Classic Eventing Nation

Photo Gallery: GMHA June H.T. & Postponed 2020 Area I Championships

Training Rider – Championships: Mickey Rathbun and Bramble (32.4). Photo by Joan Davis / Flatlandsfoto.

Due to Covid-19, Area I postponed its 2020 championships from last September to this year’s GMHA June Horse Trials, which took place over the weekend in South Woodstock, Vermont. In addition to Beginner Novice through Prelim Championship divisions, the event hosted regular horse trials divisions for many more riders — you can view complete results here.

Joan Davis of Flatlandsfoto was on the scene, snapping beautiful photos of the riders. Thanks, Joan, for sharing! GMHA competitors, you can check out your photo proofs on her website. And, if you spot her taking your pic over a fence next weekend at Valinor Farm Horse Trials, be sure to mug for the camera!

 

Essex Horse Trials Returns to Calendar for 2021

Photo courtesy of Essex Horse Trials.

After a hiatus last year due to Covid-19, Essex Horse Trials is set to return to historic Moorland Farm in Far Hills, New Jersey, July 17-18. The iconic event was reborn in 2017 after a near two-decade long hiatus and has since been welcomed back by the eventing community with open arms.

After offering Beginner Novice through Preliminary divisions the past two years, the event sampled an Advanced division in 2019 but is returning to the original levels offered for 2021. Additionally, they’ll be hosting an Interscholastic Eventing Team Challenge. Are you going?  The event opened on June 1 and the closing date is June 29.

“We are thrilled to bring the Essex Horse Trials back to Moorland Farm,” said Ralph Jones, President of the Essex Horse Trials. “We would like to thank the competitors, our sponsors and the local community for their encouragement to bring the event back. It is so important to have their support. The Essex Horse Trials is such a special event and truly a great way for families and fans of equestrian sports to spend a summer weekend!”

Although some of the family centered activities have been canceled this year as a concession to the pandemic, the popular Peter Chesson Memorial Classic Car Show will still be held, taking place on Saturday. The weekend will kick off on Friday evening with a concert hosted by Music in the Somerset Hills.

Photo courtesy of Essex Horse Trials.

General admission tickets are now on sale and available here. The cost is $10 per person, with children 17 and under admitted free. New this year, spectators can reserve a small, private tent to spend the day ringside at the show jumping arena. Ringside sponsorships are available for $500 and feature a 10×10 tent with four folding chairs.

Tailgating spots are also available for the best viewing of the exciting cross-country course. Packages range in cost from $50 – $300 depending on location. For more information on tailgate packages and ringside sponsorships, please call 908-234-9115 ext. 13 or email [email protected].

Photo courtesy of Essex Horse Trials.

Proceeds from the event will benefit the Greater Newark LifeCamp in nearby Pottersville, a day camp for inner-city youth.

For more information, visit www.essexhorsetrials.org.

In Memory of La Paz

Sara Mittleider and La Paz. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

We are deeply saddened to learn that Sara Mittleider’s partner, the 11-year-old Hungarian Sport Horse La Paz, with whom she had aimed to return to the five-star level this spring, has passed away after sustaining devastating injuries following a fall or getting cast in his stall. The gelding had been rehabbing from a soft tissue injury that had kept him out of the Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event in April.

“He was incredibly special, and he was my friend,” Sara said. “He was the most talented horse I have ever sat on, and had the sweetest temperament ever. He was a total powerhouse of a jumper that was all try, that also enjoyed bareback strolls around the farm even at peak fitness. I am so gutted that he didn’t get to reach his full potential, as he had no limit on what he could do, and his loss is felt by his incredible support team and fan club.”

Sara Mittleider and La Paz. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

First hopping aboard “Muki” as a newly-imported four-year-old who had shown himself to be a bit too much for the young student he was intended for, Sara quickly formed a partnership with the gelding, and while he took some time to come into his own as an event horse he began to shine brighter as the jumps got bigger and the tracks got harder. “Funny enough, moving up to the Advanced level, where it was like the jumps and distances matched his scope better, things really clicked,” she said earlier this year.

Success at the Advanced level and beyond began trickling in. Sara and La Paz claimed the CCI4*-L victory at the 2019 Galway Downs fall international and followed that result with a trip to the East coast in 2020, where they finished in the top 20 in Tryon’s CCI4*-L. All systems were go for Sara to make her long-awaited return to the five-star level before the gelding sustained a soft tissue injury just before Kentucky.

Sara Mittleider and La Paz. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

“I am so grateful I was able to experience what it was like to be partnered with such an outstanding horse,” she said. “He gave me wings and paved a road for me that I hope to continue in his honor. He will never be forgotten, and he will always be loved.”

The EN team sends its condolences to the Mittleider family and the team that supported “Muki” until the end.

Tuesday News & Notes from Legends Horse Feeds

Photo by Shelby Allen.

The thoroughbred pout is real, y’all. That’s the face of a baby Thoroughbred asked to lunge (both ways — gasp!) out in the fun cross country field. My version of hot girl summer has been groundwork and strengthening my relationship with my horse. What are your summer goals?

