Classic Eventing Nation

An American Girl in Germany: Sadie Buchenau’s Leap of Faith

We first met Sadie Buchenau, originally from California, in 2014 after she took up a working student position in Germany for Andreas Diboski. Since then, Sadie has become a budding professional herself, now basing in Germany with her partner, Esteban Benitez Valle. Sadie shares an update on what she’s been up to for the past six years in her newest guest blog for EN. 

Photo by Thomas Ix/Ix Photography.

I grew up in the beautiful Santa Monica Mountains in California, in Topanga Canyon. When I was about seven years old I received a trail ride at a local ranch as a Christmas present. I spent about a year just going on trail rides and learning basic horsemanship skills until I wanted to learn to jump. From there we moved a few miles deeper into the canyon to Mill Creek Equestrian Center, which became my addiction for the next two decades. I spent every possible minute at the stable, until I began working in exchange for lessons.

At 18, I moved abroad to pursue my riding career. It definitely was a very big leap and a kick in the butt in terms of independence, however I was always a go-getter and pretty independent from a very young age. Toward the end of high school, I began to realize that the typical college route was not my path. Whereas some universities in the States have equestrian teams and offer an education in equine basics, there is nothing quite as extensive as the system in Germany.

When I graduated I decided to take a gap year and move to Germany and pursue a working student position. I had interviews with a few different riders from the German Olympic Team and was offered positions with all of them. This was my first major decision, who did I want to work for? After lots of deliberations and weighing the pros and cons, I chose to take a position with Andreas Dibowski.

The transition, to be honest, was not the most difficult part. It was saying goodbye to family and having that “last meal” with Mommy while knowing I would be left “alone” for the foreseeable future, with new people, new horses, etc. Here in Germany, you don’t really get much of an adjustment period. It’s learn fast, keep up, work hard, or go home, and I was not about to go home.

The language barrier was frustrating at times, but most major competition facilities in Europe are made up of very international team members and English is a basic form of communication. Minor misunderstandings and confusions are part of the game, but once you get in the flow of things, the language issues work themselves out.

After completing my year internship, I returned to the States to continue expanding my career. I went back home to my childhood stable and immediately got a job teaching and training horses. I worked in the lesson program and helped with basic management at the stable. I grew a nice client base and also did some freelance riding throughout the area. At some point I realized I would not be able to teach to the extent I wanted to without some type of certification or licensing, which is when I decided to return to Germany and take the official step to study in their apprenticeship program.

Photo by Zawody Barborowko.

Here in Germany there is a three year apprenticeship program with a few choices of majors, i.e. service, breeding, driving or, in my case, classical riding and training of horse and rider. Throughout those three years I learned German, attended German equine school, and trained with a few top event riders as well as a showjumping and breeding stable in Holstein.

After completing my degree – and about two weeks before my flight home – I met my boyfriend, Olympic qualified four-star rider Esteban Benitez Valle. At the time we met, he was operating his self-made business with almost 20 competition horses. Things between us just “clicked”, so I made the big decision to stay in Germany.

I am very lucky to have met someone with similar goals and ambitions, who trains his horses and rides in the way that I do. Together we are training, teaching, competing, selling, and integrating our riding style into the classic German styles. We currently have a full stable at Cádiz Sport Horses.

There are quite a few differences between the American way of riding and the German way, most of them major. However the biggest difference would have to be in the show jumping.

In the U.S. we are taught a lot in half-seat or two point position; here they would call it your light seat. We are taught in our jumping courses mostly to be up off the horses backs, seeing our distances with a forward eye, active canter, waiting for the distance, and softening to the fences.

In Germany we are typically taught to be sitting deep in the horses backs, with constant contact, driving the horse from front to back, powerful tempo, connection in the bridle before, over, and after the fences to be in constant support of the horse.

For me, this is the biggest difference; working the horses round between the fences and not releasing the pressure before the fences, as opposed to allowing the horse to stay open in the throat latch and softening before the fences. The ideas of what are being accomplished are similar, but in general it was an adjustment developing a completely different feeling.

