Classic Eventing Nation

Sunday Links

Entries are now open for the annual Fundraiser Clinic at Galway Downs in Temecula, CA! This three-day event features an opportunity to ride with several well-respected Area VI coaches, and this year will include a new Showcase with Olympic riders Jock Paget and Ian Stark. These Showcases will take place on Friday, January 17 (Jock Paget) and Saturday, January 18 (Ian Stark). Spectator auditing for these Showcases is available, and all clinic riders will receive complimentary auditing of the Showcases.

All proceeds from this Fundraiser are used to support the Galway Downs eventing program each season. Entries will close on January 7. Click here to enter.

U.S. Weekend Events

Rocking Horse December H.T. (FL): [Website] [Entries/Ride Times] [Scoring] [Volunteer]

Full Gallop Farm Jingle Bells H.T. (SC): [Website] [Entries/Ride Times] [Volunteer]

Links & Reading

Don’t forget to enter our giveaway to win a $400 shopping spree with the new apparel brand, Thiandro Equestrian! Click here to enter before Monday, December 9.

Celebrating the Successes of The USEA’s VIP Volunteers in 2024

Rodney Jenkins Dies At 80

Careers in the Horse Industry: Success Stories

20 Things Your Horse’s Teeth are Telling You

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Dressage rider Anna Buffini and her horse Flynn, take on the social media roasting challenge:

Can Cobs Go Eventing? New H&C+ Series Says: Of Course They Can!

In 2023 the hashtag #cobscan went viral after Morven Ritchie and her 20-year-old cob Mikey went clear cross country in the Voltaire Design BE90 Grassroots Championships at Badminton. The pair’s achievement was the inspiration for Horse & Country’s new series, Cobs Can Go Eventing, produced in association with EQUIDRY.

Working in partnership with British Eventing (BE), Horse & Country devised an eight-part series with each episode focusing on a different aspect of preparing your cob for the challenges of eventing. Subjects range from flatwork to boost your dressage score, through to preparing your cob for the ultimate challenge of cross country. There are also episodes on how to protect your cob’s legs and nutritional advice, produced in association with Woof Wear and Baileys respectively.

Once the series got the green light there was never any doubt about who the stars would be. The H&C team headed to Scotland to meet up with Morven and Mikey at the stunning Bogenraith Equestrian centre, set in the beautiful Aberdeenshire countryside. As we were filming in early January there was quite a nip in the air so the cast and crew were more than happy to have EQUIDRY, makers of the ultimate equestrian coat, as the series sponsor!

Featuring alongside Morven and Mikey are Josie Smith and her cob Gem who competed at their national championships last year, the NAF Five Star BE80 at Bramham. Helping the combinations to perform to their very best is Sarah Houlden, a BE Level 3 coach delivering BE’s national training programme, under The Howden Way umbrella, in Scotland. Completing the line-up is H&C favourite and five-star event rider Simon Grieve. As well as presenting the series, Simon gets to try eventing on a cob with willing partner Thor.

Jonathan Rippon, Director of Content for H&C commented, “We’re delighted to bring our members this series. Cobs are always a favourite with our viewers and, without giving away any spoilers, the series more than proves that cobs certainly can.”

On behalf of EQUIDRY, Managing Director Vicky Fiddes said, “There has never been a more important time for equestrian sport to focus on being inclusive, welcoming and accessible. This is exactly the message of Cobs Can Go Eventing and is why we at EQUIDRY are so proud to support it. Cobs and native breeds make the most wonderful pets and, as proven by the incredible stars of the programme; Mickey and Gem, are capable of being truly talented competitors. If you have a cob and a passion for eventing, be proud and get out there. EQUIDRY hope to be there to keep you warm and dry along the way.”

All eight episodes of Cobs Can Go Eventing will be available to watch exclusively on Horse & Country’s streaming service, H&C+. For non-members there is a Pay per View option. Annual membership of H&C+ is only £74.99 as a one-off payment, or there’s an option to pay in 12 monthly instalments of £7.99. Full details on how to join, as well as more information, can be found at www.horseandcountry.tv. Interested parties can also save 15% on an annual H&C+ membership using code EVENTINGNATION15.

