Classic Eventing Nation

The Fork at TIEC BN Through Training Divisions Cancelled Due to Storm Damage

2019 The Fork at TIEC CCI4*-S winners Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography courtesy of TIEC.

Tryon International Equestrian Center (TIEC) has announced today that it is excited to welcome the return of The Fork at TIEC Eventing competition on April 2-5, 2020. However, due to recent storm damage on the course, the Training, Novice and Beginner Novice Divisions for The Fork at TIEC will not be held this year.

Captain Mark Phillips visited TIEC this week to review the course conditions and begin the design phase. Phillips’ review confirmed that the course is in great shape to run the Modified, Preliminary, Intermediate, Advanced and FEI levels (CCI4*-S, CCI3*-S, CCI2*-S, CCI1*-S). Stay tuned to the TIEC website and Facebook page for event updates and course pictures in mid-March. TIEC looks forward to hosting all levels on the White Oak Course for the Blue Ridge Mountain H.T. on Sept. 12-13, 2020.

The Fork at TIEC will occur alongside Tryon Welcome 3 on April 2-5, which has recently been upgraded to A Hunters/Level 3 Jumpers. This upgraded rating brings all Tryon Welcome Series shows to the A or AA level, offering Hunter/Jumper competition from March 19 through April 12.

Both lodging and stall discounts are available if booked by March 10, with similar offers available for the Tryon Spring Series when booked by April 1. Visit Tryon.com/Compete to learn more.

EN Tip: Looking to re-route from The Fork at TIEC to another event in the Tryon area? FENCE H.T. in nearby Landrum, SC, takes place the following week, April 11-12, 2020. WindRidge Farm H.T. in Mooresboro, North NC, is also nearby, and takes place May 9-10.

The Fork at TIEC: Website, Entry Status

[Modifications to The Fork at TIEC]

Twin Rivers’ 2020 Season Opener Is Ready to Run

James Alliston and Pandora topped the Advanced division of the Twin Rivers Winter H.T. in 2019. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

Tamie Smith with her 2019 Pan Am Games team gold medalist partner Mai Baum along with five-star pairs Andrea Baxter with Indy 500 and Frankie Thieriot Stutes with Chatwin headline a strong Advanced field when Twin Rivers begins an exciting season of eventing competition this weekend.

Weather for the Winter Horse Trials looks distinctly un-wintery on Feb. 28-March 1, as the Baxter family-owned venue on California’s Central Coast welcomes 300-plus contenders. Joining the aforementioned pairs running Advanced are newly-anointed members of the USEF’s U25 Eventing Program — Maddy Temkin, Kaylawna Smith-Cook and Megan Sykes — plus seasoned competitors Helen Bouscaren, Gina Economou, Auburn Excell Brady, Amber Levine and Emilee Libby. 

Twin Rivers’ 500 acres are green and tracks designed by new upper level course designer Hugh Lochore are full of new tests. Plus, teasers for what’s to come at April’s inaugural Spring International CCI4*-L, one of only six competitions at this rigorous level in the United States.

“They are a progressive bunch,” says Lochore of the Baxter family. Along with Andrea Baxter, organizer Connie Baxter has extensive eventing experience and Whirlwind Excavating owner Jeff Baxter happily applies his expertise and equipment to bringing Lochore’s ideas to life.

“The venue has interesting topography and it’s a good canvas to play with,” Lochore adds. “It’s exciting when you put things on paper, then you have a team that is keen to get the bit between their teeth and make it happen.” Lochore designed the Preliminary through Advanced courses; Marc Grandia designed the Intro through Training. Show Jumping course designer Jose Nava has colorful new obstacles to work with in the arena.

The Winter Horse Trials are presented by Auburn Labs, makers of adaptogenic APF Formula for horses, riders and dogs; and Professional’s Choice, manufacturers of top-of-the-line sports medicine boots for horses. Supporting sponsors include Best Western PLUS Black Oak, which offers great exhibitor deals on nearby lodging; and Riding Warehouse, the horse gear and supply company located in nearby San Luis Obispo. Vendors include Equestrian Habits, Chubby Cov, Whitehorse Tack, Cahoots Catering and Katie’s Coffee.

Volunteer opportunities abound and all those helping out will have their name entered in a raffle for generous prizes. These include Twin Rivers entries, stabling and a cross country schooling certificate; and a family four-pack of tickets to the San Diego Zoo or San Diego Zoo Safari. More hours equals more raffle tickets! Sign up to volunteer here.

Other useful info for competitors: the show photographer is Marcus Greene Outdoor Photography, and the official videographer is Ride On Video. For competition-related inquiries, contact Christina Gray of Gray Area Events at [email protected].

Twin Rivers: Website, Entry Status, Ride Times

Friday News & Notes from World Equestrian Brands

Find someone who looks at you like Kim Severson looks at her horse. Photo from Kim Severson Eventing.

