Classic Eventing Nation

The Literary Jim Wofford: A Review of ‘Still Horse Crazy After All These Years’

Readers of Eventing Nation will know James C. (“Jim”) Wofford as one of the premier three-day event competitors and trainers of event horses and riders of the past half century. A team and individual medalist in Olympic Games and World Championships, Wofford also won the U.S. National Championship five times on five different horses. He has coached the Canadian national team, and has taught a stellar roster of students, packed with U. S. Olympic and four-star riders, that comprises a who’s who of elite three-day eventing.

Many readers also will know Wofford as the author of technical and practical books, such as Training the 3-Day Event Horse and Rider, Gymnastics: Systematic Training of the Jumping Horse, and Cross-Country with Jim Wofford, and as a regular columnist in Practical Horseman. Fewer readers, though, may know Wofford as the writer of two literary works that are primarily but not only about horses: a collection of occasional essays, Take a Good Look Around (2007), and the recent memoir, Still Horse Crazy After All These Years (2021).

Take a Good Look Around

Imagine an equestrian writer not parented by a celebrated horseman and expert horsewoman, as Wofford was, but rather, say, by Mark Twain and Chelsea Handler, and you will have a sense of Take a Good Look Around—a collection of tall tales in the tradition of mild exaggeration and local color, on one side, and in the more current style of wild hyperbole and slightly off-color jokes, on the other. “My attitude,” Wofford repeats often with variations, “is that if it did not really happen the way I tell it, it should have.”

Comparing Take a Good Look to Wofford’s emails, William Steinkraus called it “usually funny in a very original way, often provocative and occasionally poignant.” Reflecting that tonal range, the book takes its title, Wofford notes, from an acerbic local expression for a guest who has drunk too much and won’t be invited back, but it also inevitably recalls Paul McCartney’s more genial plea to his Old English Sheepdog in “Martha My Dear”—a juxtaposition that also reflects Wofford’s ease with references from the folksy to the cosmopolitan, from how cowboys walk, for example, to Keb’ Mo.’

Take a Good Look, Wofford writes, “is about training horses, but it is also about people, and Labradors, and trout, and quail, and ducks, and places I have been, and our interaction with the natural world.” It has three parts: Hooks and Bullets; Mostly Horses; and Verse. Its first part, a sporting travelogue, roams from bird hunting in Texas to duck hunting in the Bayou, from trout fishing in Ireland to salmon fishing in Alaska, spinning tales of adventures and mishaps well-lubricated by “all-purpose brown.” Its brief third part comprises three verses, charming encomia to countryside, dogs, and foals.

The book, though, pivots on horses, “because my whole life has been dedicated to their training and welfare.” It opens with an essay on the Miles City [Montana] Bucking Horse Sale and, for example, its rollicking street bands—”You aren’t going to hear a lot of Cole Porter here, but you will see some fancy two-stepping.” Wofford uses the occasion to amplify his assessment of George Armstrong Custer, who appeared earlier as “an idiot . . . who nails his own horse right between the ears with a .44 slug,” and now as “a glory-hunting egomaniac . . . profligate with the lives of his men.” An entertaining essay, it speaks less specifically to eventers than do the three that follow it.

Those are Wofford’s authoritative “weblogs” posted from the 2000 Sydney Olympics, 2002 World Championships, and 2004 Athens Olympics. Since standings and scores would have appeared online prior to his reports, he notes, “if I was going to keep people interested . . . it would be because of my commentary, not my reportage.” The articles, consequently, read as polished dispatches, packed with insight, on horses, riders, overall event conditions, and, particularly, cross-country courses and specific rounds made on them. The posts from Athens also dwell on the new “short format,” sure to prompt a controversy about its “rights and wrongs,” a battle that Wofford would join more fully in Still Horse Crazy.

Still Horse Crazy After All These Years

A sustained narrative rather than a collection of essays, Still Horse Crazy is a fully realized literary work at once wry, wistful, and elegiac, like the Paul Simon song echoed in its title. It treats memory, for example, not as a simple instrument, but as a vexed process. Its subtitle and refrain, “if it didn’t happen this way, it should have,” uses a light hand to make a point. Both factual and fanciful, Horse Crazy not only will report the horse world as witnessed by Wofford, but also will explore Wofford’s subjective experience of the horse world—an interplay of public history and private memory, each with its own form of validity, its own set of challenges and rewards, and its own claim on the reader’s attention.

