

In the market for a new four-legged partner? You may find your unicorn on our sister site, Sport Horse Nation. To help with the search, we’re going to feature a selection of current listings here on EN. We include the ad copy provided; click the links for videos, pricing and contact information.

If you’re a long-legged rider looking for a new event horse to match, the dating pool can sometimes seem small. Here are seven 17+ hand horses that have been listed on Sport Horse Nation since the beginning of October, ranging from 17 solid hands to a whopping 17.3!

Photo via Sport Horse Nation.

Training packer ready to move up

2011 OTTB 17.2+ hh mare (JC name Affirmed Coed)

Sire: Prefer; Dam: Hopeful Coed; USEA Horse ID 201088

8 Training level competitions at recognized shows with no XC jump penalties

1st place at Texas Rose and 2nd place at Heritage Park in 2019 (Training level)

Selling because I realized I don’t have the bandwidth to compete two horses while working a full-time job with a commute. Mal has not been competed in ~1 year because I moved and am building out a new barn/facility. Had planned to move her up to Preliminary level before COVID hit and before I moved. Then life happened.

Mal has excellent ground manners. Clips/ties/trailers. Can hop on her from just about any object (necessary as she’s a tall girl!). Will carefully jump anything you point her at.

XC is her strength. She’s ready to pack a young person up through the levels or for an AA to move up to Prelim/Intermediate. Could also see her excelling in the Hunter ring.

Videos are of Mal running XC a year ago and packing around a beginner a few weeks ago.

Price negotiable to an excellent home.

Photo via Sport Horse Nation.

Training packer with Prelim/Intermediate miles

Parc Cooley “Parker” is a 2007 17h Irish Sport Horse gelding looking for his next partner! A cross country machine, careful in the showjump ring, and amazing movement scoring 20s and 30s in the dressage.

Parker is only offered for sale as owner does not have the time and funds to compete him between finishing college and going to law school. This is a competition horse and he is ready to go! Recently placed 2nd at Stable View Eventing Academy in the Novice division with a YR who had just started riding him. Parker has Prelim/Intermediate and FEI miles with his previous owner and is ready to show his new person the ropes of eventing.

Price reflects owners inability to compete. 5 star home ONLY for this wonder horse.

Photo via Sport Horse Nation.

Newly Minted Prelim horse – Level 2 dressage

“Loo” is a 9 y.o., 17.1 hh Irish Thoroughbred with potential to be competitive at the top-levels of eventing or in pure dressage.

He is confirmed at the T level with a win in a very competitive field at Bromont CCI-S Horse Trial. He has successfully completed two Preliminary courses this Fall, winning the dressage phase each time. Consistent below-30 dressage scores, including a 22.1 (77.9%) at his last Preliminary outing.

This very elegant boy has also been shown at the level 1 in pure dressage in 2020, winning every test with results up to 74%. He is schooling level 2 and level 3 movements at home with ease.

Loo has a relaxed and positive attitude at work, with very elastic gaits and a powerful jump. His best assets are his trainability and his astonishing balanced and uphill canter, which can be collected for dressage or stretched to devour the ground in XC.

He is a snaffle ride in all three phases.

Loo can be spooky and playful at times and thus needs an intermediate/advanced rider that can take a joke.

On the ground, Loo is a barn favorite – he ties, showers, clips, loads, travels without problem and is friends with the farrier and the vet. He currently lives out 24/7 but is also used to live in a stall.

No known injury.

Photo via Sport Horse Nation.

Good Man – 4yrs 17.3h ISH gelding, recently imported

Good Man is the first young horse of this size that I’ve purchased. He is uphill, balanced, relaxed, and rhythmic, with an unbeatable canter. His kind and willing temperament offsets the liability of his size, even as a four year old. He has the quality of a show horse, should excel in the equitation, and should be able to be competitive in the jumpers as well. Also, a credible derby prospect.
irishhorsesusa.com/available-horses

Photo via Sport Horse Nation.

Top quality 4 year old

Lots of video available upon request!

RHS Mandiamo.
4 yrs old, KWPN 17.0 gelding.

The best 4 yr old I have ever sat on! Has competed 1.0m to 1.05m prior to import. We have done xc on a line with him, and he does all the things without batting an eye. Brave, has incredible movement, and is extremely easy on the ground, and to ride. He has all the star quality for upper level for a pro, but also has an A/A or YR friendly disposition.