Saturday Links from World Equestrian Brands

Coming next week! An online auction hosted by Renaissance Equine Rescue and Welfare Foundation and benefitting horse owners and horses in Western Carolina who have been affected by Hurricane Helene kicks off on December 10. The auction is only running for two days through December 12, so you won’t have to wait long to secure your top bids! Items on offer include donations from Sydney Elliott, Hayley Norfleet, Larissa Ann Fine Art, Breezeway Sporthorse and Diagnostic Clinic, and many more.

To participate in this auction, click here to join the Facebook event page, where items will be posted for bidding once the auction is open.

U.S. Weekend Events

Rocking Horse December H.T. (FL): [Website] [Entries/Ride Times] [Scoring] [Volunteer]

Full Gallop Farm Jingle Bells H.T. (SC): [Website] [Entries/Ride Times] [Volunteer]

Links & Reading

Don’t forget to enter our giveaway to win a $400 shopping spree with the new apparel brand, Thiandro Equestrian! Click here to enter before Monday, December 9.

Grooms, the Unsung Heroes of the Horse World

Equestrian Hub Podcast: William Fox-Pitt

Sensational Seminars Set for the 2024 USEA Annual Meeting & Convention Next Week

The history of hyperflexion in dressage training – and how the sport can move away from it

Sponsor Corner: World Equestrian Brands

Want to win an Equilibrium Therapy® Massage Pad Heatsense ($879 Value) from World Equestrian Brands? Now is your chance! World Equestrian Brands has teamed up with the educational platform Equestrian+ for a big holiday giveaway. Click here for more on how to enter!

Video Break

Do you feel seen or attacked?

Adelaide Equestrian Festival to Host Historic Oceania Championships in 2026 and 2029

The only 5* set in a city center. Photo via Adelaide Equestrian Festival Facebook.

The Adelaide Equestrian Festival, in partnership with the High Performance units of Equestrian Australia and Equestrian Sports New Zealand, is thrilled to announce that the next two Australian-hosted instalments of the prestigious Oceania Championships will take place at the Adelaide Equestrian Festival in 2026 and 2029.

This historic decision follows a challenging Paris Olympiad, marked by numerous major event postponements and international travel disruptions for equine athletes. The extension of the Championships to 2026 will ensure that the domestic season for both Australia and New Zealand competitors will remain unaffected and allow athletes to focus on an extended preparation for early 2026.

The move marks a significant opportunity for Australian and New Zealand competitors to showcase their talents in front of the largest equestrian audience in the Southern Hemisphere. The Adelaide Equestrian Festival, which boasts the only CCI5* event in the region, notably attracts the largest number of spectators but is also the only city-centred event of its kind worldwide, further elevating the prestige of the Championships.

The Oceania Championships will be contested across two divisions: the CCI3*-L for Young Riders and the CCI4*-S for Senior competitors. This will be the first time the Young Rider division will be hosted at the Adelaide Equestrian Festival. At the same time, the Senior teams have not competed here since 2009, when an all-female Australian team won the coveted Championship honours.

Competition Director Belinda Lindh expressed her enthusiasm, “Securing the Championships for the 2026 and 2029 instalments is a major win for our Organising Committee. It’s an incredible opportunity for riders to compete at the pinnacle event in the Southern Hemisphere. We look forward to developing our program to ensure New Zealand riders and their support crew experience the best South Australian hospitality alongside our world-class competition in Adelaide.”

Will Enzinger, Director of High Performance Equestrian Australia, emphasized the importance of this collaboration, stating, “Utilizing the Adelaide Equestrian Festival’s world-class event to host our longstanding Oceania Championships underscores the collective efforts of both countries and offers critical exposure to our team environment which creates an opportunity to develop our talent at the elite level. This competition plays a significant role in our preparation for the World Championship and Olympic Games.”

Jonathan Paget, ESNZ High Performance General Manager stated, “We are fortunate and appreciate this collaborative approach to providing these great opportunities for our athletes to experience team competitions, particularly at the Adelaide Equestrian Festival. This is a great event and really exposes our southern hemisphere combinations to the international standard.
As we build towards LA and Brisbane, these opportunities will play a critical role in our performance pathway.”