Still Horse Crazy, overall, unfolds Wofford’s life and multiple careers with horses—competitor, trainer, administrator, commentator, and writer—from his childhood in the 1940s and youth in the 1950s to the present day. The book also chronicles the history of Olympic-level three-day eventing, particularly its evolution from a military to a civilian enterprise and its transformations as both institution and sport. In addition to text, the book includes nearly a hundred photographs. Mainly professional action shots of horses and riders over fences, they celebrate three generations of equestrian partnerships.

Wofford, the book begins, has been “horse crazy” his whole life, “obsessed with horses . . . how to ride them, how to train them, how to care for them, how they think, and how we should think about them.” After growing up in a “horse-crazy family,” he married Gail Williams, “horse crazy, too,” and now his wife of over fifty years. Driven by “an instinctive, irresistible power,” he determined when young “to pursue a life that revolved around horses”—a life, he concludes some four hundred pages later, spent “on the back of a horse, complete,” that is, with perhaps a nod to Le Comte d’Aure, a life as a centaur.

Family looms large in this memoir. Wofford’s father, a cavalry officer, rode on the U.S. Army show-jumping team at the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics and was non-riding reserve rider at the 1936 Berlin Olympics; he was a founder and the first president of “the newly formed civilian U.S. Equestrian Team [and] coach of the 1952 Helsinki Olympic show jumping and eventing teams.” His mother bred Olympic level “Thoroughbred sport horses,” including “three of the four horses on the Helsinki eventing team,” and the mare Hollandia, ridden by Wofford’s sister-in-law in the 1960 Rome Olympics. His brothers were Olympians and his wife an avid foxhunter and former MFH; their daughters and grandchildren are all riders.

The military looms equally large. Three-day eventing emerged from cavalry training, and “from the first equestrian Olympics in 1912 until 1948,” Wofford reminds us, “participants were exclusively men in uniform.” Wofford’s boyhood dream was “to be a cavalry officer between 1920 and 1940: I would have been paid to ride, show, steeplechase, play polo, and generally live a horseman’s dream.” Although that option disappeared when the Army dehorsed, “close family friends,” mainly senior Army officers who had ridden with his father, arranged for Wofford to complete his military service in the 1960s by training for Olympic competition and coaching at the U.S. Army Pentathlon Training Center.

The early chapters of Still Horse Crazy, of course, focus on Wofford’s training. Coaches at Gladstone, New Jersey, “the mecca of the U.S. horse world,” emphasized “a different system of riding than I was used to . . . no longer the U.S. Cavalry system, as developed by General Harry Chamberlin,” but one based on controlling “every movement of the horse.” As a result, “I was changing my riding from an Italian system [as modified by Chamberlin] to a German system.” Over time, he would learn to combine them, tutored both by practical experience and the work of classical and modern writers on military equitation, especially Chamberlin, who had taught Wofford’s father and whom Wofford reveres.

That experience and reading had a salient effect. Following the Caprilli revolution, theorists had dismissed dressage as either antithetical or irrelevant to jumping and riding across country. Chamberlin, though, revived the nineteenth-century cavalry’s emphasis on the critical role of dressage in training the cavalry horse and rider—not only for the discipline needed to maneuver in close formation, but also for the suppleness and agility needed to cover ground and jump fences. Not surprisingly, and despite his obvious passion for the cross-country phase, Wofford has advocated consistently for the importance of dressage in training event horses.

Later chapters, and the bulk of the book, focus on Wofford’s career in elite international competition from 1959 to his retirement in 1986. His riding successes were legion: they feature Olympic, World Championship, and National Championship medals, including an individual Silver Medal in the 1980 Alternate Olympics, and two wins at Kentucky: “wire-to-wire” in 1981, and “at my final Classic” in 1986, the latter allowing him to “retire on top.” Likewise his teaching successes: Wofford’s students included all four members of the U.S. Bronze Medal team at the 2000 Sydney Olympics, three of the four members of the U.S. Gold Medal team at the 2002 WEG, and individual medalists at three Olympic games.

