Classic Eventing Nation

How Sinead Maynard and Allison Springer Turned in the Burghley Weekend of Their Lives

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The visual of Sinead Maynard’s (née Halpin) face as she determinedly laid down the cross country trip of her life to lead the field at the Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials, just her third start at the then-four-star level, is still burned into my mind. She lands off of a combination aboard the much-loved Manoir de Carneville and adjusts her reins, her jaw set and her eyes laser beam focused on the next question. She rode with a fire, with something to prove. “Would that be one of the great rounds of your life?” Samantha Clark would ask Sinead at the finish. “Yes. For sure,” came the answer without hesitation.

She wasn’t the only one on a mission that weekend, late in the summer of 2012.

The London Olympic Games had come and gone, taking with them a mixed bag of results for the U.S. eventing team. A few weeks prior to the Games, the short listed riders, among which were Sinead as well as Allison Springer, who’d traveled to final team training in England were gathered in a room to hear the final selection of the team.

To be clear and fair: U.S. eventing and its team selection process and training have made great strides since 2012. But this particular team announcement, which gave some the best news of their careers at the same time as their friends got some of the worst, left those who weren’t on the team awash in disappointment. They packed their trunks, unsure of where to go next after pouring their blood, sweat, and tears into training over the last year. We talk often about the elation of representing your country in the Olympic Games. We don’t mention as often the rebuilding that comes when you don’t make the team.

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Exhausted, is how Allison Springer describes her feelings after receiving the news that she would not be traveling to London as a member of the squad. This was her second attempt at making a World Championship team (she was named a traveling alternate for the 2010 World Equestrian Games). “You just feel so deflated,” she recalls now. “After so many years of dreaming (of going to the Olympics), to be so close … I just remember feeling overwhelmingly exhausted.”

The decision to pursue a competition overseas is daunting. There are still bills to be paid at home, a business to keep running, clients to keep happy. Yet on the other end of the spectrum dwells another force: career goals, achievements that lend themselves well to keeping the aforementioned business running. It’s the eternal dichotomy faced by every professional rider: do you go big, or do you go home?

And so, in the wake of the heartbreak that comes alongside missing out on your first Olympic berth by the skin of your teeth, Sinead and Allison packed their tack trunks and headed to Jacky Green’s Maizey Manor Farm to prepare for the unlikeliest of plan B’s: Burghley Horse Trials.

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Plan B(urghley)

“How does Burghley end up as your backup plan?” Allison can’t help but chuckle at the irony as she looks back on that weekend now.

Nestled just shy of two hours to the west of London, Maizey Manor Farm has played host to countless overseas guests through the years. Championship teams and individual riders alike come to make their final preparations for important events with Jacky as the ever-welcoming host. It was here where the paths of several women, all carrying the burdens the year had laid on them, converged at the most opportune of times – and perhaps when they all needed the camaraderie the most.

In my conversations with Sinead and Allison, we talk at length about these weeks spent at Maizey Manor and the healing power that it had on all who were there. There were just a few weeks until Burghley, so each rider kept her head down and stuck with her program, quietly turning the sting of failure into the determination to come back from it.

“Jacky creates such an amazing environment,” Allison says. “It was just the mending your heart needed.” Sinead echoes this sentiment. She says she lost her way a bit after the emotional rollercoaster that was the Olympic selection. A soft landing at Maizey Manor was “like coming home after a rough tumble,” she adds. “It was a very comfortable space. We all needed that.”

Fellow Burghley-bound riders, Germany’s Bettina Hoy and Ireland’s Elisabeth Power, were also a part of this accidental sisterhood the women found themselves members of. It was the perfect incubating space in which to repair confidence and mend broken hearts.

Day by day, the women continued their training, each with their own personal fuel pushing them to make Burghley a weekend to remember. “I don’t know if desperate is the right word, but we weren’t going to leave Burghley with a poor result,” Allison says.

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Be Prepared, Be Present

How does one take the emotional sting and the devastation that comes with the dashing of an Olympic dream and turn around to compete at the most testing event in the world just a few short weeks after? To have to come to terms with the emotional disappointment and regroup in time to aptly navigate a five-star event is a feat some may underestimate.

Women are often unfairly labeled as “emotional” or “unstable” when a situation elicits an emotional response. I’m unsure how you could possibly apply either of those labels to these women, who arrived on the grounds of the famed Burghley House, heads held high, quietly determined to allow their riding to speak for them.

Sinead had long worked with her sensitive Selle Francais gelding to coax out the best work on the flat. An exercise in staying present, she recalls ticking through each movement, not feeling particularly like they were knocking the test out of the park, but at least feeling reasonably confident that they’d come in under 40. When she looked up at the board, she did a double take. First place on a score of 36.3, the only pair who would score below a 40. Allison’s score aboard Arthur – a 40 on the nose – would put the U.S. ladies in first and second place following the first phase.