Key Dates:
● Tickets for the 2025 Adelaide Equestrian Festival will be available from Tuesday December 3, 2024
● 2025 Adelaide Equestrian Festival: May 1-4
● 2026 Adelaide Equestrian Festival & Oceania Championships: April 16-19, 2026

For further information, please visit www.adelaideequestrianfestival.com

Friday News & Notes from Stable View

Charlotte Dujardin and Valegro. Photo by Jenni Autry.

The FEI has suspended British Dressage athlete Charlotte Dujardin for one year and imposed a fine of CHF 10,000 ($11,300), effectively concluding the disciplinary proceedings against her.

The multi-Olympic champion had been provisionally suspended since July 23, just before the Paris Olympics, for engaging in conduct contrary to the principles of horse welfare. The time served during her provisional suspension will be credited towards the one-year suspension.

During her suspension, Charlotte is prohibited from participating in all activities related to competitions or events under the jurisdiction of the FEI or of a National Federation. British Equestrian and British Dressage have reciprocated the suspension, resulting in her ineligibility to compete in any national competition or training events during this period.

Charlotte responded to the decision on social media yesterday, stating:

“I fully respect the verdict issued by the Federation for Equestrian Sports (FEI), released today.

As the federation has recognised, my actions in the video do not reflect who I am and I can only apologise again. I understand the responsibility that comes with my position in the sport, and I will forever aim to do better.

This has undoubtedly been one of the darkest and most difficult periods of my life, and I would like to take this opportunity to thank everyone who has supported me during this time. To those of you who have sent messages, emails and tried to reach me to check in on how lam – thank you. Every kind word truly has made a difference, more than you’ll ever know.

What I was unable to share at the time is that I am currently pregnant, with my baby due in February. This was planned well before the Olympics and something my partner Dean and I have been excited about for a long time.

At the moment, the energy I have is focused on Dean and our daughter Isabella, and we are all very much looking forward to the arrival of our new family member.”

You can read more information about the FEI’s decision here. Meanwhile, we are still awaiting updates on the ongoing investigation into abuse allegations against 5* eventer Andrew McConnon, who is not listed on the currently open Case Status Table of FEI suspensions as of today.

U.S. Weekend Events

Rocking Horse December H.T. (FL): [Website] [Entries/Ride Times] [Scoring] [Volunteer]

Full Gallop Farm Jingle Bells H.T. (SC): [Website] [Entries/Ride Times] [Volunteer]

News & Reading

Don’t forget to enter our giveaway to win a $400 shopping spree with the new apparel brand, Thiandro Equestrian! Click here to enter before Monday, December 9.

Toxic barn behavior: it’s likely we’ve all experienced it to some degree. This reprint from The Plaid Horse is a worthwhile read, offering insight on how one rider was affected by a toxic barn environment, and how she navigated through it. Read the piece here.

What is Neuroathletic training? It’s using the power of brain science to unlock an athlete’s full body potential. Every movement of the rider’s body starts in the brain. Olympic competitor and coach Marc Nölke explains how to direct the specific areas of the brain that control stability, sense of rhythm, precision of movement, breathing, and vision. With his unique brain-focused exercises, riders learn how to change the input sent to their brain to get healthier, more athletic output. Read an excerpt from Marc’s book here.

In The Chronicle of the Horse‘s new series, Ask Stable Sage, one reader asks about financial responsibility in the horse world. Is that even a thing? It certainly can be with a dash of responsibility and accountability, but it requires a fine balance and a willingness to get creative. Read the first Ask Stable Sage column here.

Registration is still open for the IGNITE 2nd Annual Sports Science for the Olympic Disciplines Seminar, happening at the World Equestrian Center in Ocala January 12 and 13, 2025. During this two-day seminar, thought-leaders from both equestrian and human-centric sports will gather to discuss how to use technology to enhance precision within training programs, how athletes acquire skills, how exercise impacts the cardiovascular and musculoskeletal systems in human and equine athletes, and how to manage chronic injuries, among other topics. Interested parties can view more and register here.

Sponsor Corner: Stable View

It may be a wrap on 2024, but we’re already keen to get going with the 2025 season at Stable View in Aiken, SC! Entries for their Aiken Opener H.T. (January 18-19) are currently open and the perfect way to get your new year off to a rocking start. Click here to view the full recognized eventing calendar at Stable View for the year ahead.