Despite those successes, however, Still Horse Crazy shies neither from Wofford’s failure, at times, to make teams, win competitions, or accrue championships, nor from the riding mistakes that caused the missed opportunities, nor from the frustrated ambitions that followed them. In a slump in the late 1970s, for example, Wofford “had ridden in the Olympics twice . . . but hadn’t been on a Team of any sort for five years [and] had not won any competition above Preliminary level since 1972.” While that would change for the better with the 1980 Olympics and a ranking of “number three in the world . . . I was still unsatisfied. I wanted to be the best event rider in the world before I retired.”

In the early 1980s, in any case, and while still competing, Wofford began looking toward “the next chapter in my life, a life that would not revolve around competitions.” He became immersed in “the world of horse politics . . . what Gail called the alphabets (AHSA, USCTA, USET, FEI, USOC, IOC),” a commitment that occupied him through 2004. He served as “an officer in all three associations responsible for my sport—the USET, the USCTA, and the AHSA.” With a brother and sister-in-law holding similar positions in England, “we were responsible for about 150,000 riders.” Like much in his life, in a word, this service too was a “Wofford family affair.”

As noted earlier, the essentially bifocal Still Horse Crazy chronicles the world of U.S. eventing as closely as it does Wofford’s journey through it. Eventers in the 1960s, for example, were “a small, disorganized group of people who wanted to gallop at speed over solid obstacles and then party like hell that night.” By the early 1970s, however, “USCTA [subsequently USEA] had grown from several hundred members to more than a thousand.” Likewise event horses. In 1966, “the U.S. eventing team . . . assembled every conceivably qualified horse in the country . . . and it wasn’t an impressive list”; by 1984, horses had to compete to qualify. Even so, Wofford sums up, “opportunities [taken] for granted . . . today simply did not exist in eventing in 1984.”

Growth in numbers aside, the change from “classic” to short form in the early 2000s, in Wofford’s view, changed everything: horse breeding and training, rider strategy and tactics, and, of course, scoring. While classic events “were usually decided by the speed and endurance test,” the short form weights dressage. Neither format is a cake walk, but Wofford’s preference rings clear: “I have enjoyed both the psychic payoff from success in an upper-level, big-time short format event—and the ecstatic joy one feels after completing a Classic. They are not even close. There is no sensation like completing a Classic cross-country phase. And when your horse has come out on top of the placings? Indescribable.”

That brings us, finally, to the not-so-secret heroes of Still Horse Crazy: horses. Without a fit, bold, and superbly trained animal as a partner, Wofford makes clear, no rider, no matter how expert, can achieve excellence at the highest levels. While the perfect equine partners for success arrive reasonably soon for some riders, such as Prince Panache for Karen O’Connor or Custom Made for David O’Connor, others turn up later, such as Three Magic Beans for Nina Fout or Donner for Lynn Symansky. In the meantime, such outstanding riders must bide their time and endure the frustration of deferred dreams.

Counting himself among them, Wofford did not lack for good horses, but he still had not found, by the 1970s, “a horse with talent to match my dreams.” He soon would. Following Kilkenny (Henry), “a young man’s ride [who] disliked dressage,” and Castlewellan (Paddy), who excelled in dressage and could have won either classic or short form events, Carawich (Pop) “found” Wofford, as he puts it. Thus began a “partnership with the best horse I would ever ride . . . I rode him for four years, and there was never a time when I did not feel that he could read my mind.” Perfectly matched, the partners excelled in the 1978 World Championships, 1980 Olympics, and 1981 Kentucky Three-Day.

As should be obvious, any eventing competitor or spectator will find Still Horse Crazy After All These Years a highly instructive and rewarding read—a tour through the recent history of the sport with an expert guide who experienced it first-hand. Readers also will enjoy the book’s literary quality. As a youth without TV, Wofford devoured literary classics; later, as an undergraduate, he studied them formally. He appreciates good prose, in short, so he takes lessons in writing, as well as in riding, from models like Harry Chamberlin, whose “literary work reminds us of the power of the simple declarative sentence.” Along with Chamberlin, Jim Wofford belongs to the select group of horsemen and horsewomen who, over the centuries, have both ridden with tact and written with finesse.