In the end I have continued to lean more towards my American seat, while still holding onto the German influence. My partner and I strive for the same overall feeling when riding: soft contact, self carriage, activity and push from behind, while remaining supple and light, rather than a constant pull on the bit. I still tend to find my half-seat between fences, rather than sitting through the entire course.

This idea is also translated into our dressage and cross country mindset as well, as we want horses who are more elastic and using their natural suspension, rather than a forced suspension.

Throughout my apprenticeship this was extremely difficult for me, trying to learn and gain all possible knowledge, while still holding onto my feeling and finesse. There were many ups and downs, frustrations, confusing moments and longer periods of time, but in the end I am very thankful to have developed both feelings and the ability to find a balance between the two. At this point in time, it is very exciting working with someone with a similar riding style, as our clients are seeing the results, and people are recognizing that there is a way that works that is slightly different than what they’ve known before. We are hoping to be able to continue to share our techniques with as many people as are open to it.

Photo by Manuela Garcia.

Some of my proudest personal accomplishments this past season were in the competition ring. I had waited a long time trying to prove myself in Germany and unfortunately wasn’t given the opportunity to do so until this last season. The competition season for eventing has come to an end for the winter but I have a total of six wins and another five placings under the top 10 under my belt this season; four wins with one mare, two with another, and all six of these wins were with horses who had never evented before, so it was a successful and satisfying season as a trainer and rider.

My newest and probably most exciting project at the moment is my new horse. Before coming to Germany I sold my heart horse back in the states, and very tragically he passed away last year in a pasture accident. Purchasing my own horse was a big step for me, as I had waited a long time for the right one to come along, and the right moment in my life, with happiness and stability, to be able to do so with Cleo, a four-year-old Hannoverian mare who is already showing lots of promise for a successful future.

The whole experience has been a challenge. Not giving up when times got hard, wanting to throw in the towel and sticking with it, but also being strong enough to know when something isn’t right and making the decision to get myself out of a bad situation. I’ve done a bit of both and in the end it seems to have been worth it.

 

Thursday News & Notes

We’ve all had those days. Or have we? Photo by Liz Schatz.

Yesterday winter came calling officially with a full day of ice, snow, sleet, and horrid cold. I did what I had to in the barn, tucked my ponies in safe and sound, and drove carefully at 25 mph back from my work barn. I can deal with cold, but when the precipitation comes, count me out. No thank you.

News From Around the Globe:

Olympic Committee Thomas Bach says he’s confident that the Tokyo Olympics will go in summer 2021. This will be the first global sports event since the beginning of the COVID-19  pandemic. To prevent coronavirus transmissions, the Japanese Olympic Committee plans to ask the participants to basically stay inside the athletes’ villages, except when training or competing. Spectators will be asked not to speak loudly at the venues and to adhere to other restrictions. [Tokyo 2021 Prepared to Go]

Outfitting horses in winter can be an exercise in perseverance and patience, but blanketed horses stay warmer and conserve more energy than their naked peers. Thermoregulation is an energy-expensive proposition for horses. As temperatures plummet, how does blanketing affect hay consumption and body condition changes? A group of researchers set out to determine the daily hay intake, body weight change, and body condition score changes in blanketed and non-blanketed horses living in western Wisconsin. So you know it’s expert on cold weather. [Winter Care of Horses: Blankets & Body Condition]

You’ve heard all about how Thoroughbreds are the ultimate versatile athlete that can excel in multiple disciplines, you’ve done your research and made your budget, and you can’t wait to start working with your very own. But how do you go about acquiring a retiring racehorse? Here’s a helpful guide. You know you want to put a Thoroughbred ex-racehorse in your barn… but how? Between aftercare organizations, reselling agents, horses already in training for a second career and horses coming directly off the track, there’s an overwhelming array of options, and it’s difficult to know which way to acquire a Thoroughbred is the best way: as with many such questions in the horse industry, that answer depends on a lot of factors. [How to Acquire an Off-Track Thoroughbred]