Don’t forget to catch the action today and tomorrow at the $50,000 LiftMaster Eventing Grand Prix at Bruce’s Field! We’ll be following along and giving reports, and you can always tune in to the Live Stream if you’re not in Aiken to see it in person. You can see the entry list here, it’s a star studded field!

National Holiday: National Public Sleeping Day

U.S. Weekend Preview:

Twin River Winter H.T. [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Rocking Horse III H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Chattahoochee Hills H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Sporting Days Farm March H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

News From Around the Globe:

Jacquie Brooks may be an Olympic dressage rider, but she’s also made a name for herself in helping Event riders of all levels. She’s incredible in her ability to break down training horses into achievable steps, and train a wide variety of horses and riders. Here, she tells about the simple fundamentals that make both dressage tests and jumping courses work smoothly, no matter what level. [The 7 Basic Skills For Fundamental Flatwork]

The Virginia Horse Trials has been a standard part of east coast eventing calendars since 1989. Held twice a year and created by Brian and Penny Ross 31 years ago, the event is famous for the cross country hills, and the enormous facility at the Virginia Horse Center. Hosting levels from Beginner Novice through Advanced/Intermediate and including  CCI*, CCI2* and CCI3* levels as well, it’s an absolute destination competition. [USEA Events A-Z: Virginia Horse Trials]

Get your lotto tickets ready, this might be your next farm. The Old Farm is 60 acres in Berkshire, England, and pretty much ticks all the boxes. While the farm hasn’t been operating as a horse farm recently, it has all the structures including two large barns, tons of fenced in fields, and loads of hacking. Only £3M, not too bad right? [Wantable Farm of the Week]

Misty of Chincoteague was the book of my childhood, and I can’t be the only one. The real story of Marguerite Henry discovering Misty with the Beebe family is not much different than the fairy tale of the book, but has lots of interesting details that you may not know. If you’re a fan like me, you’ll enjoy this. [The True Story of Misty of Chincoteague]

 

Can’t wait for tomorrow’s cross country action? Relive last year:

 

#TBT Video from FLAIR: William Fox-Pitt and Chilli Morning at Badminton

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William Fox-Pitt and Chilli Morning. Photo by Nico Morgan.

In anticipation of the 2020 event, Badminton Horse Trials has begun releasing throwback videos of past winners on cross country. We’re in for a treat with the first round the event has shared: William Fox-Pitt and the stallion Chilli Morning’s smooth-as-glass round that would eventually help secure the pair the 2015 win.

Watching William’s quiet and effortless riding is always a privilege. Watch and learn as he and the chestnut stallion make the Badminton cross country look like pie, coming home easily with seven seconds to spare:

5 years, 5 incredible rounds

When the daffodils start to pop up, you know Badminton is getting nearer – what better time to share our winners clips from the past 5 years!We begin with William Fox-Pitt Eventing and Chilli Morning's cross country round from 2015

Posted by Badminton Horse Trials on Wednesday, February 26, 2020

As fate would have it, William and Chilli Morning would go on to jump a tenacious clear round to pressure overnight leaders Andrew Nicholson and Nereo, who lowered three rails to lose out on the win. Chilli Morning became the only stallion to win Badminton Horse Trials and has begun passing along his talents in a growing crop of progeny.

Why Does My Horse Need Vitamin E? And How Can He Get It? Brought to You by Banixx

Banixx,tack,horse,wound care,scratches,healthy,Vitamin E

Grass is the best natural source of Vitamin E. Photo courtesy of Banixx.

How much do you know about Vitamin E and your horse’s requirements for it? Vitamin E is the compilation of eight naturally occurring compounds that have antioxidant properties. Vitamin E is a fat-soluble nutrient, meaning it’s stored in the body’s fatty tissues and the liver. Your horse can store Vitamin E when it is provided in abundance and utilize it later when less is provided.

Dr. Green (also know as grass) is the best natural source of Vitamin E. Once hay/grass is cut, the amount of Vitamin E drops off and will continue to drop over time. So, the older the hay, the less Vitamin E.

What does Vitamin E do?

It’s an antioxidant. A simple explanation of antioxidants is that they bind with free radicals to diffuse them and make them less damaging to the cells. Free radicals are unstable molecules and are a byproduct of the body’s utilization of fuel such as protein, carbohydrates and fats.

For nerves, muscles, reproductive system, and internal systems, Vitamin E is vital to the repair and health of these systems. Horses under stress, such as pregnant mares, nursing mares, young horses, performance horses, and older horses are likely to need more. It’s an essential part of the diet for horses with allergies, those prone to tying up, those with metabolic syndrome, or those recovering from an illness.

How does my horse get Vitamin E?

Fresh pasture is the best supplier. The way we keep our horses now, with less or no pasture, means that horses may not be able get and store up enough Vitamin E.  A diet heavy in hay, not grass, results in a forage where the Vitamin E has dissipated in the drying process and is much less available.

Supplements to provide additional Vitamin E can be from synthetic or natural sources. But it’s important to know that the natural Vitamin E is stored in the horse’s system for about twice as long as synthetically sourced Vitamin E.