Photo via Sport Horse Nation.

Lovely Allrounder Mare!

Birdie is a lovely 2007 17hh Black Dutch Mare

Super on the flat, experienced and goes in a snaffle!

Amateur friendly and ready to go!

Photo via Sport Horse Nation.

17.1 2013 Irish Gelding

The Nobleman a.k.a. Norman, was imported from the U.K. In May of 2021. He loves cross country and fox hunting, and is in a dressage program 4-5 days a week. He has a wonderful attitude, and very nice work ethic. He hacks out alone or in company, and is happy living out or in.
Norman is the whole package, he has beautiful uphill gaits, not spooky or silly, and has the cutest personality. He is wonderful with hounds and stands quietly at meets. He prefers first or second field, but can be easily managed hill topping.

Norman is patient for vet, farrier, dentist. Easy to ship and clip.

He passed a 5 stage vetting in May and has had no soundness issues. Radiographs available.

Listings included in this article are randomly selected and not confirmed to be current and active before inclusion. Sport Horse Nation features user-generated content and therefore cannot verify or make any warranty as to the validity or reliability of information.

Why Saddle Fit Matters: The Anatomy Under the Perfect Fit

Dealing with saddle fit issues can be more than frustrating to a rider. Trying to find a saddle that the rider loves AND that shows love to the horse can even seem impossible! We all know that a saddle needs to fit our horse, but what is the anatomy underneath it that makes this true?

No matter the kind of riding, saddles are designed to fit onto the thoracic region of a horse’s back. The thoracic region is the section of the back that has ribs and comes after the cervical vertebrae (the neck) but before the lumbar vertebrae (lower back). The thoracic region is made up of 18 total vertebrae in the horse, known as T1-T18. This region is unique to the rest of the spine because of the large spinous processes that point upwards on each vertebra, similar to a dorsal fin on a fish! Where these spinous processes are the tallest, is known as the withers of the horse.

Illustration via VIP Equestrian.

Because of the prominence of the spinous processes of the withers, a saddle’s gullet must have enough “clearance”, both in height and width, over the withers (and rest of the thoracic spine) to prevent rubbing against the spinous processes. This is important to check both before and after exercise because the weight of a rider can push the saddle down onto the horse’s back. Interestingly though, a horse’s body has a natural cushion over the withers, known as the supraspinous bursa, that provides some protection to this region. Irritate the withers enough though and this bursa can become inflamed and very painful.

How far up the withers a saddle sits, is also important for the scapula, also known more commonly as the shoulder blade. The scapula is a large fan shaped bone that sits at an angle from the point of the horse’s shoulder, back to the withers. When in motion, the scapula moves like a windshield wiper, forward and back against the sides of the horse with each step. If a saddle sits too high up the horse’s withers, the front of the saddle can cover this “windshield wiper”, as it tries to move with every step. Rubbing can occur here too, but more importantly, the saddle will be in the way of the movement.

Illustration via VIP Equestrian.

If a saddle is sitting to far down the withers or slides into this position, a different problem occurs. In this case, more of the saddle may be onto the lumbar region of the horse’s spine. Unlike the thoracic region that normally performs more lateral (side to side) movement, the lumbar region is responsible for more dorsoventral (up and down) movement of the back. It would make sense then that more rider weight onto the region where the spine is designed to lift, would make this movement more difficult for them to perform.

The saddle’s flaps, skirts, and panels having a smooth contour and even weight distribution with the tissues they are in contact with is very important to the epaxial muscles. Epaxial muscles are the muscles that sit next to and above the vertebral column. Uneven pressure or weight on these muscles can cause pain and even muscle atrophy (loss of muscle mass).

Illustration via VIP Equestrian.

No matter your type of riding, the basic anatomy that influences saddle fit remains the same. Making sure your saddle fits is important to your horse’s health. Asking your veterinarian to evaluate your horse’s back and saddle fit is just another way we can ensure our horses are taken care of, because as always … it’s about the horse!

VIP EQUESTRIAN: Looking for the very best impact protection? The VIP pad is made with a proprietary polymer used for over 50 years to prevent and treat pressure sores and ulcers in humans. This medical grade polymer has been rigorously tested worldwide in peer reviewed research and is known as the universal gold standard for impact protection. It does not leak or bottom out under pressure, providing better cushioning to the horse’s back like a low profile second skin, while drawing and dispersing heat from the horse’s back, regulating temperature. It is hypoallergenic, easy to clean, and does not support bacterial growth. This polymer is used in other applications, including the military, in gun recoil pads, in spaceship harnesses, by stunt actors, in football helmets, motorcycle seats, and several other sporting uses. Click the link below to learn more. 

