Classic Eventing Nation

Friday at Le Lion: Unsurpassable Trailblazers Top Ever-Changing Leaderboards

Ingrid Klimke and Cascamara. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Welcome to day two at Le Lion d’Angers where, shrouded in a wintry fairytale mist, the second half of the competition’s six-year-olds made their first moves in front of the ground jury of Sandy Phillips (C), Gerd Kuest (M), and Laure Eslan (E). After yesterday’s exacting marking, there was earnest curiosity rippling through the stands: would today’s scores be more lenient, or would the judges stand firm in their pursuit of their ideals? As it happened, it was the latter — and rightly so — and yesterday’s leaders, Tom McEwen and MHS Brown Jack, would stand firm atop the leaderboard.

It should come as little surprise that Germany’s Ingrid Klimke presented the strongest challenge of the day, though, trending in the lead through much of her test with the Westfalian mare Cascamara (by Cascadello II). Throughout the test she demonstrated the softer, slightly longer outline required of these young horses, though a shuffle into trot in the free walk scuppered their chances of taking the lead. Instead, they finished in second place on a score of 27.4 — a fifth international sub-30 mark for the mare, who won the CCI2*-S at Wesel-Obrighoven last month and who has never yet been outside the top ten at the level.

“I was very pleased; she was so good, so smooth, so supple, just wonderful,” enthuses Ingrid, who has had the horse for just under a year. “She was very steady in the contact and I could ride all the extensions really forward. There was just one little mistake in the walk where she thought ‘we trot now!’ while she was stretching, but the rest was perfect. I’m very proud of her.”

The test’s relaxation came as something of a revelation after the mare, who Ingrid describes as ordinarily quite spooky, shied at the entrance at A as Ingrid approached. But instead of letting the misstep dictate the tone of the test, she simply turned away, rode another circle, and reapproached the arena positively.

“The moment she was in the ring she was so focused,” she says. “I think one day she’ll be really easy to ride in dressage; she’s so with the rider and tries to give her very best.”

Now, it’s all about tomorrow’s challenge — but Ingrid, as always, is approaching it with the future in mind.

“I think the cross-country is very challenging; every time with young horses, you never know what will happen. It’s beautifully built and I think they will really learn a lot. That’s why I’m here — there’s no other course where young horses can learn so much,” she says.

Samantha Lissington and Ricker Ridge Ricochet. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

New Zealand’s Samantha Lissington has been an exciting new addition to the Kiwis abroad contingent in the UK since her arrival last year, and her polished ride aboard homebred Ricker Ridge Ricochet today showed exactly why. She scored a 29.1 aboard the New Zealand Warmblood (by GT Jake, out of a Landioso mare) to move into third on one of just three sub-30 scores in the class.

“She was really good — she felt very elastic and loose, and it felt like I was sort of just steering her around, which I think is what you want,” she says. “There are a few little things I could have scraped some more marks from, but I’m prone to trying a little bit too hard, so I think it was good on my behalf to just chill out and go for the relaxed, calm test.”

Having had Ricochet her whole life, Samantha was able to impart confidence in the mare — helped along, too, by the horse’s straightforward temperament.

“We bred her, so we know everything about her — she’s been a sweetheart. She’s very quiet and easy.”

Though the mare has racked up clear rounds for 10th and 13th place in her two CCI2*-S runs, Samantha felt the pressure of trying to get the young horse qualified and prepared in such a fragmented season.

“It’s been mental; we didn’t even think we’d be here, so the fact that we’ve made it means that everything else is a bonus,” she says.

Cute is as cute does, and British-based Aussie Kevin McNab‘s Cute Girl certainly lived up to her name in the ring this morning, delivering a two-star personal best of 30 to sit comfortably in fourth place. Like Kevin’s top rides, the Holsteiner mare by Coventry is owned by Italian couture trainer company Scuderia 1918, and her performances this year will certainly help her earn the coveted prefix. She finished third in her Novice debut at Little Downham in July, and jumped classy clears around Wellington and Cornbury’s CCI2*-S classes at the latter end of the summer.

A personal best today is certainly a promising start to her debut CCI2*-L.

“I’m really happy with her,” says Kevin. “She did a good test, she was really settled, and the arena was really nice to ride in.”

Though the pandemic has restricted competition opportunities for these young horses, Kevin has embraced the extra time spent at home working on Cute Girl’s formative education.

“It’s been straightforward [to prepare for Le Lion] in that we’ve had so much time to train,” he explains. “It’s great in the sense that you get time you don’t normally get through the season, but the thing you have to be careful of is that they actually do enough away from home, because there isn’t really a substitute for competing. For the horses who haven’t been out as much this year, though, the lack of trade stands and atmosphere is probably helping them here, though.”

Despite her sweet moniker, Kevin tells EN that Cute Girl is less sugar, more spice — but she has plenty of all things nice, too.

“There’s never a dull moment with her — she’s got plenty of personality,” he laughs. “But she’s actually a really brave, tough little mare as well as being very careful. I wouldn’t say that she’s a ‘girly girl’ — she doesn’t have any mare-ish tendencies.”

Oliver Townend and Cooley Rosalent. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Great Britain — and, indeed, the Irish Sport Horse studbook — made further moves on the leaderboard in the form of Oliver Townend and Cooley Rosalent, who posted a 30.3 for fifth. The petite and pretty mare by Valent and out of a Rosalier dam trended in the twenties nearly throughout her test, though lost some marks in the medium walk to slip just into the thirties.

For Oliver, who has been refining his string over the past few seasons, the six-year-old is a special favourite among his horses.

“She’s a very smart horse to me. We’ve had her since she was four years old and we like her an awful lot; this is just part of her education and part of her progression,” he says. “I think she’s one of the better horses that we’ve had a six-year-old. Hopefully this is the start of a special international career; we think an awful lot of her for the future.”

It’s not hard to see why — though the mare only has one international start under her belt, she made light work of it, taking the win in Burgham’s CCI2*-S in August after finishing on her dressage score of 24.7. Her national career has been similarly exciting, with wins in Novice sections at Cholmondeley Castle and Frickley Park this season and a clean sweep of clear rounds across the country in her sixteen runs across the levels. Nonetheless, Oliver isn’t taking the challenge to come lightly.

“I think it’s plenty tough enough, especially for my horse who’s only done one competition of this level,” he says. “There’s plenty out there and it’ll be very educational — it’s very fair as always. I’m a huge fan of Pierre Michelet’s courses; I think the horses will learn a lot.”

Sophie Leube and Isselhook’s First Sight TSF. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Germany’s Sophie Leube certainly has a stable of horses we’d like to raid — after delivering the leading test in yesterday’s seven-year-old class with Sweetwaters Ziethen TSF, she returned for the six-year-old class today with another striking Trakehner stallion. Isselhook’s First Sight TSF, by Lossow W out of a Hibiskus mare, who scored 30.6 for sixth place at the culmination of dressage.

This is an exciting prospect for Sophie, who took the Young Horse class in Emsdetten with the horse on his debut in 2018 and won the prestigious Bundeschampionat Five-Year-Old final in 2019. This year, he’s made three international starts at CCI2*-S, completing all three with quick clear cross-country rounds and finishing in the top ten twice.