Video Break

In the latest episode of RIDE, presented by Longines, take a trip with the FEI back to 1913 North East England, a time rich in British history and once home to the small but mighty ‘Pit Pony’:

Doubt: The Rider’s Greatest Enemy

In this excerpt from her book The Horses Who Made Me, French phenom Alizée Froment shares the story of one challenging equine partner from her early teens and the valuable lesson she learned from her.

Alizée Froment and Foy.

Foy was an Anglo-Arab who had stayed “pony size” because she had been born with a twin.

Foy was super thin with long gazelle legs, a rather weird face with a bump on her nose, some very long and flat ears, and what seemed like three curly hairs in place of a forelock.
I rode her for the first time very early on a frozen morning. The sun was shining and the light was wonderful.

What I felt under the saddle that day was completely different than anything I had ever felt before. She moved like a horse. The movements felt enormous and less elastic. Everything seemed unstable. I had no benchmark anymore. On top of that, Foy spent the first 15 minutes hopping around like a jackrabbit.

But when we started jumping, it felt like a dream. Foy had an incredible “punching” energy in the last stride before she jumped. She could switch from 2-foot stride to a 13-foot stride in a second. I was riding a Ferrari and just trying to be up to the task. We ended jumping a course with no hole left on top of the standards. I had never ever jumped that high in my life. We were over 4”6” (1.40m), and it looked easy for her, even though she was under 15 hands.

Of course, I got off the mare with stars in my eyes and my heart pounding. I was on a little cloud, amazed, ecstatic…and that was the beginning of a new big chapter in my horse life.
I remember my mother hanging up the phone, turning to me and asking if I was sure I wanted Foy when she was known to be a particularly difficult mare. I answered yes. Mum wanted me to be truly involved in the choice and to take responsibility for it, so my parents told me they would pay two-thirds of the money, and the last part would have to come from me.

I had an account that had been opened by my paternal grandmother in my name when I was six years old to help compensate for the fact that my biological father never took care of me and never gave a penny to my mother to help her raise me. The money was intended to help me pay for my studies at university later on. So using it to help pay for Foy was my first big decision in life, and being a part owner of her became my first true responsibility.

Foy was a mare that could not be counted on. She had constant ups and downs, and her moods were extremely changeable. Sometimes she filled me with euphoria as I enjoyed her athleticism, power, and strength. Sometimes she filled me with despair, as she became entirely inaccessible and offered me nothing. She could jump 4’6” (1.40m) one day and categorically refuse to pass over a ground pole the next, making a huge drama out of it with crazy eyes and theatrical reactions.

Showing her was the same. At our first and only French Championships, we won the first round of qualification after a terrible warm-up, and the day after, she was incredibly relaxed in the warm-up and then wouldn’t even approach the first fence on course.

With her horse-like locomotion and Thoroughbred temper, Foy challenged me to a new dimension of riding. I had to learn, progress, and understand very quickly, because she was not a horse with a forgiving nature. The slightest technical error had immediate repercussions. She made this very clear.

The only possible answer when Foy twisted and turned in the air for several minutes in a row without stopping, while I barely had a foot in a stirrup, was to stay calm and unflappable, and patiently wait for the storm to pass. You couldn’t get into a fight with her, because while she was indeed a very dominant personality, she was also ultra-sensitive.

Foy and her genius jumping style opened doors for me that I never imagined. By the middle of January 2002, Foy and I were participating in our first international pony show jumping competitions together.

Was it that I was entering adolescence and experiencing the loss of innocence that goes with it? Was it the complicated financial situation and my parents making big sacrifices in their lives so I had a chance to compete at an elite level and accept the responsibilities that went along with it? Was it suddenly an awareness of the physical risks and the danger when jumping such high fences with increasing technical difficulty?

I can’t say exactly the cause, and I honestly think it was a mixture of all that, but what’s certain is that I went through two extremely formative but difficult and painful years. For the first time, I struggled with self-doubt and the fear of disappointing.

I was incredibly proud of representing my country and defending our colors. I clearly remember the speech we got during that first team clinic, which explained to us the model behavior that we had to have, the exemplarity that we had to represent, and the values of hard work, self-improvement, self-control, respect, loyalty, and perseverance that we had to embody.