Charles Caramello is John H. Daniels Fellow at the National Sporting Library and Museum in Middleburg, Virginia, and the author of Riding to Arms: A History of Horsemanship and Mounted Warfare, forthcoming in January 2022 from University Press of Kentucky.

Still Horse Crazy After All These Years, by Jim Wofford, is available in print and eBook from Horse and Rider Books here

Tuesday News & Notes from Legends Horse Feed

 

If you’ve ever dreamed of a career in equestrian photography, we’ve found one heck of an opportunity for you, courtesy of Shelley Paulson Photography and Eye Candy Jumpers. Want some industry leading mentorship and the chance to go to Wellington to hone your craft? Click on the post above for all the deets and to register your interest. Happy snapping!

Events Closing Today: Horse Trials at Majestic Oaks

Tuesday News:

The Holekamp/Turner Grant, which funds a trip to the Young Horse World Championships at Le Lion d’Angers, is one of the most coveted grants in US eventing — but what does winning it mean for a horse’s future? Check out some of the graduates and what they’ve been up to since making the trip to France.

Does your workout regime consist of riding, mucking out, and traipsing back and forth to the field? There’s a strong case to be made for adding in supplementary training — and if you’ve ever met an equestrian who’s tried Pilates, you’ll know that there’s a lot of love for this mixed discipline workout. Here’s why you — and your horse — should give it a go.

Everything Chris Bartle touches turns to gold, and that’s just the facts. Formerly the German team’s secret weapon, he’s spent the last few years turning the Brits into an unbeatable beast of a squad. But what’s actually behind his remarkable ability to transform the very good into the truly legendary?

Breeding is no joke, and if your precious mare is in foal, you’re more than likely quietly stressing out about the whole thing pretty much constantly. Save yourself a bit of anguish — and get prepared to spot the signs of anything amiss — with this comprehensive piece.

In need of some inspiration before you fire the clippers up this week? Check out these 50 artistic shave jobs and start planning how you’ll explain your motives to your yard owner.

Video Break:

Winter is coming, and Michael Jung‘s retirees La Biosthetique Sam and fischerRocana are certainly embracing it.

Monday Video: Dressage on the Trail

As eventers, we have a pretty good understanding of the value of cross training. We also recognize the benefits of spending some time outside of the arena on a nice hack — it can do wonders for our horses’ fitness and wellbeing, after all.

While a relaxing amble on the buckle has loads of value in itself, switching things up and working a little dressage practice into your trail rides can be beneficial as well. In this video, dressage rider Amelia Newcomb offers us no less than three exercises that can be easily incorporated into your trail rides — just in time for prime winter hacking season!

10 Gifts to Pick Up During SmartPak’s Extended Holiday Sale

For better or worse, we’re into holiday shopping season already. If you’re like me, you run the gauntlet of really-on-top-of-sh*t to oh-snap-it’s-Christmas-Eve each year. I tried to be pretty on top of my shopping this year because I can’t say no to a good sale, so if you’re in the same boat you’ll want to take advantage of our partner SmartPak’s extended Black Friday sale. You’ll save 15% off just about anything on your list and you’ll also receive a free gift with your purchase using code BF2021.

I’m a big fan of gift lists, so we went through and picked out some items that are just asking to be gifted to your kid, coach, barn bestie or even yourself this holiday season. I’ve also included excerpts from top reviews, if available, from SmartPak shoppers for each item to help ease your decision along. Happy shopping!

1. A gorgeous SmartPak Soft Padded Leather Halter

Photo courtesy of SmartPak.

With 18 colors to choose from and customization available (be sure to order ASAP to avoid shipping delays!), this halter is sure to please the color-coordinated rider on your list.

Top review: “I have a fine boned 4 year old 15.3 OTTB gelding and felt that typical horse sized halters looked large on him. I opted for a Cob size and am glad I did. It fits perfectly on either the second to last or last hole on all buckles – but I feel like a horse size still would have been too big, so I’m satisfied with the size. Leather is SO high quality and buttery soft. Too nice to be used as an everyday halter but will be great for shows!” – Molly

2. A full-length Piper Trainer’s Coat for the always-cold coach

Photo courtesy of SmartPak.

TBH, I probably owe all of my former coaches this sort of gift for making them stand out in the cold telling me to put my shoulders back repeatedly. Coaches are saints, aren’t they?