“Be prepared, then be present,” Sinead says of her mental strategy going into the weekend. She’d kicked around Burghley the year before with “Tate”, and the fact that the track in 2012 ran in the same direction gave her an opportunity to have another crack at some of the same questions she’d already seen. She spent time watching riders such as Andrew Nicholson on the previous year’s track, comparing the lines he took to those she had chosen, finding the precious seconds he saved that she had left on the table. This year, she would be more prepared.

“As soon as I went out of the box, I had gone through it so many times in my head and I knew how I would ride each complex,” she says now. Small adjustments here and there brought her home clear inside the time to hold the lead ahead of the show jumping finale.

This was Allison and Arthur’s second trip to Burghley; they’d come the year before but were eliminated on cross country, so the pair had some additional demons to put to rest this weekend. And put them to rest they did, storming around Capt. Mark Phillips’ testing track without jumping penalties. In hindsight now, she sees the spots on the course where she could have caught the time, but the effort was enough to land her and Arthur in the top 10 after cross country.

The win would elude Sinead the next day, but show jumping on Burghley’s fabled (or infamous, depending on your results) grass proved tough for the rest of the field, too. Sinead would finish in second, adding her name to the list of eventing legends who have graced the Burghley podium, this year accompanied by Andrew Nicholson (Avebury) and William Fox-Pitt (Parklane Hawk) on either side. It’s disappointing to lose out on a win, and Sinead found herself unsure of how to feel once the final results were tabulated. But one look at the massive group of supporters who’d congregated at the in gate told her all she needed to know: no matter what, this was a huge victory on many levels.

Allison would finish in sixth place overall, taking home additional prize money for coming third in the HSBC FEI Classics competition as well as winning the International Pairs competition with Oliver Townend. “It was probably the best year I’ve ever had for prize money,” she laughs.

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Ice Cold Lemonade

A few weeks prior, Sinead sat at the kitchen table at Maizey Manor with Jacky, contemplating the summer and trying to reconcile her emotions. Where was one to go next? So much of the year had been spent on the Olympic grindstone. It was hard to see the next goal. Yet here she was on the other side of the Atlantic with a fit horse in his competitive prime. Jacky looked at Sinead across the table. “Sinead,” she began. “You have a bloody Burghley horse. You’re going to Burghley.”

Both Sinead and Allison – and, if I had to guess, the other riders who based at Maizey Manor would agree – credit the welcoming and comforting environment Jacky created as a pivotal part of their eventual success at Burghley. At Maizey, they had time to process the months prior and train in an environment that was free from pressure. They had each other to bond with over bottles of wine and swapped stories in the evenings.

Bettina would finish 10th with Lanfranco that year. Elisabeth would get her first Burghley completion with September Bliss in his four-star debut. In all, a successful weekend for the women who’d experienced their own lows throughout the months leading up to the event. In the face of it all, tenacity and the encouragement they provided for each other made all the difference in the world.

“I learned a lot that year,” Allison reflects now. “You’re always learning so much about mental game and toughness. After everything, you just have to kick on and do it.”

Kick on and do it you certainly did, ladies. Three other American riders, Kristi Nunnink, Kate Ditchey, and Erin Kanara (née Sylvester) would also complete the five-star event that year. It’s the stuff of stories told by coaches looking for a last minute pep talk, by young riders who’d fallen in love with the sport and hung pictures of Arthur and Tate on their walls in the weeks after. It’s a true tale of life’s ultimate lemons and how to best make them into ice cold lemonade.

We’ve got a special treat for you! The Burghley media team has graciously honored our request to release the video of Sinead’s cross country round from the archives. Be sure to tune in for more Burghley’s Greatest coverage happening this weekend at burghley.co.uk

One Large Bump: How Horses Helped Me Escape an Abusive Relationship

Sophie Tallman and Parc Cooley at American Eventing Championships in 2019. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Riding has brought me some of my highest highs and lowest lows; it has also helped me through them. I had big aspirations for my riding career when I arrived at the University of Georgia in 2017 and joined the eventing team. I was eager to get to the prelim/2* level and gradually bump up throughout my time at school. Now, in my second to last semester, I have yet to make it there due to some small blips and one very large bump. I want to talk about the large one.

In the spring of 2018, I found myself in a relationship with someone at school. We would go on to date until the end of 2019. It started out as any relationship does in the honeymoon phase. Upon returning to school after summer break, things became very different.

If you know me, this story may come as a surprise. It is something I don’t often disclose, and never talk about in full. I never thought that I would be a person to stay in an abusive relationship. I thought that I couldn’t because I’m strong; riding takes blood, sweat, and tears, and it shapes you into someone brave, someone confident.