Feeling that holiday spirit? Got your Mariah Carey Christmas playlist going full time? Check out these beautifully decorated barns and farms to inspire you to get out this weekend and make your barn instagram worthy. [10 Decorated Barns to Get You in the Holiday Spirit]

Holiday Horse Song: Christmas Tune: Missing Shoes

 

Important video of the day:

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: The Golden Age of the USET

Take a midweek trip back to the 1980s in this hour-long documentary, which follows USET horses and riders in all three disciplines as they tackle the greatest challenge of all: the Olympics. There’s something about a slightly grainy video of a long-format competition that makes me feel a bit teary-eyed – and if you, too, like a good recreational weep to kickstart the second half of your week, you’ll be very into this.

Go (old school) Eventing!

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30 Eventing Legends Face Off in Equiratings Wonderful Willberry Holiday Sim

Mark Todd and Charisma, David O’Connor and Custom Made, Ginny Leng and Priceless, Mary King and Star Appeal … how might these legendary partnerships stack up against the world-beaters of today like Michael Jung with La Biosthetique Sam FBW or Ingrid Klimke with SAP Hale Bob OLD? A very special Equiratings Eventing Manager simulated competition is pitting 30 of the best horses of the last 40 years against one another — and all for a great cause. A Wonderful Willberry Holiday Sim is aimed at raising awareness and support for Hannah’s Willberry Wonder Pony, a charity dedicated to #kickingcancersbutt.

“After a really hard year, we also want to raise some cheer over two nights of lighthearted merriment,” the invite says. “Pick your team, pour the cocoa and tune in.”

If you haven’t played Eventing Manager before, here’s the drill: First, download the app. With a virtual budget of $10M per competition,  you’ll then “buy” a team of four riders and hope your team has success in all three phases for a chance to win. Models powered by SAP Predictive Analytics will create the likely results for the dressage, show jumping and cross country phases of the competition. Every competitor in the simulation has a chance of having a good or bad competition; they could have a dressage PR, only to throw it all away with a 20 penalty refusal in the cross country phase. It really is eventing as we know it, as the exciting sport of a million variables. Fans can play their own tactical game during each simulation, and a league table pits them up against all other EM App players around the world.

If you have played Eventing Manager, you’ll notice a few changes in the app. The big one: The more demand for a combination, the higher their price will go. This means prices now rise and fall before the event starts. Pick your team early to make sure you can afford your favourites or try the “buy low, sell high” strategy.

Featured leagues are loaded into the app with prizes on offer and the weekend coverage will be complete with your favourite commentators plus some very special guest appearances.

The market is open until Saturday, 19 December at noon (UK), 7 am (EST) when the simulated dressage phase begins on the EquiRatings Facebook page. After dressage, the market will re-open but selections will close for good once the simulated jumping phases begin on Sunday, 20 December at 7:30 pm (UK), 2:30 pm (EST).

Equiratings has also recorded a limited-release episode of the EquiRatings Eventing Podcast featuring Ingrid Klimke, Piggy March, Chris Bartle, Shane Rose and Kitty King. We’re not publicly releasing these powerhouse interviews but donating any amount to Hannah’s Willberry Wonder Pony Charity will grant you access to the special episode via your donation confirmation email.

To learn more, visit the event webpage!

EN’s Young Horse Academy with Martin Douzant, Part One: Conformation and Presentation

Looking ahead to the winter off-season, it’s a good time to put in some work on the details of our horses’ training. For some of us, this may mean starting off with an exciting young project. Perhaps you’re finally getting to put in some real work with your homebred, or maybe you’ve just gotten a new horse off the track for restarting. Whatever your circumstances, we’re excited to present a new video series this winter, EN’s Young Horse Academy with Martin Douzant of The Frame Sport Horses.

In this video series, we’ll cover topics ranging from conformation to restarting a horse off the track, giving you some new tools to put into practice this winter and beyond. If you’re planning to do some competition in the Future Event Horse or Young Event Horse events next year, these videos will be helpful.