Top review: “Bought this jacket to wear as I am a Florida girl now living in Tennessee. I ABSOLUTELY love this jacket! It’s very warm! Fits to the body but allows movement in the arms and waist/hips to comfortably ride in without getting too bulky! Great for all around barn chores, coaching, and riding! Highly recommend!” – Jrockster

3. For the color-crazy: a SmartPak Classic Ombre Dressage Saddle Pad

Photo courtesy of SmartPak.

Three colors are available for this pad, which features comfortable cushioning and a contoured shape.

Top review: “I bought this pad as soon as SmartPak released it. I was not disappointed. It’s just stunning on my horse. It’s well made, and fits him beautifully. I love the fact that the saddle doesn’t slip on the material, like other brands. For the price point, you must get this. It’s beautiful.” – tana317

4. Because blanket care is always a drag — a Blanket Care Bundle

Photo courtesy of SmartPak.

Tough on dirt but gentle enough not to damage waterproofing properties, the SmartPak Blanket Care Bundle features Stain & Odor Remover, Blanket Wash and Blanket Waterproofing Spray to help keep your blankets in top condition (despite the beating our horses insist on giving them!).

5. For the barn dogs: an Amigo Ripstop Dog Blanket

Photo courtesy of SmartPak.

I may live in Southern California, but my dog has enough coats to get him through a Northeastern winter (listen, he looks cute in them ok?). I’m a huge fan of Amigo’s dog blankets for their fit and quality.

6. For the one who’s always hot: a Mobile Cooling HydroLogic Vest

Photo courtesy of SmartPak.

This light vest provides quick, water-activated cooling relief, making it a perfect addition to throw on for a summer lesson or cross country school. I saw several riders donning ice or cooling vests in Tokyo, so I guess call me a bandwagon-jumper! Pro tip: You can also add ice packs to this vest for additional cooling action!

Top review: “…This updated model actually has ice packs to put into specific pockets to work even better…my old one was only a dip wet and wear vest…this one works better and longer…bravo…it really keeps your core cooled down.” – Frannie

7. The always-popular Rambo Micklem Competition Bridle

Photo courtesy of SmartPak.

I love a good deal, and finding my favorite items on sale turns into an ongoing scavenger hunt this time of year. I was pleased to see the popular Micklem bridle is eligible for this 15% off sale!

Top review: “You will notice a difference in you horse the first time you put it on. They are more likely to cooperate with less pressure on the reins, head tossing or similar behaviors. I use both of the small straps for the bit, my horse likes the division of pressure between the nose band and directly on the mouth. In addition to dressage, I do a great deal of trial riding and the willingness to push into the bit makes for a much more pleasant ride, while building up the horses back and hindquarters on hills and and galloping through the meadows with a completely relaxed horse.” – Susan

8. A C4 Classic Belt & Buckle

Photo courtesy of SmartPak.

Eventers adopted C4 as their go-to belt many years ago thanks to the determined efforts of the late Jon Sonkin, who helped bring the brand to the forefront of riders’ minds. Today, C4 continues to be a popular option with its adjustability and customizable features. There are 27 colors and patterns to select from in SmartPak’s catalog, so you’re bound to land on the right fit for the eventer on your shopping list.

Top review: “I have 2 other C4 belts, so it was a no brainer to buy 2 more! They hold up great, and the solid colors are casual enough that I can work them into my every day wardrobe, instead of just using them for riding. Love that theyre cut to size, so it’s always a perfect fit.” – ElleRose

9. A stylish Piper Down Vest

Photo courtesy of SmartPak.

I love a good vest for layering, especially when I’m at a show that starts off cold and finishes warm. A vest over a thin long sleeve is my go-to outfit of choice for cooler days, and you really can’t go wrong with the affordable Piper line! This vest is available in three colors. You can also add monogramming to your order.

Top review: “I bought the cobalt color and love it! This is perfect for cool and cold weather riding! It is quite warm and fits true to size.” – Debby

10. Recover in style with a set of Rambo Ionic Stable Boots

Photo courtesy of SmartPak.

These easy-to-use boots, which once a horse is acclimated can be worn without time limits, combine the benefits of compression and negative ion therapy to help with increasing circulation, stimulating metabolism, and increasing oxygen delivery to cells and tissue.