I learned firsthand that it has nothing to do with how strong you are. I’ve heard it all; “you didn’t have to listen”, “you should have just left”, “you could have done what you wanted to do”. If you have also been in an abusive or manipulative relationship, you know that this is simply not the case. It’s not that easy. If you haven’t, I hope you never do – but I see how it can be difficult to fully understand why and how it happens.

Sophie Tallman and Parc Cooley at Pine Top. Photo by Carter McInnis.

Slowly, there were certain “rules” put into place. I “wasn’t allowed” to go to certain competitions that would be overnight, I “couldn’t spend” more than two hours at the barn, going to any type of “barn family” event such as a dinner or Christmas party always led to a fight. Suddenly, one of my greatest passions was being taken away from me.

My moments at the barn were rushed and I made excuses to avoid shows that I wanted to go to. I never told anyone the full story because I was embarrassed, I was confused, and I was hurting. The consequences for breaking the rules started out with just words; saying the world would be better without me, calling me every swear in the book, threatening his own life. It did not take long for it to escalate physically. I was withdrawn from the barn and from my friends. No one truly knew what was going on in my life. On the outside, I made sure to keep a smile and appear okay, but I felt isolated and alone.

In the summer of 2019, I wanted to go to the AEC’s. I qualified and, since I’m not sure what will happen with my riding for at least a few years after I graduate, I decided I should go – it has always been my dream and I thought it might be my last chance. I did not relay these plans to my boyfriend until a couple hours before I was leaving because I knew he would find a way to stop me.

The whole week was amazing, but there were a lot of “behind the scenes” moments that I kept in the dark. He called me an hour before my cross country warmup and told me he “hoped it went horribly” – that he wouldn’t care if something happened to me on course. Still, I got through it, and I was over the moon after a clear show jump the next day that placed me high enough in my division to take part in the victory gallop.

Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

The three months between then and when I was finally able to leave felt like years. I was extremely unhealthy due to the stress I endured every day. I lost over twenty pounds, was always tired, and felt nauseous while doing any sort of exercise. The moments I spent at the barn were some of the only moments I was able to truly cherish, even when my body felt as though it was collapsing.

Riding got me through my situation. It was the only thing that kept me going. I feel like I lost a lot of time because of my relationship, but I can still make up for it now. I owe a lot to my horse and to my barn family who, despite my increased absence over that period of time with no explanation, eagerly accepted me back with open arms. I love all of you so much and I hope that everyone who knows what this is like is offered the same level of support that I have received.

If you are going through this now, please know that you are not alone – and that your horse will be waiting happily for you when you’re back.

Sophie Tallman is a 21 year old student at the University of Georgia. She competes with her horse Parc Cooley for the UGA Eventing Team. Sophie serves as president of the team and is hoping to be able to ride throughout law school and eventually, fund a lifestyle where she is able to own horses and compete. We thank her for sharing her story and voice our solidarity with her and every other survivor of abusive relationships.

Friday News & Notes from World Equestrian Brands

Can you guess which one is P Dutty in this photo above? Click on the link to submit your answer and enter to win a book! Better yet, go get your own copy of Riding For The Team, from Trafalgar Square Books and the United States Equestrian Team Foundation and edited by Nancy Jaffer — highly recommend. (And be sure to read this amazing excerpt from Boyd Martin’s contribution, “You Weren’t Really on Him That Long,” on EN here.)

U.S. Weekend Preview

Bucks County Horse Park H.T.: [Website] [Entries]

Caber Farm September H.T.: [Website] [Entries] [Entries/Times]

Chardon Valley H.T.: [Website]

Copper Meadows H.T.: [Website] [Entries/Times]

Course Brook H.T.: [Website] [Entries]

Five Points H.T.: [Website] [Entries]

Seneca Valley Pony Club H.T.: [Website] [Entries] [Live Scoring]

News From Around the Globe:

For sporthorses, we might as well say “no gut health, no horse” for all the power it holds over their performances. Currently, new gene technology is driving research at an intense rate, providing new insights into the equine microbial community (1) and providing both trainer and the vet with a powerful and accurate analytical tool to improve health and manage disease.  [Differences Between Healthy & Unhealthy Equine Gut Biome]

Walking your show-jump course accurately is half the battle. Riding it is another matter, but going in with a proper plan of attack, and viewing all your turns, lines, and distances correctly is deeply important to your clear round. [Video: How To Walk Showjumping Courses]

Is the cost of outfits for competition excluding more riders? The USEA has already taken measures to make polo shirts legal for competition in all phases through Training level, inviting more riders from the unrecognized circuits to feel welcome. Our sport is expensive enough, do we really need strict dress codes? [Is Our Equestrian Dress Code Pricing Out Riders?]

