Classic Eventing Nation

It’s Time! Enter the 10th Annual Kentucky Pick ‘Em & Win Contest, Presented by FLAIR Equine Nasal Strips

Doug Payne and Vandiver. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

We’re back! Finally! We are so pleased to be able to offer a real live Pick ‘Em contest for this year’s Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event, presented by MARS Equestrian.

Up for grabs this year is a FLAIR Equine Nasal Strips Prize pack with 2 6-packs of FLAIR Strips as well as a FLAIR towel. All you need to do to enter is to input your pick of the winning horse and rider, as well as your prediction for their finishing score, in the embedded form below.

If we have more than one correct answer for the winning pair, the closest score (without going over the final score) will win. If there is more than one finalist, we will do a random drawing from that pool.

Entries for this contest are due by Wednesday, April 21 at 12 pm EST. We will announce the winner on Monday, April 26.

Our apologies, but at this time this contest is open to U.S. residents only.

ENTRIES CLOSED!Good luck everyone!

Good luck!

Coming Soon: EN’s Ultimate Wall-to-Wall Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event Coverage

Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t holding my breath and crossing my fingers for the last few weeks, watching the calendar tick down to this year’s long-awaited Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event, presented by MARS Equestrian. Thanks to the massive efforts of thousands of eventing participants and supporters, the event — which originally was set to cancel for the second year in a row — was able to pull together enough funding to make this coming week happen.

While spectators are sadly still prohibited by US Equestrian, the Eventing Nation team is looking forward to bringing eventing fans the world over the Kentucky coverage you’ve come to anticipate in some fresh and exciting new ways. Don’t worry — nothing regarding our traditional coverage (daily reports, live updates and more) is changing. We want to bring you to Kentucky with us, so all of our regular coverage will be available right here on EN all week long.

But we did want to add some new pieces to the party this year! So we’re excited to offer three supplements to our Kentucky coverage:

1. Meet the EN Ultimate Guide to the Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event

A preview of just some of the information that will be found on each rider’s two-page spread inside EN’s Ultimate Form Guide.

What started as a whim of an idea in a daily Slack chat quickly evolved, in true EN fashion, into a massive project, and we’re pleased to present the very first Ultimate Guide to Land Rover Kentucky. Featuring in this slick, downloadable guide are profiles on every horse and rider entered in this year’s CCI5*, complete with statistics on each pair’s performance leading up to this week, fun facts, and analysis. Learn a little bit about your favorite pair — and maybe even “meet” a new rider or horse you’ll be a fan of forever.

You’ll get a sense of the competitive strengths and weaknesses of each pair in each phase, their history together and much more in this guide, meant to be a true companion for those following along with the competition via the USEF Network (in North America)/Horse & Country TV (internationally) live stream.

The Ultimate Guide will be available for sale very soon through Issuu and will cost just $5 to purchase. The Ultimate Guide is mobile and desktop friendly, and Issuu also has a great free app that makes the user experience even better. We’re also honored to donate a portion of proceeds to an equestrian access program or nonprofit in an effort to, in a small way, help welcome more people into our community. To nominate a nonprofit program (we’d like to keep the programs focused on access to horses for underserved populations), please email [email protected].

2. Want to stay the most up to date on what’s happening in Kentucky? Sign up for the FREE LRK3DE Daily Digest, a daily email newsletter that will land in your inbox early each morning beginning Thursday, April 22 full of coverage links from the day before, a preview of the day’s action, and much more. We’re also partnering with Achieve Equine (VIP Equestrian and FLAIR Strips), EcoVet, Kentucky Performance Products, Legends Horse Feeds and Pro Elite Feeds to offer up some great prizes all week long — just by signing up (you can use the embedded form below), you’ll be entered into a drawing to receive a prize!

3. If you haven’t become a Patreon supporter for EN, now might be your time! While all of our standard coverage will always be available on EN, we’re planning some exclusive interviews and other tidbits just for our Patreon Facebook group members. Patreon tiers start at just $5 a month, and you can sign up to become a member here. P.S.: All Patreon will receive a discount code for EN’s Ultimate Guide to Land Rover Kentucky!

Click here to learn more about EN’s Patreon, and click here to become a Patron.

I am thrilled to be working alongside my co-editor, Leslie Wylie, as well as our intrepid reporters/photographers Shelby Allen and Tilly Berendt — and with Maggie Deatrick and Abby Powell supporting remotely — on the ground in Kentucky. It’s a true honor to work with this team, who has put their heart and soul into our Kentucky content, and to be able to bring you the Kentucky coverage you deserve. We wish you could be there with us, but we hope we can at least make you feel as close to being there as possible.

