Classic Eventing Nation

Sunday Links

I can’t believe it’s nearly the end of June already. The spring has absolutely flown by and soon enough we’ll all be sweltering under the summer (that is, if you’re not already depending on where you live!) The excitement of the Olympics will be upon us in the blink of an eye and then the fall eventing season will be practically right around the corner. Where does the time go?

Major International Weekend Action:

Strzegom Horse Trials and Nation’s Cup: [Website/Live Stream] [Schedule] [Starting Order/ Leaderboard] [EN’s Coverage]

U.S. Weekend Action:

Arrowhead H.T. (Billings, Mt.): [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Fox River Valley Pony Club H.T. (Barrington, Il.): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Inavale Farm H.T. (Philomath, Or.): [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Loudoun Hunt Pony Club Summer H.T. (Leesburg, Va.) : [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Midsouth Pony Club H.T. (Lexington, Ky.): [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Stable View Summer H.T. and Area III Championships (Aiken, Sc.): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Sunday Links:

Eventing Safety with Andrew Hoy

Tokyo Olympics: Thomas Heffernan Ho set to make eventing history for Hong Kong after sealing place in Games

Penn Vet New Bolton Center, Royal Veterinary College Launch New MARS EQUESTRIAN™ Veterinary Scholarship Program for Equine Research

Strong horse? How to work with him rather than against him over fences

New master’s degree in Britain aims to enhance physical therapies for horse riders

Just in on Jumper Nation: Growing Up with the Team – Jimmy Wofford Book Excerpt

Saturday Video: Nothing to see here, just a turkey wearing a tiny saddle…

When you run out of horses so you have to improvise 😂

Posted by Amanda Smith on Wednesday, June 23, 2021

The Luhmühlen Tour Diaries, Part Eight: That Time We Won a Five-Star

Getting to a CCI5* is always an enormous undertaking — but never more so than in a pandemic year. Our own Tilly Berendt is on the road to Luhmühlen with Great Britain’s Mollie Summerland and her horse Charly van ter Heiden – and she’s documenting the whole journey as it happens. Welcome to part eight: you already know how this one ends.

Part One: The Long, Hard Road out of Plague Island

Part Two: The One with the Border Police Kerfuffle

Part Three: The BeNeLux Sausagefest

Part Four: A Heartbreaking Tale of Unrequited Love

Part Five: In Which the Price is Right

Part Six: Two Girls, One Five-Star

Part Seven: In Which We Lead a Five-Star

If any typo could summarise life at Luhmühlen, it’s this one.

As in the last blog, I feel I need to start this one with an apology for keeping you all waiting. As it turns out, the relentless madness of multitasking at a five-star doesn’t stop once the competition wraps; there’s a lorry to pack, final articles to file, a horse to feed a million Polo mints to, celebrations to be had, and then a long, tough journey back to England to be undertaken. After that, there are final logistical loose ends to tie up, suitcases to unpack (barely – I’m still living off the top layer of my luggage), heartfelt goodbyes to be said, and then so, so much sleep to catch up on. Beyond that, there’s the realisation that somehow, you have to put into words the full scope of what’s happened, and that comes with a fear that’s unfamiliar to me: a fear of getting it wrong, of running out of those words, and of pressing ‘publish’ for the final time and really, truly having to put the whole experience to bed. Since we finally made it back to England at 4 a.m. on Tuesday morning, it’s all been a bit too much to face – but now I’m here, and nearly human again, and I hope I can try to do the whole thing some sort of justice.

When I left you last, we’d made it through to Saturday night in a hot, sweaty whirlwind: between Mollie, myself, and Jillian Giessen, head groom to Tim Lips, our little team had stayed atop the leaderboard and put a healthy, happy horse to bed for the evening. Not only had Mollie and Charly dug deep and produced that impressive, gutsy round across the country, they’d also come in with the fastest time of the day – not too shabby, when you consider that darling Chazzle is only 24% blood. A busy afternoon followed for me, as I covered the CCI4*-S cross-country, and Mollie worked on recuperating and recharging her own batteries after an incredibly intense morning battling the heat and that achingly difficult cross-country course. As we reconvened that evening – each having made it to the showers too late to enjoy any warm water – it was in a haze of delirious happiness, tinged with sadness for our friends who hadn’t had the same great day that we’d enjoyed.

That’s the thing about eventing: we’re all one big family, connected in strange but solid ways, and we ride out those ups and downs together. It’s been the thing that’s saved our bacon a number of times throughout this trip – from German journalist Juliane Barthes locating some stirrup leathers for Mollie for cross-country day to Jillian stepping in to help us before and after Mollie’s round – but it also means that no matter how well your day has gone, part of your head and your heart are always with those who are feeling the burn a few lorries away.

But that night, we had to keep our heads firmly screwed on. Before I made the long trek up to the showers of doom, I ran through the to-do list with Mollie, who was wading through the messages of congratulations and good luck wishes pouring in.

“Right,” I said. “Shower – write a blog post – sort through some photos – set an alarm – win a five-star. Not a bad to-do list, really.”

Mollie laughed, and I was struck once again by her relaxation – a seriously good omen, if the previous few days were anything to go by. Before each of the prior two phases, she’d mentioned how uncharacteristically calm she felt, and in each of those phases, she’d outperformed everyone to hold the lead. Now, we’d be heading into the most pressurised situation yet – and the phase that Mollie considered her and Charly’s weak point – and that calm remained in place. I mentally filed it away with all those 11:11s, and the magpies we’d manically saluted every day, and the stars I’d wished on while waiting in shower queues. (Some of those had turned out to be planes, admittedly, but perhaps there’s a patron saint of air travel who was feeling particularly generous. I had to hope.)

What do you reckon would be the perfect scenario for the night before the most important showjumping round of a rider’s life, to that point anyway? Probably a quiet night in the lorry, with little ambient noise and a mild temperature, so that any possible sleep could come easily, right?