Tomorrow, Greg Harbut gets to watch his horse run in America’s most famous race. What sets him apart is that he is one of very few black racehorse owners in one of the whitest sports in the country. His great grandfather groomed Man O’War, and his grandfather bred and owned a horse in the 1962 Derby, but Greg still faces racism in 2020 on the backside of the track. [Black History in Racing]

Best of Blogs: A Letter To Me, Emma Ford

Video: 

 

US Equestrian Names East Coast 2020 Adequan USEF Futures Team Challenge Rosters

US Equestrian has announced the horse and rider combinations selected to compete at the 2020 Adequan USEF Futures Team Challenge – East Coast to be held in Unionville, Pa., from September 17-20, 2020. Additional teams yet to be named will compete in the West Coast Adequan USEF Futures Team Challenge, scheduled for October 28-31, 2020 in at Galway Downs in Temecula, California.

The format of the Adequan USEF Futures Team Challenge provides an opportunity for eventing athletes to gain valuable team competition experience in an unofficial team scenario on home soil at the CCI3* and CCI4* levels.

The concept initiated by Erik Duvander, U.S. Eventing Director of High Performance, has created a more defined structure to the High Performance eventing pipeline in the United States and fosters a competitive and elite atmosphere for future team and program riders. This year’s teams will be coached by Duvander and Leslie Law, USEF Eventing Development and Emerging Coach, both serving as Chef d’Equipe for their respective teams.

Applications were submitted to the USEF Performance Advisory Team and selected based off of results, potential, willingness to learn, and commitment to developing as future team athletes, following the FEI Nations Cup selection criteria as guidance. The team selections are as follows:

Erik Duvander’s Team

  • Daniel Clasing (Lovettsville, Va.) and his own MW Gangster’s Game, a 10-year-old Anglo European Sporthorse gelding
  • Andrew McConnon (Vass, N.C.) and Ferrie’s Cello, an eight-year-old KWPN gelding owned by Caroline Martin and Jeanne Shigo
  • Meg Pellegrini (Wayne, Pa.) and her own RF Eloquence, a 15-year-old Holsteiner gelding
  • Caitlin Silliman (Swathmore, Pa.) and Ally KGO, an 11-year-old Trakehner mare owned by Morgan McCue

Leslie Law’s Team

  • Fylicia Barr (West Grove, Pa.) and her own Galloway Sunrise, a 12-year-old American Warmblood mare
  • Woods Baughman (Lexington, Ky.) and C’est La Vie 135, a 12-year-old Hanoverian gelding he co-owns with Kim and James Baughman
  • Maya Black (Clinton, Wash.) and Miks Master C, an eight-year-old Swedish Warmblood stallion owned by Laurie Cameron
  • Ariel Grald (Southern Pines, N.C.) and Leamore Master Plan, an 11-year-old Irish Sport Horse gelding owned by Anne Eldridge
  • Reserve: Amanda Beale Clement (Phoenixville, Pa.) and Carlson 119, a 10-year-old German Sport Horse gelding owned by Get Ready Syndicate LLC

Congratulations to all selected!

#ThrowbackThursday Video from FLAIR: Relive Tim Price’s Burghley Winning Cross Country Ride

Listening to a top rider rehash a cross country round or a dressage test is perhaps one of the most educational things a rider can watch. Pair that commentary with helmet cam video and data analytics, and you’ve got a true eventing nerd’s dream. But nerd or not, you’ll likely get a thrill out of this analysis of Tim Price’s cross country round at Burghley in 2018 aboard eventual winner Ringwood Sky Boy.

Burghley has a well-deserved reputation as one of the toughest cross country tracks in the world, and factors such as undulating terrain play a pivotal role in the final standings once the dust has settled. A horse tested at Burghley is truly an elite athlete. Watching the course unfold from Tim’s perspective provides as much of an adrenaline rush as it does an educational opportunity.

Watch the other view of Tim’s ride:

Tim and the Irish Sport Horse gelding would go on to finish the weekend nearly on their dressage score, adding just one second of time on cross country and a clean show jumping to take home the win, the first of such for the New Zealand rider. Take a walk down memory lane and relive Tilly’s coverage from the 2018 Burghley Horse Trials here.

Did you know that September is Childhood Cancer Awareness month? In honor of this and in an effort to further educate more about childhood cancer, FLAIR Equine Nasal Strips has created a Kick Childhood Cancer strip, 25% of proceeds from which will benefit St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital.

A Letter to Me — Emma Ford

We’re pleased to share the latest in Athletux’s series, A Letter To Me, featuring the perspectives of equestrian professionals we look up to. To learn more about Athletux, click here. You can read other editions of this series on the Athletux blog here.

Previous letters: Tamie Smith | Jennifer Wooten | Katy Robinson | Natalia Gurmankin | Joanie MorrisWill Faudree | Jan Byyny | Sara Kozumplik Murphy | Max Corcoran | Jacquie Brooks

Super groom Emma Ford and Mighty Nice. Photo by Jenni Autry.