See you soon! Go eventing.

Monday Video: An Emotional NBC Flashback to Kentucky 2014

Today, let’s flashback to Kentucky 2014. Picture it (or, you know, watch the video above): Andrew Nicholson was seeking the Rolex Grand Slam, our hopes hinged on Sinead Halpin and “Tate” for a home-country victory, and Lillian Heard was a rookie to the level.

Things are different now — the event is no longer known as “Rolex”, but as Land Rover Kentucky; it’s no longer a four-star, but a five-star; we don’t have to deal with a 1.5x dressage coefficient anymore; and there will be no spectators this year.

Nowadays, I get a bit of a kick out of watching the main stream media coverage (what little there is of our sport at least) as it glosses so casually over the finer details of it all, but there’s something about these emotional, musical NBC segment introductions that still give me goosebumps and make my heart flutter the same way they did when I was a kid glued to the TV, dreaming of taking riding lessons someday.

Thanks to Sara Kozumplik Murphy, Lynn Symansky and Dorothy Crowell leading the charge to make sure the event went on this year, and to the personal contributions of many more eventing fans across the country, maybe there will be a dramatic 2021 Kentucky segment on NBC this year too.

Land Rover Rookies: Valerie Vizcarrondo Pride and Favian

Valerie Vizcarrondo Pride and Favian. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Valerie Vizcarrondo Pride never thought she would be 40 and doing her first five-star. It doesn’t seem that long ago – but all at once also feels like a lifetime ago – that a younger Valerie was hip-deep in the sport, working with Karen O’Connor and planning out her life full of top-level horses and accomplishments.

But of course, with horses life hardly ever goes to plan. And it’s why Valerie now carries an overwhelming sense of pure gratitude for both her horse of a lifetime, Favian, as well as for the opportunity, after all these years, to finally make her debut at the top level of the sport.

It wasn’t for lack of trying that Valerie hasn’t quite made it to the level yet. She’s had a handful of other horses come up to the Intermediate and Advanced level, but whether it was the necessity of sales, injuries or simply that the most difficult level was just out of reach for these horses, she came up short on her biggest goals. So when she met the 16.2-hand Oldenburg gelding, Favian, she felt she was looking at a real chance at a clean slate.

Favian is a U.S.-bred horse out of Anita Nardine’s Hidden Springs Ranch in Mountain Center, Ca., and was originally campaigned in his eventing infancy by Tamie Smith and Heather Morris. Valerie, who had saved her dollars with every sale she’d had to make to keep her business going, was finally ready to purchase a horse for herself.

“I was looking for a while, all up and down the East coast, and just hadn’t found anything. A friend of mine, Liza Horan, was in California and I asked her to keep an eye out for a horse out that way,” Valerie recalled. “The next day, she called and told me about Favian. He was still owned by (breeder Anita Nardine) and had been with Tamie and Heather to that point.”

Valerie Vizcarrondo Pride’s Favian. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

It was a whirlwind of a shopping trip as Valerie soon found herself hopping a plane to California for just about 24 hours – just enough time to take Favian for a spin, talk it out over lunch, and decide that she’d indeed found the horse she wanted to partner with.

With the help of longtime supporter Elizabeth Bonner, who also owns Sudley Farm where Valerie’s Blue Clover Eventing bases, Valerie and “Faves” officially began their partnership in 2016, methodically moving through the levels as they got to know each other better before making their debut at Advanced together in 2019. Favian is a cross country-loving horse, made evident by his record, which shows just two shows ever with cross country jump penalties. It’s given Valerie the feeling she’s always craved in a top partner, and she’s feeling keen to get the upcoming week underway.

It can be challenging for riders limited in the number of upper level horses in their string to stay sharp and in good practice. Unlike some of her counterparts, Valerie doesn’t have a large number of horses in her program. Running Blue Clover Eventing, just outside of Annapolis, Md., Valerie prefers to keep her program on the smaller side. What helps her get as much practice as she can? Her side gig as an “S” certified National judge and a Level 2 FEI dressage judge, which allows her to judge through the Advanced and CCI4* levels. She’s also in the process of obtaining her FEI Level 3 certification, which will give her the opportunity to judge at the five-star level.

“Having the chance to judge so many horses competing at the Advanced and four star level has been really helpful for me, only having the one horse going at the level,” Valerie said. She credits Marilyn Payne and Linda Zang, both longtime mentors, as her inspiration for becoming a judge. “I kind of realized I wouldn’t be able to ride forever, so I wanted to find something I could do for a long time.”

