Classic Eventing Nation

OTTB Wishlist: Bold, Beautiful Bays

We all know there’s a stereotypical assumption about chestnut mares (for the record, I don’t buy into it!) but what about bay mares? I’ve never heard any axiom around them, so let’s make one up right now! When I think about a bay mare, I picture a horse who is beautiful and bold with a kind eye. Here are three off the-track Thoroughbred mares who fit right that description to a too.

Elite Appeal. Photo via MidAtlantic Horse Rescue.

Elite Appeal (UNCAPTURED – ALOTOFAPPEAL, BY TRIPPI): 2016 16.0-hand Florida-bred mare

This girl could appeal to a lot of different buyers as she seems to have the temperament for just about any discipline. Though green, the folks atMidAtlantic Horse Rescue (MAHR) call her easy to ride and describe her as a lovely mover. The icing on the cake? She goes barefoot! One of the great things about adopting  horse from MAHR, if you’re unfamiliar with them, is that all their adopted horses receive $200 toward lessons and training thanks to the ASPCA On the Right Track Voucher program.

Located in Warwick, Maryland.

View Elite Appeal on MidAtlantic Horse Rescue.

Boston Girl. Photo via Finger Lakes Finest Thoroughbreds.

Boston Girl (WICKED STRONG – JUST SAY HEY, BY ROCKPORT HARBOR): 2017 15.3-hand New York-bred mare

This lightly raced young filly could be a real catch for someone looking for an athletic and spirited mare who just couldn’t quite find her stride as a race horse. Though she didn’t win any races, she did seem to prefer the turf over the dirt, which never seems like a bad thing for an event prospect. Her trainer has enjoyed exercising “Emma” herself and says she’s good to ride and a nice mover.

Located in Farmington, New York.

View Boston Girl on Finger Lakes Finest Thoroughbreds.

Rewarded. Photo via Friends of Ferdinand.

Rewarded (CENTRAL BANKER – BEST REWARD, BY GRAND REWARD): 2017 16.0-hand New York

Rewarded is a spirited filly who can be a little bit of a handful at times, but she loves to work and is ready and willing to learn. She had a couple of decent finishes in her career as a racehorse, and last set foot on the track in November. Take her home, put the work in and, yes, this super cute mare could become a rewarding partner!

Located in Moorseville, Indiana.

View Rewarded on Friends of Ferdinand.

Thursday News & Notes Presented by Stable View

Diet is going well. Photo by Gail Smith.

Is there anything more satisfying than seeing a horse in your care explode into dapples? My personal horse is currently having a really good dapple season, and I’ve got to take photos of him just because I feel somehow personally responsible for how pretty he looks. Maybe it’s just me being slightly neurotic, but I’m always obsessed with getting my horses super glossy and silky soft, and if I can get dapples I’m positively delighted. Also why I keep buying plain bays, because otherwise this isn’t possible.

Major International Events:

Longines Luhmühlen: Website, EN’s Form Guide, Entries, Timing & Scoring, CCI5* Friday Dressage Ride Times, CCI4* Thursday Dressage Ride Times, CCI4* Friday Dressage Ride TimesCCI4* Live ScoresLive Stream, EN’s Coverage, EN’s Instagram, EN’s Twitter

U.S. Weekend Preview:

Flora Lea Farm YEH and Mini Trial (Medford, Nj.): [Website] [Entry Status]

Full Gallop Farm June H.T. (Aiken, Sc.): [Website] [Entry Status] [Volunteer]

Honey Run H.T. (Ann Arbor, Mi.): [Website] [Ride Times]

Horse Park of New Jersey H.T. (Allentown, Nj.): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Volunteer]

Kent School Spring H.T. (Kent, Ct.): [Website] [Entry Status]

Shepherd Ranch Pony Club H.T. (Santa Ynez, Ca.): [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times]

Silverwood Farm H.T. (Camp Lake, Wi.): [Website] [Volunteer]

News From Around the Globe:

Andy Kocher has received a ten-year ban from the FEI Tribunal regarding his use of electric shock equipment attached to his spurs. More details have been made available following the trial, including testimonies from various witnesses in the form of grooms, riders, and previous owners throughout the years associated with Kocher. His only defense was to say that the device found in numerous photos was a clicker used for positive reinforcement, and called no witnesses to his defense. [Andy Kocher Details Emerge]