A Letter to my younger self…

So much to see, so much to do, so much to learn, make up your mind Emma…you don’t have to figure it all out at once…. be flexible and let life guide you to the next step. “Turn off the radio station in your head that points out your failures” (Gerry Laybourne). You know Mum and Dad have brought you up to work hard for what you want in life. Knowing school would not be easy for you, they made available every opportunity for you to succeed. You will always struggle to express your thoughts and emotions in person and on paper but don’t let that hold you back.

The close friends you make on this journey will always be there to listen and understand. Going to university was not originally in the cards but with encouragement from teachers, friends, and family you made that step that has set you on this roller coaster of life. University has set you up with friends for life but also a thirst for travel and the need to see what the world has to offer. You know you always have a home full of love to go to when needed. Take that first step outside the box and see where it leads you…..

The USA… that’s where you will head.. Your mum and dad will worry for you, and even expect to see you home within 6 months but what you experience in the first year will set you on a path filled with travel, meeting idols, and working for and with the top equestrians in the sport. You will experience some amazing highs but there will be lows that you couldn’t imagine you would ever have to navigate. But you know what girl….you will get through them, you will learn from them and you will be a stronger and wiser person because of them.

You will arrive in Boston, Mass after taking the first flight of your life. It will be very turbulent due to storms, all your luggage is lost and you will land wondering what on earth you have done…. No cell phone, you call home,.. as in the UK… and yes your mum is there to fix things. This is your first dose of the reality of moving through problems in life momentarily feeling very alone. You are a common sense, logical thinker Emma, always have been. You try not to stress and keep repeating to yourself ‘things will work out”! They do…. the Iorios find you at Logon Airport and take you to their farm which you will come to love as your second home. By the way, life lesson: always pack spare underwear, a jumper, sorry “sweater”, and jeans in your carry-on. Mucking stalls in a long skirt on your first day is not quite the look you need to go for!

Apple Knoll Farm and the Iorio family will look after you and become your second family. Adrienne will encourage you to take in every aspect of a working horse farm life, from horse care, riding school ponies, teaching, driving the horse van, and running around your first preliminary course.

You get to meet many amazing people that will remain friends for life, but Sarah, another Brit, of course, will be the one who pushes your interest in grooming. True friendship takes time, but her level of knowledge and attention to detail with the horses will make you want to better yourself more and more. Don’t be afraid to ask questions Emma….if Sarah doesn’t have the answer she will help find one. This Sarah, she will introduce you to a new hobby that will take hold of your life. Dancing of course!

Z get’s some congratulatpry ear rubs from Emma Ford. Photo by Abby Powell.

In early 1999, you will make a very hard phone call to your parents, you will be given an offer to stay in the States that you just can’t refuse. Calling your parents will be upsetting because at first, they won’t understand why you don’t want to return home. They will come around Emma, well sort of….they want the best for you….they will be very proud of what you achieve over the years. Remember to stay in contact, don’t let life get so busy you forget to call home!

In 2000 you get to go to Australia with Adrienne. You get to watch the Sydney Olympics in person. The atmosphere is something you have never witnessed. You won’t know who to cheer for as the British take the team silver and the Americans the team bronze-oh and by the way your future boss is on the gold medal team! This is when you start to wonder what it would be like to be down in that parade of medalists. How can you be part of that team?

By the time you fly to Blenheim in 2002 with Show of Heart and Adrienne, you will have figured out that grooming at the top level is the way to go. You know you have the dedication to your horses, do you have the stamina? Your back will be starting to give you trouble, especially when riding. You need to start making decisions for longevity here Emma, you can’t just keep doing the same thing over and over and think it will fix itself.

In 2005, Adrienne brings a black lab puppy into your life that you will love like no other. Charlie will make you smile when you are down and sometimes mad at his antics, like chasing cyclists, but no matter your life choices he is a constant unconditional love in your life. The day he passes will be a very hard one but yet again, you will have a dear friend holding your hand.

A job opportunity will appear in front of you that on one hand seems like a no brainer, but on the other hand, you will wonder how you can possibly move away from Adrienne, Apple Knoll Farm, and all they have done for you in your 7 years there. Remember Emma, there are always going to be times in life when what’s right for you will hurt people or cause conflict, and those close to you will support you. Those that don’t understand your decision will eventually come around. Believe in yourself, you are the only one who can decide what makes you happy. It does sound selfish…but you have goals as well……go after them!

So that guy who you watched in Sydney, Phillip Dutton, well you will get to be on his payroll. Now you’re an English, working in America for an Australian. Make sure your passport is up to date because girl, you are in for a wild ride. You will make the decision that riding is off the cards, but you will get to take part in medal ceremonies!