Tiana Coudray and Cabaret. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

One of the most impressive things to see in this six-year-old class is those horses who are at the greenest end of the spectrum but so obviously possessed of the kind of brain that will help them excel in the sport. One of those is the lone US representative, Tiana Coudray‘s Cabaret (a Holsteiner mare by Clinton I), who scored a 33.3 to sit 17th going into cross-country. She delivered a remarkably mature test for a horse who was only started last year, and Tiana is justifiably excited about the affable mare’s future prospects.

“She’s only been in work barely over a year, so she’s unbelievably green to be here, but she’s getting better and stronger all the time,” says the British-based rider, who debuted the mare at BE100 at the tail-end of the 2019 season with success and stepped her up to Novice (US Preliminary) after lockdown restrictions lifted in July. Since then, she’s notched up two top-five results at the level and a promising 11th place in a CCI2*-S at Burgham, where she finished on her dressage score of 34.6.

The attractive mare is owned by Jules Cournane — formerly Stiller — who found her as a foal in Germany and then sent over to Ireland to enjoy her formative years. After being broken in last August, she was sent to Tiana to produce.

“We through her straight in at the deep end, and she did her first event in September,” says Tiana. “She qualified straight away for the Burghley Young Horse Finals and did that and a handful of events last year.”

With a short and sweet education behind her so far, the plucky mare is thriving in her biggest-ever challenge — helped along, explains Tiana, by her positivity.

“She’s very sweet and very straightforward, and she tries so hard. She’s game and she’s taken everything on — hence why we’re here,” she says with a smile.

The top five going into cross-country in the Six-Year-Old World Championship.

A Strong Line-Up for the Seven-Year-Olds

As in the six-year-old class, yesterday’s leader in the seven-year-old CCI3*-L, Sophie Leube with Sweetwaters Ziethen TSF remained untouched in the top spot. But several strong contenders came forward through the day to challenge her lead, reshaping the top ten in their wake.

France’s Nicolas Touzaint was the highest scorer of the day, riding Selle Français gelding Diabolo Menthe (by Scareface de Mars, out of a Caesar van de Helle mare). They scored 29.1 — their best mark in an international in 2020 and a three-star personal best — to slot into second place going into cross-country. Diabolo Menthe has had an impressive career thus far, jumping clear around all five of his international starts and adding just 4 time penalties cumulatively throughout his record.

First in the ring for the second half was the Netherlands’ Merel Blom, who followed up a great test in the six-year-old class yesterday with another excellent effort this afternoon. Riding Crossborder Radar Love, a Holsteiner by Diarado, she delivered a 30.3 for third place at the culmination of the phase.

Crossborder Radar Love comes to Le Lion just a month and a half after making his CCI3*-L debut at Strzegom, where he finished third on his dressage score of 35.4. This makes him one of the most experienced horses in the field, and although all three of his three-star runs have been at the Polish venue, he has Le Lion mileage, too — he finished 15th in the six-year-old class here last year after adding a solitary rail to his 31.8 dressage.

Donatien Schauly and Dgin du Pestel Mili. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It was a jolly afternoon for the French riders, and concurrently for the Selle Français studbook. Donatien Schauly stepped into fifth place, just behind New Zealand’s Caroline Powell and Greenacres Special Cavalier, riding the calm and confident-looking Dgin du Pestel Mili. The Nartago gelding stepped up to CCI3*-S at Haras de Pin in August, finishing second on his dressage score of 27.3. More importantly, he features prominently on the official list of Horses EN Would Most Like to Take Home, due to his big-eared attentiveness and casual curiosity at this new, strange environment. (“Oh, are all zees people here to see moi? Zat is nice.”)

Ros Canter and Izilot DHI. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

When the World Champion tells you she’s earmarked a youngster as her future superstar, you sit up and listen — and that’s just how Ros Canter feels about Izilot DHI, a horse who certainly fits the bill on looks alone. The leggy Dutch Warmblood was initially produced by fellow Brit Alex Postolowsky, and Ros took the reins in late 2019, promptly winning the British Six-Year-Old Championships at Osberton and following the success up with a victory in the CCI2*-L at Burgham this summer. His final prep run saw him take fourth in his debut CCI3*-S at Cornbury last month, and although his 31.5 today is slightly off the mark of his usual scores, it’s enough to leave him in seventh place overnight behind Laura Collett and Moonlight Charmer.

“I was really pleased with him — he’s a sharp and spooky horse, but I wouldn’t change him for the world,” she says. “He’s hopefully my next superstar; I think the world of him.”

In this tough-scoring class, the marks have to be viewed as relative – but Ros admits to having hoped for a lower score here today.

“I am a bit disappointed in the mark, because he’s very correct in his work,” she explains. “There’s more to come, though, because I have to back off a bit when he gets a bit spooky, but I was delighted with him today. It’s a big deal for him coming here, and hopefully we can build on it for the future.”

Izilot DHI is a horse who may benefit from the uncharacteristic lack of crowds, giving him the opportunity to focus his mind on the task at hand, as Ros explains: “It’s a beautiful course as always, but I think we possibly wouldn’t have come if all the crowds were going to be here because he is quite sharp. I think in another couple of years he’ll really relax with all the people — so from that point of view, I’m quite happy there’s no one here! But there’s still plenty out there to test us — equally, I’m happy I’m sat on a very brave horse, providing he can stay focused. I have no doubt about his ability or scope; it’s whether he stays focused on the day.”

Yasmin Olsson Sanderson and Inchello DHI. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

One of the most hotly anticipated tests of the day was that of Norway’s Yasmin Olsson Sanderson and Inchello DHI, who are the highest-placed Le Lion returners in this year’s field. They led the first two phases last year in the six-year-old championship, ultimately finishing in third place after knocking a rail in the poor conditions of the final day.

Their otherwise polished and enjoyable test was marred by an early error when Inchello DHI broke in the medium trot — the first time this has ever happened, and a real shame for the horse for whom this movement is ordinarily something of a party trick. But a spate of event cancellations in the lead-up to Le Lion means that today’s test was his first since Burgham in August — and the first for Yaz, too, who is a one-horse rider.

“To come here and still perform a very respectable test in this company — and when the judges aren’t giving away marks — is great,” she says. “We wanted to be in the top ten before the cross-country. It’s a shame, because normally his medium trot is a big mark for him, and that mistake obviously puts the judges slightly on edge through the rest of the test, but I’m happy with him.”

Nonetheless, the pair earned a 32 to finish the day in eighth place — a slightly more relaxing place to find oneself the night before cross-country.

“In a way I’m quite glad — I might sleep better tonight than I did last year,” she laughs.

Having just one horse is a certain type of pressure, but returning as one of the previous year’s most formidable combinations is quite another. Despite this, Yaz remains characteristically cool-headed and pragmatic about having the world’s eyes on her.

“There’s some pressure, but at the same time, he was amazing here last year and so I know he’s good,” she explains. “He’s up there with lots of great horses ridden by professional riders, and to do that when he’s my only horse is always nice. It’s just a shame that he’ll be eight next year and won’t be able to come back!”