Ready to learn a simple exercise to help you feel your distances instead of counting them? Riding your horse in a good balance and a good rhythm will always help, and Andrew McConnon shares a simple yet challenging exercise that he learned through both Bobby Costello and William Fox Pitt. He focuses on feeling the canter and riding it to help each individual horse stay straight and forward, rather than aiming for a specific distance by counting strides. [How to Feel Strides Instead of Count Them]

Our horses and sport provide us with an endless array of amazing opportunities and experiences, but sadly our brains are sometimes really good at thinking really bad things. Even though we love our horses, riding peers, classes, and competitions; our thoughts don’t always match the greatness of our experiences. Sometimes we just get stuck thinking bad things when good things are happening. The next time your thoughts and emotions don’t match the greatness of your experiences give the following three-part positive-thinking tip a try. [Daniel Stewart’s Brain Babble]

Best of Blogs: Horses Shouldn’t Always Be Expected to Jump

 

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Queeny Park Novice Helmet Cam

Queeny Park, the sole St. Louis, Mo.-area event each year, holds a special place in my heart, having grown up at the barn just across the street from the venue. Nestled in the heart of a suburban park in what’s know was “West County”, St. Louis, Queeny Park hosts divisions ranging from Starter up through Modified each spring. Recent years and the pandemic have brought their fair share of challenges to this much-loved event, and as such the event can always use more support. Click here to learn more about Queeny Park Equestrian Events and how you can support their efforts.

This week we’re celebrating Nancy Fronczak, who you may remember from her Amateur’s Corner column not too long ago, and her draft cross mare, RendezVous. This pair finished in the top 10 of their Novice division last weekend, capping things off with this fun double clear cross country. Thanks for sharing, Nancy!

Go Eventing.

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.

Let’s Go to Luhmühlen: Wednesday Social Media Roundup

Willkommen in Deutschland! We’re so pleased to have another CCI5* to follow in the first half of 2021; after the past year of feast or, for most of 2020, famine when it comes to events, it’s nice to see some normalcy returning. The Longines Luhmühlen Horse Trials are running this week sans spectators, but we’ve got our intrepid globetrotting, lorry-sleeping reporter Tilly Berendt on the ground to bring you all of the details from Germany.

We’re off to a rocking start today with the First Horse Inspection completing for the CCI5* – you can catch up on the action in Tilly’s report here. H&C+ subscribers can access the live stream of all competition phases by clicking here. If you’re a super early riser (or an extreme night owl, depending on how you look at it), you can tune in at 2:15 a.m. EST for the CCI4*-S dressage, followed by the CCI5* at 8:45 a.m. EST.

In the meantime, let’s take a glance around social media from day one on the grounds!

Longines Luhmühlen: Website, EN’s Form Guide, Entries, Timing & Scoring, CCI5* Friday Dressage Ride Times, CCI4* Thursday Dressage Ride Times, CCI4* Friday Dressage Ride TimesCCI4* Live ScoresLive Stream, EN’s Coverage, EN’s Instagram, EN’s Twitter

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.

Error, group does not exist! Check your syntax! (ID: 54)

One Horse Spun at Luhmühlen CCI5* First Horse Inspection

Ariel Grald and Leamore Master Plan. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

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.

There’s something special in the air at the Longines Luhmühlen Horse Trials. Perhaps it’s just because it’s the first CCI5* of the 2021 European season, but it feels more intangible than that: there’s a shared sense of camaraderie, a delicious kinship, because everyone knows all too well how long and convoluted the journey has been for everyone, regardless of whether they’ve been impacted by travel bans. Walk along any of the venue’s sandy, sun-soaked pathways and every person you meet will greet you with a beaming smile — regardless of whether you know one another or even speak the same language. The weather is tropical, the horses are bubbling with hard, fit energy, and despite the event being forced to run behind closed doors, the music never stops and the atmosphere feels thick with anticipation of the great adventure yet to come.

Jennie Brannigan and Stella Artois. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This afternoon saw the first horse inspection take place for the CCI5* class, which shares feature billing with the CCI4*-S and German National Championship. Twenty-five horse-and-rider combinations presented to the ground jury — revised as a result of travel restrictions — of president Anne-Mette Binder (DEN), Ernst Topp (GER), and Katrin Eichinger-Kniely (AUT), and the eagle-eyed among you may notice that this is a slightly inflated number. That’s because of an eleventh-hour exemption granted to British-based competitors by the local government, which opened the tiniest window of opportunity for competitors on that enormous list of withdrawn entries.