Along the way, the family of grooms that you become a part of will be who you lean on when the extreme lows of losing horses or the unmentionable barn fire occur in your career. The grooms will also be the ones you celebrate with and make the best memories throughout your travels. From Carol Ann needing to feed horses at 3 in the morning to Marie Ann dancing away the night at Burghley Horse Trials, Joanie not killing you after your heavy 40th birthday celebration in Germany, Sally and Lindsey at Barbary Horse Trials and the mini micra adventures, partying around Hong Kong with Max, to Shannon, Lizzie, and Kelley sharing in the fun of Kentucky 2010 and the antics of hitting deer, bad directions, tornado warnings and much more!

That’s right you get to fulfill going to those events that as a kid you were glued to the TV, watching every horse fly over massive fences. There will be one on your bucket list, that for some unknown reason the universe doesn’t want you to attend. God will throw a Volcano and even a pandemic in your path of Badminton Horse Trials. I should mention here, that you will experience that Olympic medal ceremony with a horse that completely steals your heart from the moment you meet him. Rio 2016 will get forever engraved into your soul.

So how’s that life-work balance thing going to work out for you? Well to be honest you will struggle with it for a long time. You will leave the Dutton family only to return once…or twice! Rest assured thou Emma, you will have your “American sister” Amy as a sounding board when you feel conflicted and confused.

Emma Ford and Z. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

A surprising offer to be a co-author for a grooming book with Cat (Hill) might shine some light on how to live a less strenuous life. You will both start a business that feeds your thirst for encouraging people to want to know and love their horses on the ground as much as they do when riding. Don’t accept the attitude that it’s all in the riding. You know deep down that without good horse management skills you will not be part of this elite team. This will be your turn to share your knowledge. You need to focus on horse health management and longevity will start to be the main focus of your future.

You might need to start saying NO to things at some stage so you can move onto the next phase of living. Your body will complain, your work ethic will keep you moving forward, and your love for the horses and that trust and bond you work every day towards will lead you in the right direction. Above all Emma, believe in yourself, remember who you are as a person, and where you came from. You will come to call the USA home but England will always stay close in your heart.

Your parents are extremely proud of you, they do wish you would connect more often thou! You will have created a life for yourself that you never imagined as an 18-year-old. Be thankful, be kind, never stop listening, keep your chin up, keep dancing and when that chance to travel to Africa comes, jump in feet first… who knows where that trip will lead.

Love, Emma

Volunteer Nation: 6 Events You Can Help This Weekend

Opportunities abound this weekend for a chance to help out our sport! One demographic of eventing folk who can often be found volunteering are the parents of young riders, and this month’s USEA Volunteer of the Month spotlight hones in on Bub and Janet Dillon. When their daughter, Olivia, started eventing, both Bub and Janet began volunteering right away. Bub prefers working in the cross country start box, while Janet favors dressage stewarding and jump judging. Read more about these handy helpers in this profile.

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.

Where can you volunteer this weekend? Here’s a look at who needs help:

Event: Caber Farm September H.T.
Dates: Friday, September 4 through Sunday, September 6
Address: 213 Jensen Road, Onalaska WA 98570
Positions Available: XC Jump Judge, XC Start Timer, XC Warm-up, Dressage Score Runner, Dressage Scribe, Dressage Warm-up, XC Starter, SJ In-Gate, SJ Jump Crew, SJ Timer, SJ Warm-up

Event: Copper Meadows H.T.
Dates: Today through Sunday, September 6
Address: 633 Montecito Way, Ramona, CA 92065
Positions Available: Temperature Checker, Dressage Ring Steward, Dressage Score Runner, Dressage Scribe, SJ Ring Steward, SJ Score Runner, XC Timer, XC Jump Judge, XC Score Runner, Office Helper


Event: Five Points H.T.
Dates: Today through Sunday, September 6
Address: 2814 Montrose Rd., Raeford, NC, 28376
Positions Available: Event Prep – XC, Dressage Score Runner, Dressage Steward, General Help, Scorers, Secretary – Awards, SJ In Gate, Event Takedown – XC, YEH In Gate Steward, Hospitality Steward

Event: Seneca Valley Pony Club Fall H.T.
Dates: Saturday, September 5 through Sunday, September 6
Address: 14010 B Bittersweet Field, Partnership Rd., Poolesville, MD, 20837
Positions Available: XC Jump Judge, Temperature/Waiver Checker, Parking Afternoon Gate, Shuttle Drivers, Dressage Test Runner, Parking Cars, Parking Large Trailers, Parking Substitute

Other Events in Need of Volunteers:

Bucks County Horse Park H.T.: [Website]

Looking for 5 people to help jump judge at our Horse Trials on Saturday, September 5th and 2 for Sunday, September 6th. …

Posted by Chardon Valley Horse Trials on Friday, August 28, 2020

Our USEA Fall Horse Trials on September 5th is still searching for volunteers! If you're able to help out, please contact our Volunteer Coordinator, Janet Sinclair at janetsinclair1@live.com

Posted by Course Brook Farm on Sunday, August 23, 2020

The Burghley That Wasn’t: Tune In for a Virtual Celebration All Weekend

Image via Burghley Horse Trials.