These words resonated in me so strongly that I made it my life to be disciplined and live up to the Federation’s expectations. I locked myself in this “straitjacket” for several years, losing sight of the real reason why I love being with horses so much—the freedom they give us, and the pleasure inherent in the constant search to understand a fascinating animal whose language we do not speak.

I was focused—and I needed to be focused—on improving my technique, but it made me lose my instinct for a while. I was just about to discover that the greatest enemy of the rider is doubt, because to doubt—beyond the technical problems that go hand in hand with it—is to betray your horse. You can doubt before getting in the saddle. You can doubt after you get off.

We can and we all do make mistakes, every single day. But to doubt when you ask something of your horse is to put him in a position of weakness and discomfort, which is much worse than the resulting error itself. It took me a while to truly understand that, and even more time before I was able to put it into practice.

Becoming a horseman takes a whole lifetime. You never stop learning. You never stop growing.

This excerpt is adapted from The Horses Who Made Me by Alizée Froment and reprinted with permission from Trafalgar Square Books (trafalgarbooks.com).

DOKR Committee Names Olympic and Perspective Eventing Squads for 2025

Jérôme Robiné and Black Ice. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The Eventing Discipline Committee of the German Olympic Equestrian Committee has named its senior squads for 2025 as it looks ahead to the 2025 FEI European Championships at Blenheim as well as the next FEI World Championships on home turf at CHIO Aachen in 2026.

As German publication Buschreiter reports, two key names are off the list in 2018 World Champion Sandra Auffarth, who has expressed that she will be more heavily focusing on show jumping this year, as well as Paris Olympian Christoph Wahler with Carjatan S; Christoph has indicated he will be involved with youth coaching this year. It won’t be a year of solely coaching, though — Christoph is listed on the Performance-Oriented Development Squad with D’Accord FRH.

The Squads for 2025 are as follows:

2025 Eventing Olympic Squad

  • Calvin Böckmann (Warendorf/Rhineland) with Altair de la Cense and The Phantom of the Opera
  • Malin Hansen-Hotopp (Gransebieth/Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania) with Carlitos Quidditch K
  • Michael Jung (Horb/Baden-Württemberg) with fischerChipmunk FRH and Jim Knopf P
  • Julia Krajewski (Warendorf/Westphalia) with Ero de Cantraie and Nickel
  • Jérôme Robiné (Warendorf/Hesse) with Black Ice

2025 Performance-Oriented Development Squad

Anna Siemer and FRH Butts Avondale (GER). Photo by Tilly Berendt.

  • Nicolai Aldinger (Egestorf/Lower Saxony) with Timmo
  • Arne Bergendahl (Hamminkeln/Rhineland) with Bronco NRW and Luthien NRW
  • Emma Brüssau (Warendorf/Baden-Württemberg) with Dark Desire GS
  • Ingrid Klimke (Münster/Westphalia) with EQUISTROs Siena just do it
  • Libussa Lübbeke (Wingst/Lower Saxony) with Benedetta, Caramia, and Darcy F
  • Dirk Schrade (Heidmühlen/Schleswig-Holstein) with Casino
  • Anna Siemer (Salzhausen/Westphalia) with FRH Butt’s Avondale
  • Christoph Wahler (Bad Bevensen/Lower Saxony) with D’Accord FRH

2025 Perspective-Oriented Development Squad

  • Antonia Baumgart (Düsseldorf/Rhineland) with Lamango and Ris de Talm
  • Vanessa Bölting (Münster/Westphalia) with Ready to Go W
  • Rebecca-Juana Gerken (Tasdorf/Schleswig-Holstein) with TSF Solara
  • Pauline Knorr (Warendorf/Westphalia) with Aevolet M-A-F
  • Ben Leuwer (Wachtberg/Rhineland) with Citius
  • Pia Leuwer (Wachtberg/Rhineland) with Jard
  • Johanna Marloh (Seevetal/Lower Saxony) with Crazy Carlotta
  • Katharina Meyer (Hanstedt/Lower Saxony) with Aspen T and Chapeau Claque
  • Anna-Lena Schaaf (Voerde/Rhineland) with Fairytale
  • Brandon Schäfer-Gehrau (Warendorf/Rhineland) with Very Special

You can read more on Buschreiter here.

The article information above has been translated from German; please forgive any mistranslations. 

Thursday News & Notes

Is it too early to start planning our trip to the Defender Kentucky Three-Day Event? Answer: Never!