National Holiday: National Best Friends Day

Events Opening This Week: Course Brook Farm Summer H.T.Horse Park of New Jersey Horse Trials IISilverwood Farm Summer H.T.The Event at Rebecca Farm

Events Closing This Week: Loudoun Hunt Pony Club Summer H.T.Stable View Summer H.T.Fox River Valley Pony Club H.T.Inavale Farm HTArrowhead H.T.Midsouth Pony Club H.T.

Tuesday News: 

Show jumper Rich Fellers was arrested yesterday four counts of second-degree sexual abuse by the Tualatin Police Department in Oregon. He was temporary suspension by the U.S. Center for SafeSport in February for “allegations of misconduct.” [Updated: Fellers Arrested On 4 Counts Of Sexual Abuse]

One day when there’s a Michael Jung question at trivia, you’ll be glad you clicked this link. [Everything you need to know about one of eventing’s greatest riders — Michael Jung]

If the thought of navigating and online horse auction freaks you out, you’re in good company. There’s a lot to unpack there, but this guide can give you a head start.[I Went Behind the Scenes of an Online Horse Auction. Here’s What I Learned.]

Tuesday Video:

Olympic show jumper Peter Wylde takes a spin around Windurra’s cross country course.

This Week in Livestreams: Watch Bicton International on H&C TV!

Emily King gets cozy with the Bramham under-25 CCI4*-L trophy in 2018. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We might not have a Bramham to look forward to this year, but thanks to the extraordinary efforts of Helen West and her team at Devon’s Bicton Arena, we’ll still be able to see those hugely important CCI4*-L, CCI4*-L for under-25s, and CCI4*-S classes play out this week – and boy, oh boy, are the entry lists seriously hot.

The CCI4*-S class acts as a selection trial for the British team Olympic longlist, Ben Hobday and Shadow Man II and Sarah Bullimore and Corouet, who are listed as reserves, will run in the CCI4*-L. Other notable combinations in the CCI4*-L include 2019 Badminton winners Piggy French and Vanir KamiraLaura Collett and Mr BassSarah Bullimore and her super-consistent five-star mount Reve du RouetEmilie Chandler and her CCI4*-L winner Gortfadda DiamondKitty King and the Burnham Market CCI4*-S winner Cristal Fontaine, and Imogen Murray and her seasoned campaigner Ivar Gooden.

The CCI4*-S class isn’t just about those longlisted British team riders – they’ll face stiff competition from the likes of Andrew Nicholson‘s Swallow Springs, who was third at Burghley in 2018 and fifth at Badminton in 2019, Piggy March‘s Brookfield Inocent, second at Pau last year, Laura Collett‘s Pau winner London 52Tom McEwen‘s 2018 Pau winner Toledo de Kerser, World Champions Ros Canter and Allstar BChris Burton‘s Blenheim eight- and nine-year-old winner Clever Louis, two-time Kentucky winners Oliver Townend and Cooley Master Class, European bronze medallists Cathal Daniels and Rioghan Rua, and Kevin McNab and his Kentucky sixth-placed Scuderia 1918 Don Quidam.

The final podium in Bramham’s 2019 CCIU254*-L: Yasmin Ingham, second, Cathal Daniels, first, and Will Rawlin, third. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We’ll be looking at one of the hottest under-25 CCI4*-L sections we’ve ever seen as well, with reigning champion Cathal Daniels returning to fight for his throne with Sammy Davis Junior. Heading the home challenge is British under-25 champion Yasmin Ingham, who brings forward three rides in Night Line, Banzai du Loir, and Rehy DJ, while the on-form Bubby Upton rides Cola III and Cannavaro. Ireland’s Susie Berry has two rides in the class in John the Bull and Ringwood LB, and Felicity Collins brings forward her five-star ride – and the winner of last week’s Advanced at Little Downham – RSH Contend Or. France’s Barbara Sayous has made the long and tricky journey with Opposition Filmstar, marking a strong effort from the talented daughter of Pau organiser Pascal.

You can take a look at the full entry list here, and you’ll be able to watch every phase – including Wednesday and Sunday’s horse inspections – via Horse&Country TV. The broadcast schedules are as follows:

Wednesday

First horse inspection: 13.30 BST/8.30 a.m. EST

Dressage: 13.30 BST/8.30 a.m. EST

Thursday

Dressage stream one: 9.30 BST/4.30 a.m. EST

Dressage stream two: 10.45 BST/5.45 a.m. EST

Friday

Dressage stream one: 9.30 BST/4.30 a.m. EST

Dressage stream two: 10.45 BST/5.45 a.m. EST

Saturday

CCI4*-L Cross-Country: 9.00 BST/4.00 a.m. EST

CCI4*-S Showjumping: 10.00 BST/5.00 a.m. EST

Sunday

CCI4*-S Cross-Country: 10.00 BST/5.00 a.m. EST

CCI4*-L Showjumping: 10.00 BST/5.00 a.m. EST

We’ll be bringing you reports through the week on EN – roll on Bicton!

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

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 one: in which one frazzled journalist ages forty years in four days. 

Daydreaming about a Luhmühlen before social distancing. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s no secret that the road to Luhmühlen’s CCI5* and CCI4*-S has been a trickier one than normal for many riders this year. When the entry list was first released on the 19th of May, it was jam-packed with over 70 combinations coming forward for the five-star, which will be the first of the 2021 European season. Because of Luhmühlen’s early summer position in the calendar, we don’t tend to see fields of that size in this class; by this point, many prominent horses will have run at Badminton, or will be aiming for a summer championship, and so the prospect of a huge entry list created considerable buzz.