Emilie Chandler and Gortfadda Diamond. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

With such short notice, though, only those who had got themselves organised early and had their horses’ bloodwork done and paperwork in process prior to last week’s Bicton Horse Trials were able to make use of the opportunity. As a result, we welcome British rider Emilie Chandler and Gortfadda Diamond and British-based Kiwi Samantha Lissington and Ricker Ridge Rui to our small but impressive list of runners.

Clara Loiseau and Ultramaille. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Just one drama marred an otherwise swift and straightforward trot-up. Clara Loiseau‘s Ultramaille will not start the competition after being sent to the holding box and subsequently rejected upon re-presentation, but the young French rider will continue on with her seasoned CCI5* mount Wont Wait.

Reigning champions Tim Price and Ascona M. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The CCI5* will do dressage in its entirety on Friday afternoon, while tomorrow’s action is all about the smoking hot CCI4*-S class. You’ll be able to stream every phase of each class on Horse&Country TV, and we’ll be bringing you full reports and images galleries every day. Plus, you can get a taste of life behind the scenes with the Luhmühlen Tour Diaries, as your resident journo combines wall-to-wall coverage with being a CCI5* groom for British rider Mollie Summerland. Expect antics galore.

Until tomorrow: Go Eventing!

Longines Luhmühlen: Website, EN’s Form Guide, Entries, Timing & ScoringCCI5* Thursday Dressage Ride Times, CCI5* Friday Dressage Ride Times, CCI4* Thursday Dressage Ride Times, CCI4* Friday Dressage Ride TimesCCI4* Live ScoresLive Stream, EN’s Coverage, EN’s Instagram, EN’s Twitter

Error, group does not exist! Check your syntax! (ID: 54)

#DogsofEN: This Lucky Dog Found Her Way to Andrew McConnon, and the Rest is History

We know, we know – we’re an eventing website. But what’s an eventer without his or her dog, we ask? North Carolina-based Andrew McConnon got a bit more adventure than he bargained for on a recent trip to the West coast, and the story is too good not to share.

This is Moab. Moab may be pictured living her very best life in Andrew’s pool here, but her origins are a bit more complicated.

Photo courtesy of Andrew McConnon.

You see, Moab first made herself known to Andrew and his traveling partner, Cameron, at a gas station en route from Lake Powell, Az. to Moab, Ut.

“After doing our best to rationalize with ourselves that we were in a rental car, on the other side of the country, in the desert, and that the last thing we needed to do was take a dog with us,” Andrew wrote on his social media. “I went in to ask the story on this dog. I was told that, ‘she showed up 2 days before’ and when I asked what would happen to her I was told, ‘she’ll either end up starving or getting hit by a car’. Decision was made and she jumped into the car.”

Moab’s first appearance. Photo courtesy of Andrew McConnon.

Of course, the logistics that followed were far from simple, but Andrew and Cameron were determined to get their new friend home safely with them. A bonus: Moab got to tag along on the rest of their travels, hitting hot spots such as Arches National Park, Canyonlands National Park and Zion National Park, even throwing in a few L.A. staples such as Runyon Canyon after her initial flight east was canceled due to high temperatures.

“We immediately started working on her required shots and health certificate needed to travel!” Andrew continued. “Outside of Zion, The Desert Vet got us squared away and confirmed that she didn’t have a microchip. We headed towards Vegas. The only flights we could get for her was a flight out of LAX on Wednesday morning so we left Vegas on Tuesday. While on our way we got an email that her flight was canceled due to heat (can’t be over 85° at any of the airports). We took a detour and went up through Badwater Basin, Death Valley up to Mammoth Lakes across through Yosemite National Park down the PCH to Los Angeles for her Thursday 5:30 am flight. Woke up to another canceled flight… so she got to see Runyon Canyon the Hollywood sign and others before finally getting her on a Thursday PM flight for NC!”

Olivia Coolidge and Natalia Knowles, holding down the fort at Andrew’s home base, were sent to collect the newest barn dog member of the McConnon Eventing family and, well, we think it’s safe to say that Moab has officially lucked out and has a wonderful new forever home. “It’s been quite a journey,” Andrew wrote. “but so thankful that it worked out!”

Welcome home, Moab!

Photo courtesy of Andrew McConnon.