It’s the Burghley weekend that wasn’t, and I for one am particularly bummed as this was to be my first trip to the biggest, baddest five-star in the world. Alas, there are bigger things to worry about in the world, but this weekend sure will be a quiet one, comparatively speaking.

However, there’s no reason to lose all hope! The great minds on the Burghley organizing and logistics team have been toiling hard to put together a virtual celebration of Burghley’s past, present, and future all weekend long. In addition, we’ll be running some special Burghley look backs throughout the weekend, so you’ll want to stay tuned.

Here’s what’s on tap over on the Burghley website this weekend:

Friday, September 4: Online shopping – who isn’t game for this? Shop a long list of vendors all day long in the Burghley virtual trade fair.

Saturday, September 5: The Burghley media team will unveil archived videos and other content all day right on the website. We’re surely in for a treat, just looking at the list of recent winners that will likely make appearances: Pippa Funnell, Tim Price, Oliver Townend, Chris Burton, Andrew Nicholson (and a Nicholson hat trick, at that), and the list goes on and on. We can’t wait to tune in.

Sunday, September 6 at 8 am EST/3 pm BST: Clare Balding presents the All-Star Sunday Program, which will feature:

  • Strictly Dressage with five time Olympian Carl Hester MBE & international Dressage & Eventing Judge Nick Burton
  • Sir Mark Todd gives an insight into his new Racing career
  • 2019 Champion Pippa Funnell talks to us from The Billy Stud
  • World No.1 Oliver Townend reveals how he dealt with lockdown & the new normal for Eventing
  • Clare Balding talks The Road To Tokyo with Dickie Waygood and Henry Bullen
  • We meet the new Land Rover Burghley Course Designer Derek di Grazia and bid farewell to Captain Mark Phillips as they talk Cross Country.
  • Tune in to find out who will be crowned the Ultimate Burghley Champion (voted for by social media followers) while taking you on a Burghley Odyssey, reflecting on some of the most memorable moments of the Event’s past

Go Eventing.

Katarina Stovall: ‘Does Access Equal Diversity In Equestrian Sports?’

In summer 2020 we launched a 1st Annual $5,000+ Diversity Scholarship with the support of generous donors, inviting minority equestrians to contribute to the discussion of diversity and inclusion in equestrian sport. It is the mission of this annual bursary, which we intend to expand in coming years, to call for, encourage, elevate and give a platform to minority voices in a space where they are underrepresented.

How do we build a more diverse, inclusive and accessible sport? In the coming weeks we will explore this question alongside many of the 27 Scholarship recipients as they share with us their essays in full. Collectively, their perspectives coalesce into a body of work that will no doubt help inform a viable path forward for equestrian sport, and we are committed to connecting their actionable ideas with the public as well as leaders and stakeholders of the sport.

Today we welcome Katarina Stovall, a 15 year old eventer from Texas. More voices: Aki Joy Maruyama | Anastasia Curwood | Caden Barrera | Christopher Ferralez Dana Bivens | Dawn Edgerton-Cameron | Deonte Sewell | Helen Casteel | Jordyn Hale | Jen Spencer | Julie Upshur | Katherine Un | Kimberly Kojima | Lea Jih-Vieira | Leilani Jackson | Lyssette Williams | Madison Buening | Malachi Hinton | Mitike Mathews | Muhammad Shahroze Rehman | Scnobia Stewart | Briannah Kaitlyn McGee

Photo courtesy of Katarina Stovall.

Diversity in the equestrian sport is a hot button topic these days. I am a 15-year-old, biracial eventer living in San Antonio, Texas. I am from a military family. My goal is to be a professional eventer. Generally speaking, I am in a diverse community most of the time thanks to the military. I do become aware that as I travel further away from the San Antonio area for shows that my environment becomes less diverse. At times my family struggles with the cost of the sport. I believe that if the sport were more affordable, more people would participate, including more minorities.

I am fortunate to have encouraging parents who are teaching me how to be successful. I have always had to work hard and think outside of the box as to how I can participate in the sport. In addition to my parents I have had amazing mentors.

I am a proud member of the United States Pony Club. Pony Club gave me a strong foundation and work ethic. It gave me a chance to work with professionals and like-minded people. Most important, Pony Club allowed me to learn without owning my own mount and tack for quite some time. I have been fortunate to be able to lease horses and borrow tack. Instructors have allowed me to work off lessons, so my parents would have the money to pay for shows, hauling, clinics, or board.

A few years ago, I participated in the Dressage 4 Kids program. That organization helps kids have access to more affordable clinics and leases on school masters. I think if there were more organizations like this, it might make it more affordable for people to participate.