Valerie Vizcarrondo Pride and Favian. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

These days, Valerie can typically be found alternating weekends between competing Favian, taking out her younger horses and flitting away for judging gigs. It’s a true art, this juggling that the professional rider must perform in order to make all of the ends meet. But Valerie does it all without complaint, accepting of the fact that life’s best rewards require some hustle.

“At Kentucky, I will just be super grateful to be there,” she said. “This is as close as I have ever been. Everyone has their own path, and I’ve had a lot of nice horses on the way. It feels really good to be here, on a horse I own.”

Not the bloodiest horse in the field, Valerie’s been working hard to tailor Favian’s fitness program, relying on the use of a heart rate monitor to keep a keen eye on his condition. She spent a good portion of the pandemic year working on speed as well as fine-tuning the dressage and show jumping. Most recently, the pair finished in the top 20 in the CCI4*-S at The Fork at Tryon International.

Favian and his sidekick, Theodore. Photo courtesy of Valerie Vizcarrondo Pride.

Valerie says she’s feeling prepared and confident – ready to get the show on the road, really, as Kentucky hurtles toward us. Favian, who on the other hand doesn’t love traveling to away shows, will be attending Kentucky with his mini companion, Theodore, in tow. “Unlike most of the other horses, (Theodore) earns his keep!” Valerie laughed. “When Favian comes back from a ride he trots up to the stall whinnying for Theodore, who is typically glued to the front of the stall door with his little mini nose plastered into the grates awaiting Favian’s return. It is so pathetic it will melt your heart.”

Hey, whatever helps you perform your best, buddy – no judgement here. We look forward to following Valerie and Favian during their debut this week! Stay tuned for much more from Kentucky. Go Eventing.

‘Behind the Barn’: Daniela Moguel on Making History

Daniela Moguel made history when she became the first rider from Mexico to compete at the then CCI4* level in Kentucky in 2016 and also the first to compete at the FEI World Equestrian Games. Mexico, which primarily supports eventing as a male, military activity – so Danny soon found herself packing up to move to the U.S. to pursue her dreams after seeing a poster of Karen O’Connor. Team Mexico coach at the time, Karen would later go on to coach Danny and her off-track Thoroughbred mare, Cecelia, when the pair competed at the Pan American Games in 2015.

You won’t want to miss this next interview from Frankie Thieriot Stutes as Daniela sits down to reflect on her career to this point.

To view the previous episodes of “Behind the Barn”, click here.

‘Get Good Help’: Chelsea Canedy Launches New England Spring Symposium

Chelsea Canedy and Unexpected. Photo by KTB Creative Group.

In May of 2021, the first annual New England Spring Symposium will be held at Unexpected Farm in Wales, Maine. Each year, this event will bring two internationally known equestrian professionals together for a full weekend of immersive education in varying disciplines.

This year they are hosting ICP Certified Instructor and Olympic Team Reserve rider, Sinead Halpin, along with shortlisted Canadian Eventing Team Rider, two-time Thoroughbred Makeover Freestyle Winner and author, Tik Maynard. The topic for this event will be: The First Year of Competition for Horse, Rider or Combination. Perfectly timed at the beginning of the 2021 New England show season, this weekend will be full of learning opportunities for riders and auditors alike.

With two rings going, vendors and food trucks, this is essentially a mini Equine Affaire. After a year with little or no competition and clinics, we are thrilled about this new event.

To get the inside scoop, we sat down with founder Chelsea Canedy of Canedy Performance and Horsemanship. But first, here’s how Tik Maynard describes Chelsea, her work and her new farm:

“Chelsea combines her knowledge of competition, horsemanship and mindfulness in a unique way. Chelsea is a constant learner, which I love.  She has super feel. She finds a great balance between understanding the demands of competition and knowing when to back off to give the horse more time.  Chelsea has a truly unique and powerful approach to teaching. The best reference I could give her is that I would love her to teach my own son when he is ready.

“In addition to Chelsea’s teaching ability there is also her new farm. Which is gorgeous. I have no doubt it will quickly become a destination facility for students from all over the North East. A place to learn, to host clinics, and for people to not only become better riders, but to become the best versions of themselves.”

EN: Tell us a little about your background, Chelsea.

CC: I grew up in Connecticut, and started riding when I was about 11. I was a member of Litchfield Pony Club, and earned my H-A certificate before leaving for college. I rode and taught lessons through those four years, while I earned my Bachelor of Fine Art degree. And then I jumped headlong into horses!