Alas. There’s nary a Luhmühlen that goes by without some kind of biblical storm, and we’d been coasting through all week in seriously scorching temperatures. We were overdue a big one, and it rolled in at around 5 a.m., lighting the lorry park up and shaking the ground as it raged overhead. Within minutes, my tent (with its uncloseable door) had flooded, and I was wrapped in a damp duvet attempting to shield myself from the worst of the deluge. Inside the metal lorry, it must have sounded even more horrifying, and Mollie was jolted awake into the worst possible conditions to face the day ahead. For my part, I could think of nothing other than 2019’s event, at which a similar storm overnight on Friday caused such significant flooding that bales of shavings were swept away in the current and the local fire department had to come and siphon water off the grounds. It felt like the first dodgy omen we’d had in weeks.

Nevertheless, we headed into the hustle and bustle of the stables to prepare for the final horse inspection, which felt extra pressurised after the tough conditions of the previous day.

“Don’t cover yourself in hoof polish this time,” laughed Mollie, as I worked my way carefully around a very fresh Charly’s white socks, which I’d just scrubbed and chalked to perfection. Almost on cue, the hoof polish slipped out of my hand, and in my haste to divert it from those pearly whites, I absolutely drenched myself like a sad, soggy dalmation. Still, I thought, we’ve got through every other day with me covered in hoof polish. Maybe it’s a necessary part of the equation.

Mollie and Charly get their first glimpse of how the showjumping course is riding.

All fifteen remaining horses passed the final inspection in record time, and there was no time for any faffing about: the showjumping course had been opened for walking, and without any trainers in situ, Mollie needed all the time she could get to formulate her plan of action. For a rider who doubts her prowess in this phase — “I’d rather have done dressage or cross-country again,” she later told the press — this was a challenge that went beyond the norm: Luhmühlen makes best use of its surfaced arena and presents the toughest, biggest, and most technical five-star showjumping courses you’re ever likely to see. Because all of her trainers were stuck at home in England, Mollie had to be creative in her walking: she videoed each line as she walked it, counting her paces out loud, and sent the videos to her showjumping coach Jay Halim, who gave her feedback on how to ride each fence and promised to supply further intel after he’d watched the first few riders on the livestream. With only fourteen riders to jump ahead of her, Mollie would have time to watch just a couple of rounds herself before we headed into the warm-up. We had to make every second, every step, and every fence count, or risk dropping the ball.

Once you spend the amount of time together that Mollie and I did over the past few weeks, it’s almost like you start to share a brain – and I knew, when I saw Mollie ride down to the gate to watch the first few rounds, that this wasn’t the time to chat through ideas and options or offer any platitudes. It was simply time to grit our teeth, trust the process, and do the work. And that’s what we did.

I was still on journalist and photographer duties, and so I’d scoped out the best — and closest — fences to be able to photograph each rider on course. Both the first and final fences were square oxers, which were ideal in terms of catching horses in a nice shape over the fence, and both made good use of the light – and so I made a plan to alternate which one I used in each round once Mollie began warming up. If I photographed one rider over the first fence, I’d photograph the next over the last, giving me the maximum possible time in the collecting ring to set fences. After I’d photographed a rider over the last, I’d grab the next over the first — and so on, and so forth. In between, I carved out a speedy route that allowed me to sprint via the Longines hospitality tent, fling myself over the little boundary fence, and dash back into the arena to set the next warm-up fence for Mollie, using a system we’d practiced and perfected while jumping at Peelbergen in the Netherlands the week before. This time, I had fewer terrifying showjumping grooms to contend with – instead, I found myself sharing an oxer with a particularly dishy German coach.

“One hole or two?” he purred, as I flung myself at the back rail to set the next fence. Oo–er, good sir, I thought to myself – but for once, even I didn’t have the bandwidth to make any fundamentally immature jokes. (Is this adulthood? Had I finally reached it? Inconclusive.)

It felt like no time at all had elapsed before it was time for us to head back over to the in-gate. There, we were able to watch Germany’s Christoph Wahler — jumping in second place in his five-star debut — produce what had to have been the round of the day. Flawless, smooth, and textbook perfect, it was every inch a winning round – and as the celebratory music rang out for him, accompanied by a roar of cheers, I think both Mollie and I must have had the same thought: “right, well, Christoph is the winner. Let’s see if we can nab second.”

For Charly, it must have come as something of a shock to enter the cavernous main arena to a thunder of applause after a week of tackling a spectator-free five-star, especially as he’s been shy of crowds in the past. But Mollie had her game face on and Charly was fit, fresh, and jumping on springs after Jay’s strategic warm-up regime. The crowd fell silent as she popped over one, two, three… and then, halfway around the course, he stumbled. Time felt as though it had stopped; my malfunctioning heart leapt into my throat; I saw, almost in slow motion, Mollie’s balance getting tipped out of the saddle. And then, just as quickly as it had happened, he righted himself, tossed Mollie back into the plate, and she sat deep in the back of the saddle and found the next line. Charly tap, tap, tapped his way through – but they were clear. It felt like every fence threatened to tumble, and no one dared breathe, but then there was just the last to go – and they were over it safely with just a smattering of time penalties. We all froze for a moment, checked the scoreboard, and then…well, then it’s all a blur, really. A glorious, baffling, ecstatic blur, and all I could do was throw myself back over that little boundary fence as Mollie and Charly came out – victorious! Can you believe it?! – and we hugged and sobbed and tried to process what had happened.

This! Is not the easiest way to hug!!

I’ve been in so many collecting rings over the years as winners have been decided at five-stars, and it’s always an emotive whirlwind of hugs and tears and exclamations and stamping hooves, but this time it was my job to fasten the rosette onto the bridle of a cavorting Charly, to swing that winner’s rug over his back, to pass his boots to the stewards while he spun around me in circles and threatened to squash my long-suffering camera, while a sobbing Mollie was swept up in a crowd of congratulations. I felt almost numb as the hugs and back-slaps came my way, too – from Tim Lips and Jillian, who had become family, from Andrew Nicholson, who had laughed as he watched me sprinting from ring to ring just moments before, from endless smiling faces who became a joyous blur as it felt like the world was spinning in all sorts of funny directions. We’d done it. We’d really, truly done it — just two girls without any support crew, living in a tiny horsebox with no electricity, never managing to find dinner (nor lunch, in my case), just putting our heads together and figuring out a plan and being saved, over and over again, by the kindness and generosity of our fellow competitors and compatriots. It felt like ancient history that, just three weeks prior, I’d been having to argue my way through a tiny handful of people telling me it couldn’t be done, that we wouldn’t even be able to get to Luhmühlen. Even making it this far had felt like an extraordinary victory. And now? What now? We’d shown everyone who’d ever doubted us just what could be done with a bit of faith and a whole hell of a lot of hard work.