How to Watch All Phases of the Luhmühlen CCI5* & CCI4* This Week

Hallo from Luhmühlen! Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Want to keep up with the action in Germany this week at Luhmühlen? You’re in luck as our friends at H&C are on site and will be providing a live stream for H&C+ subscribers, one with German commentary and one with English commentary provided by Spencer Sturmey.

All phases of the CCI5* and CCI4* will be live streamed and you can find more information here. A subscription to H&C+ is just $9.99 per month and also has an annual option available for $99.99 and gives you access to live streams, replays and an extensive library full of masterclasses, documentaries, interview series and much more.

The H&C+ live stream of Luhmühlen is as follows:

Wednesday June 16
10:00 a.m. EST / 4:00 p.m local – CCI5* First Horse Inspection

Thursday June 17
2:15 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. EST / 8:15 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. local Meßmer Trophy CCI4* S dressage

Friday June 18
2:15 a.m. – 8:00 a.m. EST / 8:15 – 2:00 p.m. local Meßmer Trophy CCI4* S dressage

8:45 a.m. – 10:45 a.m. EST / 2:45 – 4:45 p.m. local Longines CCI5* Dressage

Saturday June 19
3:15 a.m. – 6:00 a.m. EST / 9:15 – 12:00 p.m. local Longines CCI5* Cross Country

6:40 a.m. – 12:45 p.m. EST / 12:40 – 4:45 local Meßmer Trophy CCI4* S Cross country

Sunday June 20
4:30 a.m. – 5:50 a.m. EST / 10:30 – 11:50 a.m. local Longines CCI5* Showjumping & prize giving

6:50 a.m. – 12:10 p.m. EST / 12:50 – 4:10 p.m. local Meßmer Trophy CCI4* S Showjumping & prize giving

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.

Error, group does not exist! Check your syntax! (ID: 54)

 

Wednesday News & Notes from Haygain

For the first time, Thailand will field an Olympic equestrian team next month at the postponed 2020 Olympics in Tokyo. The eventing berth is another step in a 10-year plan laid out by Thailand’s federation, and riders Arinadtha Chavatanont, Weerapat Pitakanonda and Korntawat Samran say they have benefitted immensely from coaching and support from France’s Maxime Livio. Read more about the great accomplishments of this team and how they’re feeling looking ahead to Tokyo here.

Major International Events:

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

U.S. Weekend Preview:

Flora Lea Farm YEH and Mini Trial (Medford, Nj.): [Website] [Entry Status]

Full Gallop Farm June H.T. (Aiken, Sc.): [Website] [Entry Status] [Volunteer]

Honey Run H.T. (Ann Arbor, Mi.): [Website] [Ride Times]

Horse Park of New Jersey H.T. (Allentown, Nj.): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Volunteer]

Kent School Spring H.T. (Kent, Ct.): [Website] [Entry Status]

Shepherd Ranch Pony Club H.T. (Santa Ynez, Ca.): [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times]

Silverwood Farm H.T. (Camp Lake, Wi.): [Website] [Volunteer]

Looking for a fun schooling show opportunity? Check out the Barnstaple South 3-phase schooling show, a part of their Jackpot Series, this weekend! Entries close tomorrow.

Wednesday Reading List:

The Senate on Tuesday unanimously approved a bill marking Juneteenth, the June 19 anniversary commemorating the end of slavery in the U.S., a federal holiday. An interesting tidbit of history about Juneteenth: though President Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863, not everyone living in the country was free, just like that. In fact, it would take until June 19, 1865 – two and a half years after the passage of the Emancipation Proclamation – for implementation to reach into Texas, one of the last footholds of slavery in the Confederacy. On this date, 2,000 Union troops marched into Galveston Bay, declaring the states quarter of a million people still enslaved as officially, gloriously free. Read more on the history of Juneteenth here.

As she prepares to head to Tokyo for her second Olympic Games representing Puerto Rico, Lauren Billys Shady took a few minutes to chat with The Chronicle of the Horse recently. The latest “Behind the Stall Door” goes behind, well, the stall door with her longtime partner, Castle Larchfield Purdy.

Andrew Nicholson takes us down memory lane with the great Nereo, who “looks as grey as I am,” he joked in the latest USEA “Horse Heroes” column. Now 21, Nereo spends his golden days teaching Andrew’s daughter, Lily, the ways of the world and generally celebrating his legendary career.