I ran a farm in Northeastern Tennessee, where my eyes were opened to some horsemanship ideas and tools that I had never seen before, and then went over the nearby border into Virginia where I expanded my business into a larger facility. I remained there for several years and during that time, brought along project horses from the track and other careers into eventing. I had several horses move up to the Preliminary level before being sold for their owners, and was also able to ride up the levels in dressage, which really helped my eventing game! I was also lucky enough to meet a wonderful client who brought me on to run her private farm and show her amazing horses. I was working there when I met my now husband, and soon after it was clear that we needed to move back to the northeast where both our families were, for various reasons.

At this same time, I was doing a lot of soul searching about my personal goals in life and in the horse world specifically, and this led me to exploring meditation, which became a huge part of my life going forward. When we moved to Maine, I backed off from horses as my sole profession, and pared it down to teaching just a few clients, while working in social service. But over the last 10 years, while I have also had two children, my clientele has grown and my business is full-time horses again … though now I can say I am in this business in a much healthier and more sustainable way than I was in my early days, which allows me to help my horses and my clients so much more effectively!

EN: Unexpected Farm, the name of your facility, what’s the story there?

CC: Well, I had a horse named Eddie, who’s show name was Unexpected … When I saw him the first time, he was so unhealthy and homely, but when he moved, I thought “that was unexpected!” That horse taught me so much. He had a lot of baggage and quirks, and I had to get way out of my usual training box to work with him. It was really challenging at times, and also the most rewarding relationship with a horse I think I’ve ever had. I sold him in May of 2020, when I realized my goals and his abilities weren’t in alignment. He went to the literal perfect home, and letting him go still kicked my butt. I so loved that horse!

It was around that same time that my husband and I started tentatively looking at farms, which was NOT in our 2020 plans at all. The whole thing unfolded over many months, with A LOT of paperwork and finagling. When it looked like all of the impossible things that needed to align for the whole thing to come together were actually going to fall into place, one of my students asked me about a farm name. When I said I had no idea where to begin, she asked if maybe there was a special horse I could name it after. I immediately thought of Eddie … Unexpected. It was perfect on so many levels. The whole fact that we were buying a farm was completely unexpected at that moment in our lives, and so was the fact that it actually came together!

We also bought a real diamond in the rough, which is exactly like Eddie. Quirky, with plenty of issues, but so full of character and potential that you can’t help but love it. Every time I tell someone the farm name, I think of Ed and of this crazy journey our family has been on, and all at the same time I feel shocked, amazed, proud, and grateful.

EN: What inspired you to create the New England Symposium and what are your goals with this event?

CC: I used to live in Virginia, basically within three to five hours of every major event in the southeastern U.S. And then I moved to Maine. There was one rated event here when I moved, and it has since stopped running. There’s not a lot going on in the way of upper-level eventing in this area. But I know there are people here who want to connect with that world! I want to bring that level of education and professionalism to this area. I strive to do that with my farm each day, and especially with the clinicians I bring here.

We get a slow start to the show season in Maine, since we basically can’t ride outside until April (if we’re lucky)! I wanted to create something that people look forward to each year as they emerge from the long winters and dust of their show clothes. I want it to be something that helps them step out on the right foot for the season … inspired and confident, with new ideas and tools to apply.

I want the Symposium to be an event that people from all over New England look forward to every year, not just if they have a horse to ride in it, but also to just come and be a part of. I want it to be something that breathes life into the horse industry and community in Maine, and shows people that what we have to offer isn’t all that far away, and is so worth the drive!

EN: We love Tik and Sinead — how did you pick them, and what will go into choosing the next clinicians?

CC: I have been so lucky to get to know Tik and Sinead over the past few years after connecting with Tik at Equine Affaire. I have been having him up to Maine to teach clinics regularly over the past 2 ½ years, and have been fortunate to spend time at Copperline Farm, Tik and Sinead’s home base, in the winters.

Tik and I actually came up with the idea for a yearly event like this while talking about my desire for more regular help with my own riding. He basically said “if it’s not here, then bring it here!” We have already brainstormed a list of clinicians that would be amazing to have, so get ready!

As far as having Tik and Sinead for the inaugural event, our work is so aligned in terms of our emphasis on horsemanship and our thoughts about that training process that it was a no-brainer for me to ask them. We were supposed to kick this off in 2020, but we all know what happened there.  The delay means that I now get to host the first New England Spring Symposium at Unexpected Farm, which is both thrilling and daunting!

EN: Advice for the younger equestrian generation?