The eagle-eyed among you may have noticed a recurring suffix in this class — two horses in the top ten feature the DHI add-on, as does Brian Morrison‘s Global DHI. The DHI horses are the product of top trainer Ian Woodhead and wife Heidi’s busy and successful Yorkshire-based production yard — and while the Le Lion competition is ostensibly a competition for studbooks as well as individual horses and riders, for a sourcing and production business to feature so heavily is a great advert, too.

Kai-Steffen Meier and Charming Ciaco. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Merging the two concepts is the Arville hub headed by Germany’s Kai-Steffen Meier and Belgium’s Lara de Liedekerke-Meier, where the pair breed and produce an exciting string of horses as well as hosting well-loved international events and raising two young children. Who needs sleep, anyway?

Kai rounds out the top ten in this class riding the Oldenburg stallion Charming Ciaco, who lived up to his name in the arena. But though the beautifully presented test looked easy, Kai tells EN that the stallion, by Ciacomo out of a Castellini mare, isn’t always the most straightforward ride.

“He was a really good boy and was trying to concentrate, but he’s a stallion and I said to [German team trainer] Hans Meltzer before I came in, ‘he’s a bit ‘on’ now in comparison with the last few days’,” says Kai. “That’s a bit of a problem, because I can’t put him enough in front of my leg when he’s a little bit tense, but all in all, I was very pleased with him. He was technically very good and didn’t make any real mistakes — but on the other hand, he didn’t really have highlights, either. But I think it was solid, and that’s what I was expecting and hoping for from him because the other days will be challenging enough.”

The stallion’s natural way of going and good looks served him well at the two-star level with its easier test, but at three-star, Kai tells us, Ciaco is still learning how to manage the more technical expectations in this first phase.

“In the two-star tests he can play with the fact that he’s good-looking, but in the three-star tests when it got a bit more technical, it took him quite a long time to get the more difficult lateral movements. The half-pass to the left has been working at a 6 or 6.5 for the past few days, so I was pleased to get that now. In his body, he’s not built to be a dressage horse — he’s built to gallop and jump, but he’s very trainable and once he knows what he needs to do, he always does a good job.”

Although the stallion is licensed to breed, Kai has held off on adding him to the successful Arville programme while he continues his education.

“We made a deal with the owner at the very beginning that until he was seven, he wouldn’t breed. As a younger boy he was a bit more stallion-like, and now he has quite good behaviour — I have a lot of stallions, and I’m happy that they all behave very well, but I also think we don’t need to challenge him too much now.”

Lara de Liedekerke-Meier and Hooney d’Arville. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The Meier power-couple had a good day in the office all round, with Lara de Liedekerke-Meier returning to Le Lion with Hooney d’Arville and delivering a 35.2 for overnight 14th. For those breeding aficionados among you, this striking mare may be of special interest: bred at Arville, she’s by the stallion Vigo d’Arsouilles, and with one of the most enviable damlines of the day. She’s out of Nooney Blue, the mare with whom Lara contested five European Championships and the 2010 World Equestrian Games in Kentucky.

“She’s the first one out of Nooney Blue, and so she’s slightly special,” she says, adding with a laugh, “she’s impatient and a queen, we call her the Witch because you never know what to expect — she can be lovely and then she can be a little bit special! But she has everything that you want to find in those really great horses; she’s a good jumper, she’s really nice on the flat, and while I don’t yet have all the control on the cross-country, it will come.”

Hooney is one of two exciting seven-year-olds that Lara is looking ahead with — and this week, with its varying challenges, is an important rung on the educational ladder for the horse.

“I’m really happy; I think she’s a lovely horse for the future,” says Lara. “I think she lacks a little bit of experience in a big arena, but I’m really pleased. There’s some little balance mistakes, and places where she needs to be more forward in front of my leg, but she’s a lovely horse so she’s going to wait for her days to come.”

The top five going into cross-country in the Seven-Year-Old World Championship.

Both classes head into the pivotal cross-country phase tomorrow, which is run over Le Lion’s typically stunning and artistically built track. We’ll be taking a closer look at those courses later on, and you’ll be able to follow all the action live, too. The six-year-olds will get underway at 10.30 local time/9.30 UK/4.30 a.m. Eastern, while the seven-year-olds are under starter’s orders from 13.30 local/12.30 UK/7.30 a.m. Eastern.

Le Lion d’Angers: Website | Start Times and Live Scoring | Live Stream | EN’s Coverage | EN’s Instagram | EN’s Twitter

Weekly OTTB Wishlist: Second Chances for Horses and Humans

Mark your calendars for Tuesday, October 20th for an uplifting and educational evening on behalf of the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation (TRF) Second Chances program, which pairs vocational training in horse care for prison inmates with off-track Thoroughbreds in need of a soft landing. The TRF Second Chance program has been going strong for over 20 years and spans correctional facilities in eight different states.

Next Tuesday at 8 PM Eastern, TRF will live stream a “horse show unlike any other” from the Blackburn Correctional Complex in Lexington, Kentucky where inmates will demonstrate their knowledge of horse handling and equine health care. With a global livestream, the positive impact that these horses and men have on each other will be on display for the world to see. For a glimpse at the passion that participants and advisory committee have for this program just watch the short video above and to read a little more about the impact of this program on its participants check out this article from the Paulick Report published in the lead up to their 2019 show.

Of course you can make an impact on the life of a retired racehorse as well. Here are our three adoptable OTTB picks of the week:

One More Thing Sir. Photo via Finger Lakes Finest Thoroughbreds.

One More Thing Sir (JAPAN – KAPSIKI, BY DANZIG): 2017 16.2-hand New York-bred gelding

Could this be one of the most drop-dead-gorgeous horses we’ve ever featured here on OTTB Wishlist? It’s possible — because holy cow is this one stunning three-year-old! “Sir” has only raced twice, finishing at the back of the pack both time, so it was clear to his trainer that he would be better suited to another discipline. With his impressive uphill build, forward attitude, desirable bloodlines, and, oh, not to mention a fabulous head of hair, we think Sir is going to get scooped pretty quickly!

Located at Finger Lakes Race Track in Farmington, NY.

View One More Thing Sir on Finger Lakes Finest Thoroughbreds.

Harp of Gold. Photo via Mid Atlantic Horse Rescue.

Harp of Gold (PETIONVILLE – GOLDEN INNIS, BY YARROW BRAE): 2017 15.1-hand Maryland-bred gelding

Does Harp of Gold heave a heart of gold? It sure seems like it, as this three-year-old has been an easy restart for the experienced folks at Mid Atlantic Horse Rescue (MAHR). Prior to making his way to MAHR through Maryland’s Beyond the Wire program, Harp of Gold raced four times with no notable finishes. This gelding is big-bodied and takes up a lot of leg despite his smaller stature, though as a youngster he still has room to grow. He’s a quiet, easy-going guy with no physical limitations and will make somebody a lovely partner.

Located in Warwick, Maryland.

View Harp of Gold on Mid Atlantic Horse Rescue.

Once A Thief. Photo via CANTER Michigan.

Once A Thief (BODEMEISTER – CRY CRY CRY, BY JUMP START): 2016 16.0-hand Kentucky-bred gelding

I think we really struck gold this week because rounding out our three picks is yet another good-looking uphill gelding! Once A Thief is a son of 2012 Kentucky Derby and Preakness runner-up Bodemeister and has made 12 career starts himself with varying degrees of success. As a new addition to CANTER Michigan’s program having just begun being restarted as a riding horse, we don’t have much for information on him at this time, but we sure couldn’t resist that cute face!