Are horses that we deem to be sound actually experiencing pain and discomfort? This is the subject of a study done by researchers Sue Dyson and Andrea Ellis using the Ridden Horse pain Ethogram (RHpE) to identify those horses that may be experiencing discomfort. Read the report on the latest results from horses studied at Badminton and Burghley here.

Wednesday Video Break:

🇵🇷 Lauren Billys Shady made the local news with her journey to Tokyo – check it out!

The Luhmühlen Tour Diaries, Part Five: In Which the Price is Right

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 four:

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

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.

Family matters: Jillian and Lugano stop for a chat.

By the latter part of our stay in Breda, Mollie and I had formed a delightful little family unit with our cohorts at Tim’s: we’d spend the day working on our various jobs alongside one another and the evenings out cruising for snacks with head girl Jillian, who drives like she’s in a Dutch Grand Theft Auto and gave us all an early taste of those cross-country day heart palpitations. From our evening haunt on the terrace we’d construct elaborate drinking games based on the clinics taking place in front of us, none of which came to much as it turns out Tim has trained his students far too well. (And, to be fair, the booze is all nonalcoholic anyway.)

In those last few days, though, our family unit was to expand into the best kind of chaos: Tim and Jonelle Price, plus three grooms and six horses, joined our happy clan en route to Luhmühlen from Ireland’s Millstreet Horse Trials. Suddenly, it became very possible that we could be looking at a total Lips Stable domination across the two classes at Luhmühlen.

Hanging out with Popeye, just moments before the great faecal incident of 2021.

Team Price brought an extra addition along for the ride: a small, one-eyed dog they’d christened Popeye. Tim had spotted him running along the motorway in the wee hours of the morning and managed to do an emergency stop in the lorry, expertly manoeuvred a frightening moment in which the little dog nearly got hit by an oncoming truck, and scooped him up. In Breda, he quickly settled in, trying out any and all available beds, happily trotting along to do chores with whomever he came across, and getting frequently and inexpertly humped by a terrier belonging to one of the Lips Stable liveries. And then, of course, there was the delightful moment in which he accidentally covered me in poo, which means that somewhere in the security camera footage there’s an excellent video of me sprinting across the yard, hastily undressing as I went. He had his bum shaved after that by Kelsey, one of the Prices’ grooms, and so we all suffered some indignities that day.

Top-notch pony-spotting at Lips Stable.

The new addition of a plethora of Kiwi accents to our diverse selection meant that I started to sound like a parody of everyone: I split my childhood between the UK and the US, and when you undergo an accent change as a child, your brain becomes a uniquely self-conscious little creature that tries to adapt, chameleon-like, to whatever sounds it hears frequently. It had drifted towards something vaguely continental in the first half of the week; by the latter half, every third sentence sounded rather like I was doing a bad impression of the Crocodile Hunter. This led to some communication difficulties.

“Are the bosses around?” I cheerfully called out to Kelsey one day, strolling into the Prices’ barn aisle.

“Are the…bastards around?” she replied, looking puzzled and defensive.

I wasn’t the only one struggling with accent troubles, though for Mollie, the difficulty was in interpretation. She bumped into Gosia, Tim Lips’s Polish groom, one day in the kitchen. Gosia had made the best use of her morning off, cooling off at one of the many nearby swimming areas.

“You have to go there one day,” she told Mollie in her strong Gdansk accent. “You have beautiful legs.”

Or at least, that’s what Mollie thought she said. She appeared in the lounge moments later, looking harried.

“I thought she was hitting on me, and I didn’t know how to respond,” she said. “But she was just saying they have beautiful lakes.”

Mollie’s cultural education was taking shape every day.

“I’m going to leave here such an intellectual,” she proudly proclaimed one day. “I’m learning so much.”

Like Columbus before her, Mollie aims spectacularly poorly and somehow discovers the Americas.

After discovering on that first night that she didn’t, in fact, know what continents were, she set about learning them with gusto a couple of evenings before our departure, helped along by an interactive map-labelling game I’d found for her on the ages 5-7 section of an educational website. It took some serious focus and a couple of misfires — notably, the labelling of Africa as Europe, because “I thought that was the United Kingdom,” she said, pointing at Madagascar — but eventually, she got it. No one was more proud than Mollie herself.

“I can’t stop thinking about Antarctica,” she said, pensively eating a block of cheese the next evening.