I’d love to say I spent the afternoon celebrating, but there was the small matter of that CCI4*-S left to cover – and I did so in a haze, vacillating between a sort of numb shock and a total outpouring of emotion, which meant that no one was safe from my sudden tears. Maybe it seems a little dramatic to have taken the win to heart as much as I did — after all, Mollie and I had only teamed up three weeks prior, and though we’d known each other considerably longer, and I’d always rooted for her in particular, it wasn’t as though this had been the culmination of many years of working together. But those three weeks had been extraordinarily hard-won and intense, with both of us focussed so wholly on the goal at hand, whether that was simply making it out of the UK, or getting to the five-star, or ultimately winning it. We’d fought for it every step of the way – and our shared similarities meant that in so many ways, we were jumping the same hurdles. Both of us come from unlikely backgrounds, without money behind us, and both of us have had to make the bare minimum work – for Mollie, that involved spending a winter living in her lorry after losing her yard and living situation just after returning from her first five-star; for me, there’d been years of penny-pinching and living on porridge just to lay some kind of a foundation after moving to the UK with £50 in my pocket a decade ago. Both of us have had to accept and overcome mental health wobbles, and both of us have been dismissed by people who simply didn’t believe in what we were capable of. Though we’ve lived very different lives, we’d become connected by the rough stuff; the stuff we didn’t have to work to explain to one another, because each of us just knew. That we could team up to take on the world, even in the strangest of circumstances, felt like a victory for the underdog: you can do it. Things do get better. Keep fighting, even when there’s no one there to fight with you. Your army will come.

And then you, too, can annoy the British team trainers all you like.

Somehow, though, I made it through the rest of the day, tried to screw my head back on firmly enough to write a bumper report covering both classes and interview the top trio in the four-star.

Andrew Hoy, who’d finished third in the class with Vassily de Lassos, caught my eye at the end of his press conference interview, in which he’d spoken emphatically about the importance of surrounding yourself with a good team — and learning from them, too.

“And you and Mollie,” he said with a broad grin. “I never would have guessed, when we were all at customs together in Calais, with you guys in a two-horse lorry, that I was looking at the winner of the five-star!”

“We were saying as we drove away in our little box that you probably thought we were the local Pony Club, out looking for autographs,” I laughed – but as Mollie had said earlier, it’s not about the lorry you drive in on. It’s about what you pull off the back. And by god, did we have the horse of a lifetime on the back of our little box.

Also delighted to announce I became a nurse, thanks to Facebook’s dodgy translation feature.

But what a week for horses of a lifetime, overall. Each of the final top three had that extraordinary partnership – their heart horses, who they’d each had since they were five-year-olds, and who had given them all those big firsts. First five-stars, first team call-ups, first big wins, first tastes of how extraordinary the sport can be, but also how much it can break your heart. Each of them had forged the kind of partnership that pulled them out of bed the next day after a setback, and each of them were getting to see the fruits of their labours — and their love — writ large. I could have — and honestly, did — cried for each of them.

How’s that for a send-off?

By half-past eight that evening, it was time to pack up one last time and go in search of a proper celebration before our departure the next day.

As we packed up the lorry, we were one of just three left on site: one lorry was in the process of heading out the gate too, while the Hoys had set up shop for one final night in situ. We packed the last of our things – some heavy trunks, a flooded tent, and a thoroughly depressed looking airbed – into the back, locked up, and then loaded up Charly, who drank in his last glimpse of the place with wide eyes and pricked ears.

“Say goodbye to Luhmühlen, buddy,” I said. “It’s all yours.”

“Except for the elephant graveyard. Give that one a miss, pal.”

An evening in our little lorry with no dinner and no alcohol would have made for a pretty lacklustre celebration, but fortunately, we’d been invited to Klosterhof Medingen, the stunning base of second-placed Christoph Wahler, to raise a glass to the weekend and let Charly enjoy a night in a real stable with a thick straw bed. As Christoph laid the straw and Mollie tackled Charly’s boots and rug, I nipped around the back of the lorry to do the really important stuff: fetch the booze from our prize stash (which included a cheeky something-something for us having won the groom’s prize, too – though how could they not give it to our little ragtag team?). I put the key in the lock, brimming with pre-sesh bravado – and nothing happened. I tried again. And again. And again. The lock was stuck tight.

After abortive attempts by both Mollie and Christoph, we decided to leave it and tackle it later on, when Mollie and I would need to get back in to go to bed. After all, there were far more important things to do – like drinking peppermint schnapps and listening to Germany’s finest club classics. (Helpfully, each song was explained to us in detail: “this one is about the joys of agriculture,” someone told me sombrely during one particularly unlistenable bop. As it turns out, Germans like highly specific and very literal subjects for their tunes.)

You can see where this is going, can’t you? We never did get back into the lorry – not that night, wherein Mollie slept on the front seat, wrapped in her winner’s rug, and I found whichever bed was going spare – nor the next day, as we embarked on the long trip to the ferry in France. No big deal, right? Except it kind of was a big deal: everything we owned was in the back, including bank cards, clean clothes, contact lenses, jackets, my laptop… in short, we were a bit screwed. Mollie had had to sleep in her daily contacts so she could see while doing the day-long drive, and the weather had taken a real turn for the worse, but we were spectacularly underdressed — and freezing cold — in our summery garb. And then, everything started to go pear-shaped: a nine-hour trip turned into a fourteen-hour one before we’d even got on the ferry, and rather than celebrating on the way home, we could be found hunched over in service stations, filling up a feed bucket from bottles of water because we couldn’t get to the canister in the back to offer Charly a drink. (Buying those bottles was hard enough: after too much travelling and too little sleep, I wandered into the the shop and had to actually ask myself what language they speak in France. And then I spoke bad Dutch to the poor cashier anyway.)