View Once A Thief on CANTER Michigan.

Hagyard Midsouth Three-Day: Liz Halliday-Sharp & Cooley Stormwater Lead CCI3*-L

The Hagyard Midsouth Three-Day Event is off and running at the Kentucky Horse Park, and the backdrop couldn’t be more pleasant: robin-egg blue skies, brightly-lit foliage and sweater-optional temps. Have a blast out there, competitors!

The FEI divisions had their dressage on Thursday and will head out to cross country today. A quick recap of the first-phase action:

CCI3*-L: Liz in the Lead with Cooley Stormwater

Liz Halliday-Sharp leads the 22-horse field with Cooley Stormwater on a score of 31.7. This 7-year-old Irish Sport Horse gelding (Camillo VDL x Thornfield Calypso) owned by the Stormwater Group has experience at the three-star level and we’re glad to see them off to a great start. Liz is also fifth with The Monster Partnership’s Cooley Be CoolBuck Davidson is second with Carl Segal’s Victor B Z on 31.8, and Boyd Martin is third with Nancy Hathaway’s Fernhill Prezley on 31.9.

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#prettyheidi checking it all out! Thanks @skipperdoodlefritz 📸! Thought I paired my flamingo mask🦩😷 well with my @houndnhare @fairfaxandfavor @mackenzieandgeorge Booties and Fedora and @asmarequestrian blouse and belt!? Even on Sally’s birthday she manages to turn the horses out beautifully! Thank you to the team at the show and at home for always working together and making it as fun as possible! @kimmycecere @cecebette @salnz69 @teganpearlhenderson @stablesue @saramckenna2003 @samnic4 @amme4133 #somanygreys #spicyheidi🌶 #goteam #hagyardmidsouth #equestrianstyle #thankyousponsors @ecoliciousequestrian @platinumperformance @buckeyenutrition @auburn_laboratories @stable_secretary @icehorse @charlesowenhelmets @flairstrips @guardianhorsebedding @sagmae @gumbits @rodanandfields @srb_jenkins @seaverhorse_world @higherstandardsleathercare @mdc_stirrups @heritagegloves @galladesigns @knixwear @oakmont_rehab_wellness @haymarketchiropractic @haygainusa

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CCI3*-S: Lauren Nicholson and Vermiculus Are Right at Home

Lauren Nicholson and Vermiculus are no strangers to the Kentucky Horse Park and they are out for a lark in the CCI3*-S division where they lead dressage on a score of 27.0. Lauren and Ms. Jacqueline Mars’ 13-year-old Anglo Arab gelding (Sazeram x Wake Me Gently) have cantered up the centerline here thrice before, but this is their first non five-star start at the venue!

Mike Pendleton and Bonnie Stedt’s The Fonz Himself are second on 28.4; Liz Halliday-Sharp is third with The Monster Partnership’s Cooley Quicksilver on 28.4. A field of 30 horses will head out to cross country today.

CCI2*-L: Will Leads the Way with Unlimited

It’s a big startlist of 45 horses in the CCI2*-L and Will Coleman has the early lead on 25.8 with Unlimited, a 6-year-old Holsteiner gelding (Uriko x Viona III, by Colman) owned by Team Rebecca LLC. This is a neat young horse sourced by Clayton Fredericks — he was 12th at his first CCI2*-S at Great Meadow this summer.

Liz Halliday-Sharp is second with her own Maryville Sir Henry on 28.4, and Karl Slezak is third with Hot Bobo on 29.3. Canada, represent!

Roaming photog JJ Sillman snapped some gorgeous photos of the Wednesday jog:

My favorite thing to photograph I think because I can get grooms and riders. And I mean look at all those cute faces. I batch edited these so they could be rough in some places but I had to get these out!

Posted by Jj Jayhawk Sillman on Wednesday, October 14, 2020

The international competition continues today with FEI cross country and horse trials dressage for Beginner Novice through Intermediate divisions. Bring it on, stunning fall weather, we’re never been more ready!

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We have arrived safely at the @kyhorsepark which is looking quite stunning decked out in it’s Fall colours. This weekend we have a bunch of Intermediate horses running in the National Division, and Olivia is riding Happy (Mighty Nice) and Indio (Iniesta) in the Prelim classes. We brought Sea of Clouds, Quasi Cool, Beverly’s Clueso and Carlchen down from Pennsylvania, and I’m catch-riding MHS Fernhill Finale for Altorac Farm’s Alex Baugh as she’s recuperating from an injury. Thanks to the team on the ground for getting the horses settled in, and the stabling situation organised; we’re looking forward to a busy, but productive weekend. Dressage and Show-jumping is Friday, Cross country on Saturday

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The season is a state of mind, I guess.

Hagyard Midsouth Three-Day Event & Team Challenge: KY Events Website | USEA Prize List | Entry Status | Ride Times | Live Scores | Volunteer

 

Friday News & Notes

Will Coleman works on his chalk artistry while Team Rebecca’s Unlimited, leader of the CCI2*-L dressage, looks beautiful for the jogs at Midsouth. Photo via WCE FB.

One day, I’ll make it to Midsouth for their three-day event. There is something magical about Kentucky in October, it’s the most beautiful season (other than April, of course), and to cap off a season by galloping across those hallowed grounds would be such fun. Maybe next year! After an actual season of competition! Check out our recap of the FEI dressage with a beautiful jog gallery by JJ Sillman here.

U.S. Weekend Preview:

Hagyard Midsouth Three-Day Event & Team Challenge: [Website] [Entries/Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Hunt Club Farms H.T.: [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Pine Hill Fall H.T.: [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times]

Tryon Riding & Hunt Club “Morris the Horse” H.T.: [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times]

Major International Events:

FEI WBFSH Eventing World Breeding Championship for Young Horses – Mondial du Lion: [Website] [Start List/Live Scores]

News From Around the Globe:

Ready to make your barn greener? Between bags of shavings and bags of grain, even a small barn has a huge amount of plastic waste. My barn has a recycling bin as well as a trash bin, and it fills up fast and all get out. Figuring out ways to re-use common items that we all have is just one little step you can do to reduce your carbon footprint in the barn. [Reduce, Reuse, Recycle In The Barn]

Is your horse feeling unexpectedly sluggish? Determining the cause of this can be fraught with confusion, as you do blood tests and change feed and experiment with different approaches to your workload. This article outlines some of the major causes for horses seeming a little less enthused about their jobs, and might help you in narrowing down the cause. [5 Reasons Why Your Horse Is Lacking Energy]

Ah dressage, how do we scientifically figure you out? The ideal dressage horse has supple and relaxed movements, with a pronounced beat. He’s free from resistance and works under light, even, and elastic contact from the rider, with a level of “thoroughness” with the horse functioning in one piece. His steps give the impression that he springs off the ground, and he has energy that is created and contained, but without resistance. But this doesn’t sound very objective, does it? How do we crack the code in terms of equine biomechanics? [Exploring the Science Behind Dressage]

Video: Well if this isn’t a gem of a flashback…

Toddlers and Tiaras, Horse Edition: The Best of Le Lion Social Media, Part One

It’s been all systems go at Le Lion d’Angers this week, where the Young Horse World Championships are well underway and the competition is heating up fast. But it’s always important to enjoy the time you spend in beautiful places with exceptional horses — and that’s just what the riders, grooms and connections behind the scenes are doing. Here’s some of the best snippets of life at Lion from Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.