Martin also offers clinics, which focus heavily on young horse development and elements such as free-jumping. To learn more or to book a clinic, click here.

To kick things off this week, we’re taking a look at basic conformation as well as in-hand presentation.

Conformation for Event Horses

Martin uses some examples of the horses in his program when talking about conformation. Generally speaking, he says, “one of the most important things is that, at the end of the day, the horses for eventing are going to have to run. So the type of the horse is very important. They have to be pretty light and not too heavy.”

Martin speaks about what he looks for in event prospects in terms of conformation. You’ll be able to see much more detail and comparison in the video, but here are a couple of takeaways:

  • Depth of girth is important for breathing capacity – this is something you’ll often see in Thoroughbreds off the track
  • The thickness of the throatlatch is also something Martin takes into account – this will account for suppleness in the bridle and also breathing capacity

Another key takeaway from Martin’s notes on conformation is the positioning of the horse for a conformation photo.

Sellers and photographers, take note: these two images depict the same horse, yet in the photo on the left, Martin describes, the head is lower, making the horse appear more round, compact, and hunter-type. The second picture, on the other hand, repositions the head to be higher, creating a more uphill visual that shifts the balance more to the hind legs. Which photo would catch your eye if you were shopping for an event prospect?

In-Hand Presentation

During an in-hand presentation for Future and Young Event Horse competitions, a judge will first look at the horse standing still, then will observe the horse at the walk. Here are some thoughts on presentation from Martin:

  • Teach your horse to yield small steps and large steps in-hand to be able to re-place their legs for a more correct stance
  • Martin prefers the horses to be square, or slightly open in the front legs and open to the judge’s side with the hind legs
  • Walking away from the judge, straightness is key
  • On the long side, the walk should be big and flowing – similar to a free walk under saddle – with the ears level with or below the wither
  • The head must stay straight at all times

Have a question for Martin? Please send an email to [email protected] and we’ll address it in an upcoming article. This series is presented in collaboration with Mythic Landing Enterprises. Happy young horse-ing!

#EventerProblems Vol. 245, Presented by Haygain: That’s A No From Me, Dawg

Have you ever asked your horse to do something and they just objectively said “No ❤️.” This week’s #EventerProblems is dedicated to all those times our partners decided that we just didn’t know best.

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Wednesday News & Notes

In today’s internet culture, “going viral” is synonymous with the idea of being “discovered” or getting your (hopefully more than) 15 minutes of fame. Saddle Up and Read founder Caitlin Gooch experienced this firsthand after a simple tweet fired off into the Twitterverse on December 5 took hold and quickly went viral.

Just a few of the results returned from a Google search for Saddle Up and Read.

Soon, media outlets and personalities all over the world picked up the story of Saddle Up and Read, which Caitlin founded in 2017 in Wendell, Nc. Caitlin even got some recognition from Oprah Winfrey, and she’s now using this momentum to help drive donations to grow the children’s literacy project she’s built from the ground up.

The biggest goal of Saddle Up and Read’s fundraising, Caitlin says, is to gain enough support to buy land to build a dedicated facility for introducing horses to kids in the SUAR program and beyond. You can learn more and make a donation here. Caitlin also just launched the first in her new series of Black Equestrian Coloring Books. Inside, readers will learn about 12 Black equestrian trailblazers. You can order a copy here.

Want to read more of the stories written about Caitlin and Saddle Up and Read? Here are a few links:

Meet the Black Cowgirl Who Inspires Children to Read

Meet the Woman Using Horses to Encourage Child Literacy

Wendell, NC Equestrian Uses Horses To Inspire Children’s Literacy

I hope you’ve enjoyed learning a little more about Saddle Up and Read today. I’m pleased to tell you that Eventing Nation will be partnering with a nonprofit or diversity-focused access program each month in the new year to highlight their stories and share ways to help. Look for more information each Wednesday morning right here in News & Notes.