As we finally pulled into the ferry port in Calais — after getting completely and utterly lost in town, and asking for directions from a man who just kept telling us that he’d recently got out of prison — we realised we could be about to hit some serious trouble.

Not sure Mollie would have looked so happy had she known she’d be living in those clothes for three days straight.

Anyone who’s done the Dover to Calais crossing and back again knows that getting back into the UK is the tougher bit of the journey. Because Calais has long been the site of refugee camps, there are stringent security checks in place to ensure that no one has stowed away on board, in desperate search for a better life — or just some kind of a life at all. There was every likelihood that the border police would want to search our lorry, and they weren’t likely to take it well if we told them we simply couldn’t get into it.

“Oh god, they’re going to rip the door off,” wailed Mollie, and I agreed with her. It wasn’t looking great for the final legs of our trip home.

Somehow — and truly, I don’t know how — luck was on our side. We were waved through the police checks, and through customs (once we’d presented our exemption letters from the British Equestrian Federation, after which they were considerably gentler with us), and then sent to park up and wait for our midnight ferry. But that changing of the weather had followed us through the day.

“Are you empty?” shouted a high-vis-clad man, bellowing over the high winds.

“No, we have a horse on board,” I shouted back.

“‘Av you got lashing points?”

“No, we don’t.”

“You are joking?!” He dashed away, speaking furiously in French into his radio.

“Yes, because not having lashing points in a storm is exactly the sort of great joke we like to make,” Mollie said, rolling her eyes. But neither of us were finding the situation particularly funny – if we couldn’t travel on the ferry, we’d need to find somewhere to take Charly for the night. Oh, and have I mentioned that both of our phones had run out of international data? And it was already past midnight? Cool, just making sure you’re up to speed.

Thank god for Charly, who is the happiest horse in the world and took each hurdle we faced with aplomb and another snatch of his haynet. We did, eventually, get let onto that ferry, where the staff managed to wedge us between a wall and some much bigger lorries to keep our little box in place if the crossing got rough. And so we made it back to the UK, through yet another round of customs paperwork checks, and on the road to my place, where we could unload Charly at 4 a.m. and try to get some sleep – in the back of a different lorry, mind you, because my house key was locked in the back of ours.

After a couple of hours of kip, I got up to feed Charly – still bright-eyed and bossy, wondering where on earth his breakfast was — and attempted to unlock the lorry again. I rarely feel helpless about much of anything, but exhaustion had caught up in a big way, and I stood in the rain wailing like a lunatic until a much more sane collective of folks from around the yard came to try to help me. A mounting block, a broom handle, one incredibly long pair of arms, and a lot of jimmying later, and we were in. I wailed a bit more, for good measure.

“D-d-do you guys want to s-s-see the trophy?” I blubbed. They looked a bit alarmed but took pity on me while I unboxed it like I was at a preschool show-and-tell session.

When there’s a 5* winner temporarily overnighting at your yard, you’ve got to come meet him. One of Littleton’s coolest kiddos actually got taken out of school to come befriend Charly, who ADORED her.

Parting is such sweet sorrow, and all that – and saying goodbye to Mollie and Charly as they headed for home was just the latest in a long string of teary goodbyes over the past week or so. Though the press accounts of the win will focus on the fact that Mollie and I did it alone, the truth of the matter is that so many people contributed in so many ways, and without them, none of this could have happened – and it wouldn’t have been anywhere near as fun. There’s all her home team, for example: trainers Carl Hester, Olivia Oakeley, Jay Halim, and Robin Dumas, who coached from afar using videos and, in Robin’s case, went above and beyond to offer advice and support when we hit logistical issues on our trip home. Then, of course, there’s fellow 5* rider Julia Norman and her team, with whom Mollie is based in Wiltshire, who supported so wholeheartedly from afar, as did Paula Cloke, her husband Adrian, and daughter Georgie, who own one of Mollie’s young horses and lent us our little lorry. Paula didn’t just give us the vehicle that became our home; she also FaceTimed us regularly, always with joy and love and enthusiasm, and lifted our spirits every time. Kate Tarrant and Charley Bloodworth at Littleton Manor, where I live, provided stables and support before and after our journey — and made sure my own beloved horse was happy and healthy on her holiday. The British World Class team, helmed by Chris Bartle and Dickie Waygood, supported our plan from the get go, and team vet Liz Brown went above and beyond to offer advice as I sorted logistics before and through the trip. Tim Lips took superhost to a whole new level: his yard provided the most exceptional facilities, but he also went above and beyond to share advice, wisdom, great stories and laughs, dinners in the sunshine, and so much more. He and his team – head girl Jillian Giessen, who was an utter legend throughout Luhmühlen, and the wonderful Gino Cassano and Gosia Niczyporuk – became more than colleagues, or even friends: they became our family, and we miss them dearly. Tim and Jonelle Price and their team were a wonderful addition in the latter part of our Dutch residence, and they continued to be positive and supportive through the competition – even when their own week didn’t go quite to plan. German media superstar Juliane Barthes (the German Tilly, and I am the English Juliane, we’ve decided) was a wonderful friend and comrade in the media centre, but also saved the day when we needed to source new stirrup leathers and couldn’t buy any short enough on site. She appeared, miraculously, with a borrowed pair the next day and almost certainly saved Mollie and Charly from a catastrophic accident on course. The Doel family were so warm and welcoming to us, saving us a parking space by their lorry when we arrived and letting us charge phones, sit outside with them in the evenings, and so, so kindly taking Charly back to the stables and getting him comfortable after the prize giving, when both Mollie and I had to rush into media duties. Luhmühlen’s own team were vocally supportive of us before we even arrived (though I did worry that they might not let us in, after reading the blogs) and so welcoming through the week; it feels odd not to drink plastic cups of champagne and smoke furtive cigarettes with them while debriefing after a long day. And we’re grateful beyond words to all of you who followed along and sent messages of support: we might have been just two gals and a horse, but really, our worldwide team was the biggest and best one we could ever have asked for. There are so, so many more people who deserve a mention, but only so many words and very few functioning brain cells left: just know, if you’re reading this and have had any involvement at all, that we are so grateful and I’ve probably cried about you at some point.