But shortly after those entries went live, Germany announced that it was tightening its restrictions on UK travellers, due to an outbreak of the Delta variant of the coronavirus in the north of England. This, in combination with an EU-wide ban on entry from countries outside the EU and Schengen Area, looked very much like a firmly-closed door indeed. For the 42 British entries on that hefty list – plus, of course, the smattering of British-based riders representing other nations – there was a very big question mark hovering over their June plans. Now, ultimately, we head into the CCI5* with just 28 entries.

My own journey to Luhmühlen as a journalist was always pretty well set in stone, even if the actual logistics were ever-changing. Last week, shortly after the travel ban was announced, I headed to Norfolk to cover the Houghton International CCIO4*-S, which incorporated the FEI Nations Cup and, most importantly, gave me ample opportunities to badger Team GB’s Performance Manager, Dickie Waygood, about his interpretation of the wildly confusing legalese surrounding the ban. Even more importantly than that, we were both in contact with the wonderful team at Luhmühlen, who worked around the clock to try to secure a ‘sport bubble’ on site, which would effectively mean that entrants would quarantine at the venue. Ultimately, though, we found out on Friday that no such bubble would be possible, and those hoping to travel to Germany from the UK had two options: arrive 14 days early and self-isolate before the competition began, or make a new plan for their season.

Well – not quite two options. Though that pesky EU ban was in effect across the continent, not every country had closed their doors quite so firmly to inbound travellers from the UK. All it took was approximately 487 hours of combing through the various government websites, liberally abusing Google Translate, parsing together plenty of international phone calls using a combination of pidgin languages, and a healthy dose of that unique kind of sweaty, stressy adrenaline to find a couple of countries that would both allow UK travellers to enter (if they had one of a few kinds of documented exemption) and, crucially, from which travellers into Germany were welcomed sans quarantine after a certain period of time.

This is an angle I like to call “I’m on the ground trying to read the German consulate’s website, and I’m going to make the very best of it.” Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Now, it’s important to note here that all of this frantic scrolling and research wasn’t just squeezed in alongside reporting on a four-star – it was also being undertaken while in the most comprehensive dead-zone in all of England. I’m not convinced that Norfolk has invented 4G yet – they’re still stuck somewhere around the 1G threshold, I reckon – and so I was most often found hunched over by one of the arenas, quietly swearing at my phone and occasionally waving it in the air like a drunk divorcee at an Adele concert. My grand plan at that point? Figure out a way to get to Ireland, stay there for ten days, and then somehow get to Germany. My great nemesis? The fact that many flight routes around Europe have been temporarily halted, which made finding a direct flight increasingly tricky – and I couldn’t risk even the shortest layover in another country, which would likely have ruined all my careful planning and plonked me straight back into quarantine. In short, life had become the most high-stakes, low-entertainment version of Snakes and Ladders that I’d ever played.

By the time Saturday evening rolled around, I’d decided to take a break from bashing my own brain into increasingly stupid smithereens, and instead headed over to chat to the lovely folks at the Event Horse Owners’ Syndicate, a super initiative that allows people to ‘buy in’ to an event horse with a high-profile rider for a tiny one-off payment with a tonne of excellent rewards. I had scheduled in an interview with the team – and with Emily King, one of their sponsored riders – and quickly discovered that I was walking into one of my favourite working environments. By that I mean they had wine, and plenty of it, and they really, really liked sharing.

Act Two: in which Mollie Summerland enters the story. Pictured here at Pau in her first CCI5*, in which she finished tenth. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Anyone who knows me, even just in passing, knows that I am desperately, appallingly, embarrassingly bad at remembering to use suncream. Every year, without fail, I burn myself to a crisp at an event, shed all my skin like a sad little lizard woman, and emerge anew, no wiser for my experiences but always in possession of the kind of farmer’s tan that renders me fundamentally unshaggable for the rest of the year. This year, Houghton was that event. Have you ever tried quaffing a crisp glass of white wine after ten hours of sizzling yourself? How about three glasses? My well-intentioned interview process had veered off into wholly uncharted territories when Mollie Summerland – 23-year-old British superstar-in-the-making and all-around good egg – appeared at the trade stand.

“I heard you’re going to Luhmühlen,” she said.

“Yeeeeshhh I am,” I replied, laboriously uncrossing my eyes.

“I really want to try to go,” she told me. “But I don’t want to do it alone. Do you think you could help me with the border crossings and come in the lorry with me?”

“Absholutely, count me in,” I slurred, feeling as though I could probably take on any challenge in the world and succeed with minimal bruising.

* * *

Sunday morning rolled around in the manner that all Sunday mornings should: groggy, crispy, and with only the faintest recollection of the prior evening. Pretty sharpish, I remembered – I was now spearheading Mission (Hopefully Not So) Impossible. All my prior research gave me a pretty firm starting point, but there was one crucial difference: where I’m lucky enough to have a German passport, which allows me unfettered access to the country, Mollie’s British citizenship presented a rather bigger hurdle that would need to be overcome with some serious paperwork. I even considered offering to marry her for a couple of weeks, a plan that would need to be backed up by ‘reasonable social media evidence’ of a pre-existing and legitimate relationship. I knew there was a photo of us hugging post-cross country at Boekelo, and figured I could make a gals-who-are-pals narrative out of that if it came to it.