CC: Go slowly and learn from the ground up. Things will come together much more quickly if you take your time with the foundation, and if you build it carefully, your plans won’t collapse as they grow. Learn how horses learn. Learn about animal behavior and training techniques. It will make everything you try with your horse make more sense, and your horse will thank you for it! When things get hard, slow down. Break things down into smaller questions that both you and your horse have a chance of getting right. Build both of your confidences this way. Get good help. Don’t be afraid to make a change to get the help you and your horse need.

EN: That sounds like solid advice for all of us! Anyone you would like to thank?

CC: Absolutely! I would like to say thank you to my sponsors, Prestige Italia and 100x Equine. Also a huge heap of gratitude to my husband, Nick, who is non horsey but always supportive and incredibly hard-working. And of course, to my amazing students and clients who have stuck by me through the move to the new farm, and in particular, Katie Liscovitz, my “life manager,” without whom none of this would be running smoothly!

 Thank you for taking the time to talk, Chelsea. Congrats on your farm and we’ll see you at the Symposium in May!

There are still auditing tickets available for the Symposium. These can be purchased here.

For vending and sponsorship options, contact Chelsea Canedy (email: [email protected])

‘Behind the Barn Episode 3: Get to Know Kentucky and Olympic Course Designer Derek di Grazia

The interview series, “Behind the Barn”, featuring 12 candid interviews with some of the people competing or otherwise attending the Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event, kicked off yesterday and will continue with new episodes released all week long. This morning’s first drop is a special one: get to know course designer (and Advanced-level competitor himself) Derek di Grazia! Derek has designed the course in Kentucky since 2011 and will also be designing the course for the upcoming Tokyo Olympic Games. He also won this event in 1985, so it’s safe to say he’s familiar.

To view the previous episodes of “Behind the Barn”, click here.

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

The eagles have landed! Many West Coast based horses and international horses who will be be competing at Kentucky arrived on-site at the Kentucky Horse Park over the weekend. While some competitors got to spend the weekend settling in with their horses, many other international riders will be landing in the Bluegrass today too to join their five-star horses, after a busy weekend competing several other horses at Burnham Market.

Our British correspondent Tilly Berendt was on-site at Burnham Market working tirelessly all weekend too — if you missed any of her coverage you can find it here. Tilly is going to be landing in the Bluegrass this week too for her first trip to Kentucky, helping EN to bring you a ridiculous amount of Kentucky coverage.

U.S. Weekend Results:

Ocala International Festival of Eventing: [Website] [Results]

F.E.N.C.E. H.T.: [Website] [Results]

Holly Hill H.T.: [Website] [Results]

Longleaf Pine H.T.: [Website] [Results]

Sporting Days Farm April III H.T.: [Website] [Results]

Unionville H.T.: [Website] [Results]

UK Weekend Results:

Burnham Market: [Results] [EN’s Coverage]

Ascott Under Wychwood (1): [Results]

Bovington (1): [Results]

Eland Lodge (1): [Results]

York & Ainsty North ODE: [Results]

Global Eventing Roundup:

Eventing season is in full swing in both hemispheres right now with FEI events having taken place in Australia, New Zealand, Mexico, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Poland, Sweden, and of course the US and UK over the past week. Five of those countries hosted CCI4*-S divisions.

Your Monday News & Notes:

Sara Mittleider announced via Facebook that she is withdrawing La Paz from the Kentucky 5* after the gelding was involved in a freak accident. We’re so gutted for you Sara, and we’re wishing “Muki” the best and speediest of recoveries.
Kyle Carter is the new Jimmy Wofford — at least when it comes to handicapping Kentucky entries for The Chronicle of the Horse. With Jimmy stepping down from his iconic role of assessing each horse and rider pair in the magazine’s Kentucky preview issue, Kyle was offered the job and unabashedly accepted it. He reflects on the meaning the role and on the running of this years event: [Inspiration Comes In Many Forms At Kentucky]
Have you met this year’s crop of Five-Star First-Timers yet? So far we’ve gotten to know Ema Klugman, Fylicia Barr, and Emily Hamel. Coming up, we’ll meet Zoe Crawford, Valerie Vizzcarondo Pride, and Mike Pendleton.
As we are full steam ahead into Kentucky next week, we’re looking forward to bringing you our famous EN coverage in a whole new way. Early next week, we’ll be launching the first-ever EN Ultimate Form Guide to Kentucky, available as a download for a small fee. We’re also launching the LRK3DE Daily Digest (click here to sign up – it’s free!), a daily email sent out early each morning during competition full of coverage links, predictions, giveaways/contests, and more. Finally, it’s a great time to become an EN Patreon supporter – we’ll be doing some exclusive content in our private Facebook group just for Patrons all week long.
Morning Viewing: Meet one of Britain’s rising dressage stars, Sonnar Murray-Brown, who has overcome the odds after a serious car crash to not only walk, but ride again.