So now, we let the dust settle and try to comprehend the adventure of a lifetime, alone for the first time in weeks and missing all of it as though we’ve lost a limb. There are further journeys to go on, and goals to try to hit, my rent to attempt to pay, and continents for Mollie to learn about – but for now, we’ll just try to stay tread water in those memories of a lifetime, and the extraordinary people who came into our lives. Call me a soppy git all you want, but Carrie Bradshaw-esque, I couldn’t help but wonder: perhaps the real five-star win really was the friends we made along the way.

(Or, you know, maybe it was the five-star win. Who knows.)

EN’s coverage of Luhmühlen is brought to you in part by Kentucky Performance Products. Click here to learn more about Kentucky Performance Products and its wide array of supplements available for your horse.

Longines Luhmühlen Horse Trials: Website, EN’s Form Guide, Entries, Timing & Scoring, CCI5* Friday Dressage Ride Times, CCI4* Thursday Dressage Ride Times, CCI4* Friday Dressage Ride Times, Live Stream, EN’s Coverage, EN’s Instagram, EN’s Twitter

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Early Bird Catches the Live Stream: Strzegom & Swiss Championships

You could enjoy a leisurely Saturday morning, sleep in until a reasonable hour, maybe grab brunch with friends. OR! You could set your alarm to blast you into consciousness at some inane predawn hour to catch a European cross country live stream. Your life; you do you.

At risk of enabling, here are your links:

Option A: Swiss Championships and a preview of the Avenches facility where European Championships will be held this year. Live stream starts at like 3 a.m. Tick tock!

SA 26.06: 9h00 | CROSS CCI3* -S // 12h00 | CROSS CCI3* -L // 14h00 | CROSS CCI4* -S

Option B: the second leg of FEI Nations Cup Eventing, taking place at LOTTO Strzegom Horse Trials. You can watch the live stream via the Strzegom website or FEI partner ClipMyHorseTV. Recently, the EN team informally voted Tim Lips “The Best Person in the World and Everyone Else Is $h!t,” and he’s currently leading the FEI Nations Cup division individual scoreboard, so (in our professional opinion) rooting this sweet buddy on is raison d’être enough to set that alarm clock.

Get up early, and Go Eventing.

Saturday Links from Trefonas Law

We are extremely excited to have boots on the ground to once again bring you the best Olympic Eventing coverage you’ll find. Our Managing Editor, Sally, will be credentialed, vaccinated and working hard to bring you the detailed reports and fantastic photos that you know and love all the way from Tokyo. As we prepare our plan for coverage of the event, we’d love for you to help us out by filling out this single-question poll. Thank you, dear readers!

Major International Weekend Action:

Strzegom Horse Trials and Nation’s Cup: [Website/Live Stream] [Schedule] [Starting Order/ Leaderboard] [EN’s Coverage]

U.S. Weekend Action:

Arrowhead H.T. (Billings, Mt.): [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Fox River Valley Pony Club H.T. (Barrington, Il.): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Inavale Farm H.T. (Philomath, Or.): [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Loudoun Hunt Pony Club Summer H.T. (Leesburg, Va.) : [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Midsouth Pony Club H.T. (Lexington, Ky.): [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Stable View Summer H.T. and Area III Championships (Aiken, Sc.): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Saturday Links:

Lucinda Green: how to assess your horse’s fitness

Grandmother of three to represent Australia at Tokyo Olympics

The Memories of Steeplechase from USEA Classic Series Competitors

Tendonitis in the Superficial Digital Flexor Tendon

IOC set to relax complete ban on athlete demonstrations at Tokyo 2020

Saturday Video: All-around good guy, the Netherland’s Tim Lips, leads the CCIO4*-NC-S at Strezgom.

Trefonas Law is an immigration law firm located in Jackson, WY. We are able to provide advice and assistance on a variety of immigration issues including employment based visa services, athlete visas, family based immigration, among others.

Friday Video from SmartPak: Get to Know Lucinda Fredericks

There are certain partnerships that remain firmly in the forefront of public sentiment, long after their final trip down the centreline. Lucinda Fredericks and the extraordinary Headley Britannia, who won Kentucky, Badminton, Burghley, and Blenheim across the course of their incredible career, are certainly among those. In her latest vlog, Megan Elphick gets to know the woman — and the horse — behind the wins. Prepare your tissues, folks, because this one tackles some tough stuff.

Team Poland Leads FEI Eventing Nations Cup Dressage at Strzegom

Mateusz Kiempa and Lassban Radovix. Photo by Leszek Wójcik.

The home team has the edge after the first phase of the FEI Eventing Nations Cup at LOTTO Strzegom Horse Trials. Team Poland — Wiktoria Knap with Quintus, Jan Kamiński with Jard, Michał Hycki with Moonshine, and Mateusz Kiempa with Lassban Radovix — posted a combined score of 91.6 (one drop score is permitted for teams of four). They’re followed by Team Germany in second (95.2), Sweden in third (100.1), Belgium in fourth (102.1) and Italy in fifth (103.4).

The team’s top scorer in the sandbox was Mateusz Kiempa, who sits third on the individual scoreboard as well. “I’m happy with the ride and the score,” Mateusz said. “It can always be better, but the result is good enough and we’ll fight on tomorrow. I think the cross-country course includes some demanding combinations, so we will see how we do there.”

Tim Lips and TMX Herby. Photo by Leszek Wójcik.

Tim Lips of The Netherlands is first with TMX Herby, a 9-year old Dutch gelding (VDL Zirocco Blue x Naomi, by Olympic Ferro) owned by the late Max Trenning, on a score of 26.2. We were saddened to hear that Max, an avid eventer, patron of the sport and supportive owner, passed away earlier this month, and our hearts go out to his family and friends.

In second position is Jule Weher of Germany with Ruling Spirit on a score of 27.0.