Tuesday News & Notes from Legends Horse Feed

 

It’s baby season, folks, and we’ve got two rounds of huge congratulations to deliver over here in the UK to two five-star eventers, their partners, and their new tiny people. Julia Norman and husband Tristan welcomed baby Max into the world on November 12th, while James Sommerville and his wife Lucinda were joined by daughter Aoife Olivia yesterday. Both babies are gorgeous and thriving, and we look forward to seeing them join the rabble of mad lorry park children in the seasons to come!

Events Closing Today: Sporting Days Farm Horse Trials IVRocking Horse December H.T.

Tuesday News:

No one’s having a particularly nice time in the wake of Brexit, but the UK’s formerly thriving equestrian industry is being hit particularly hard. Conservative-leaning newspaper The Telegraph has published a short but searing indictment of how the government is handling the situation (which is to say, quite predictably, not at all), featuring comments from showjumping gold medallist Nick Skelton, who has been forced to relocate to the Netherlands as a result.

Rustling up equal rumblings is the Olympic three-to-a-team format, which was introduced at Tokyo this year. The format change, which was brought in to allow for more flags within the sport and is considered by many to be a last-gasp attempt to keep horse sports at the Games, has been criticised as unfair to riders and horses alike. Catch up with the viewpoints from the FEI General Assembly here.

Do you know an ex-racehorse who’s become a major character in their second life? Retraining of Racehorses, the UK’s foremost ex-racehorse support system and charity, is accepting nominations for their second-ever Horse Personality of the Year Award — click here to find out more and to make your nomination!

Badminton’s back for 2022, baby — and if you’ve ever daydreamed about working at this iconic event, there’s a pretty sweet job being advertised right now. Badminton’s team is looking for someone to helm their digital content, working across their website and social media channels to create engaging content that’ll make everyone as excited as you are for the return of this showpiece competition. Fancy the best behind-the-scenes view of the event? Check out the job spec here.

Video Break:

Interested in a more in-depth look at the three-to-a-team debate? Here’s a clip of Swiss showjumper Steve Guerdat arguing the case at the General Assembly.

Monday Video: #MondayMotivation Thanks to Alexandra MacLeod

Can we officially add Alexandra MacLeod‘s name to the list of way cool eventing wonder women? (The correct answer is YES.)

In case you missed it, Alex recently topped the leaderboard of the Galway Downs Fall International CCI4*-L with her and her mother Carla’s Newmarket Jack, a 12-year-old Irish Sport Horse gelding (Newmarket Jewel — Newmarket Chantepie). The only pair in their division to finish on their dressage score, they climbed from seventh after dressage to clinch their first ever FEI win.

As if that isn’t impressive enough, Alex also earned her veterinary degree from the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine just last spring. A former Area II Young Rider, she has managed to make riding and competing in eventing fit around her undergraduate studies and veterinary school, and now her post-doctoral work and education — that’s no mean feat! While Alex originally hails from the East Coast, she has recently moved to California for an internship in Los Angeles (of course she brought Jack with her!) where she’ll be focusing on radiology and imaging.

Thanks Alex, for showing us that with enough hard work and dedication you CAN do at all. Let’s enjoy Alex and Jack’s cross country from Galway run thanks to Ride On Video!

Galway Downs International (Temecula, Ca.): [Website] [Final Scores]

FEI Eventing World Rankings Update: Oliver Townend Still #1, Boyd Martin #7

Boyd Martin and On Cue. Photo by Abby Powell.

The deep-threat British continue to dominate the FEI Eventing World Rankings with four of the top 10 and seven of the top 15 spots in the world taken by British riders. It’s no surprise to see Oliver Townend still ranked at the top — his second-place finish at the Maryland 5 Star as well as competitive finishes at Le Lion d’Angers and Pau helped solidify his position as the year winds down with a total of 676 points accumulated.

The FEI rankings are based on the riders’ best six performances over the past 12 months. Rankings roll over for a 12-month period; i.e. at the end of each month, the points earned during that month are added to the list and the points from the same month the previous year are dropped. Only the best six scores from the season count towards the final tally.