See? It’s convincing, if you squint.

I’m used to coming up with bonkers plans to make difficult things happen, but this was next level – and so it was enormously encouraging to see how enthusiastic and supportive both Dickie Waygood and Chris Bartle, the British team coach, were about me taking the reins, figuratively. But though I left Houghton pretty confident that I could get the job done (and slightly less confident about making it home with approximately £8 in my bank account), even I wasn’t fully prepared for the utter madness the next few days would hold.

First, there was the stopping point. We needed to find a place to stay in Belgium or the Netherlands for ten days, where Mollie and her horse, Charly van ter Heiden, would be able to train and prepare for a CCI5*. Our original plan to stay with some friends of Mollie’s in Belgium had fallen through and, conscious that people would be justifiably concerned about both COVID and equine herpesvirus, I wanted to approach people sensitively. A few of my ideas failed to turn up anything conclusive and it was looking increasingly likely that we’d end up stopping over at a dealer’s yard, until I popped onto Google Maps to double-check our route to Luhmühlen and realised that we’d be driving just past a Dutch town called Breda. I had only ever heard of Breda in one context: it’s where Tim Lips, Dutch eventing superstar (and another all-around good egg) is based.

Tim Lips: our new favourite human being in the whole wide world. Photo by Anja Veurink.

I often wax lyrical about how great our eventing community is – we all look out for another, regardless of our roles within the sport, and though it’s a fiercely competitive discipline, it also often feels like one big family with none of the cutthroat rivalry that I suspect can permeate other sports. Mollie had never met Tim, and I only knew him in passing from having interviewed him in a couple of mixed zones, so I had no expectation that he had much of a clue who he was, but he replied to my plea almost instantly and was immediately incredibly welcoming and accommodating of two slightly panicked girls and one spectacularly un-panicked horse. The great news? It meant that we’d spend ten days in one of the top yards in the Netherlands, with access to all the facilities anyone could possibly need to prepare for a five-star, and someone with a huge amount of experience to ask for help and advice should we need it. And obviously, even better than THAT was the fact that I was now preparing to spent ten days in close proximity to Herby, a horse I’ve loved from afar (and with much vocal enthusiasm) since watching him compete with Tim at the 2019 Young Horse World Championships at Le Lion d’Angers. We were heading straight to pony nirvana.

Herby: the champion of one journalist’s heart. Photo by EquusPix.

Well, if we could get there, that is. First, there was the small matter of, well, everything to sort out, and without much time to get it done before we left on Friday. We’re in that tricky time of year in which the UK has a bank holiday approximately every other week, and so although Charly’s bloods had been taken on the Monday, there was no way they’d go into overnight testing before Wednesday. Then, it was a matter of hoping that the lab didn’t have a backlog, but even a Thursday morning result would be too late for the vet appointment scheduled for us by John Parker International, the shipping agents who looked after us so well. And so I began a quest for a vet in the Wiltshire area who was a) signed off to do health papers, b) available on Thursday afternoon, c) would be able to accommodate our incredibly vague timing, and d) would be happy to prioritise a horse who wasn’t ordinarily registered with their practice. A few frantic phone calls led me to the fantastic Valley Equine Vets, who treated us as though we’d been loyal clients for years, and my high-octane stress was eased for a moment – now, all we could do was pray that the bloodwork results actually did come in on Thursday.

There wasn’t a lot of time to worry, though: in the meantime, I needed to organise PCR tests for Mollie and I in two different parts of the country, with next-day results guaranteed, I had to keep Mollie herself calm and sane and mostly in the dark about how tricky it was all looking, and there was a feed delivery that needed to be changed, potentially necessitating a four-hour round trip for me to go collect it, and I needed to gather a serious amount of paperwork – hay receipts, elite athlete exemptions from the British Equestrian Federation, letters of invitation from Luhmühlen, and, crucially, letters of invitation from the Dutch Olympic Committee, securing our entry to the country for elite training.

I like to imagine that this is what was happening on the other end of the phone while I was on hold.

There’s hold music, and then there’s Dutch hold music – jaunty, shrill, and frequently punctuated with a serious-sounding message that I hoped said “look, just stop panicking and wait a sec, you’re third in the queue” and not “please hang up your phone, you numpty, because you haven’t even dialled the country code correctly.” Fortunately, I only had to wait what felt like an hour, cobble together some spectacularly shoddy Dutch, and then I was at least at the entryway to the great maze of navigating the Dutch federation’s many offices.

And there was more – oh, god, there was so much more, but nobody wants to read thousands of words on logistics. On Tuesday alone I made 40 phone calls across four different countries, all of which had to be made in the phone signal hotspot on our farm, which I paced around so aggressively that I hit my daily step count on phone calls alone. Basically, if anyone wants to know how I prepared for Luhmühlen, I basically lunged myself for a whole day. Does this mean I’m ready for a hunter round?

Me after successfully managing “spreek je Engels?” and “dankjewel!” on the phone to the Dutch federation.