In the CCI3*-S the lead belongs to Nadine Marzahl with Vally K, and Sweden’s Louise Romeike with Caspian 15 is the leader in the CCI2*-S. Cross country played out today for the Intro and CCIP2*-L classes. The best combination in the Intro is Ricarda Berkenheide from Germany with Belle Jour, and Emilia Vogel with Tina leads the pony leaderboard.

Best of luck to all this weekend. You can watch the live stream via the Strzegom website or FEI partner ClipMyHorseTV.

Strzegom: WebsiteScheduleStarting OrderLeaderboard

British Equestrian Announces 2021 FEI European Eventing Championship Long List

Mollie Summerland and Charly van ter Heiden. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

British Equestrian and the British Eventing Selectors can today confirm the 30 eventing athlete and horse combinations that will form their long list of entries ahead of the FEI Eventing European Championship, set to take place in Avenches, Switzerland, on 22–26 September this year.

Long list entries, listed in alphabetical order by athlete surname:

  • Sarah Bullimore (48) based in Keysoe, Bedfordshire, with the Kew Jumping Syndicate, Brett Bullimore and her own Corouet (chestnut, gelding, 10yrs, 15.2hh, Balou du Rouet x Lovis Corinth, Breeder: Sarah Bullimore GBR)
  • Rosalind Canter (35) based in Hallington, Lincolnshire, with Caroline Moore and her own Allstar B (bay, gelding, 16yrs, 17hh, Ephebe For Ever x Erkstein, Breeder: FAJ Van der Burg NED) and Michele Saul’s Lordships Graffalo (bay, gelding, 9yrs, 17hh, Grafenstolz x Rock King, Breeder: Lordships Stud Writtle College GBR)
  • Kirsty Chabert (32) based in Salisbury, Wiltshire, with John Johnston and Carole Somers’ Classic IV (bay, mare, 12yrs, 16.1hh, s. Calvaro FC, Breeder: P. Charles GBR)
  • Emilie Chandler (40) from Melton Mowbray, Leicestershire, with Maria Doel’s Gortfadda Diamond (brown, gelding, 12yrs, 16.2hh, Water Valley Cool Diamond x Glacial Storm, Breeder: Sean Thomas Lydon IRL)
  • Laura Collett (31) based in Salperton, Gloucestershire, with Karen Bartlett, Keith Scott and her own London 52 (bay, gelding, 12yrs, 16.3hh, Landos x Quinar, Breeder: Ocke Riewerts GER) and Keith Scott, Nick How and her own Mr Bass (bay, gelding, 13yrs, 16.2hh, Carrico x Exorbitant XX, Breeder: Henning Heinz GER)
  • Kristina Cook (50) based Findon, West Sussex, with Elisabeth Murdoch and Keith Tyson’s Billy the Red (chestnut, gelding, 14yrs, 16.1hh, Balou du Rouet x Stan The Man XX, Breeder: Michaela Weber-Herrmann GER)
  • William Fox- Pitt (52) based in Sturminster Newton, Dorset, with Jennifer Dowling and his own Little Fire (bay, gelding, 12yrs, 17hh, Graf Top x Heraldik GER) and the Oratorio Syndicate’s Oratorio (brown, gelding, 12yrs, 16.3hh, Oslo Biats x Topanoora, Breeder: R. Jenks GBR)
  • Pippa Funnell (52) based in Dorking, Surrey, with Jonathan and Jane Clarke’s MGH Grafton Street (bay, gelding, 13yrs, 16.2hh, s. OBOS Quality, Breeder: Padraig and Lucy McCarthy GBR) and Barbara and Nicholas Walkinshaw’s Billy Walk On (bay, gelding, 12yrs, 16.3hh, Billy Mexico x Golden Bash, Breeder: Donal Barnwell GBR)
  • Ben Hobday (33) based in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, with Jane Chamber’s and his own Shadow Man (chestnut, gelding, 11yrs, 17hh, Fidjy of Colors x Winningmood van de Arenberg, BEL)
  • Yasmin Ingham (24) based in Nantwich, Cheshire, originally from the Isle of Man, with Janette Chinn and Sue Davies’ Banzai Du Loir (chestnut, gelding, 10yrs, 16.2hh, Nouma D’Auzay x Livarot, Breeder: Pierre Gouye FRA)
  • Tom Jackson (28) based in Ashford, Kent, with Patricia Davenport, Milly Simmie and Sarah Webb’s Capels Hollow Drift (grey, gelding, 10yrs, 16.2hh, Shannondale Sarco St Ghyvan x Lucky Gift, Breeder: Jeanette Glynn IRL)
  • Kitty King (38) based in Chippenham, Wiltshire, with Diana Bown, Sally Eyre, Samantha Wilson and Sally Lloyd-Baker’s Vendredi Biats (grey, gelding, 12yrs, 16.2hh, Winningmood x Camelia de Ruelles, Breeder: Phillipe Brivois FRA)
  • Piggy March (40) based in Maidwell, Northamptonshire, with John and Chloe Perry and Alison Swinburn’s Brookfield Inocent (bay, gelding, 12yrs, 16.3hh, Inocent x Kings Servant, Breeder: John Mulvey IRL)
  • Tom McEwen (30) based in Stroud, Gloucestershire, with Fred and Penny Barker, Jane Inns and Ali McEwen’s Toledo de Kerser (bay, gelding, 14yrs, 16.1hh, Diamant de Semilly x Papillon Rouge, Breeder: Kerstin Drevet FRA)
  • Harry Meade (37) based in West Littleton, Wiltshire, with Mandy Gray and his own Superstition (bay, gelding, 12yrs, 16.1hh, s. Satisfaction FRH, Breeder: Eva Meier GBR) and David Bernstein, Sophie Caruth, Tamsie Castle and Nigella Hall’s Tenareze (bay, gelding, 14yrs, 16.1hh, Jaguar Mail x Quatar de Plape, Breeder: Patrick Sisqueille FRA)
  • Mollie Summerland (23) based in Marlborough, Wiltshire with her own Charly van ter Heiden (bay, gelding, 12yrs, 16.1hh, Contendros Bube x Escudo II, Breeder: Klaus Steffens GER)
  • Gemma Tattersall (36) based in Horsham, West Sussex, with Caroline Teltsch’s Santiago Bay (bay, mare, 13yrs, 16.1hh, ARS Vivendi x Aldatus Z, Breeder: Thomas Merrigan IRL) and Christopher Stone’s Chilli Knight (chestnut, gelding, 11yrs, 16.2hh, Chilli Morning x Rock King, Breeder: Christopher Stone GBR)
  • Izzy Taylor (38) based in Bicester, Oxfordshire, with Mark Sartori and her own Monkeying Around (bay, gelding, 10yrs, 16.2hh, Bertoli W x Donnerhall II, Breeder: Christian Heinrich GER)
  • Oliver Townend (38) based in Ellesmere, Shropshire, with Karyn Shuter, Angela Hislop and Val Ryan’s Ballaghmor Class (grey, gelding, 14yo, 16.2hh, s. Courage II, Breeder: Noel Hicky IRL) and Angela Hislop’s Cooley Master Class (bay, gelding, 16yrs, 16.2hh, Ramiro B x Master Imp, Breeder: John Hagan IRL)
  • Nicola Wilson (44) based in Northallerton, North Yorkshire, with Deirdre Johnston and James and Jo Lambert’s JL Dublin (dark brown, gelding, 10yo, 16.2hh, Diarados Cheeky Boy x Cantano, Breeder: Volker Coettsche-Goetze GER) and James and Jo Lambert’s Bulana (black, mare, 15yrs, 16.3hh, Tygo x Furore, Breeder: S. van Dellen NED)
  • Isabelle (Bubby) Upton (22) from Newmarket, Suffolk, with Rachel Upton’s Cannavaro (bay, gelding, 14yrs, 16.2hh, Oklund x Don Juan, Breeder: E. van de Vleuten NED) and Rachel Upton’s Cola (brown, gelding, 11yrs, 16.2hh, Catoki x Contender, Breeder: Peter Boege GER)