Tokyo silver medalist Tom McEwen moves up two spots from #4 to #2, and New Zealand’s Tim Price remains in his #3 spot. Jonelle Price also moves up a bit, from #7 to #5.

Thanks to his big win at the Maryland 5 Star, Boyd Martin also moves up from #9 to #7 to be the sole U.S. rider in the top 10; Lauren Nicholson is the next highest-ranked, moving up to #13 from #19 with 462 points accumulated.

Weekend Winners: Tryon, Majestic Oaks, River Glen

We may be winding down the season, but there are still a few weekends of eventing left on the books — let’s get to this weekend’s winners’ roundup!

Our Unofficial Low Score Award this week was earned at Tryon International, where Tik Maynard held on to a wire-to-wire lead aboard Galileo, who was originally purchased by his father, Rick, with a dressage background. He’s taken to eventing quite well, though, and won the massive CCI2*-L at Tryon on a score of 21.8.

Tryon International Three-Day Event (Tryon, Nc.): [Website] [Results] [EN’s Coverage]

CCI4*-L: Woods Baughman and C’est La Vie 135 (29.4)
CCI4*-S: Phillip Dutton and Z (35.6)
CCI3*-L: Ariel Grald and Forrest Gump 124 (27.7)
CCI2*-L: Tik Maynard and Galileo (21.8)
CCI1*-L: Boyd Martin and Gestalt (27.7)

 

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Horse Trials at Majestic Oaks (Reddick, Fl.): [Website] [Results]

Open Preliminary: Kylie Lyman and Monbeg Heatwave (48.2)
Preliminary Rider: Stephanie Tyler-Wright and Madison Avenue (36.8)
Open Training: Anna Martin and Furstina (30.2)
Training Rider: Amelia Ebhardt and Fernhill In Motion (32.1)
Novice Rider: Catherine Hatcher and RathPierce Lord (32.1)
Open Novice: Libby Head and Face Value (27.6)
Beginner Novice Rider: Audrey Bennett and Bad to the Bone (27.8)
Open Beginner Novice: Jessica Shull and Redbud Quite A Day (31.7)
Starter/Intro: Elliott Timmons and Are You Dancin (34.7)

 

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River Glen H.T. (New Market, Tn.): [Website] [Results]

Intermediate/Preliminary: Emily Ballard and Sexy Swinging Walk (57.9)
Open Preliminary: Annabelle Friend and Fine With Me (44.8)
Preliminary/Training: Jordan Knight and Southern Gentleman (37.0)
Open Training: Erin Pullen and Theodoor (33.8)
Training Rider: Olivia Marsh and Decadence (31.3)
Training/Novice: Serena Baensch and Sytation (29.0)
Novice Horse: Valerie Johnson and Henson (32.6)
Novice Rider Jr.: Kylee Casey and Dani (28.3)
Novice Rider Sr.: Isobel Crumb and Promise Windstar (32.1)
Open Novice: Amanda Farmer and Boyd Marden (29.8)
Beginner Novice Horse: Madeline Thompson and Southern Heritage (33.8)
Beginner Novice Rider Jr.: Rosemary Milek and Oakfields Ennis (27.0)
Beginner Novice Rider Sr. A: Lindsay Parsley and Kilkenny Mile (29.8)
Beginner Novice Rider Sr. B: Gemma Kearns and Vanderbilt (30.0)
Open Beginner Novice: Rachel Miles and Cooley Keystone (34.0)

 

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Your Ultimate Guide to the 2021 Goresbridge ‘Go For Gold’ Select Event Horse Sale

Photo courtesy of Goresbridge Online Auctions.

It’s almost go time for this year’s Goresbridge ‘Go For Gold’ Select Event Horse Sale! The sale kicks off today in Wexford, Ireland with a live preview to showcase over 80 horses available on offer, ranging from three-year-olds up through six- and seven-year-old purpose-bred eventing horses. This year, the Go For Gold sale returns with in-person attendance, but the event will still be offering a live stream and virtual bidding options as they did in 2020.

Ahead of tomorrow’s sale, each horse is ridden for in-person attendees as well as on a live stream for those not attending in person. You can view the live stream, which should also be available for full replay upon conclusion, here.