Luckily, the team at Kentucky is ten steps ahead of us, and planning for the 2025 event (happening April 24-27) began nearly the moment the last horse crossed the finish line this past April. Get a sneak peek of the preparation that’s underway from one of the hardworking course builders working on site, Tyson Rementer, in the video embedded above or by visiting Instagram here.

Today is the final day of Early Bird Pricing for Kentucky tickets, so be sure to grab yours here — they make great holiday gifts!

U.S. Weekend Preview

Rocking Horse December H.T. (FL): [Website] [Entries/Ride Times] [Scoring] [Volunteer]

Full Gallop Farm Jingle Bells H.T. (SC): [Website] [Entries/Ride Times] [Volunteer]

News & Reading

Many congratulations to Tom and Harriet McEwen, who welcomed a baby boy on November 29!

Don’t forget to enter our giveaway to win a $400 shopping spree with the new apparel brand, Thiandro Equestrian! Click here to enter before Monday, December 9.

British readers! Want to win tickets to MARS Badminton in 2025? Now’s your chance! British Eventing is seeking respondents from members in its annual survey. On the table as an incentive to share your thoughts with organization are tickets to MARS Badminton, a parking pass and two season member badges to the Weatherbys Hamilton Members Enclosure. You can find more information on this survey here.

Peter Thomsen will continue to lead the German eventing team for the next four years, Buschreiter reports. He will be joined by discipline-specific coaches Anne-Kathrin Pohlmeier (dressage) and Frenchman Rodolphe Scherer (cross-country). Andreas Dibowski will take the reins of the U25 age group and development program from former coach Julia Krajewski after she stepped aside earlier this year. Jérôme Robiné, a Warendorf-based top-10 finisher at the 2023 European Championships, will assist Andreas in coaching U25 riders. Read more on Buschreiter here.

You might recognize the name Donna Brothers, the well-known sports journalist who can be seen on NBC presenting for equestrian sports. Donna got her start in the horse world through the world of racing, eventually finding her way to broadcast and weaving a storied career across disciplines. Read more on Donna’s background, career, and how she keeps it all in balance here.

We’ve all probably dealt with a horse who does not favor having their mane pulled. A tidy mane serves different purposes, but is there more than one way to accomplish this? Explore the topic here.

Video Break

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum take on the jumper ring!

EN’s Holiday Gift Guide: Must-Have Additions to Your Wishlist from Coach Krystal Kelly

It wouldn’t be the off season without some plans for improvement – we can’t help it, we’re hooked on getting better (and those dressage judges aren’t getting any more lenient!). 

Education is a big deal for us here at EN, and we love to work with brands that provide accessible educational opportunities to riders everywhere. This featured Holiday Gift Guide Wishlist comes to you from Coach Krystal Kelly, who boasts an impressive resume that’s led her to all walks of equestrian life and a passion for helping others.

Coach Krystal Kelly started her company in 2021 during the pandemic and went all in as a virtual coach. She now has several extremely popular and successful virtual coaching programs where she takes her clients through step by step training plans and gives regular critiques on their riding videos. Her speciality that really separates her from the rest of the online equestrian space is her 1:1 coaching, her unique training methods focusing on biomechanics and a system and training plan for her clients to follow to get results fast.

Here are just a few of Coach Krystal’s offerings that we think would make excellent gifts this holiday season. Whether you’re shopping for that hard-to-gift friend, for stocking stuffers, for the rider with a new horse or who’s just starting out, or even for yourself, there’s something for you on our list! Be sure to check out everything Coach Krystal Kelly offers here.

1.  Show Jumping Guide to Seeing Distances (Vol. 1)

Grand Prix jumpers don’t have time to set up 52 poles every day because it “looks cute” on Instagram. They stick to what works. That’s why in this complete training plan, journal and workbook all-in-one, you will find effective, simple exercises and a step-by-step curriculum to follow to help you catapult your jumping to new heights.

2. Dressage Guide to Perfecting Rhythm

This *complete training plan, journal, and workbook* is designed to take your dressage skills to the next level with step-by-step guidance and scientifically backed exercises.