After the frenetic pace of Tuesday, in which I felt like I uncovered another insurmountable hurdle every five minutes, Wednesday was no less fast-paced but considerably better for my blood pressure. Every call I made felt like it yielded a solution, not another addition to the to-do list, we received confirmation that the bloodwork would come back in the morning, and I cried my way through a COVID test that came back negative. (Look, I’m pretty tough, but even I can’t cope with what looked like a mascara wand being forcibly shoved into the base of my brain.)

Thursday was another perfect day: the bloodwork came back and I danced like a lunatic on top of our muckheap ramp; Mollie’s own brain swab came back negative; the phone calls were slightly fewer and all overwhelmingly positive. All we had left to do was finalise the health papers for Charly, get all our stuff packed, get Charly from Mollie’s Wiltshire base to the yard I live on in Surrey, and then complete a two-hour round trip to swap Mollie’s big lorry for a smaller one lent to us by her wonderful owner, Paula Cloke. Teamwork truly does make the dream work, and between us all, we managed to fit the entire contents of her 7.5 tonne lorry into our new 3.9 tonne home. The moving parts of all our plans had been well and truly bolted into place. We were going to Luhmühlen – as long as I hadn’t messed anything up along the way, which we’d only discover definitively once we got to the port.

Charly gets a good night’s sleep ahead of his big adventure. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The Longines Luhmühlen Horse Trials: Website, Entries, Live Scoring, LivestreamEN’s CoverageEN’s InstagramEN’s Twitter

Exercise-induced muscle damage that results in sore, stiff muscles and poor performance is a common problem in athletic horses. Vitamin E plays an important role in preserving optimal muscle function by interrupting the production of harmful free radicals that can damage critical tissues. When vitamin E levels in muscle tissue are inadequate, the risk of exercise-induced muscle damage is increased. Elevate® Maintenance Powder supplies the natural vitamin E your horse needs to neutralize damaging free radicals and support peak performance. Keep your horse at the top of his game with Elevate natural vitamin E. 
The horse that matters to you matters to us®.
Not sure which horse supplement best meets your horse’s needs? Kentucky Performance Products, LLC is here to help. Call 859-873-2974 or visit KPPusa.com.

Weekend Winners: Genesse Valley, IEA, Archer, GMHA, Middleburg, NJ Region PC, Ocala, Poplar Place, Unionville

Phew! It was a really doozy of a weekend for eventing with nine recognized events taking place throughout the country, from Florida to Vermont to Wyoming and what feels like everywhere in between. We’d like to send a special shoutout the very patient competitors of the Area I Championships that took place at GMHA this weekend. These were the postponed 2020 championships — the 2021 Area I Championships will take place later this year in conjunction with GMHA’s September H.T.

This weekend’s Unofficial Low Score Award was earned by Maya Chinana and Popstar, who won the Open Beginner Novice at Unionville on a score of 21.1. Way to go, Maya!

Genesee Valley Hunt Club H.T.: Final Scores

Training Novice A: Erica Plazony and Mr Mac N Reddy To Rap (40.1)
Novice A: Kari Roberts and Dakar (33.3)
Novice B: Claire Mulligan and Silent Glider (32.9)
Beginner Novice A: Eden Dedrick and Excel Star Darcy (31.1)
Beginner Novice B: Jennifer Treacy and Jolly Harbour (28.9)
Intro A: Suzanne Chang and Brogan (32.8)
Intro B: Joy Tomlinson and Sam’s Alive (34.2)
Intro C: Aubrey Dickens and Jane Doe (36.1)

IEA H.T. (Edinburgh, In.): Final Scores

Intermediate/Preliminary-Open HT: Dan Kreitl and Horales (31.1)
Preliminary-Open HT: Carrie Mulks and Riddle Master (28.8)
Modified-Open HT: Julie Bryer and Fernhill Dynamic (26.5)
Open Training A: Jane Papke and Robinstown Ballivor (32.1)
Open Training B: Hannah Boyd and Billy Mcclusky (29.3)
Open Training C: Christina Kelly and Real Deal Lady (34.7)
Training 3 Day: Brooke Kahl and Nata Montada Scf (31.9)
Novice Junior: Ashley Fern and Silver Sprite (26.4)
Open Novice A: Gina Pletch and Wapz Too Legit (24.1)
Open Novice B: Katie Wainscott and Battle Ready (28.3)
Open Novice C: Shannon Austin and Southern Violence (32.6)
Open Novice D: Renee Senter and Regina (27.6)
Novice 3 Day: Madeline Bletzacker and Drummer Boy (25.2)
Beginner Novice Junior A: Libbey Shellenberger and Chibi (27.8)
Beginner Novice Junior B: Emma Buckley and Olivander GS (30.0)
Open Beginner Novice A: Megan Edwards and Global Dynasty (28.5)
Open Beginner Novice B: Corinna Garcia and Lyric (21.8)
Open Beginner Novice C: Corinna Garcia and Cratus (27.0)
Open Beginner Novice D: Katherine Rutherford and Amazingly Lucky (30.6)
Open Beginner Novice E: Madeleine Vonfrankenberg and Monet’s Masterpiece (28.8)
Open Starter A: Rachel Miles and Casanova (22.5)
Open Starter B: Christy Schlough and Vanquish (28.3)
Open Starter C: Heather Kuenzi and Teddy (33.9)