Team Ireland were the first to arrive, thereby securing themselves the best possible photo ops in front of the house:

But Estonia wasn’t far behind. The golden rule? No matter what time it is when you get to Le Lion, you take a photo in front of the house. Duh.

As the stables filled up and horses settled into their home for the week, everyone’s true colours started to show:

While others — like Kevin and Emma McNab’s daughter Annabelle — stayed focused on very important jobs. 

Masks are part of the fashion brief at trot-ups these days, and even the ground jury aren’t exempt — but we think they pull of pandemic chic quite marvellously.

Several British riders wore patriotic masks made by the Chalkdown Riding For The Disabled Association branch, as modelled by Tom McEwen:

Spain’s Albert Hermoso Farras had the unfortunate honour of being the only hold at the first trot-up — and his relief on being accepted was palpable and infectious:

Team Italy’s equine members got a bit of extra pampering ahead of the competition: 

…while other horses needed no extra help to feel good, like Caroline Powell’s firecracker Greenacres Special Cavalier, or Cavvy.

Oversized puppy Inchello DHI returns to Le Lion with Yaz Olsson Sanderson to try to go one better than his second place finish here last year.

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Trot up ✔️

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Business lederhosen on the left, sports casual lederhosen on the right. That’s what we call versatility. 

Find yourself a man who looks at you the way Nicolas Touzaint looks at literally any of his horses:

Dutch rider Sanne de Jong has got colour coordination down to a fine art:

Peter Nixon has been hard at work snapping for Horse&Hound:

How to social distance, a primer by Lara de Liedekerke-Meier and Kai Steffen Meier:

France’s Camille Lejeune unpacked his grooming kit for a photo:

You can nearly smell the autumn air in this picture, right? Oliver Townend enjoys a quiet schooling session on a crisp morning:

What’s the collective noun for a group of Irish eventers?

Ingrid Klimke and her team enjoy a stroll through the picturesque parkland of the hippodrome:

EquiRatings have made their predictions — but who’s your money on to win?

Some serious #girlpower holding down the fort at the schooling arenas:

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#equestrianstockholm

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“Say CHEEEEESE!” Cavvy and Jip, Caroline Powell’s head girl, show off their best angles:

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🧀

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Arena familiarisation is always best with a stunning sunset creeping in:

Leader of the pack: Tom McEwen throws down the gauntlet on day one. 

Brian Morrison, the saddest man in eventing, looks delighted with Global DHI’s test:

Kitty King struts her stuff with Monbeg Hendricks.

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Monbeg Hendricks test today. Currently in 5th place on 32.4.

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Sweden’s Aria Ramkali wastes no time in getting on course after her test:

Le Lion d’Angers: Website | Start Times and Live Scoring | Live Stream | EN’s Coverage | EN’s Instagram | EN’s Twitter

Thursday Video from FLAIR: Carter, Age 4, Is Crushing It

Photo courtesy of Anni Grandia-Dodson.

Last Saturday we met Laila Alexander, age 4, who had just completed her first mini-trial — yay Laila! This week we’d like to introduce you to another 4-year-old rising superstar, Carter Grandia-Dodson.

Mom Anni shares, “His pony is Polka Dot and he loves to do what the big kids do. He loves to go cross country schooling and jump his pony. He did his first derby a few weeks ago and won his 5-and-under division. Carter has an uncle that events in area VII, I also event and run an event, grandma and his aunt do dressage. We’re producing the next generation here in area VII!”

Photo courtesy of Anni Grandia-Dodson.

Photo courtesy of Anni Grandia-Dodson.

Photo courtesy of Anni Grandia-Dodson.

We love to see it! Go get ’em, Carter!!!

Thursday at Le Lion: In Which We Discover that Dressage is an Emotional Rollercoaster

 

Whew. What a day, readers: a day in which two ground juries apparently found the lack of a coffee van on site as offensive as the rest of us, and proceeded to enact sweet revenge by serving up blistering scores and crushing (metaphorical) blows like gunfire. It’s been a day of placing bets as to whether you’d even see a score in the 20s; a day of watching the scoreboard between your fingers; a day of groaning and then laughing because honestly, what else can you even do at that point? We’ll say this for them, though — though the two sets of judges doled out some seriously tough marks throughout the day, leaving many horses with their worst-ever international scores, they were at least consistent with it. That’s worth a lot.

But despite an ostensibly tough morning between the boards, any assumptions of Thursday Morning Syndrome would have to be shelved when one of the day’s early combinations took a decisive lead — one that wouldn’t be usurped as the competition unfurled.

Tom McEwen and MHS Brown Jack aren’t just the day one leaders in the Six-Year-Old CCI2*-L, they’re also the only competition to break the sub-30 barrier. Their mark of 26.6 puts them over four penalties ahead of their current closest rivals, Merel Blom and Corminta Vom Gwick, and sets a mighty precedent for tomorrow’s second half of the class.

“He’s been amazing,” says Tom of Fred and Penny Barker’s Irish Sport Horse gelding (by OBOS Quality out of a Cavalier Royale mare). “Obviously he’s quite a big horse, so it’s taken a bit of time, but this year, he’s surpassed himself and become very established for a six-year-old. I’m delighted with him — he came out today and delivered the quality of work he’s been producing at home, and to be able to show that off is very exciting.”

Though today’s 26.6 doesn’t quite rival their two previous international marks — a very consistent 24.2 and 24.8 — it makes MHS Brown Jack one of the only horses across either class to score nearly bang-on his predicted mark. But this consistency hasn’t been about running him as much as possible, Tom tells EN.

“None of mine are overrun — instead, it’s about ensuring the quality of everything he does,” he explains. “You’d never bring a horse here just for the sake of going to Le Lion — they need to be ready for what they’ll face when they get here.”

That means tactical entries, measured schooling, and a healthy dose of keeping it fresh and fun for the horses — though Tom acknowledges that the loss of the main educational factor at Lion, its 35,000-strong crowds, will affect how a run here benefits some of the entrants.

“It’ll be a very different competition this year without the crowds. But some horses will benefit from that — some of them can get in front of that many people and have their brains blown a bit from it. Others won’t get quite the same experience they normally would do — but we’re lucky to be able to be here at all this year.”

Merel Blom and ‘independent woman’ Corminta Vom Gwick. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

In second place on 30.7, Dutch National Champion Merel Blom piloted the Holsteiner mare Corminta Vom Gwick, by Cormint and out of a Contendro mare, to a polished and polite test that belied the fact they’ve not yet notched up a full year in partnership.

“The test was what I expected, though it’s always hard to know what the judges would like to see,” says Merel. “It’s the first time for her in an arena like this, and I think she did a wonderful job.”