All combinations hold their place on the long list subject to achieving the necessary minimum eligibility requirements to qualify for the championship

Selection decisions are subject to the athletes and horses maintaining fitness and performance, and this list may be amended at any stage. When the championship schedule is released, a further nominated selection meeting will be held to narrow down the long list to 18 combinations that will be submitted to the Fédération Equestre Internationale (FEI) as our nominated entries for the Eventing European Championship 2021.

The selected squad of six, including four team and two individual combinations, plus reserves, will be announced on or around 20 August.

First West Coast Leg of the Adequan®/USEF Eventing Youth Team Challenge Takes Place at Aspen Farms

Kayla Dumler and Faramir. Photo by
Cortney Drake Photography.

Youth eventing athletes from the western U.S. had their first opportunity to compete in the Adequan®/USEF Eventing Youth Team Challenge last weekend at Aspen Farms Horse Trials. Eight talented athletes competed as individuals in the first West Coast leg of the inaugural Youth Team Challenge in Yelm, Washington.

In the CCI2*-S division, Kayla Dumler (Enumclaw, Wash.) and her 2010 Thoroughbred gelding, Faramir, took home the top score, adding nothing to their dressage score of 29.8 to finish in first.

In the CCI3*-S division, Haley Turner (Alamo, Calif.) finished on a 46.7 with her 2010 Irish Sport Horse gelding, Shadow Inspector, to secure the top spot.

The Youth Team Challenge serves as a progression from the North American Youth Championship format for youth eventing athletes up to the age of 25. The series includes short format events across the country and will conclude with two long format finals, one on each coast.

Aspen Farms Horse Trials organizer Jonathan Elliott said that while the pool of local competitors was small at this inaugural event, the participants and their families were enthusiastic about creating a successful event.

Haley Turner and Shadow Inspector. Photo by
Cortney Drake Photography.

“We had great local support from some of the parents of Area VII Young Riders here, so the athletes got coats, saddle pads, and hats when they first got here,” said Elliott. “They got really good prizes in addition to the ones from USEF. The athletes were super excited. They seemed to really like it and it was a good experience for them. Hopefully it’s a good start that will grow into getting teams from California and elsewhere in the west to compete next year.”

The next West Coast legs for the Youth Team Challenge will take place Sept. 23-26 in Paso Robles, Calif., and Oct. 7-9 in Woodside, Calif. The West Coast Final will be held in Temecula, Calif., Nov. 3-7.

“I think the focus now is on making sure we get teams at the long format [finals] at the end of the year on the East and West Coast,” said Elliott. “Then, hopefully, more team competitions happen at the shorts leading into that, because I think that’s the great aspect of what Young Riders has always been. It’s that team component to competing in eventing that you can’t get anywhere else.”

See full results from Aspen Farms Horse Trials here.

Learn more about the Adequan/USEF Eventing Youth Team Challenge and see all 2021 dates and locations here.

For questions regarding the USEF Eventing Youth Team Challenge, contact Christina Vaughn, USEF Director, Eventing Performance and Program Support, at (859) 225-6917 or [email protected].

Stay up to date on U.S. Eventing (USEF) by following USA Eventing on Facebook and Instagram. Use #USAEventing.

[First West Coast Leg of the Adequan®/USEF Eventing Youth Team Challenge Takes Place at Aspen Farms]

TIEC to Host USEF CCI4*-L Eventing National Championship in 2021 and 2022

Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

US Equestrian is pleased to announce that the USEF CCI4*-L Eventing National Championship will return to the Tryon International Equestrian Center in Mill Spring, N.C., in 2021 and 2022. The National Championship will be held in conjunction with the Tryon International Three-Day Event.

The USEF CCI4*-L Eventing National Championship was held at TIEC for the first time in 2020, and competitors had high praise for the facilities at the venue and the staff’s dedication to producing a world-class event. Tryon’s White Oak cross-country course was created for the 2018 FEI World Equestrian Games™ and is known for its scenic rolling terrain in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains.

“We are very excited to host the Tryon International Three-Day Event CCI4*-L again this November,” said Sharon Decker, President of Tryon of Tryon Equestrian Properties, Carolinas Operations. “Our 2020 event was extraordinary, and with spectators welcomed this year, we will have the chance once again to showcase the highest levels of this sport on what many of our riders have declared one of the best cross-country courses in the world. We cannot wait!”