Top review: “My horse is older, 17, and whenever I have a lesson or school her o/f or work on conditioning her in the fields with lots of trotting uphills she retains lots of fluid in her legs overnight in her stall. Instead of having her end up being a horse that needs to be wrapped every night I thought I’d try these boots. I put them on her at her supper time which is around 6pm and take them off at night check around 11pm. The next morning her legs always look perfect. There is no fluid build up anymore. I’m so happy with these boots. I feel like they have given me more years of jumping my mare into her senior years.” – EverSoClever

To view all products eligible for the SmartPak holiday sale, click here. Today is the final day of the sale, and as a free gift you’ll receive a $50 SmartPak gift certificate with your purchase of $200 or more.

FEI Representatives Visit Pratoni 2022 World Championships for Eventing, Driving, Endurance Site in Rocca di Papa

Photo via Pratoni 2022 on Facebook.

The International Equestrian Federation (FEI) recently held meetings at the Pratoni del Vivaro with the twelve directors of the different departments involved in the organisation of the FEI World Championships Eventing, Driving and Endurance to assess work being done together with Italian Equestrian Sports Federation’s OC in preparing for the event.

A visit to the historical facilities built to host the 1960 Rome Olympic Games was followed by a workshop organised in Rome at the Italian National Olympic Committee’s headquarters where throughout the day meetings of the various work groups were held.

The FEI World Championships Eventing and Driving that will be held at the historical equestrian centre Pratoni del Vivaro from September 14-25 September next year, hosting the best horses and riders and spectators from every continent, will be a qualifying opportunity for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games and will attract great attention from the media. About 80 horses are expected to arrive for the Eventing Championships and 250 for the Driving (four-in-hand competitions).

Photo via Pratoni 2022 on Facebook.

Work to adapt the facilities to technical infrastructures needed (stables, arenas, cross country and marathon courses) and welcome services (parking, stands, restaurants, shopping area) for the over 40,000 spectators expected over the two weeks of competitions, started months ago and the 140 hectares of the estate will present an unmatchable stage when opened.

This was confirmed by the Mayor of Rocca di Papa, Veronica Cimino, who spoke, as did the President of the FISE, Marco Di Paola, and Secretary General Simone Perillo, greeting the participants in the workshop.

Tim Hadaway, Director, Games Operations, coordinated the meeting attended by the FEI Directors of the three disciplines for which world championships will be held in Italy and assign the 2022 medals (Sweden’s Catrin Norinder for Eventing, Portugal’s Manuel Bandeira de Mello for Driving and Jordan’s Christina Abu-Dayyeh for Endurance) discussing matters with key representatives of the FISE Organising Committee. The FEI World Championship Endurance 2022 will also be held in Italy, not at the Pratoni but at Isola della Scala (Verona) on October 22nd.

Photo via Pratoni2022 on Facebook.

“I am especially delighted about this return to Pratoni, a location and an equestrian centre that has already in the past hosted sporting events at the highest possible levels in this discipline, above all the 1960 Olympic Games and the 1998 WEG,” FEI Eventing Director Catrin Norinder said. “I cannot wait for next September to come as we will be happy to be attending such a great sporting event and do everything possible to support the Italian Equestrian Sports Federation in its organisation.”

Simone Perillo, Secretary General for the Italian Equestrian Sports Federation, echoed the excitement: “We are enthusiastic about the fruitful days spent working together with the FEI in view of the 2022 World Championships. Assigning this extraordinary event to Italy provides significant evidence of the trust the FEI has in our federation. Significant investments made will provide an important legacy for these facilities that are a strategic centre for equestrian sports and not only top-level competitions.”

To learn more about Pratoni 2022, click here.

Weekend Winners: Thanksgiving at Pine Top

It’s that time of year when I begin articles with sentences such as “the eventing season is winding down” or “only a few weekends of eventing left this year!”, and as such we’ve got just one event to cover in Weekend Winners today: the annual Thanksgiving event at Pine Top in Thomson, Ga.

Pine Top hosts its fall event on Thanksgiving weekend each year as one of the bookends of the long eventing season. This weekend, the event celebrated its top volunteers, Cindy Smith and David Slagle, who between the two of them collected over 200 hours of volunteer service in 2021.