Corminta Vom Gwick’s easy temperament has helped Merel make relatively light work of the tricky 2020 season, particularly in light of the fact she only made her competitive debut in November of 2019: “She’s super willing to do everything right. Sometimes she likes to do things her own way — but most of the time, the way she wants to do it is the way I want to do it! She has character, but it’s the right character — she really wants to fight for it and try her best. I think she’s a lovely horse. She surprised me after the lockdown that even with so little experience, she went out and did a good job. With the good ones, it still came easy.”

With their qualification in the bag on their first run post-lockdown, Merel was able to strategically use the rest of the summer and early autumn to prepare the horse for precisely the challenges she’ll face this week.

50% of the top five — which features six combinations, because of a tie for overnight fifth — came forward in the first of this morning’s three sessions. Third place at this early stage is in the clutches of Germany’s Felix Etzel, who at just 27 is very much a part of his home country’s formidable line-up of young guns gaining experience at Nations Cups and in championships such as this. His Promising Pete TSF, a Trakehner gelding by Hirtentanz 2, earned a 30.8 after some quite considerable differentiation between the judges, who had him scattered from 2nd to 8th place in their individual estimations. Still, Felix was delighted with the relatively new ride, who was bought for him nearly a year ago by the DOKR — the German Federation — as a potential team horse for the future.

“He’s a really cool horse for a six-year-old,” says Felix. “He’s already done some nice dressage tests this year and he’s becoming really consistent in this phase. Today he was really easy to ride; it was like riding at home. It’s a long way for a six-year-old [to become a team horse], but I can imagine it: he’s relaxed in every phase and never wastes his energy.”

Austria’s Daniel Dunst and Della Stella SDH overcame a similar sort of widespread discrepancy, with Laure Eslan at E awarding them a 65.45% for 9th place and Sandy Phillips at C settling on a 70.23% and 2nd. Ultimately, they would average out at a respectable 32.2 penalties, giving the Austrian Warmblood mare by Follow Me a competitive early start in the competition.

Fifth place is held jointly overnight by two of the big guns in this class — though both were disappointed to receive marks considerably lower than predicted.

Kitty King and Monbeg Hendricks (GBR). Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Kitty King and Monbeg Hendricks, an Irish Sport Horse by Harlequin du Carel, were first of the two up to bat, and though there were no errors in their test and there was much to like, their marks stayed resolutely and disappointingly in the 6.5–7.5 margin, earning them an eventual 32.4. This is rather a shock score for the gelding, who hasn’t scored out of the 20s in six runs, national and international, in 2020 — but we’ve certainly seen these surprises and disappointments here before.

To watch this phase play out here is always an educational experience, because the winner isn’t always necessarily the most obviously flash dressage specialist. Often after watching for a while, it becomes clear what the judges are looking for: in a six-year-old, it may be a looser, lower, more relaxed outline, which can result in penalisation for the produced and polished youngsters that are often presented here.

Further complicating matters is the dual purposes for which riders tend to bring their young horses to France. Some make the journey to gain essential championship experience, learning to cope with crowds and atmosphere so that they can go boldly forth into their careers as the potential team horses of the future. Many others bring exciting young horses to put them in front of prospective buyers, turning the event into something of a shop window. As the saying goes, there’s more than one way to skin a cat — and so, too, is there a myriad of ways to train a young horse.

Karim Florent Laghouag and Embrun de Reno (FRA). Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tied with Kitty for fifth is a rider who’s using this competition very much as a route to future team selections. French team stalwart Karim Florent Laghouag is looking firmly ahead to the Paris 2024 Olympics for Embrun de Reno, an impressive-looking Selle Français gelding by Eliott MC, with Jazz lines. But he, too, was disappointed with 32.4.

“He usually does lovely dressage but here he bounced his head a bit too much, and the judges saw it at first as they entered,” says Karim. “It was like they stopped on this little problem and we couldn’t get the usual marks. He’s a fantastic horse in this phase because his father brings dressage breeding while his mother is Anglo-Arab, so he has all the blood and the quality to be a perfect eventing horse.”

But, he acknowledges, like so many of his compatriots Embrun de Reno is a big horse who hasn’t finished growing into himself; this week’s competition, therefore, will be less of a benchmark for him and more of an educational effort, with everything serving as a cog in the machine heading to Paris.

William Nilsson Fryer and Joel (SWE) tackle the stretchy circle. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s all too easy in these championship classes to miss out on the top spot by dint of ‘low ebb’ scores that just don’t bring the averages where they need to be to join the fight. But also easily done is the odd mistake that sends a brilliantly trending score plummeting down the rankings. It would be amiss not to mention Sweden’s William Nilsson Fryer and Joel — a Dutch Warmblood gelding by Ampere — who sit 11th overnight on 35.2. Theirs was among the most developed and professional tests of the day, and the eye-catching gelding will be closely watched through the weekend, but although they spent much of their ride trending in the lead or very close to it, the 3, 4, and 5 they earned when Joel overreacted to the reinback aids in the final quarter of the test gave their numbers a real hammering. These young horse championships aren’t the be-all and end-all of a horse’s career, despite their enormous importance, and so it’s crucial to look beyond the numbers on the page when considering which of these horses might be worth your attention. Consider Joel an EN One To Watch.

The top five at the halfway point of the Six-Year-Old World Championship’s first phase.

Sophie Leube Heads Seven-Year-Old Challenge

Sophie Leube and the impressive Trakehner stallion Sweetwaters Ziethen TSF. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Everyone here is delighted with the new addition of a surface in the main arena — particularly anyone who was here last year, and, we can assume with some confidence, none more so than Germany’s Sophie Leube. Last year, she and the licensed Trakehner stallion Sweetwaters Ziethen TSF, by Abendtanz, dazzled in the first two phases to hold onto second place throughout the competition — but the showjumping finale, held in the worst of the weather and on the worst of the ground, would push them down to eventual fifth after the gutsy stallion found himself slipping dramatically in the poor going and incurring a stop early on.

And so it’s nice to see him back in the main arena here, looking no less confident in himself than he did last year. Nor has Sophie’s confidence in him waned: when asked if she expected to go into the lead here today, her answer was a resounding and joyful “yes.”

“He’s such a performer; he’s calm but he wants to do everything right. He knows what to do in there and he tries so hard,” she enthuses. The pair scored a 27.6 to make them the only combination in the 20s in this class.

It’s hard not to be taken in by Ziethen, who is innately friendly, curious, and obviously intelligent, investigating interviewers’ notebooks and turning politely inquiring eyes on the new friends surrounding him for a chat. Taken, too, were the judges, who offered up rare 8s for his catlike walk work and the deviously tricky walk pirouettes in this three-star test.

“His walk is always really good because he has such a covering stride — but there are some things we can do better, too,” she says, pointing to the walk-canter transition as something she’d like to improve upon. It would certainly appear that they’re on the right track, though — they won their prep run, a CCI3*-S at Langenhagen, as well as CCI2*-S classes at Kronenburg and Westerstede in 2020. In eight internationals, he’s never finished outside of the top ten — so this is among the most formidable horses in the field.

Caroline Powell (NZL) and the spicy Greenacres Special Cavalier. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

New Zealand’s Caroline Powell holds onto second place provisionally with Greenacres Special Cavalier, an Irish Sport Horse mare by Cavalier Royale out of a Touchdown mare. They put a 30.6 on the board, bettering their score here last year by nearly two marks.