A reformed Charly shows off his best duck impression.

Charly — the happiest horse in the universe — had also come on in leaps and bounds. Not in his ridden work, which had already been excellent, but in learning to eat while away from home. At their debut five-star at Pau last year, he’d survived on a diet of 24/7 carrots, and for the first few days of our trip, he turned his nose up at mealtimes, but now he bellowed for extra meals whenever anyone dared venture past his stable. Mollie, high on the euphoria of knowing about Antarctica, reenacted a pivotal scene from Secretariat on her own in the barn aisle.

Teams Lips, Price, and Summerland convene for cross-country day.

The Prices were due to leave a day before the rest of us, and they’d been good company, providing sparkling commentary as we all piled into the lounge to watch Bicton’s CCI4*-L cross-country, putting on a suitably excellent barbecue, and giving us all a unique insight into just how many opinions Ascona M really has. (A lot, as it turns out.)

Tim never quite recovered from the discovery that all the booze was alcohol free.

Their horses had occupied a separate barn aisle during their stay, and anytime any of the rest of us pottered through, Tim would appear, roaring at us in jest to get out of his barn. After they headed to bed in preparation for their long journey the next day, Jillian, Molly and I decided to get our revenge, wrapped their lorry and aisle in banners reading ‘TIM LIPS 4EVER (no other Tims need apply)’. The battle of the Tims had commenced.

Throughout the ten days of our stay, it felt like there were good omens everywhere: I kept glancing at my phone just as 11:11 hit; Mollie and I had saluted every magpie within a five-mile radius; and little signs just kept adding up to add to the positive vibes around the place. Being in Breda felt like a lucky charm in and of itself – we were surrounded by people we’d come to adore and it felt more like a home than I could ever have expected.

Two Tims and a horse who changed their lives. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Just before it all came to an end, I sat down with each of the Tims in turn to chat about Keyflow, the now-24-year-old gelding whose sale had given Tim Price a foothold early in his career, and who had gone on to extraordinary success with Tim Lips for years thereafter.

After half an hour of sharing memories, the latter became pensive.

“I remember watching [Dutch Paralympian] Bibian Mentel on TV once,” he said. “She had had cancer over and over again and knew she was going to die. But she said life is all about collecting memories – it doesn’t matter what you own, or how much money you have, or how nice your car is. It’s about following your passion and gaining these wonderful memories. That’s what these great horses give us.”

I could say the same for the great people who work with them. Thanks for the memories, Tim: and now, onward to Luhmühlen.

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

Error, group does not exist! Check your syntax! (ID: 54)

TikTok Tuesday Videos: Cross Country Failsauce

Why does setting it to music just make it that much funnier?

From the masterminds who brought the world the shiteventersunite Facebook group, here comes the TikTok channel version. Note: All ends well in these video, but please try to safe out there, EN!

@shiteventersDid she stick it!? Comment what u think 🦄 (not my video.no hate, will be deleted) ##shiteventersunite ##horse ##xyzbca ##duet ##fails ##equestrian ##fyp ##f

♬ Falling – Trevor Daniel

@shiteventersWhoopssss (video off of Instagram) ##poniesoftiktok ##shiteventersunite ##fail ##fyp

♬ Don’t Play – Anne-Marie & KSI & Digital Farm Animals

@shiteventersTired pony 💤 (not my video off Facebook “shiteventers” comment for credit) ##horse ##fyp ##xyzbca ##equestrian ##fails ##shiteventersunite

♬ Dua lipa NO GOD PLEASE NO – Kayla Barry

@shiteventersOh no 😖😂 love a water jump fall! Hope u didn’t get too cold 🤣 ##horsesontiktok ##RayBanElevatorDance ##shiteventersunite ##fyp ##foryou ##pony ##xc

♬ Just Water – Bryansanon

@shiteventers@pony.it.up on ig!! Love this video 😂 ##shiteventersunite ##horse ##horsefails ##foryou ##fyp ##funny ##foryoupage ##ponyclub ##crosscountry ##fails #

♬ Spooky horse thoughts – Evan Donadt Dressage Groom

@shiteventersMust of hurt 😬😬😬 (not much video) ##shiteventersunite ##horse ##fails ##horsefails ##funny ##fyp ##foryou ##FreshWearSpin ##LiftLockPop ##TechTokTips

♬ Spongebob – Dante9k

Go Eventing.