Go ‘Behind the Barn’ with Emilee Libby

For Temecula, Ca.-based Emilee Libby, the trip to the Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event, presented by MARS Equestrian, is a homecoming of sorts. Having been here when she was just 19, she’s lived a lot of life in between starts at the CCI5* level – and in that time came a lot of changes, too.

In the second episode of the “Behind the Barn” interview series with Frankie Thieriot Stutes sitting down with 12 riders all throughout the week of Kentucky, we get to know Emilee as she prepares to make another start at the five-star level with the talented Jakobi.

These interviews provide a small window into the lives of the riders who we’ll be watching this week. Stay tuned for many more interviews to come featuring riders such as Jonelle and Tim Price, Buck Davidson, Daniela Moguel, William Fox Pitt, and many more. To learn more about the “Behind the Barn” series, click here and to watch the first episode featuring Liz Halliday-Sharp, click here.

Kitty King and Piggy March Share the Spoils of Burnham Market CCI4*-S – And Then Some

Kitty King and Cristal Fontaine take section B of the CCI4*-S in fine style. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Throughout the weekend here at the Barefoot Retreats Burnham Market International Horse Trials, we’ve seen the power balance shift in droves from one rider to another, again and again: from Piggy March on Friday, when she held first, second, third, fifth, and sixth over the two CCI4*-S sections after the first half of dressage, to Laura Collett, who sat first, first again, and second at the culmination of the phase. Today’s showjumping, and the tumultuous cross-country finale, would see this pattern of movement – and multi-horsed leaderboard dominance by a small handful of riders – continue.

The withdrawal of Laura Collett‘s horses after showjumping owing to the firm ground cleared the way for another sea change. Kitty King‘s 2018 Six-Year-Old World Champion made his CCI4*-S debut here last September, finishing third in the CCI4*-S for eight- and nine-year-olds, ordinarily held at Blenheim – and the now nine-year-old Selle Français has emerged this season looking even more established, strong, and balanced than he did in his previous impressive efforts.

This week, he sat ninth in section B after dressage on a score of 28.1 – just slightly marred by an unplanned halt in one of the walk pirouettes – before showjumping clear and producing a clear cross-country round three seconds inside the optimum time of 6:21 to take victory in just his second attempt at the level.

“He jumped a beautiful round in the showjumping and made it feel very easy. It’s easy to ride good rounds when you’re sitting on nice jumpers like that – you start to think ‘actually, I might be quite good!'” Kitty laughs. Having debuted the horse at the level over September’s more straightforward track, today’s run was both a test and a solidification of his experience at the level.

“On cross-country he was a wee bit green in a couple of places but really genuine; as long as I told him where he was going, he went,” she says. “We weren’t always the prettiest but he got the job done, and I was really proud of how he kept answering the questions even when he wasn’t sure what he was meant to be doing. I think he’ll have grown up a lot from the track – it’s given him a lot of experience.”

Kitty cites the Fairfax Sun Dials at 8AB – a table and a skinny element, situated on opposite ends of a quarry – as one of the tricky questions where the young horse could have faulted and instead made a greater effort to find his way through the flags.

“Because he’s a careful jumper, he was like, ‘ooh, there’s a drop down there’ – so then we ended up adding [a stride] going up to the sun dial, which made it a big effort jumping up the hill. It would have been easier for him, probably, to run out rather than to put in that big effort, so I was really pleased with how generous he was there. By the time he got to the corners [near the end of the course] he was flying; he had really grown in confidence [around the course] and understood what he was doing, basically.”

Reigning Badminton champions Piggy March and Vanir Kamira take second place. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Second place went to Piggy March and Vanir Kamira, who climbed from 10th place after dressage after finishing on their first-phase score of 28.7. Though the pair, who won Badminton in 2019, are fiercely competitive at the five-star level, we’ve become used to seeing the experienced mare run intentionally conservatively at these short-format internationals.

“This isn’t really what we do with her, fly around one-days – but right now, we’re not sure what else is happening, and so if she’s competitive, now we do run her,” says Piggy. “Because what are we waiting for? What are we saving her for? I won’t run her much in the summer on the hard ground, so after this I’ll probably ease off her – then, hopefully Burghley will happen, and so we’ll work back from then [to make a season plan].”

The now sixteen-year-old mare looked fresh and keen on course, clocking up the fastest round of the day as she crossed the finish line ten seconds under the optimum time.