“She’s quite a big, long horse and just starting to connect up, but she’s going to have some lovely tests in her in the future,” says Caroline, who bought her as a just-broken four-year-old from breeder Michael Callery — ordinarily a showjumping breeder — in Ireland.

Nailing it on a tough day: Caroline Powell celebrates with Greenacres Special Cavalier. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Since then, she’s proven to be a big personality with equally colossal ability — and that’s given Caroline the breathing room to focus on her education when competitions were off the table this year.

“She’s a bit of a freak, this horse — she doesn’t really need a tonne of competition, so we’ve been able to focus on the training [during the pandemic]. She’s just getting better and better and stronger and stronger, and we’re really using this as a stepping stone for next year.”

Next year, for Caroline, could mean a bigger goal than many of the horses entered here — when I ask if she considers this mare a prospect for the 2024 Paris Games, she smiles and tells me that she could be ready much sooner than that.

“She’s a diva,” she laughs. “It’s in her name — she’s special and she knows it. She’s sassy and opinionated and she makes you work, but she’s lovely and when she goes into the arena she loves to perform. She’s a good mare — when you get a good one, you know, and when you get a bad one, you know too!”

Laura Collett and Moonlight Charmer. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Laura Collett and Irish Sport Horse Moonlight Charmer (by OBOS Quality) sit third overnight on their score of 31.4, a three-star personal best for the horse despite some minor green errors. But Moonlight Charmer, who averaged in the mid-20s at two-star, looks likely to be a new stable star for the British rider with one of the most enviable strings in the sport.

“Parts of it were really nice, and the canter work was lovely,” says Laura, “but he just sort of shut down a bit in the trot. Where it’s a bit more complicated than a two-star test he sort of over-tries a bit and gets his concentrating head on, rather than just going forward. But he’s not been in an arena like that, away from the other horses, so I’m really pleased with him.”

There’s a lot to think about for these inexperienced horses here: there are flags flapping, stands relatively full of people despite the closed-door policy this year, a technical enough test and, as Laura points out, the first experience these horses will ever have had of doing a test without the security blanket of other horses working in parallel arenas. But Moonlight Charmer’s brain has helped him overcome the varying challenges.

“He’s been pretty straightforward,” she says. “Obviously with the year we’ve had it’s been quite difficult to just get qualified for here; he didn’t do a CCI2*-L last year so it’s felt like we’ve always been chasing a qualification. But because he’s got such a good brain he’s just taken everything in his stride. He’s got the brain to come here and it doesn’t bother him that he’s been rushed — it’s just been one of those years!”

Tom Carlile and Darmagnac de Beliard. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

France’s Tom Carlile, who was based here at Le Lion until recently, is something of a maestro when it comes to this event, with almost innumerable FOD finishes for his young horses over the years. And so, despite the consistency of the low marking, it must have been a bit of a disappointment to receive a 32.9 with Selle Français gelding Darmagnac de Beliard (by Canturo Bois Margot), who’s never scored above the 20s before in an international. But in today’s judging climate this was still a score not to be sniffed at, and the rangy bay will be followed up by stablemate Spring Thyme de la Rose tomorrow as Tom makes yet another bid for the Le Lion crown. With three top five finished from three international runs, Darmagnac will certainly make an exciting claim.

Gireg le Coz and Drakkar Littoral. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Rounding out the top five is France’s Gireg le Coz, who burst into the international consciousness in 2019 with Event Rider Masters successes with the stunning Aisprit de la Loge. Today, he rode Drakkar Littoral — a Selle Français gelding by Qlassic Bois Margot, and definitive proof that Gireg has a ‘type — to a 33.5 in a test that had several bystanders eyeballing their bank accounts. But Gireg, who took the ride on at the beginning of this year and made the horse’s international debut in just July, has no plans to let go of the gelding.

“He’s a horse I’d like to keep for the Olympics in Paris,” he tells EN. “He’s a very nice horse; he moves well and he was very calm — sometimes he can be a bit hot, so I’m happy with him today. The judges aren’t giving very good marks today, but that’s okay — I’m happy with the horse and sure that he can do better.”

Gireg’s enthusiasm when talking about the horse is infectious — and only rivalled by the horse’s own enthusiasm for the sport.

“He’s a very good horse in all three tests. He loves cross-country — a bit too much! — but he’s a very nice horse and loves what he does,” he says with a broad smile.

The top five at the halfway point of the seven-year-old CCI3*-L.

The World Breeding Championships is as much a fight for individual glory as it is a quest for studbook superiority. At this early stage of the competition, the Irish Sport Horse studbook is in an enviable position: not only can they claim the leader of one of the classes in Tom McEwen’s MHS Brown Jack, they’ve also got another in the top five in the six-year-olds (Kitty King’s Monbeg Hendricks) and two in the seven-year-old top ten (Laura Collett’s Moonlight Charmer and Caroline Powell’s Greenacres Special Cavalier).  The Selle Français studbook — last year’s overall winner — features three times across the two top fives (Drakkar Littoral, Darmagnac de Beliard, and Embrun de Reno), while the Trakehner features twice (Sweetwaters Ziethen TSF and Promising Pete TSF).

Tomorrow we’ll dive straight into the second halves of both classes, with some strong contenders coming forward in each. In the six-year-old class (starting at 9.30 local time/8.30 BST/3.30 a.m. Eastern) we’ll be keeping an eye on Cathal Daniels‘ LEB EmpressIngrid Klimke‘s CascamaraOliver Townend‘s Cooley Rosalent, and Sophie Leube‘s Isselhook’s First Sight TSF, while our tips for the seven-year-old class, starting at 14.00 local/13.00 BST/8.00 a.m. Eastern, are Ros Canter‘s Izilot DHINicolas Touzaint‘s Diabolo MentheKai Steffen Meier‘s Charming ChiacoTom Carlile‘s Spring Thyme de la Rose and, of course, last year’s six-year-old runners-up, Yasmin Olsson Sanderson and Inchello DHI.

We’ll be back with the full debrief tomorrow. Until then: Go Eventing!

Le Lion d’Angers: Website | Start Times and Live Scoring | Live Stream | EN’s Coverage | EN’s Instagram | EN’s Twitter

Badminton Runner-Up Euthanized After Cross Country Schooling Accident

Oliver Townend and Cooley SRS. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We are sorry to hear that Cooley SRS, whom Oliver Townend rode to a second place result at Badminton 2018, was put down after a cross country schooling accident with Australian eventer Hazel Shannon on Tuesday. Hazel, a three-time winner of the Adelaide 5* and High Performance Eventing Green Squad rider, took over the ride on “Aero” in 2019. Renamed Willinga Park Cooley, the 13-year-old Irish Sport Horse gelding and Hazel were based with Heath Ryan in New South Wales.

Hazel is currently in the hospital with liver damage but expected to make a full recovery.

Heath Ryan shared on Facebook:

“Aero suffered a fractured femur on the left hind. Through the efforts of owners Terry and Ginette Snow and our two main vets Dr Peter Tabak and Dr Robin Bell from the Sydney university, we searched the world for viable surgery procedures that could have perhaps rescued the situation. This was not to be.