Wednesday Reading List:

World-famous dressage stallion Totilas has passed away due to colicat the age of 20. The stallion and his early partner, Edward Gal, made international headlines, breaking record after record and winning triple gold at the 2010 World Equestrian Games in Lexington, Ky. The stallion was later sold for a rumored 11.2 million euro and would compete with Matthias Rath, though he would sadly never return to his prime form. He was retired from competition in 2015.

The West coast is truly the best coast! Yes, I’m biased as a West coast-er, but the proof is in the pudding: nearly half of the spots on the just-released list of riders invited to the Emerging Athlete Eventing 25 Assessment Sessions are taken by riders hailing from the Western states. Learn more about these “Ones to Watch” in this blog from The West Equestrian.

How do you keep a horse fit and healthy during the winter months? In a recent webinar with World Horse Welfare, Sir Mark Todd spoke at length about his horse management program and how simple tweaks can make a huge difference for the horses. Click here to view the webinar.

What does sportsmanship mean to you? Hear from multiple top event riders in this thought-provoking read from a recent issue of Eventing USA magazine.

Buying a horse sight unseen off of Facebook can be a risky move, but for Plaid Horse writer Lettie Teague, it paid off in spades. There are many things that can go wrong during the horse-buying process, but this feel-good story might just have you perusing ads again…you know, just for fun.

Wednesday Video Break: Remember the legacy of the great Totilas with their Freestyle performance at the 2010 World Equestrian Games at the Kentucky Horse Park.

Tuesday Videos from Horseware: Try These Stretching Exercises to Help Your Riding

Let’s be honest here for a moment: when is the last time you stretched? Don’t worry – it’s been a minute for me, too. It’s certainly not a habit I made when I spent every day in the saddle, and I think my body truly felt the effects of this over the year.

The reality is that riding is tough on our bodies! It’s important to take some time to properly care for our own bodies as well as those of our horses. Horseware seems to have the same idea, as they’ve just introduced a handful of exercise and stretching videos to their YouTube channel. With many countries still experiencing stay-at-home orders in some capacity, these exercises are friendly to staying at home and don’t require any equipment other than a chair and a wall.

In these videos, pilates instructor Caoimhe O’Dwyer walks us through some chair stretches as well as some full-body stretches that can be done anywhere, anytime, for just a few minutes. Try working these into your daily routine this week and see if it translates into your riding – we bet it will!

Looking for more exercise ideas from Horseware? Check back next week, and don’t forget to enter our giveaway of a copy of Yoga for Riders!

Fab Freebie: Win a Copy of Yoga for Riders from Horse and Rider Books

We’ve partnered with Horse and Rider Books (Trafalgar Square Books) to give away a copy of a few of their most popular titles this holiday season. Are you still shopping for some last-minute holiday gifts? You can enjoy 20% off at the TSB Online Bookstore by clicking here – don’t wait! Sale ends on December 24.

Cover image courtesy of Trafalgar Square Books.

I recently stepped into yoga practice as a way to lengthen and restore my muscles while also taking advantage of the meditative nature of the breathwork. It’s only been about two weeks, but I can honestly say that I feel an incredible difference in my bodily awareness and lean muscle strength already – and I can only imagine how helpful this work will be in the saddle. That’s why I’m particularly excited about our first Horse and Rider Books Fab Freebie this week!

From the TSB Blog:

Billions of people around the world embrace the practice of yoga. Its lessons in breath control, simple meditation, and specific bodily postures are widely regarded as a means to achieving health and relaxation. Yoga teacher and horsewoman Cathy Woods says that’s not all: She believes the meditative, mindful breathwork and lifestyle aspects of the tradition, as well as the postures, can be profoundly helpful in our interactions with horses.

Her unique program is presented here in the form of highly illustrated instruction, guiding you through the steps to achieving present moment awareness; finding body, breath, and energy awareness; breathing through challenges; listening to your inner voice; slowing down; and developing balance and symmetry in the saddle.