The Spring Event at Archer: Final Scores

Intermediate/Preliminary: Travis Atkinson and Don Darco (51.4)
Open Preliminary: Rebecca Mortensen and International Anthem (25.7)
Modified/Training: Erin Hofmann and UBQuiet (31.8)
Open Training: Rose Schild and Acording to Morgan (32.4)
Open Novice A: Victoria Poulton and Starlingh (23.3)
Open Novice B: Lindsay Wagner and Jenson (22.6)
Open Beginner Novice A: Ashley Carr and Mercury Rising (25.6)
Open Beginner Novice B: Madeline Backus and Baratheon (33.4)
Starter A: Shelly Graham and Thumbelina (33.9)
Starter B: Wendy Williams and P.S. King of Hearts (35.6)

GMHA H.T. and Area I Championships: Final Scores

Junior Young Riders Open Preliminary: Annabelle Sprague and Da Vinci Code (48.2)
Open Preliminary: Lila Gendal and Honor Society (38.2)
Open Preliminary – Championships: Booli Selmayr and Quality Touchdown (30.6)
Junior Training: Analise San Clemente and Delight (28.3)
Open Training: Danielle Downing and Caribe PCH (32.6)
Training Horse – Championships: Katie Murphy and Joshua Tree (30.9)
Training Rider: Audrey Littlefield and Prince Renan (28.6)
Training Rider – Championships: Mickey Rathbun and Bramble (32.4)
Junior Novice: Eliza Quigley and Kwibus (27.6)
Novice Horse – Championships: Alyssa Birt and Jack (31.0)
Novice Rider-A: Nancy Read and Carolina PCH (33.3)
Novice Rider-B: Mary Bielefeld and Swan’s Starry Starry Night (35.2)
Novice Rider – Championships: Melissa Alaimo and Fascinating Rhythm (30.0)
Open Novice-A: Marcia Kulak and Gran Torino (27.9)
Open Novice-B: Marcia Kulak and Nimbalina (24.1)
Beginner Novice Horse – Championships: Jennifer Fitch and Caraway Daireng Romance (27.3)
Beginner Novice Rider-A: Gabriella Curtin and Oceana (30.3)
Beginner Novice Rider-B: Amelia Pitts and KC’s Spellbound (30.8)
Beginner Novice Rider – Championships: Anneka Paelinck and Maleficent (30.0)
Junior Beginner Novice: Margaret Doherty and Bring It On (30.0)
Open Beginner Novice-A: Leigh Casaceli and Mina (28.3)
Open Beginner Novice-B: Chelsea Canedy and Little Einstien (24.7)
Open Beginner Novice-C: Cali Oliver and Primitive Promise (30.8)

The Middleburg H.T.: Final Scores

Open Preliminary 1: Kurt Martin and D.A. Shannondale Cushla (27.8)
Open Preliminary 2: Martin Douzant and Olympus (31.7)
Preliminary Rider: Kiera Kenny and FE Chardonnay (35.4)
Open Training 1: Daniel Clasing and Butts Arthur (32.9)
Training Rider: Susan Gehris and Steddy Eddy (27.5)
Open Training 2: Martin Douzant and Harthill Diamond (26.4)
Open Training 3: Adelaide French and Rockview Mr. Diamond (31.9)
Open Training 4: Arden Wildasin and Il Vici (28.1)
Open Novice 1: Skyeler Voss and Black Sea Baron (23.3)
Open Novice 2: Brittany Hebets and Westwoods (30.5)
Open Novice 3: Sara Schulman and Cooley Chromatic (28.8)
Novice Senior: Stephanie Senserini and Monbeg Icon (26.9)
Novice Jr: Samantha Homeyer and Sparrow’s Galway Bay (30.2)
Open Beginner Novice 1: Lisa Hannan and Lowenbrau (25.3)
Open Beginner Novice 2: Emily Beshear and Waffle (32.6)
Beginner Novice Junior: Brooke McColl and Chastian’s Morning Mocha (26.1)
Beginner Novice Rider 1: Stephen Fulton and DB Cooper (26.1)
Beginner Novice Rider 2: Nikki Thomas and Kinsale (37.5)

New Jersey Region’s H.T.: Final Scores

Modified: Caroline Martin and HsH Redfield Poynstown Marshall (26.5)
Open Training: Lee Maher and Redfield Opium of the Paddocks (28.6)
Training: Abby Maude and Lucky Bucky (36.4)
Novice: Aimee Carson and HMF Christine (27.4)
Open Novice: Kira Cibak and October Tryst (25.7)
Beginner Novice: McKenzie Jones and Creekland’s Chaco Canyon (30.0)
Open Beginner Novice: Rosemary Lauezzari and A Pennie For Your Thoughts (32.3)

Ocala Summer I H.T.: Final Scores

Intermediate/Preliminary: Elisa Wallace and Riot Gear (26.2)
Open Preliminary: Jonathan Holling and Juczt My Style S (32.5)
Preliminary Rider: Jackson Dillard and Layla Q (28.7)
Open Modified: Tik Maynard and Galileo (29.2)
Modified Rider: Stephanie Sills and Mille Neuf Cent (29.8)
Open Training: Joe Meyer and Ardeo Harlequin (29.5)
Training Rider: Tracey Corey and Byrnwyck West (32.6)
Novice Rider: Katia Martynuk and Adiesta Moon (27.1)
Open Novice: Jonathan Holling and Fernhill Copain (22.9)
Beginner Novice Rider: Audrey Bennett and Bad to the Bone (26.7)
Open Beginner Novice: Lily Barlow and Frolic (30.6)