“Willinga Park Cooley (Cooley SRS)/ Aero, with Oliver Townend in the saddle in 2018 came second at Badminton horse trials in England. Aero was bought by Terry and Ginette Snow in 2018 for Australian Hazel Shannon to ride after she won her third Adelaide 5* on Willinga Park Clifford.

“Aero and Hazel were quietly working their way up to top competition level having competed at Canberra 4* CCN two weeks earlier where they placed 9th. Yesterday Tuesday 13th was the final cross country school before Camden 4* CCI this coming weekend. The partnership was showing great promise.

“We would like to say how sorry we are to Terry and Ginette Snow, to Oliver Townend, to everyone here at Ryan’s who were so excited about a new partnership flexing such talent on the Australian scene, to Hazel Shannon who is struggling with the difficult emotional repercussions and of course, to Aero, who was such a gentle and lovely character, who did nothing but try hard. We are all very sorry.”

Oliver Townend and Cooley SRS. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

EN extends our condolences to Aero, Hazel and their connections, and we wish Hazel a speedy recovery.

Reduce, Reuse, Recycle: A Guide to a ‘Greener’ Barn, Brought to You by Banixx

Barn trash piles up! Photo by Shellie Sommerson.

At a barn of three horses that are outside most of the time (in during storms), we use about 240 bags of shavings, 64 bags of feed, 12 dewormers, 10 supplement containers, and 120 bales of hay (240 strands of baling twine) per year. That is a lot of waste — and a barn with more horses equals more trash! The debris from all of that does not decompose quickly. Polypropylene baling twine takes 50 years to decompose. The “skinny” on baling twine: Natural fiber baling twine is less available and breaks easier than polypropylene twine, so farmers use the polypropylene twine more often. Some more ‘information’ — biodegradable plastics decompose in three to six months, whereas synthetic bags take several hundred years to decompose.

Yard Art by Ed Bauer from used horseshoes. Photo Credit: Shellie Sommerson.

Typical recyclable items in a barn

  • Feed bags – The bags are usually recyclable. The brown paper liners of feed bags make excellent paper wrapping for poultice wraps. The bags are also great to use as trash bags or storage bags and secure them with baling twine.
  • Brown paper packing from boxes (used as packing material for shipping) – Also great paper for wrapping for poultice wraps.
  • Baling twine – Made of polypropylene, 100% recyclable. It takes 50 years to decompose (or make a hammock out of it so you can relax after a long day). Polypropylene baling twine is NOT suitable to use for break-away tying unless you cut most of the fibers away (weaken it significantly); use natural fiber twine for that purpose!
  • Supplement buckets – Use for halter and lead storage at the gate of turn out areas, or as an electric fence cover, grooming buckets, keep fence and other repair tools in your feed cart.
  • Water tanks and feeders – Make great planters (plant flowers or vegetables).
  • Water bottles, Coffee cups, soda cans/bottles, and other beverage containers can be recycled with your regular household recycling.
  • Old tack and equipment – Reusable or recyclable pieces. Tack repair professionals often desire brass rings and buckles. Cloth is recyclable. Artists may want some of the parts and pieces.
  • Horseshoes – They make great yard art! Or recycle the metal at your local waste management.
  • Dewormer tubes – Cleaned up they make great dosing syringes, and the plastic is usually recyclable.
  • Farm implement type items, old fans – Recycle the metal.

Water tanks for above ground planters. Photo courtesy of Mr. & Mrs. Elliott.

What is the “green strategy” at your barn?

Keep a bag, or bags, easily accessible for single-use recyclable items. If your recycling center only accepts items that are separated out by type, then use a separate feed bag for each type; if they accept mixed recyclables, they can go into the same container.

No recycling pickup at your barn? Trade-off with others for taking the recycling home. Be sure not to let it overflow; make it easy and convenient as possible for everyone.

In your vehicle traveling to and from the barn it is easy to accumulate ‘trash’ in your vehicle. A few grocery bags are a simple receptacle for keeping recyclables and trash separate without taking up much room.

Some additional tips:

Reusable cups that are washable – have a few so that you can swap them out for cleaning.

When you pull through the drive-thru for a quick bite, do you really need all that ‘stuff’? Ask them to give you only specific items (exactly what you need, not extras).

Consider having a baggy with utensils (spoons and forks) that you have on hand for when you need them. Did you know that most ‘disposable’ utensils wash well in the dishwasher so you can reuse them?

Large venues:

Horse show venues are another challenge! Heaps of trash, but is it really trash? Did you throw those water bottles in the trash? If recycling bins were available at shows/events, would you use them? Horse show management teams are often stretched with the resources they have, so adding additional tasks, such as recycling, with its tough logistical issues, is often avoided. The logistical challenges being transporting the recyclables to the proper location from the show venue when the show is over.

Start small and build up! If your area has a recycling center that pays for particular recyclables like aluminum, then contact your local 4-H or Pony Club and suggest a recycling fundraiser.

What works for you? Share your tips! We ALL will benefit!

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Volunteer Nation: 3 Events Still in Need of Help This Weekend

Guys. This is the thing. The REALLY IMPORTANT thing. The thing that makes FHI work. The reason our family is so special….

Posted by Fair Hill International on Monday, October 12, 2020

We’re kicking off this week’s Volunteer Nation with a cool story from the Fair Hill International team in Maryland. Longtime volunteer John Bratton makes his home along one of the trails used for Fair Hill’s Foxcatcher Endurance competition. During a recent event, John laid out a “hospitality station” for horses and riders passing by in the night, complete with light to help them see their way. A true example of a kind soul, this one.

We’ve compiled some resources on volunteering with COVID-19 regulations in mind. We’ll reference this list each week in Volunteer Nation, so take a few moments to familiarize yourself with what’s new and different.

COVID-19 Resources for Eventers
Volunteers Adapt to the New Normal
Volunteers Weigh In on New COVID-19 Protocols

As always, you can earn merit points when you donate your time through the USEA’s Volunteer Incentive Program. Registering to volunteer through EventingVolunteers.com makes it easy and seamless to both find a job and shift as well as learn what your role will entail.

Here’s a look at the volunteer positions still available for this weekend:

Event: Hagyard Midsouth Three-Day Event and Team Challenge
Dates: Thursday, October 15 through Sunday, October 18
Address: 4089 Iron Works Pike, Lexington, KY, 40511
Positions Available: XC Crossing Guard, XC Jump Judge, Event Takedown – XC

Event: Hunt Club Farms H.T.
Dates: Friday, October 16 through Saturday, October 17
Address: 294 Longmarsh rd, Berryville, VA, 22611
Positions Available: Event Prep – XC, XC Jump Judge, XC Starter, XC Steward, XC Warm-up, Parking Cars, Score Runner, SJ Warm-up

Event: Pine Hill Fall H.T.
Dates: Friday, October 16 through Saturday, October 17
Address: 1720 Hwy 159 East, Bellville, TX, 77418
Positions Available: Event Prep – General, Greeter, XC Jump Judge, XC On Course Timer

And to close things out, a big thank you to all of our sport’s amazing volunteers. It’s great to see a five-star rider out giving back and participating in the sport from a different perspective!

Lynn had a fun day volunteering at the Middleburg Horse Trials as the cross-country starter. Thanks to everyone who volunteered their time to put on this great event!

Posted by Lynn Symansky Equestrian on Saturday, September 26, 2020