“She’s fast, and she doesn’t waste any time at her fences – she’s low and quick,” says Piggy. “She’s a really hot mare and gets herself quite worked up, so it’s usually all about [saving the fast runs for] Badminton and Burghley with her. But what do you do? Do you put them out in the field, do you just hacking and schooling every day? They’ve got to have an aim and stay in work so they don’t feel that they’ve retired. It’s frustrating, but it’s just where the sport is at for the moment – we just have to keep our fingers crossed for the back end of the year.”

Tom Jackson and Billy Cuckoo take fifth – one of three top-ten placings for the rider across the two sections. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Gemma Tattersall was one of the first riders of the day to take to the course, and she was the first to make the time, romping home one second inside it with Chris and Lisa Stone’s eleven-year-old Chilli Knight, who was third in Blenheim’s eight- and nine-year-old CCI4*-S in 2019 and made his CCI5* debut at Pau last year. They climbed up to third place as a result, followed by a two-handed effort from Tom Jackson, who enjoyed a very good day in the office indeed when finishing on his dressage scores with Capel Hollows Drifts – fourth on 31.3 – and Billy Cuckoo – fifth on 32. This, plus a sixth place finish in section C with Fire Fly, who added just 1.2 time penalties to finish on a score of 36.4, should ensure a very jolly lorry ride home indeed.

The final top ten in section B of the CCI4*-S.

Piggy March and a ‘very cute’ Dargun win section C. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The baton was passed between Burnham’s leading ladies in CCI4*-S section C, which was scooped by Piggy March with the former Emily King ride Dargun. They added nothing to their 26.9 dressage to step up from fourth place overnight.

“He was really cute – in all three phases I thought he was really cool,” says Piggy, who describes her dressage test on him on Friday as her ‘clear round’ of that day.

The win marks just their fourth FEI event together and follows a second place in the CCI4*-S at Little Downham in October – but today felt like the first time that they’d set out with the intention of being competitive, Piggy says.

“It’s fun for him – I haven’t really been that competitive with him. Last year was a building year for us as a partnership, and I felt this year that this is it. He’s come on so much.”

Part of building that partnership came down to managing a few health issues: the horse has historically been prone to tying up, which has taken time to accommodate.

“He’s very simple [to manage] in many ways, but inwardly we’d think, ‘is he still up for this?'” she explains. “But he felt great – he was really cute and very genuine, and he did the tricky fences really well.”

Piggy also nabbed fifth place in this section with Fonbherna Lancer, another relatively new ride and one previously piloted by Izzy Taylor. They lowered a pole and added a time fault in showjumping and coasted home with two time penalties across the country, pulling them up from just outside the top ten after dressage.

“He was wobbly at the harder ones, but he was genuine and went,” says Piggy, who confesses with a laugh that she ‘did a big miss’ in the showjumping on the horse.

“He was jumping so well, and I keep having a jump down on him – which I shouldn’t because he’s a great jumper. He jumped one, two, and three, and he was a foot over them, so I thought ‘shit, he’s on great form, this feels amazing!’ I didn’t even have to do anything – I just pointed him at the fence and he was being brilliant. So I was floating along thinking ‘don’t get a time fault!’ and so I floated to a floaty distance and kicked the rails all the way out…what a knob I felt like!”

If it all sounds like the cross-country was rather too easy today, rest assured: today’s track, designed by Alec Lochore, boasted a nearly 75% clear round rate but caused plenty of high-profile problems. The most influential fence? The first water jump, which featured a robust house as the A element, a collapsible upright in the water as the B element, and then an achingly tricky left-handed turn to a brush corner, the line to which was made more difficult by the placement of decorative barrels on the approach. Experienced and inexperienced horses alike found themselves pushed off their intended line by the barrels, and run-outs to the right-hand side were seen in abundance, prompting more and more riders to opt for the long route, which could be tackled by swinging outside the barrels and jumping back over the other corner of the brush, or by hairpin turning right and then left to meet the ‘direct’ side of the obstacle. One of the most high-profile faulters here was Piggy’s Brookfield Inocent, winner of the Blenheim CCI4*-L in 2019 and second at Pau last year, who spooked at the barrels and wasn’t able to find his line again as a result.

“He’s probably one of the best cross-country horses I’ve ever had, and sometimes I feel like I sit there like I’m on rails,” she says. “But he’s also a spooky, hardy little sod at times, and I think he just made the first two jumps through the water really easily, and made the turn nicely, and just sat there really quietly – and then he took a spook at the barrels. It was bugger-all to do with the fence – the moment you jink at that particular jump, and you’re a meter away on the inside line, the fence is near-on impossible to jump. You can’t even see it as a fence, because you’re too much on the wall of it.”