“While cleverly disguised as a ‘yoga for riders’ book, this text contains the secret sauce to having the ultimate connection and communication with your horse,” says worldwide clinician Warwick Schiller. “Creating the human mind/body connection is not only a spiritual practice, but the key to better horsemanship. I highly recommend this book for anyone seeking to deepen their relationship with their horse.”

To enter this giveaway, simply use one of the options from the Rafflecopter widget below. We’ll announce the winner next Tuesday, December 22 when we unveil our next book giveaway. Good luck!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Unable to use the widget? Click here to visit the raffle page!

Terms and Conditions: Thank you for entering our Fab Freebie! The Rafflecopter widget above will collect your email address, which may be shared with the sponsor of the giveaway but will not be sold or shared with any other third parties.

Ingrid Klimke, Groom Carmen Thiemann Win Big at FEI Awards 2020

Winners in the FEI Awards 2020 five categories were revealed last week, with multi-medalled young Dressage star Semmieke Rothenberger claiming the Longines FEI Rising Star Award for the second year in a row, and Eventing legend Ingrid Klimke also taking back-to-back wins as Peden Bloodstock FEI Best Athlete.

This year the task of choosing the best of the best from the past decade’s previous awards winners was entirely in the hands of the public who cast their votes for the 55 nominees from 19 nations. Over 70,000 votes were cast on FEI.org and on the Chinese social media platform WeChat. Podiums in each of the five categories were occupied by a global spread from Germany, Great Britain, Australia, China, Ireland, Palestine, South Africa, The Netherlands and Zambia.

With the FEI Awards Gala cancelled this year due to the pandemic, the winners were revealed to their online audience in a moving video narrated by British Paralympic champion Natasha Baker.

Semmieke Rothenberger, winner of the Longines FEI Rising Star Award, was overcome with emotion when her family held a surprise presentation of the award at their home in Germany.

“I’m very grateful that so many people voted for me and that there is such a big fan base of people that support me,” Semmieke Rothenberger said. “It is also quite surreal because there were so many good athletes in this category, including my brother Sönke, so I didn’t really expect that I would win it again.”

The 21-year-old, winner of 22 FEI European Championship medals through all the youth categories right up to Young Riders, has even bigger goals for the future.

“My parents have always taught me to dream big and reach for my goals and I would really like to canter on that centre line of the Olympic Games one day. I’ve been to the Olympic Games in Rio with my brother and I would love to see myself there with one of my horses and feel the atmosphere of representing my country at the Olympics!”

Along with other individual FEI Award winners, Semmieke Rothenberger received an elegant timepiece from FEI Top Partner Longines, the Swiss watch brand which attaches great importance to encouraging young people to practice sports.

“This Longines FEI Rising Star Award was created to recognise young athletes between the ages of 14 and 21 who demonstrate outstanding equestrian sporting talent,” Longines Vice President of Marketing Matthieu Baumgartner said. “We are delighted to once again celebrate Semmieke Rothenberger’s dedication to equestrian sport and we applaud her determination, passion and energy, which we are confident will take her to the very top in her sporting career.”

Double Olympic Eventing team gold medallist and five-time Olympian Ingrid Klimke (GER) was delighted to win a second Peden Bloodstock FEI Best Athlete Award, together with a horse transport voucher from title sponsor and Official FEI Equine Logistics Partner, Peden Bloodstock.

“This is all still a little bit unreal but I’m so thrilled and happy,” she said. The 52-year-old, who was also nominated for the Award in 2015 and 2017, going on to win in 2019, is only the second person in history to win back-to-back European titles on the same horse, claiming individual gold with SAP Hale Bob OLD at the Longines FEI Eventing European Championships in 2017 and 2019. This year she took her fifth German National Championship, having won previously in 1999, 2000, 2001 and 2009, sharing the spotlight with her daughter Greta Busacker, who was crowned German National Junior Champion on the same day.

Although Ingrid Klimke has set her sights on winning her first individual gold at the Tokyo Olympic Games next year, she is not shy of stating her longer term ambitions. “I’m already thinking of Paris 2024 which is not so far away. I love to ride, I love to compete and I love to keep going.”