While you window-shop, here are some useful links to help you find your next unicorn:

How ‘Go For Gold’ Horses Are Selected
Goresbridge ‘Go For Gold’ website
Catalog Preview by Lot
2021 Catalog
Buyer Registration
Frequently Asked Questions
EN’s Coverage

Are you shopping this year? Send us a note at [email protected] and let us know who you end up with — we always love following Go For Gold graduates!

Adequan/USEF Eventing Youth Team Challenge – East Coast Final Winners Crowned at Tryon International

Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

The Area Two/Three/Eight team brought home the win in CCI 3*-L Adequan®/USEF Youth Team Challenge East Coast Finals competition, held this weekend at Tryon International in Mill Spring, Nc., after strong performances all week, featuring riders Alexandra Baugh, Elizabeth Bortuzzo, Benjamin Noonan, and Sarah Bowman. The conglomerate whittled their eligible scores to three after Bortuzzo retired during Cross-Country competition, but it was smooth sailing for the remaining trio and resulted in a total score of 119.1.

The team composed by riders from Areas Five and Six ran into some penalties when rider falls forced fewer than three team members to complete all phases. Nevertheless, riders Kit Ferguson, Zara Flores-Kinney, Barret Phillips, and Savannah Gwin brought home a reserve team placing on a score of 1206.2 [1000 point penalty for an incomplete score in Show Jumping].

Winner winners! Photo by Sally Spickard.

Winning teammates Noonan, Bowman, Baugh, and Bortuzzo were highly complimentary of the opportunity to compete on a team, despite not knowing each other well in advance of the Finals.

“Being on the team this weekend, it’s wonderful because I enjoy the people I’m around. Having it [a team] in a lower pressure, but also high-pressure situation, it lets you be a part of a team, and you’re wanting the best for your other teammates,” said Noonan.

“I’ve never been on an Eventing team. I’ve never met anyone else on my team, or on the three star team, and we get here and we act like we’ve known each other forever,” said Bowman. “And overall, it’s a great experience.”

Noonan and Keep Kitty, his own 2011 Hanoverian mare (Kolibris Vulkano Dree Boeken x Escudo 19), were also champions in the individual bracket, completing the weekend on a score of 38.5. Second and third went to Alexandra Baugh, who rode MHS Fernhill Finale, the 2012 Irish Sport Horse gelding (Verdi x Olympic Lux) owned by Altorac Farm, to reserve and a score of 38.8, and her own I Spye, the 2011 Irish Sport Horse gelding (Harlequin du Carel x Lombardo), to a score of 41.4 for third.

“I was a little bit disappointed in Dressage, because I did not have the test I was hoping for,” Noonan relayed. “But, I tried to ignore that and move on … I had one of the best, maybe the best Cross-Country rounds I’ve had in my entire life. Show Jumping is my favorite phase, and my horse’s favorite phase, and it just all came together. So, we had a really great weekend, and we love being at Tryon. It’s absolutely incredible being here,” he raved.

2*-L winning teams. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Area Two Claims CCI2*-L Title

Area Two took the win in CCI 2*-L Adequan®/USEF Youth Team Challenge East Coast Finals competition over five other teams, finishing on a score of 115.8 with teammates Jackson Dillard, Mia Braundel, Maddie Hale, and Kiera Kenny. Multiple riders or horses contested their first CCI2*-L at TIEC this weekend, including Kenny, Baundel, and Hale, whose horse also contested her first CCI 2*-L.

Dillard, who competes on the Clemson University Eventing Team, noted that “it’s always interesting when you work around other young professionals or up-and-coming young riders. They all have different backgrounds, and they all have different ways of interpreting things that are asked of you throughout the weekend, so being able to work with my teammates allowed me to learn a lot, and I’ll take a lot away from this weekend.”

Braundel reflected, “As a young professional, I really like being able to start getting team experience now. For the future, when we start going on to bigger things, I think it’s really helpful to be able to do this and have this experience.”

Jackson Dillard and Layla Q. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

“I love Area Two,” added Kenny, “and I’m very grateful to have been part of the team and it’s been really cool meeting everyone else on it. I have really good support, so my pressure was only as much as I put on myself. I was extremely happy with the outcome and really happy with my horse, who’s just been an amazing teacher for me this year. It’s very special.”

Hale agreed, saying, “I was just really grateful to have this experience and be part of the team. It was really amazing [to have] a team environment and I got to meet a lot of new people and new friends.”