But, says Piggy, “I half smiled at it, because I think you can put them on pedestals, but they’re not machines – and it’s probably the best kick up my ass I could have. You think, ‘oh my god, that just happened on that horse’ – but then I thought, ‘well, I was cantering around like I was on rails, thinking, do I run, do I not; we’ve had a rail, we’re not competitive…’, and so I wasn’t quite in the zone. So it was rider error, to be honest, but it was that kick up the ass that I needed. And then I got on [Fonbherna Lancer], and he’s greener, and I thought, don’t just think it’s all just going to happen – make it happen.”

Kitty King and Vendredi Biats add another jewel to the rider’s crown this weekend with second place in section C. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Kitty King followed up her win in section B with a second place finish in this section, this time riding her more experienced partner Vendredi Biats. The 2019 Bramham CCI4*-L winner has taken some time to master this phase, and it hasn’t been for lack of talent: instead, it’s been a product of his natural ebullience and cheeky nature, which has caused some focus issues in the past.

“I was really chuffed with him,” says Kitty, who expressed some disappointment in her first-phase mark of 27.5 but added nothing to it in the jumping phases.

“He consistently pulls out clear rounds [in the showjumping], so you go into the ring thinking ‘well, unless I miss, he should go clear'”, she says. That clear round was then followed by an enthusiastic penalty-free sprint across the country.

“He was very keen on cross-country, and a bit stronger than he usually would be, but I was really pleased with him because when he’s fresh, like he was today, he can be a bit on the cheeky side. I thought there were plenty of places on the course that if he was feeling that bit cheeky, he could have been a monkey. He gave me a really good ride and felt really good through all the tricky combinations – and he finished really fresh, too. When I was pulling up he spooked [going past] fence two and I nearly fell off. That’s just his character – whereas [Cristal Fontaine] pulled up like ‘oh my god, what just happened?’, this one was pricking around and spooking about. At least he waited until he’d finished!”

Kitty’s two excellent results are particularly welcome after a tumultuous end to her 2020 season, which saw her tumble from Vendredi Biats in her final prep run before Pau, from which she ultimately withdrew.

“I felt we needed to come out and prove that that was just a blip – all of last season, as short as it was, I hadn’t had a cross-country fault, and I felt like I was riding really well for a change, because I’m always really critical of how much I take a check here and there. So then I went to Little Downham and had a disaster, and I went to Thoresby and had 20 penalties on a really nice six-year-old, and a 20 in the six-year-olds at Le Lion – and I just thought, ‘I wish I’d quit [while I was ahead]’,” she says. “It all just fell apart for whatever reason, and it makes you doubt yourself – so it’s nice to come out and say it was just a blip and it was just a bad day.”

Izzy Taylor and Monkeying Around follow their win in the CCI4*-L here last year with third place in the tough CCI4*-S. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Izzy Taylor and Monkeying Around won here in September in the Blenheim replacement’s CCI4*-L feature class, and like Vendredi Biats, the result had come after some wobbles on the road to the top. But as Izzy lamented to EN yesterday, wobbles are part of the process – it’s just that most young horses get to make their educational mistakes well out of the spotlight. A third place finish here today – which they claimed after adding a solitary pole to their 25.9 dressage – proves that last year’s return to form wasn’t a fluke.

Oliver Townend and MHS King Joules take fourth place. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Oliver Townend follows his partner Izzy on the leaderboard, landing fifth place with the experienced MHS King Joules, who returns this season after taking sixth at Pau last year. It’s rather an unfamiliar position for Oliver at this event – he tends to use Burnham Market’s spring fixture as a prep run for his top horses’ early-season long-format efforts, but with both Cooley Master Class and Ballaghmor Class already in Kentucky, it was a weekend for his second string to take precedence. And so his usually unassailable grip on the Burnham Market crown was loosened – and a surprise fall from withdrawn Kentucky entry Tregilder early on in the course saw it slacken further. Nevertheless, he still took a victory elsewhere: he won the CCI3*-S aboard his 2020 Le Lion d’Anger ride Cooley Rosalent, who looks set for an extraordinary upper-level career.

Piggy March and Fonbherna Lancer round out the top five. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

That’s all from us from a jam-packed three days at Burnham Market – and now, it’s full steam ahead to Kentucky. We’ll see you in the Bluegrass state.

The final top ten in section C of the CCI4*-S.

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