There was further cause for celebration at the Klimke stables when Carmen Thiemann, head groom for more than two decades, won the Cavalor FEI Best Groom Award and a voucher from title sponsor and FEI Official Nutrition Partner, Cavalor.

“It’s the trust between us and the fun we have with the horses,” Carmen Thiemann said when asked about the longevity of her professional partnership with Ingrid Klimke. “I try to make the horses happy and healthy so that they are ready to work with Ingrid.”

Carmen Thiemann, who won the FEI Best Groom Award in 2013, has a special bond with the Klimke family having started her career as a groom for Ingrid’s father Dr Reiner Klimke, an Olympic Dressage legend for Germany.

“Everyone who knows Carmen knows how valuable she is as a person and especially in her job with the horses,” a delighted Ingrid Klimke said.

“We have been successful as a team for many years and I would never go to a show or a Championship without Carmen. She is a best friend to the horses and I can totally focus on my job, either in Cross Country or in Dressage, knowing that Carmen brings them out as happy and healthy as possible.”

It is also interesting to note that the runner-ups in these two respective categories – Peden Bloodstock FEI Best Athlete and Cavalor FEI Best Groom – went to another dynamic duo: Great Britain’s superstar Charlotte Dujardin and Alan Davies, the experienced and highly respected “Super Groom” to Carl Hester’s horses, and also a key member of the FEI Grooms Working Group.

Ten years after winning their first award, the Ebony Horse Club (GBR) was once again the recipient of the FEI Solidarity Award.

“This award, coming at the end of a really challenging year, just validates everything that we’re working for,” General Manager of the Ebony Horse Club Naomi Howate said. “To be recognised as the best of the decade is such a huge accolade and has made us extremely proud of the work that we do here.

“Ebony is a youth club with horses, rather than a riding centre, because our ethos is all about helping our young people be the best they can be both on and off the horses.”

The organisation, which is based in Brixton, South London, provides young people from low income families with the opportunity to ride horses and take part in a variety of sporting and educational activities.

The FEI has provided the 2020 FEI Solidarity Award winner with a financial donation to support the Ebony Horse Club projects. “We are a small club and we don’t have lots of resources,” Naomi Howgate said. “Donations are everything, as it is how we can provide the work we are doing. We support about 400 young people in a year and we can only do that with donations of money that allow us to run our services. So receiving this from the FEI is really fantastic!”

This year’s FEI Against All Odds Award goes to German Paralympian Dr Angelika Trabert. Born without legs and only three fingers on her right hand, Angelika is well known in the equestrian community for her indefatigable spirit and her motto, “It’s ability, not disability, that counts.”

She had just won individual gold at the Alltech FEI World Equestrian Games™ 2010 when she picked up her first FEI Against All Odds award, given to the person who has pursued their equestrian ambitions despite a physical handicap or extremely difficult personal circumstances.

Dr Trabert, an anaesthetist by profession, was inspired to be an athlete and coach in the years after tragically losing her long-time partner in 2005. She has won six Paralympic medals and four at the FEI World Equestrian Games™. She is also the current Para Athlete representative on the FEI Athletes’ Committee and a member of the FEI Para Equestrian Committee.

“I feel this is an award and a reward for the work I’ve been doing and what I feel is important for our sport,” Angelika Trabert said. “You should always look on the positive side, especially in these times. It’s very hard for a lot of people and it counts more than ever to look upon the possibilities and abilities that we have. And there are many.”

“Our global and diverse community is built on our shared passion for horsemanship and the team spirit, which is so present in all five of our winners, is replicated around the world and at every level of the sport, both on and off the field,” FEI President Ingmar De Vos said.

“Passion and resilience define our community, and these values are echoed in the stories of each of our FEI Awards winners for 2020. Congratulations to all the nominees and especially to our winners, thank you for your commitment to the sport and the values which make the equestrian world so rewarding and inspiring.”