The 2021 Tryon International Three-Day Event is set to take place November 10-14. The event will host CCI1*-L, CCI2*-L, CCI3*-L, and CCI4*-S divisions in addition to the CCI4*-L. Additionally, the East Coast Final for the inaugural Adequan® USEF Eventing Youth Team Challenge will be held in conjunction with the event, making for an exciting week of late-season eventing.
For more information, visit tryon.com/eventing.

[US Equestrian Announces Tryon International Equestrian Center as Host of the USEF CCI4*-L Eventing National Championships for 2021 and 2022]

Equestrian Australia Names Tokyo Olympics Squad

Andrew Hoy will represent Australia at an unprecedented eighth Olympic Games, extending his own record of seven as the most Olympic appearances by an Australian athlete, while Mary Hanna becomes the first woman to make six Australian Olympic Teams.

Hoy, Chris Burton and Shane Rose will compete in Eventing, and Hanna, Simone Pearce and Kelly Layne will compete in Dressage.

After making his Olympic debut in Los Angeles in 1984, three-time Olympic gold medallist Hoy’s selection extends his own record of most Olympic appearances, becoming the 13th athlete in Olympic history to make eight Games, joining only nine eight-time Olympians and three athletes who have competed at more. The 62-year-old will also surpass rider Bill Roycroft, who was aged 61 in 1976, to become the oldest Australian male competitor at an Olympics.

Andrew Hoy and Vassily de Lassos. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

In Tokyo, Hoy will ride Vassily de Lassos, a 12-year-old gelding owned by David and Paula Evans, and will be aided by groom Clémentine Girardeau as he attempts to secure a fourth gold medal.

66-year-old Mary Hanna continues her decades of equestrian excellence, extending the record she set in Rio as the oldest Australian Olympic competitor. Hanna will contest her sixth Games aboard her mare Calanta, who she co-owns with husband Robert Hanna, and will be supported on the ground in Tokyo by her groom Casey Gill.

The Eventing team boasts an incredible depth of experience with Rio bronze medallists Burton and Rose selected to their third Games, while Dressage competitors Pearce and Layne are making their Olympic debut.

Chris Burton and Quality Purdey. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Burton, who had an astounding six horses qualified for the Games prior to Covid, will ride mare Quality Purdey, owned by Claire Poole, and will be accompanied by groom Coriander Cousins. Rose has been selected for the team with his long-time ride and World Equestrian Games partner Virgil, owned together with his wife Niki and Michelle Hasibar. Rachel Watts, who groomed for Rose at Rio, will once again take on the role in Tokyo.

Pearce, 29, who currently holds all three Australian Grand Prix records and is the team’s youngest member, will make her Olympic Debut riding the black stallion Destano. Pearce co-owns Destano with Gestüt Sprehe and Emily Reudavey will support the combination as their groom. Layne, who is based in the USA, will also compete in her first Olympics next month on Samhitas, with whom she has been partnered since 2019 and jointly owns with Nori Maezawa. Satomi Ishikuri will be the groom for Samhitas and Layne at the Games.

Shane Rose and Virgil. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

The Eventing team reserve combination will be Stuart Tinney and Leporis, who will travel alongside the selected team to Japan.

Chef de Mission of the Australian Olympic Team Ian Chesterman congratulated the history-making team.

“What a fantastic piece of Olympic history this equestrian team will make in Tokyo,” Mr Chesterman said. “Andrew’s eight Games is a truly rare achievement. Andrew is one of only 13 people over 125 years of Olympic history to achieve this feat, and is testament to a life dedicated to excellence.

“Mary continues to inspire with decades of performing at a world class level, becoming the first woman to make six Olympic Games for Australia.

“Congratulations to all riders selected today, Australians will be thrilled to watch our Equestrian team in action in Tokyo and to see Australian Olympic history made.

“Thank you to the families, supporters, coaches, grooms and Equestrian Australia who have helped these six riders over decades to achieve their Olympic selection for Tokyo.”

Stuart Tinney and Leporis on their way to a second place finish in the 2019 Aus3DE CCI5*. Photo courtesy of Kirsty Pasto.

Hoy said he is looking forward to representing Australia at his first Olympic Games since becoming a father to daughter Philippa (age 3) and son Oscar (age 1), as well as riding a horse he believes may be one of the best of his career.

“To represent Australia at international level over so many years has been the greatest privilege and honour of my life,” Hoy said. “I have never set out to break records on my number of Olympic Games participations – I am just a country boy from Culcairn, who loves his horses, has a huge passion for our sport and thrives on being competitive at the top end.

“I have been fortunate to have had wonderful support from so many people over the years, as you can never do this alone. It is a huge team effort and I am so grateful for everyone´s support.

“There is nothing that beats the feeling of wearing the green and gold and being part of a team of incredible athletes – going onto the biggest sporting stage in the world – and all wanting to make Australia proud. In Vassily de Lassos, owned by David and Paula Evans, I have got one of the best horses I have had in my whole career – so let´s hope the best is yet to come.”

Hanna, a grandmother of three with number four due in the next few weeks, and legend of Australian dressage, is excited to once again step into the Olympic arena.

“I am absolutely thrilled to be selected for my sixth Olympics,” Hanna said. “It has been a truly testing time for all with so many challenges…a bit like walking a tightrope to get this far, and I am sure it’s been the same for my fellow team members.

“In spite of this I am so proud to be joining Kelly Layne and Simone Pearce to represent Australia, and I am sure together we will make a great team.”

Equestrian Australia CEO, Darren Gocher, said the two records set by Hoy and Hanna is a testament to both the longevity and proud legacy of equestrian sport within Australia.

“Today we welcome not only the selection of a diverse and talented team of athletes, but we also celebrate the core values of our sport, where men and women compete on equal terms and age is no barrier to achieving success at the highest level.

“I would like to congratulate all Eventing and Dressage combinations selected to represent Australia in Tokyo, and to acknowledge the dedication, hard work and commitment of the athletes, owners, grooms and everyone involved in the Olympic journey.”

The discipline of jumping is subject to an appeal by a non-nominated athlete, with selections to be announced when the process is finalised.