In this 4-week program, you’ll be guided through warm-ups, main sessions, and cool-downs tailored to progressively build your riding foundation. The unique exercises provided in this workbook focus on improving your horse’s balance, rhythm, and connection—while also sharpening your focus and precision as a rider

3. Show Jumping Guide to Building Topline

Use this 28-day training program to improve your jumping (and your flatwork) while also contributing to the building of a strong, healthy topline in your horse

4. The 90 Day Horse Riding Journal

This powerful horse riding journal includes over 190 pages and is a great tool for equestrians looking to have more structure in their rides and a organized way of documenting their progress.

5. Over 200 Guided Audio Lessons

Get Fun Exercises & Step-By-Step Audio Riding Instructions with a World Renowned FEI II Coach, all on your phone! No matter how remote you live, how many horses you own, what level you ride or discipline you do, you’ll find something to learn in this pack of audio lessons (which can also be purchased as a monthly subscription). 

6. An Online Course all about starting and growing your own equine business

Got a budding entrepreneur who needs a solid gift? Look no further than Coach Krystal’s course all about starting and growing an equine business. You’ll get a behind the curtain look at how Krystal operates her business, as well as insights on what you should be on the lookout for in terms of best practices for a successful business.

7. 10 Months of Dressage Training Plans

Master contact, build topline, fix your position, strengthen your mindset, and much more in this bundle of bestsellers focusing on dressage training that will be applicable to any eventing enthusias

8. A Coach Krystal Kelly Gift Card

Not sure what the rider in your life would most like? Never fear! Coach Krystal also offers gift cards, which can be used toward any offering on her site.

This Holiday Gift Guide list was provided with support from Coach Krystal Kelly.

Cycle4Caroline Heads to £300,000 for Charity

Success! Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Equestrian royalty turned out to support the Cycle4Caroline team complete their epic 1,182km ultra-endurance cycle challenge.

The landmark charity cycle ride saw stars of eventing such as Zara Tindall, William Fox-Pitt and Tina Cook, join with showjumping royalty Joe Stockdale and Jack Whitaker, to complete the final leg of the ride from Windsor to London.

Donations to Cycle4Carline now hover around £300,000, which will provide vital funds for both the two benefitting charities – British Eventing Support Trust and Spinal Research UK.

Reflecting on crossing the finish line Tom March commented: “It kind of feels like a whirlwind of emotions to have finished. A sense of excitement, achievement and relief to have everyone back safe and sound. There were definitely a few times that felt a little bit hairy, particularly the penultimate day, trying to fight our way into Windsor with Friday afternoon rush hour traffic!”

“Obviously delighted to have passed the £250,000 mark on Saturday, and now just hope that it keeps ticking away for the next little while, so we can help as many people as possible,” Tom added.

The challenge was completed in memory of, and honoring, Tom’s sister, Caroline March who sadly passed away in March 2024 following life changing injuries she sustained in an eventing fall in 2022.

With the challenge led by Piggy and Tom March, they were joined throughout by British Eventing Support Trust Chair of the Board of Trustees and three-time Olympian Ian Stark OBE, Support Trust Patron Alastair Wilson, and multi-medallist Holly Woodhead. Piggy’s sister Nini French, herself a top-level eventing rider, and Racesafe’s Tommy How.

Ian Stark shows off his badge of battle: a broken thumb sustained during Cycle4Caroline. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Making the long trip from New Zealand to join the challenge is Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) Research Trust founder in Catriona Williams MNZM. Catriona was formerly one of New Zealand’s leading international equestrian riders. Following a riding accident in 2002, she is now C6/C7 tetraplegic and confined to a wheelchair.

Of the experience Catriona commented: “I’ve done 11 days on the road with the best team in the world. I have to say it was the team who were the highlight. We’ve had some magical views, a crazy ride into London, but altogether the team just worked so well together and making it the most incredible experience.”

Speaking the morning after the finish, Alastair Wilson commented: “In reflection the highlight would be the Saturday when it was snowing (at Belsay), the conditions were horrendous and everyone pulled together so well, knowing that if we didn’t complete that day the whole journey would be put into jeopardy. If we’d have been knocked back by a day it would have caused a major issue, and potentially stopped us from raising a large amount of money for the charities. I think that’s the most proud I’ve been.”

The fundraising message will still continue to be championed by the core team of riders, as they work collaboratively to raise much needed investment for two incredibly important charities.

To donate, click here.