Thank you to our top two volunteers of 2021!

2021 hours
Cindy Smith 118.30 hours
David Slagle 84.09 hours

Since 2019,…

Posted by Pine Top Eventing on Sunday, November 28, 2021

Liz Crawley was the official photographer at Pine Top this weekend, and you can order your photos from her here.

Pine Top Thanksgiving H.T.: [Results]

Open Preliminary: Sarah Kuhn and Mr. Cash van de Start (25.0)
Modified: Laurel Massey and Lichen Lismakeera (37.4)
Open Training: Jessica Schultz and Angelic Warrior (29.5)
Training/Novice: Sarah Lohnes and D’Inzea (32.4)
Training Rider: Brooke Karl and Nata Montada SCF (30.0)
Novice Rider A: Logan Harris and Ballygriffin Cool Guy (30.7)
Novice Rider B: Molly McLaughlin and Fernhill Sinatra (30.0)
Open Novice: Katie Malensek and MRF Qwikstep (24.5)
Beginner Novice Rider: Meaghan Nelson and Courtly Miss (29.8)
Open Beginner Novice: Logan Harris and Reinheit (26.1)

 

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Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

The season has been firmly put to bed, which means that the indoor cross-country circuit can begin — and the Sweden International Horse Show certainly delivered on that front. 12 combinations representing five countries came forward for the fast and furious class under the lights, which saw Sweden handily take the team competition and their leading rider, Frida Andersen, take the individual win with Box Leo. With all the uncertainty around the new COVID variant, which has already seen travel restrictions come into play in Europe, I certainly hope this won’t be the last of these classes we get to enjoy this winter.

National Holiday: It’s Cyber Monday, so if you’re not totally shopped out from the weekend, you could nab some serious deals online to finish up your Christmas shopping or stock up your tack room.

U.S. Weekend Action:

Pine Top Thanksgiving H.T. (Thompson, GA): [Website] [Results]

Your Monday Reading List:

Another week, another slew of reasons why Brexit could be the biggest danger yet to the UK’s horse industry. This time, the criticism comes from the FEI’s veterinary director, Göran Åkerström, who points out that the long waiting times and administrative nightmare of the extra border controls is likely to stop people from travelling between Britain and continental Europe unless they absolutely have to. No man is an island, as the saying goes, but at this rate, the UK’s horse industry certainly is.

Virginia-based trainer Ally Smith doesn’t just focus on producing horses for showjumping and eventing — she also provides a lifeline for working horses heading to the slaughterhouse. This might be my favourite lockdown venture yet.

More and more, buyers in the market for a new horse are looking for the holy grail: a totally clean sheet from the vet. But do you actually need your horse to have perfect x-rays and no lumps, bumps, or oddities, or is learning to manage minor issues part and parcel of owning competition horses?

Heading down to the southern sun from one of the colder states this winter? Lucky you — but before you go, brush up on how the move might affect your horse’s health and what you can do to prevent any issues from arising. Oh, and have a margarita for me, please.

We’ve all had those moments when, after receiving a particularly disappointing score in a test, we assume the judge doesn’t like us, our horse, the brand of saddle we ride in, or somethingBut while some degree of subjectivity will always come into play, judges work hard to be as objective as possible — and as a rider, the best thing you can learn is to control the variables you can and do the very best you and your horse are capable of on the day.

The FutureTrack Follow:


I’m not sure I’ve ever seen anyone more badass than Danish vaulter Amanda Staalsø — and even if you don’t fancy ever doing flips on top of a horse, her content will definitely inspire you to go big or go home.

Morning Viewing:

Bicton CCI5* winner Gemma Tattersall is becoming a real force to be reckoned with on the showjumping circuit too, and she began her Oliva Nova circuit with a bang, winning the 1.40m gold tour with the excellent MGH Candy Girl. Catch their blazing round here:


Sunday Video: Meet the Eventers of the 2021 Thoroughbred Makeover

We’re huge fans of the Thoroughbred Makeover and National Symposium, which gives ex-racehorses a brilliant platform to show off their talents and offers fantastic incentives for riders to give one of these big-hearted horses a second chance at a second career. Last month’s Makeover finale was a bumper edition, combining two years’ worth of entries into one jam-packed event — that’s roughly 400 horses across the disciplines!