I realize how important it is for my mount to have fitting tack. Custom tack is expensive. Even used tack can be expensive. I have learned that the fit of my tack affects not only my horse’s performance, but my riding as well. I have an idea for a nonprofit organization that would give people access to good tack. The goal is to collect used tack from upper level riders as a donation. There could be an application for this tack to be used for a certain amount of time. This would buy someone time to purchase their own tack and learn what it feels like to ride in good tack.

If we could work to find more solution to make our sport more affordable, I believe that it will become more inclusive.


Get Involved: The idea of mentorship and access is one that permeates the conversation around equality within eventing. The fact is that horse sports are expensive, and yet many of us successfully subsist on bare rations in order to feed our horse addiction. Is there a way to provide these opportunities to those who aren’t starting out with large amounts of financial support? Some of our other Diversity Scholarship recipients have talked about the idea of mentorship, including Dana Bivens, Dawn Edgerton-Cameron, Helen Casteel, Katherine Un, Kimberly Kojima, Lea Jih-Vieira, and Lyssette Williams.

Clearly, this is an important objective, and there are some organizations currently mobilizing to further these efforts. We look forward to providing more updates on this as they become available. In the meantime, take a moment to locate an access program nearby. Is there a way to establish a connection with your local eventing community? Building bridges takes some effort, but those efforts can be rewarded not only by growing eventing but by making the scope of our world just a little bit larger.

Zoom Out: Katarina also talks about the importance of proper equipment. There are some programs dedicated to this, one of which is R.L. Jacobs’ From the Community, To the Community program. Gently used tack and apparel is donated to this community and made available to those without financial means for just a nominal donation. Take a look at this innovative program here.


Nation Media wishes to thank Barry and Cyndy Oliff, Katherine Coleman and Hannah Hawkins for their financial support of this Scholarship. We also wish to thank our readers for their support, both of this endeavor and in advance for all the important work still to come.

Thursday News & Notes from Taylor Harris Insurance Services (THIS)

Well this takes cross country to a whole new level. Photo via Hygain USA.

It’s Burghley week!!! Or, it would have been, so it still is in my mind. There are many memories and celebrations online, including an entire virtual Burghley vendor village, and videos of years past. I’ve only been once, but it was a magical experience that I highly recommend to anybody in the horse world.

Click here to learn more about Burghley’s 2020 virtual programming.

U.S. Weekend Preview

Bucks County Horse Park H.T.: [Website] [Entries]

Caber Farm September H.T.: [Website] [Entries] [Entries/Times]

Chardon Valley H.T.: [Website]

Copper Meadows H.T.: [Website] [Entries/Times]

Course Brook H.T.: [Website] [Entries]

Five Points H.T.: [Website] [Entries]

Seneca Valley Pony Club H.T.: [Website] [Entries]

News From Around the Globe:

With good management and good genetics, it’s not that uncommon to see horses competing well into their late teens these days. Elisa Wallace’s top horse Simply Priceless is 19 years old, and she says he’s simply Benjamin Button. Knowing how to keep your horse sound and happy through their long careers is a skill, and some top riders share how they are making it work. [Top Horses As Senior Citizens]

Sally Ike stepped down yesterday as managing director of the U.S. Equestrian Federation’s Licensed Officials committee, but don’t think for a minute that she is just retiring. A multi-faceted pillar of the equestrian community, she will become a consultant for the USEF as an independent contractor. Sally, it’s not goodbye, it’s just see you later! [Sally Ike Retires from USEF]

New Vocations Racehorse Adoption Program canceled its 2020 dressage and combined test event that was slated to be held at the Kentucky Horse Park on October 3. The Jockey Club Thoroughbred Incentive Program (T.I.P.) has followed suit, cancelling its Dressage and Combined Test Championships on Oct. 4. Horses qualified and declared by the August 3 deadline for the 2020 championships will be eligible to participate in the 2021 events. [New Vocations] [Thoroughbred Incentive Program]

Get ready for some amazing video coverage coming up with this new partnership between Horse & Country TV and US Equestrian. With more live streams of competitions across disciplines, and premium content to members, your online life just got a little better. As far as eventing goes, it looks like they’re planning to stream Les 5 Etoiles de Pau and we’ll keep you posted on any others as we hear about them. [Live Streams & Videos Galore]

The Philadelphia Urban Riding Academy is one of the country’s oldest inner city equestrian programs. The urban black cowboy has been prevalent in Philadelphia since the early 1900’s, with horse drawn wagons delivering milk, produce, mail, laundry and more. While those services have died out, the black cowboys have remained. [Concrete Cowboys of Philadelphia]

A study is focused on the health of the microbiome (hind gut) and performance of event horses. “We are currently researching this important area, in collaboration with Aberystwyth and Manchester Universities and a yard of 5* to pre novice horses, we are using the latest genomic sequencing to profile microbial communities to provide better insights into how to manage the diet/stress/temperament and energy during training and the competition season.” [Trainer Magazine]

Best of Blogs: Diapers & Dressage — Is Life Balance a Thing?

Video: