Classic Eventing Nation

Friday News & Notes from World Equestrian Brands

Turkey sporting his custom fashion. Photo by Kate Samuels.

Oh, why is my horse wearing some kind of fuzzy sock thing in this photo? That’s because he has the most sensitive skin of all time and in the summer if there is ANY kind of friction on him, his hair rubs off. He also wears a cribbing strap when he goes out overnight, and was getting some tiny little rubs behind his ears, so obviously I knitted him a custom crib-strap super soft protective sock. It works great and he loves it.

National Holiday: National Tattoo Day

U.S. Weekend Preview:

Full Gallop Farm HT: [Website][Entry Status]

Virginia CCI and HT: [Website][Entry Status]

Silverwood Farm Summer HT: [Website]

Full Moon Farm HT: [Website][Entry Status]

Course Brook Farm HT: [Website][Entry Status]

Galway Downs HT: [Website][Entry Status][Ride Times] [Live Scores]

News From Around the Globe: 

A Look Back at the First US Grand Prix

Watch The Hunt Chase Crown For Hilarious and Crazy Action

Friday Laughs: Different Horse Breeds Into Water

10 Things Equestrians Probably Shouldn’t Admit We’ve Done

Best of Blogs: Why I Left The Show World

USEA Events A-Z: Five Points Horse Trials

Podcast: As part of the build up to CHIO Aachen Digital Champion of Champions Nicole Brown speaks to the triple Aachen Champion and reigning European Champion Ingrid Klimke about her favorite Aachen memories, what makes the venue so special as well as hopes for Tokyo 2021. [Equiratings]

Featured Videos: Kimmel squared at Champagne Run! View results here.

 

Thursday Video from FLAIR: Catching Up with Jonty Evans at Barbury

Jonty Evans is BACK!

How lovely to be able to watch the dream partnership that is Jonty Evans and Cooley Rorkes Drift (A.k.a Art to his admirers) fly around the cross country at Barbury International Horse Trials today!Here he talks very honestly about how his recovery is coming along, how he is still reluctant to plan too far ahead into he future, and how he is just enjoying every time he gets to sit on his partner Art.If you missed his round, head on over to H&C+ to rewatch it at any time.https://handc.tv/3gLA6ff

Posted by Horse & Country TV on Sunday, 12 July 2020

Irish Olympian Jonty Evans has made a remarkable return to competition after suffering a traumatic brain injury at Tattersalls in June of 2018. Just seven months later, Jonty was back on a horse — a feat unimaginable just weeks before.

Jonty and Art over the Fentons Trailer. Photo by Mace Maclean.

Jonty and his crowdfunded partner, Cooley Rorkes Drift, completed a handful of Novice level events in the UK in 2019 and most recently made quick work of their BE100 event this past weekend at Barbury International. “Forward, line, and position” – the mantra Jonty says he repeated to himself all weekend, wanting to have a great round aboard his experienced Irish Sport Horse gelding. It paid off, and Jonty says he’s just enjoying the time — though he does still have some goals to tick off, by the sound of it!

Want to watch a replay from the BE100 division at Barbury? Click here to watch Part I.

Horse Sense Leads San Francisco Zoo to ComfortStall

Slider, a mixed-breed steer; Ramona, a San Clemente Island goat; and Nataani, a Navajo-Churro sheep have Ben, a geriatric Quarter Horse, to thank for the supportive, comfortable surface on which they spend their nights. They are all among the many residents of the Fisher Family Children’s Zoo and Exploration Zone at San Francisco Zoo and Gardens.

The Zoo’s proactive approach to animal care and wellness led them to the equine world where they found ComfortStall Sealed Orthopedic Flooring.

“We discovered ComfortStall while attending an equine trade show,” says Amy Phelps, Children’s Zoo Curator. “We were looking for a quality flooring product to provide cushioning for the joints of our geriatric and arthritic horses and ended up purchasing one stall’s worth of ComfortStall for an older Quarter Horse. We were so pleased with it, and, more importantly, our horse, Ben, was so pleased with it, that we purchased enough to place the flooring in all the barns in our Family Farm. Now, all of our equines, cows, pigs, goats, and sheep find comfort on this beneficial flooring.”

Like horses used in sport and recreation, zoo animals benefit from veterinary care advances that are resulting in longer life spans. Soundness and compensatory muscle and joint issues have the same debilitating effect on Family Farm residents as they do in sport horses.

“In the zoo industry, animals tend to come in young and live very long lives,” Amy explains. “Geriatric care is a very important component in what we do when developing a whole life plan for an animal.”

ComfortStall’s unique design and construction make it valuable through all phases of life.  Supportive cushion comes from a layer of proprietary foam that provides give and support. The padded surface requires constant, tiny muscle movement to maintain balance, which spurs blood flow and helps maintain joint health. The surface also encourages deep, restful sleep as Family Farm animals spend their nights inside a cozy barn. Having ComfortStall to stand or lie down on greatly benefits their well-being.

            Better Barn Air

The flooring’s durable rubber top cover is sealed to the enclosure walls with anchor strips. This prevents the seepage and accumulation of urine and other fluids that contribute to poor air quality in barns with traditional floor mats. Now, straw, shavings or other types of bedding are not required for use as cushioning: they are only needed in small quantities to absorb urine. Less bedding means fewer dust particles in the air, which improves respiratory health and is especially important when the animals are inside for the night.

Less bedding helps the Zoo’s bottom line, too. Amy estimates that the Children’s Zoo saves $15,000 annually on bedding alone. Plus, not having to haul heavy mats out of the stall regularly for cleaning is a significant labor saver.

Minimal bedding has various benefits for animals with special needs. The miniature horse, Carmela, for example, has had a specialized diet since undergoing colic surgery. Staff must carefully manage what she eats because she can no longer eat a regular hay diet.

“Because Carmela eats everything in sight, including bedding material, it has been important that her interior space be shavings-free but still cozy and comfortable,” Amy explains. “All of which has been critical to keeping her healthy and happy.”

            Evolving Animal Care Priorities

Sprawling over 100 beautiful acres on the southwestern corner of San Francisco, the Zoo is home to over 2,000 animals that represent more than 250 species. In 35 years of care for zoo animals, Children’s Zoo Assistant Curator Eric Krussman has seen animal care priorities evolve to today’s emphasis on positive reinforcement training and enhanced well-being.

Using positive reinforcement methods in the science of applied behavior analysis, training focuses on making care easier for the animal and safer for the handlers. Use of this training is widespread throughout the Zoo, from teaching a snow leopard to receive sub-cutaneous fluids to guiding a giraffe to rest its lower leg on a stand for hoof care.

ComfortStall flooring is an example of the life enhancement component of today’s animal care priorities. “In general, it means doing everything we can to keep our animals happy and comfortable throughout their life,” says Eric.

As animal lifespans extend under expert, compassionate human care, ComfortStall flooring contributes to San Francisco Zoo and Gardens’ mission and to that of the many horses for whom it was originally created.

Article provided by Haygain. For more information on Haygain Hay Steamers and ComfortStall flooring, visit www.Haygain.com.

Haygain is a science driven company with the horse’s health as the primary focus.

We are committed to improving equine health through scientific research, product innovation and consumer education in respiratory and digestive health. Developed by riders, for riders, we understand the importance of clean forage and a healthy stable environment in maintaining the overall well-being of the horse.

Our Haygain hay steamers are recommended by the world’s leading riders, trainers and equine vets and ComfortStall® Sealed Orthopedic Flooring System is used and recommended by leading Veterinary Hospitals, including Cornell University.

Volunteer Nation: 5 Events Needing Help This Weekend

Leah Lang-Gluscic thanks the Pony Club volunteers while they give AP Prime a pat. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

Signing up to volunteer some of your time has never been simpler thanks to EventingVolunteers.com. For those of you competing on the weekends, it can definitely be hard to find blocks of time to donate. But it never hurts to stop by the show office and find out what you can do to help — maybe there is help needed at the end of the day tearing down the show jump course. There is usually always help needed, so even if you only have an hour to spare put it to good use! And remember: since most events are spectator-less right now, the existing pool of on-site volunteers shrinks. Many thanks to our hard working volunteers as they get organized for another weekend of eventing!

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.

Event: Course Brook Farm HT
Dates: Saturday, July 18 through Sunday, July 19
Address: 39 Brush Hill Road, Sherborn, MA 01770
Position(s) Available: To obtain availability and sign up, visit this website.

Event: Full Gallop Farm July HT
Dates: Sunday, July 19
Address: 3828 Wagener Rd, Aiken, SC, 29805
Position(s) Available: XC Finish Timer, XC Jump Judge, XC Score Runner, XC Timer, XC Starter, XC Warm-up, Dressage Bit Check, Dressage Scribe, Dressage Warm-up, Hospitality Helper, Floater, Volunteer Check-in, Parking Steward, Office Help, Scorers, SJ In Gate, SJ Jump Crew, SJ Scribe

Event: Full Moon Farm Aloha HT
Dates: Sunday, July 19
Address: 4286 Louisville Rd, Finksburg, MD, 21048-2723
Position(s) Available: XC Jump Judge, SJ Jump Crew, SJ Additional Help

Event: Galway Downs Summer HT
Dates: Friday, July 17 through Sunday, July 19
Address: 38801 Los Corralitos Rd, Temecula, CA 92592
Position(s) Available: Dressage Steward, Dressage Scribe, XC Jump Judge, XC Score Runner, XC Timer, SJ Ring Steward, Dressage Bit Check, Dressage Score Runner

Event: Stable View July Eventing Academy
Dates: Saturday, July 18 through Sunday, July 19
Address: 117 Stable Dr, Aiken, SC, 29801
Position(s) Available: Event Prep – SJ, XC Safety Spotter, Floater, XC Jump Crew, XC Control – Assistant, XC Jump Judge, Dressage Steward, Hospitality Helper, Floater, SJ Jump Crew, SJ Steward

Dressage Is Underway at Leg 2 of Poland’s Strzegom Summer Tour

More than 300 horses (and ponies!) stand ready in Strzegom, Poland this week to contest the second leg of the Strzegom Summer Tour, with double the entries from Leg 1 earlier this month. The event features five international divisions, from short-format one-star through four-star levels, as well as a two-star class for ponies.

SST2020 – Horse Inspection – CCIP2*-L – 16.07.2020 – GALLERY
Photo Leszek Wójcik
Photos for Riders -> photo@…

Posted by Strzegom Horse Trials on Thursday, July 16, 2020

Among the 67-horse CCI4*-S entry list: German monoliths Michael Jung, who will bring forward his 2019 European Championships partner fischerChipmunk FRH and Julia Krajewski who is entered with Samourai du Thot. Other star-studded entries include Tim Lips (NED), Yoshiaki Oiwa (JPN), Andreas Dibowski (GER), Sandra Auffarth (GER), and Sara Algotsson-Ostholt (SWE).

We will also see the leading Polish riders, including the whole podium of last year’s national championships: Paweł Spisak, Mateusz Kiempa and Joanna Pawlak.

The event begins Thursday with two days of dressage. Dutch eventer Raf Kooremans has the early CCI4*-S lead with Dimitri N.O.P., a 12-year-old KWPN gelding (Vaillant x Jorine, by Enrico) on a score of 25.2. This pair finished 3rd in leg 1 of Strzegom two weeks ago — the represented the Netherlands in two Nations Cup events last year. Michael and Julia are still to come on Friday, and we expect that they’ll be challenging one another for the lead.

#StrzegomSummerTour

Polish pair 🇵🇱 Paweł Spisak & Banderas with the second result (27,4) after the first part of the…

Posted by Strzegom Horse Trials on Thursday, July 16, 2020

Day 1 CCI4*-S top 10: 

Michael and fischerWild Wave are in the lead after the first day of CCI3*-S dressage.

#StrzegomSummerTour

🇩🇪 Michael Jung & fischerWild Wave are in the lead after the first part of the Dressage in CCI3*-S class.

Well done👍

#eventing #wkkw #shtstrzegom #strzegom

Photo by ©Mariusz Chmieliński

Posted by Strzegom Horse Trials on Thursday, July 16, 2020

Cross country and show jumping throughout the weekend. No spectators are permitted but a live stream of the jumping phases will be available at the event’s website and on Facebook.

Strzegom: Website, Timetable, Starting Order, Results

 

Developing Your Jumping Options: ‘Stride Control’ Excerpt + Giveaway!

In this excerpt from her book Stride Control: Exercises to Improve Rideability, Adjustability and Performancerenowned coach Jen Marsden Hamilton talks about the importance of adjustability on course. Be sure to enter the raffle for a free copy courtesy of Horse & Rider Books at the bottom of the page! 

Photo by Take the Moment Photography.

Training develops options. When riding to a jump, there are always three options:

• Move up (increase the stride), going for the forward distance that is seen.
• Steady (decrease the stride), going against the distance that is seen.
• Keep what you’ve got (maintain the stride), going with the distance seen.

These three options are always there, but that doesn’t mean they are always appropriate!

Most riders have a preference for one of the three rides; some riders like to always move up, but this can teach the horse aggression or rushing. Others like to hold and steady, but this can create a “chicken” (teaching your horse to stop). Learning to use the short side of the arena (the recovery and setup phases) correctly, allows the rider to make decisions regarding stride length based on knowledge and confidence. Commit yourself to the stride you’ve set up with conviction. If the line rode correctly, great. If it wasn’t that great, change the turn before the line the next time by altering the stride length. If you make a mistake, learn from it and fix the ride. Don’t practice mistakes until they are perfect mistakes!

Develop the feel for three canters—the “true” (regular) 12-foot stride, the closed stride, and the open stride. Practice and learn to find the jump from the different canter strides. Why? Because when you finally get to the jump, there’s no such thing as a bad distance. That’s where you are, so learn to love it! Support the ride with your leg, position, and your conviction, using your eyes to keep looking for the track away.

These days, jumping courses are technical and riders can no longer just ride “off their eye” or always jump from their preferred distance. It is the course designers who dictate how related lines should be ridden. They do this through altering the distances between jumps, the types of jumps in the line, and other factors. As a rider you have to train hard, long, and correctly to meet these challenges.

During competition, it is essential to use the mental knowledge gained from the course walk to setup the ride on the short sides, so you can keep what you’ve got to the first jump of the line and then fine-tune the canter in the line based on:

• Your eye.
• The “feel.”
• The count.

Know that the option “keep what you’ve got” reduces the chances of confusion and will always produce a better jump. Horses do not appreciate riders who constantly change their minds in front of jumps, so learn to “keep what you’ve got” and train your horse to jump from that distance. Use the tools learned through stride control exercises, use the setup phase and recovery phase to give yourself more time to get organized, and find an appropriate ride based on training and knowledge—not panic and desperation.

KEY POINTS
• Stride control exercises over jumps add the elements of needing “more correct pace and impulsion.” The setup and recovery areas take on more importance.
• There is no fine line to a perfect distance. Horses and riders have to learn and love to jump off different stride lengths and takeoff points.
• Through stride control exercises, riders learn to read the situation, act accordingly, and ride with conviction.

Want to win a copy of Stride Control? Enter via the Rafflecopter widget below! Social media likes and follows are appreciated but not required. The winner will be announced in News & Notes on Monday, July 20. 

a Rafflecopter giveaway

This excerpt from Stride Control by Jen Marsden Hamilton is reprinted with permission from Trafalgar Square Books (www.HorseandRiderBooks.com).

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

Whoopsie! Photo by Katie Holmes.

Here’s to hoping your week doesn’t resemble Annabelle Swain’s swan dive in the Junior Training at Caber Farm recently! Grace and beauty, we see some schooling of down banks in her future. Don’t worry, Annabelle was fine and will live to fight another day!

National Holiday:  National Corn Fritters Day

U.S. Weekend Preview:

Full Gallop Farm HT: [Website][Entry Status]

Virginia CCI and HT: [Website][Entry Status]

Silverwood Farm Summer HT: [Website]

Full Moon Farm HT: [Website][Entry Status]

Course Brook Farm HT: [Website][Entry Status]

Galway Downs HT: [Website][Entry Status][Ride Times]

News From Around the Globe: 

New Technology in Sexed Semen Leads to Hope for Endangered Equine Breed 

Lindsay Partridge Starts Training for the Mega Makeover

Meet Madeline Broek: The #1 Groom in the World

Lauren Kieffer Master Class: Introducing Ditches, Water, & Banks

Showing in COVID Times

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: 5* Working Student for a Day

Whether you’ve been a working student in the past, are one currently, or are planning to become one as a stepping stone to a career in the industry, there’s one thing you know for certain – it’s hard work. But it’s also jolly good fun and hugely educational, particularly if you pick a rider known for their meticulous approach to horsemanship. The creator of today’s video, Caitlin Oldham, did just that, heading to the base of British eventer Harry Meade — sometimes affectionately referred to as ‘The Professor’ — to hone her skills.

In this comprehensive diary, she shows what a day on Harry’s yard is like for its most integral members of staff — from snoozing superstars and trotting oxers to every variety of poo-shoveling, it gives you a great look behind the curtain at this high-powered yard while also giving you some great horse-care inspiration. Plus, if you’re an aspiring working student yourself, this is basically essential viewing to prepare you for your role to come.

Go Eventing, and go working students!

Fight back against an energy crisis that can impact condition and performance.

Equi-Jewel® is a high-fat, low-starch and -sugar formula developed to safely meet the energy needs of your horse.

Whether you have a hard keeper that needs extra calories to maintain his weight, or a top performance horse that needs cool energy to perform at her peak, Equi-Jewel can meet your horse’s energy needs. Equi-Jewel reduces the risk of digestive upset, supports optimal muscle function, maintains stamina, and helps horses recover faster after hard work, all while providing the calories your horse needs to thrive.

The horse that matters to you matters to us®.

Not sure which horse supplement best meets your horse’s needs? Kentucky Performance Products, LLC is here to help. Call 859-873-2974 or visit KPPusa.com.

A Time Like This

Here we are in the middle of our grandchildren’s history books. Many people say they can’t believe these crazy times. I can though. History has never plodded along without memorable happenings on the regular. We’ve lived in an age of relative ease and comfort, lost sight of the big picture, had some extremely #firstworldproblem priorities. Things have simmered for years now and like salt added to water about to boil, covid-19 and its associated complications has brought many other issues to their boiling point. There is hot water all over the stove top, running down the wooden cabinets and onto the floor. The first step to cleaning up the mess is turning off the heat. The heat of polarized media, the heat of tempers that only know how to flare instead of seeking understanding. 

Creating my own peace. Photo by Jessica Ramirez.

In the midst of the #2020dumpterfire I’ve been lucky enough to live and work at a farm. My day to day activities really didn’t change much. Sure I sprayed a lot more bleach and lysol in the barn than I ever thought possible, but those stalls still needed cleaned, horses groomed, grass mowed, etc. The barn created a schedule so that boarders could sign up for a time and we could keep the number of people here limited. People were annoyed and tears flowed, but eventually everyone got used to the new normal.

I work hard to bring positivity to those around me, I can always look at situations from a new angle that can bring understanding and peace to those that were struggling. I wax on about opportunities for growth, and reasons to be thankful, and that you can always choose how you react to a situation. I thrive on creating peace. Maybe that is why I feel adrift now. In this world currently there is no peace, not even in our little corner of earth filled with horses. There is no way to keep everyone happy. There never was I suppose, but we pretended. It’s time for big changes and big changes are scary and difficult and overwhelming. 

Social distancing achievement. Photo courtesy of Lindsey Burns.

I’ve struggled with the concept of purpose from the time I was a child. As one person on this teeming earth, what could I possibly do that matters. I was always overwhelmed with the unending scope of the sky, its big blue presence crushing down on me. Thankfully I was distracted from these rather weighty ideas by chasing tadpoles in creeks, by transporting bugs from lawn to garden eliminating their perilous trek across sidewalks, and finally by horses and their velvety snuffling noses.

Wrestling with weighty ideas and moral dilemmas is an important part of being human, and should not be avoided. Discussions, education, expanding your viewpoint, these should all be pursued, but in a time where we feel not only isolated because of disease but also politics and morals we desperately need a chance to feel centered and grounded. As a horse person I have that chance everyday. In the midst of the confusion and uncertainty I know that these four legged creatures I have built my life around will be thankful for a simple peppermint and unconditionally share their love with me. 

All smiles while chasing some dressage dreams. Photo by Jessica Ramirez.

I want to wade into this maelstrom, but my peace loving self constantly worries about saying the wrong thing, or being misled by twisted and confusing media. I shudder at the thought that my good intentions could unwittingly bring pain to the very people I want to spread love over. So I ride my horses. I video their ears and we navigate the green and glowing trails, I document our training triumphs and woes. I chase down sunrise and sunset. I share my peace so that hopefully even one person can be encouraged to keep up the good fight. So that even one person can take that deep shuddering breath and feel their shoulders relax for a moment. I don’t have all the answers, but I do know that this is a season of desperately needed change. Even in the midst of change we humans need some form of stability, some joy to chase, some dream to cling to, how thankful I am to have horses to provide all of that.

So while you are out there sifting through moral, social, and life/death dilemmas, remember two things: 1. Everybody love everybody. 2. Always add more leg. 

 

Ride Heels Down: Both Mantra and a Business

The phrase “Heels down!” is one we constantly hear our trainer say or one we think as we approach that massive table. While this may be a staple mantra for us, Ainsley Jacobs has turned it into a business.

Those heels, tho! The jump that started it all. Photo courtesy of Halliea Milner, Go With It Farm.

The birth of Ride Heels Down came in September 2014 when Ainsley was jumping her first Novice height course in a lesson. “As JJ and I cantered towards a ‘big’ oxer, I told myself ‘heels down, hold on, and let JJ do his job.’ I thought the phrase ‘heels down and hold on’ would make

a cool t-shirt, and then immediately realized I still had to survive the course before I could start being creative … ha!” After successfully finishing their first Novice course, Ainsley went home to start designing and the rest was history.

Ride Heels Down was officially launched on September 1, 2015 and even had its first sale, from New Zealand, on that day. Ainsley started selling her products at local shows with what she had– mismatched table cloths, an old Maxxis Tires pop-up tent, and some plastic folding tables. Ainsley’s day job in her automotive aftermarket and performance industry company, P. TEN Marketing, has helped her immensely with the growth of Ride Heels Down.

“I was able to design a logo, build a website, and develop an online strategy to get things going right from day one. I just considered it to be another one of my clients, added Ride Heels Down to my daily task list, and, before long, my idea for a little t-shirt shop had become a reality.”

Ainsley and JJ. Photo courtesy of Lauren New, River Birch Farm.

If you know Ainsley’s horse, JJ, you love him. He is well known for his series, “Will JJ Eat It?” Ainsley says, “JJ has been a big inspiration for shirt designs … I love that he’s so loved, he’s definitely got a fan club! We have had some ups and downs, but he has taught me more about riding than I had learned in a lifetime, and eventing as well has elevated me as an overall equestrian.”

A sampling of the amazing Ride Heels Down products. Photo courtesy of Ride Heels Down.

The Ride Heels Down designs are relatable to all disciplines. Phrases like “Everything hurts and I’m dying” paired with some stirrups on the super soft t-shirt material make for a perfect staple in your closet. Ride Heels Down has t-shirts, hoodies, hats, stickers, jewelry, koozies, socks, you name it, they have it! You can shop their products here.

Ainsley is motivated daily by the people she surrounds herself with in the automotive industry. The “self-made entrepreneurs and first-class world champion drivers” are “relentless in their pursuit of success,” which gives her motivation to continually search for success as well. She is
also driven by how far she’s come since a tough childhood.

Ainsley hopes that Ride Heels Down will “go from a small business to a medium or even large one that can sustain itself as an independent entity instead of just a fun side-hobby.” Even though the small business sustains only itself, it’s what keeps Ainsley going. Her ultimate goal is to have Ride Heels Down apparel in big-name retailers like Dover or Smartpak.

Ainsley and the Ride Heels Down booth. Photo courtesy of Mary Campbell, Mare Goods.

Ainsley is not just your typical rider/ businesswoman. She is one of the most genuine and enthusiastic people you will ever meet. I’ve had the pleasure of getting to know her throughout the past few years, and she is truly one of a kind. When you walk up to her tent she is actually interested in how you are doing instead of just trying to sell her product. Ainsley’s enthusiasm for running Ride Heels Down and her genuine encouragement embodies the strong community in the equestrian industry.

Go Ainsley and Go Eventing!