Poplar Place June H.T.: Final Scores

Open Intermediate: Kiersten Miller and Mama Mia (32.5)
Open Preliminary: Heidi Hewlett Crowell and Tinraher Diamond (31.5)
Modified: Waylon Roberts and CS Carrera (30.9)
Junior Training Rider: Breeana Robinette and Cape Kimberly (28.5)
Open Training: Waylon Roberts and Beaulieu’s Cecelia (32.9)
Senior Training Rider: Molly Peavy and Clearly It’s Dublin (33.4)
Training/Novice: William Hoos and Jacey’s Humble Boy (37.3)
Junior Novice Rider: Tessa Geven and Vintage Bhoy (25.7)
Open Novice: William Hoos and Metalbridge Prince (24.8)
Senior Novice Rider: Malin Eriksson and WHF Wilhelmina (30.7)
Junior Beginner Novice Rider: Hudsyn Bagwell and Ardeo Mermus Hill (32.2)
Open Beginner Novice: Julie Lingle and Bourbon Flight (24.2)
Senior Beginner Novice Rider: Ashley Vance and Cloudline Rugby (31.7)
Starter: Alexandria Clenney and Checkmate Z (35.5)

Unionville H.T.: Final Scores

Open Intermediate: Jennifer Brannigan and Twilightslastgleam (30.5)
Junior Young Open Preliminary: Cassie Sanger and Redfield Fyre (31.4)
Open Preliminary: Jennifer Brannigan and Keepsake (25.0)
Preliminary Rider: Anne Hambleton and Should Expect (36.4)
Junior Open Training: Elle Stephenson and VS McCuan Civil Liberty (32.4)
Open Training A: Phillip Dutton and Lincoln’s Address (27.1)
Open Training B: Bruce Davidson and Sambuko (28.1)
Training Rider: Casey Poe and HHS Tiger Lily (28.1)
Junior Open Novice: Marina Cassou and Castleturvin Mungo (49.7)
Novice Rider: Gail Rockwood and Indigo Blue (34.5)
Open Novice A: Phillip Dutton and BE Capricorn (25.7)
Open Novice B: Maddie Lichten and EHF Casiro Royale (24.8)
Beginner Novice Rider: Megan Nock and Breezy (35.0)
Junior Open Beginner Novice: Isabel Lopez and Beau’s Emergence (31.1)
Open Beginner Novice: Maya Chinana and Popstar (21.1)

Monday Video: Scorch the Ocala Cross Country with Elisa Wallace and Riot Gear

Seems like it was quite a hot weekend out there for pretty much everyone. I’m based up near Boston, Massachusetts and as we say around here it was a real scorcha’, so I can’t imagine what it was like down in Florida for the Ocala Summer I Horse Trials. All you riders and horses down there must be well acclimated to this kind of weather!

For today’s featured video, we’re treated to a spin around the Ocala Intermediate/Preliminary cross country course courtesy of Elisa Wallace and one of her rising stars, Riot Gear (who Elisa affectionately calls Rye Bread) a 12-year-old Oldenburg gelding owned by Steve Sukup and Vicki Larson Sukup. While the goal of the weekend was mainly to further build theirs partnership and have an educational ride — even forgoing her watch on cross country in order to focus on the gallop — Elisa and Riot Gear still handily won the division. Turns out she had the fastest round anyway!

Ocala Summer I H.T. (Ocala, Fl.): [Website] [Results]

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

It’s not just the riders, connections, journalists and fans getting excited for Luhmühlen — the team on site are giddy with anticipation too. They’ve also had to reckon with the travel bans that have meant that some of their usual team members haven’t been able to join them for the preparations – but they’ve kept morale up by tackling a bake-off challenge based on the last fence on course. Wonder if we can persuade them to save us a slice?

National Holiday: It’s National Chocolate Ice Cream Day. I can get behind that.

US Weekend Action:

Genesee Valley Hunt Club H.T. (Geneseo, Ny.): [Website] [Results]

IEA H.T. (Edinburgh, In.): [Website] [Results]

The Spring Event at Archer (Cheyenne, Wa.) : [Website] [Results]

GMHA H.T. (South Woodstock, Vt.) : [Website] [Results]

The Middleburg H.T. (The Plains, Va.): [Website] [Results]

New Jersey Region’s H.T. (Allentown, Nj.): [Website] [Results]

Ocala Summer I H.T. (Ocala, Fl.): [Website] [Results]

Poplar Place June H.T. (Hamilton, Ga.): [Website] [Results]

Unionville H.T. (Unionville, Pa.): [Website] [Results]

UK Weekend Action:

Ascott under Wychwood (2): Results

Belsay International: Results

Little Downham (1): Results

Global Eventing Roundup:

There were nine FEI events held globally over the last week, but foremost were those in Millstreet, Ireland, and Renswoude, the Netherlands, both of which held formidable four-star sections.