Dillard was also first and third in the Individual competition, taking first with Layla Q, his 2011 Hanoverian mare (Loerke x Anhaltiner E), and earning third aboard Elmo, his 2009 Dutch Warmblood gelding (Van Gogh x Animo). “It was a wonderful experience to be here with Layla Q and Elmo this weekend. [Layla Q] really showed me what she’s capable of, and we’re going to keep moving forward with that. I look forward to it.” He concluded, “I’m nothing more than a product of the people behind me, so whether that’s my mother, my groom, the Clemson Eventing team where I’m a student, there’s a lot of people standing behind me that got me here and allowed me to be successful this weekend.”

1* Podium. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Two Teams Finish On CCI1*-L Podium

Two teams made it to the podium at the conclusion of CCI 1*-L Adequan®/USEF Youth Team Challenge East Coast Finals competition, with Area Two edging into the lead after Show Jumping for the win on a total score of 144.8 between teammates Ella Braundel, Caroline Brown, Grace Mykityshyn, and Juliana Cassar.

The team built by riders from Areas Three, Seven, and Five earned a reserve team title on the weekend, scoring a collective 153.3 points among Camryn Chung, Crockett Miller, Ava Holmes, and Chloe Johnson.

Johnson also took top honors in the individual race, almost beating one of her idols, Boyd Martin, aboard Chilli Bean. Canada’s Claudia Oppedisano and her own God of Thunder, the 2006 Thoroughbred Cross gelding (Matter of Courage x Unknown), scored 31.7 after three phases. Grace Mykityshyn and MTF Cooley Classic, the 2010 Irish Sport Horse gelding (Ars Vivendi x Olympic Lux) owned by Plain Dealing Farm, were third, going home with a podium-worthy score of 37.5 points.

“Chilli was absolutely a saint over the weekend. For Dressage, she perked right up as soon as we went in the ring and put down our best test ever,” Johnson divulged. “On Cross-Country, she’s always on it. She loves it, and she likes to go fast. She’ll cut any angle. I was really happy with her in the stadium. We took a rail, but that’s okay, it happens, and it was just an honest rail.

Boyd Martin and Chloe Johnson share the 1*-L victory lap. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

“He’s been my role model for years, just to be in the position I was in in Dressage and Cross-Country was an absolutely amazing feeling,” Johnson revealed about trading top places with Martin. “I know the horse he’s on, and I know the owner, who’s an amazing woman. After Dressage, just seeing that score … that feeling was absolutely unmatched. Even though we had this rail, which I just edged us out of first, I’m so incredibly proud of my mare. I’m so thankful for the opportunity to have competed against Boyd and gotten this experience with her.”

Mykityshyn gushed, “I’m just so happy to have a horse that’s so awesome in settings like this. It helps me stay calm when I get nervous. He was awesome. I feel like we’ve been working super hard on the flat, and I felt like that really paid off and scored a personal best.” She added, “I was really proud of how we were handling my nerves and just trying to get a feel more for him now too, after he’s tired and been here for a long week. He did have two rails, but he was so on it. I couldn’t have asked for a better horse.”

Canadian individual Oppedisano was “speechless” with her horse’s performance all weekend, she explained. “He was just on it for everything. And, he’s a Clydesdale-Thoroughbred, so Cross-Country is not the easiest for him to run. And he was just locked onto everything. I couldn’t have asked for a better week here.”

Claudia Oppedisano and God of Thunder. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Better still, she continued, was getting to compete under the lights in Tryon Stadium as the weekend came to a close. “It honestly was breathtaking getting in there,” she admitted. “I was actually kind of hoping to get to go under the lights. It was pretty cool to have that spotlight on us. Although it’s freezing, I’m glad that we got the chance to experience it.”

Her competitors agreed: “I feel like it definitely made the atmosphere feel bigger. You’ll see all the Grand Prix run under the lights here, and so it just felt like it was such a big deal, but still so chill at the same time,” Johnson commented. “It was just an incredible feeling.”

“It felt like I was in a dream, honestly, walking over here, at sunset, seeing the mountains. I’ve never been here before, and the venue is just amazing. They’ve done such a great job putting on this event,” Mykityshyn concluded.

The final results for the East Coast final of the YTC, both team and individual, are as follows:

Tryon International Three-Day Event (Tryon, Nc.): [Website] [Live Stream] [Final Scores] [EN’s Coverage]

Enjoy this gallery from the conclusion of the YTC, courtesy of Shannon Brinkman and her superstar team!