Both the 2020 and 2021 eventing finalists’ rides have been compiled into two action-packed videos, which provide some serious inspiration if you’re thinking of making an entry into next year’s Makeover — or if you just want to get the very best out of your own OTTB. We also highly recommend catching up on the Makeover Masterclass, which is a hefty watch at well over two hours, but will give you a priceless primer on how to pick your next project and begin the training process. Perfect winter viewing, we reckon.

Applications Open for the British CCI3*-S European Cup Team

If you’re a British rider competing at CCI3*-S and would like to try your hand at representing your country in a European Championship, the European Cup — formerly known as the Rural Riders European Championship — could be the perfect opportunity for you. Ordinarily held every two years, it was last run in 2019 as this year’s planned edition, set to run in Lausanne, Switzerland, was postponed. Now, the Cup will run in 2022 and 2023 before returning to a two-year cycle and running again in 2025.

The unique competition allows up to eight combinations to compete per country, with six team places and two individual places available. In a unique twist, all the team riders must perform a test together in a long arena, emphasising the need for some seriously good team bonding beforehand. Though the competition is held at CCI3*-S, cross-country is held prior to showjumping, giving competitors valuable experience of the championship format.

So who’s it for, anyway?

“There are generally two types of rider who can enjoy the journey through career progression when representing Great Britain in the CCI3*-S European Championships,” reads British Eventing’s guide to selection. Those are as follows:

  • Those who are no longer eligible for BE National or International youth teams (which are for riders 12 to 21 years old).
  • Riders who began eventing at a later age or those who, during their young rider years lacked the necessary horse power or opportunity to compete at CCI3*-S level.

The eligibility requirements are as follows, per BE:

  • Riders and Horses either separately or together must not have completed a CCI4*L or CCIO4*S in the last 2 years prior to the next European Cup unless this was as a Junior or Young Rider.
  • Riders and Horses either separately or together must not have completed a CCI5*L, European or World Championships or Olympic Games at any time.
  • Combinations should be able to ride as part of the Team dressage squad (6 x combinations in a 20×60 arena at the same time) as well as the usual individual/Team CCI3*S format.
  •  As a guide for competitors, they as a combination should aspire to achieve an average dressage score of 30 or below, an average show jumping score of 4 penalties or better and an average cross-country score of no more than 10 penalties slower than the fastest time in the class.
  • Athletes/combinations who wish to be considered for selection should be aiming at least one result at 2* or above of 28 or better dressage, maximum of 4 penalties in show Jumping and clear xc within 3-time penalties of the fastest horse in xc.
  • Riders must be a British passport holder.

Applications have now opened if you’d like to be considered for the 2022 competition, which will be held in Lausanne from September 1-4. Applicants will need to commit to training and selection days, and will be observed by selectors at national and international competitions throughout the selection period next season. To brush up on the full selection guidelines, click here — or, to go ahead and get your name on the list, fill out the form here. Applications will close on December 20.

Sunday Links from Fairfax & Favor

 

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Alright, admit it — did you do a little shopping for yourself on Black Friday and Small Business Saturday in addition to nabbing the perfect gifts for your friends and family. So shame here! In fact, if you havent yet (or hey, even if you have — I won’t tell!) I’d like to tempt you with Fairfax & Favor’s drool-worthy special edition black boots and bags. If you’re looking to put together a show-stopping jog outfit next year, then look no further. Or, perhaps you’re already set with a favorite pair of F&F boots but you’d like to switch things up with a new tassel color? Never fear: those are on sale right now too.

U.S. Weekend Action:

Pine Top Thanksgiving H.T. (Thompson, GA): [Website] [Ride Times] [Entry Status] [Live Scores]

Sunday Links:

Father-daughter duo target best-in-class equestrian facility at TerraNova

Questions to Ask Yourself if You’re Afraid of Jumping

Slaughter, Berry, and Shade Conclude 2021 Season with Wins in Fresno Classic Three-Day Event

Just in on Jumper Nation: Lessons from a Barn Dog

Hot on Horse Nation: Horse Nation Gives Thanks

Saturday Video: Enjoy some scenes from this year’s LOTTO Strezgom Horse Trials.