 

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Jonelle Price (@jonelle_price)

Millstreet’s feature class, the CCI4*-L, went the way of New Zealand’s Tim Price and Falco, who led from wire to wire despite the tough going making the time a serious factor. They added 14.8 time penalties across the country, while the fastest round of the day was delivered by third-placed Tom McEwen and CHF Cooliser, who was rerouting from a planned CCI5* debut at Luhmühlen. Their 8.8 time penalties far eclipsed the times delivered across the rest of the field.

Mike McNally and Eclipto took the CCI4*-S for their home country, adding just 3.2 time penalties in the showjumping to their first-phase score of 25.1. In an exciting teaser of the month to come, Jonelle Price finished second and third on two of her Luhmühlen-bound horses – McLaren, who will contest the CCI4*-S, and Faerie Dianimo, who heads back to the CCI5*, respectively. Check out full results here.

Germany’s Emma Brüssau and Dark Desire GS won the CCI4*-S at Renswoude, leading every phase and adding just 1.6 time penalties in showjumping and 0.4 across the country to finish on a score of 26.6. Her fellow countrywoman and former World Champion Sandra Auffarth took second and third place on The Phantom of the Opera and Rosveel, respectively. Check out the rest of the results here.

Your Monday Reading List:

Without wonderful volunteers, eventing wouldn’t exist – and so we’re always so excited to see initiatives that honor their hard work. Diane Bird recently became the first-ever silver medal winner in the USEA’s Volunteer Medal Program after clocking up over 1,000 hours of service. What a hero. [The First Silver Medal is Earned in the USEA Volunteer Medal Program]

Equestrian Canada is leading the fight against tight nosebands. They’ve launched a pilot project that’ll lead to refined rules and in the long run, much happier horses. [Canada clamping down on tight nosebands in horse sport]

When Marion Kimball Riese and Freckles competed at the May Dressage Derby in California, they didn’t just earn the rider the high-point adult amateur award. They also joined the prestigious Dressage Foundation Century Club, for horses and riders whose combined age totals 100 or more. [Century Club Just A Stop Along The Way For Octogenarian Dressage Rider]

And finally, here’s your daily dose of cute: meet Colin the ‘miracle foal’, who was born via emergency caesarean while his mother underwent colic surgery. Now, he likes to hang out in the house and enjoys bedtime stories. [Colin the ‘miracle’ caesarean foal is beating the odds to survive thanks to dedicated vet]

The FutureTrack Follow: 

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by ~MOLLIE~ (@molliesummerland)

It’s got to be Mollie Summerland, with whom I’m currently on a mad adventure to Luhmühlen. Stay tuned as she tackles her second five-star with her horse Charly van ter Heiden!

Morning Viewing: 

I’m sitting here writing this news and notes roundup from the comfort of the lounge at Tim Lips’s incredible base in the Netherlands – and this vlog from a young Dutch pony rider gives you the chance to see my view from the terrace and some of Tim’s cross-country training techniques. Can’t help you with translations though, sorry.

 

Horse People Are — and Have to Be — Relentlessly Optimistic

This article was originally published on EN’s sister site, Jumper Nation.

The author in competition. Erin Gilmore/Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Two weeks ago, I rode a couple of young horses at a local dressage show. I was standing around in between tests when I felt a little tap on my shoulder. I turned around, and peering up at me was a little girl who would not have been more than 10 years old. She asked me, “Have you ever gotten a 10?”. I told her that I hadn’t, but that when I got a “9” on a movement (which was rare) I was usually very happy because that’s a great score.

She had her dressage test in hand and showed me the scores the judge had given her on the different movements. There were mostly 7s and a few 8s (which is very good). I told her that she had done very well—probably better than me that day—and this made her smile.

To be honest, I do not really think about getting a “10” in the dressage arena because it is exceedingly rare for a judge to give that perfect score. But what I loved about this girl’s question was that she was clearly optimistic—if 10 is a score that one could achieve, then why not try to achieve it? And she asked me that question that day because she thought that if I could do it, then she could, too.

There are some things in our sport that are exceedingly elusive. Scoring a “10” in dressage; scoring a “100” in a hunter round; jumping clear across all days at an Olympic Games or World Cup Final in show jumping. These tasks are almost literally impossible, so when people achieve them, those watching seem to feel that they are witnessing magic. And they are.

Most of us will never achieve this kind of magical performance, but that doesn’t mean that we cannot try. It may seem crazy for us to even believe that we can come close. This kind of thinking is backed up by scientific research around what psychologists call the “optimism bias.” Basically, studies find that humans in general are more likely to overestimate good things occurring and underestimate bad things occurring to them. In other words, people often have unrealistic expectations. This bias actually connects to a lot of issues—for example, one New Zealand study found that people had very large accumulations of student debt because they were overly optimistic about how much money they would make upon graduation.

The optimism bias can lead to a lot of disappointment when experiences do not go as people had hoped they would. But I believe that the optimism bias—that unrealistic pull—is what makes us keep going in the horse world. Without it, we may have all quit a long time ago!

Every equestrian professional will tell you this hackneyed advice: “there are a few highs, and many lows.” Sometimes there are a whole stretch of lows—a truck breaks, a barn burns down, a horse goes lame, a rider gets injured—and the list never seems to end. But every now and then, things go right and we have reason to believe in success again. We have to be relentlessly optimistic—even if we shouldn’t be. So here’s to that young girl: I hope that you achieve a score of “10” in your lifetime!