What happens if he does not get a sufficient amount of Vitamin E?

Vitamin E deficiency can result in cell damage. This damage can lead to sore muscles, injury, slow recovery from exercise/work (otherwise known as oxidative stress). Oxidative stress is more likely to occur in nerves, muscles and the immune system, as they consume energy faster than other systems in the horse.

How do I know if my horse is getting enough Vitamin E?

There are no recent studies on this; however, in 2007 the National Research Council (NCR) recommended about 500 IU (international units) daily for a 1,100-pound horse in light work, and more for horses in heavier work. For those horses that need more Vitamin E, the recommendation is about 5,000 IU per day.

There is scant data regarding overdosing a horse on Vitamin E; however, in other animals (including humans) excessive Vitamin E can be toxic since it is stored in the fat and it’s not a water-soluble vitamin so the old cliché. “Everything in moderation” is best taken to heart here.

Brought to you by Banixx – the #1 trusted solution for equine and pet owners!

Volunteer Nation: 4 Events In Search of Help This Weekend

Andrea Baxter’s Indy 500 surveys beautiful Twin Rivers. Come volunteer this weekend and see the updates for the upcoming CCI4*-L for yourself!

It’s time to go eventing again! Eventers are packing their trailers and hitting the road this weekend, which means we’ve got four events that could use some helping hands if you have a couple to spare.

Here on the West coast, Twin Rivers opens its season with a robust event running divisions from Introductory through Advanced. The volunteer coordinating team at Twin Rivers has been hard at work on an incentive and rewards program of their own aimed at thanking the tireless core of volunteers who help keep the event running seamlessly. The program runs with support from Sunsprite Warmbloods and was created to memorialize one of eventing’s finest representatives, Donald Trotter, who passed away in 2019.

This year, volunteers working at Twin Rivers can earn entries into a raffle drawing for a range of prizes including an entry to a Twin Rivers event, stabling at the event, cross country schooling certificates, and even a pack of passes to the famous San Diego Zoo or San Diego Zoo Safari Park. Did we mention Twin Rivers is located in the heart of Paso Robles, California — also known far and wide for its wineries? It’s a win for everyone!

As Twin Rivers gears up for its inaugural CCI4*-L event, running April 9-12, many upgrades to the already-stunning facility are well underway. Be sure to follow Twin Rivers Ranch on Facebook to see the latest updates — or better yet, go volunteer and see the updates for yourself!

Here is a look at the current openings for volunteers this weekend:

Event: Twin Rivers Winter HT
Date(s) volunteers needed: Today through Sunday, March 1
Address: 8715 N River Rd, Paso Robles, CA, 93446
Positions Available: Dressage Scribe, Dressage Warm-up, SJ Steward, XC Jump Judge

Event: Sporting Days Farm Horse Trials
Date(s) volunteers needed: Friday, February 28 through Sunday, March 1
Address: 3549 Charleston Hwy, Aiken, SC, 29801
Positions Available: Pre-Event Help (needed today, too), XC Finish Timer, XC Jump Judge, XC Warm-up, Dressage Bit Check, Dressage Steward, Hospitality Helper, General Help (Office), SJ In-gate, SJ Jump Crew, XC Control, XC Start Timer, XC Starter, Dressage Scribe, SJ Steward

Event: Rocking Horse Winter III Horse Trials
Date(s) volunteers needed: Friday, February 28 through Sunday, March 1
Address: 44200 S.R. 19 N , Altoona, FL, 32702
Positions Available: General Help

Event: Grand Prix Eventing at Bruce’s Field
Date(s) volunteers needed: Friday, February 28 through Saturday, February 29
Address: 931 Powderhouse Road SE, Aiken, SC, 29803
Positions Available: Dressage Warm-up, XC Crossing Guard, XC Finish Timer, XC Jump Videographer, XC Warm-up

Accepted Entries & Waitlist Posted for $20K Ocala Horse Properties Eventing Prix Invitational [Updated]

Sara Kozumplik Murphy and Rubens D’Ysieux, winners of the 2017 Eventing Prix, are among several returning champions entered in this year’s event. Photo by Lisa Thomas/Mid-Atlantic Equestrian Services.

We are counting down to the highly anticipated $20,000 Ocala Horse Properties Eventing Prix Invitational, be held on Tuesday, March 3 at Southern Cross Equestrian in Reddick, FL. A total of 34 entries have been accepted for the competition’s seventh running, with another 12 on the waitlist.

Accepted entries [updated Feb. 28]:

Waitlist (based on the FEI Eventing World Rankings):

The concept for the event was launched in 2013 by Max Corcoran and Scott Keach, who are based out of Southern Cross Equestrian. Max and Scott recognized the need to create a competition for event riders that simulated the atmosphere and pressure experienced at the grand prix show jumping level. The competition will feature a 1.30m track designed by Chris Barnard, with pairs who are clear and inside the time in the first round proceeding to the jump-off.

Prize money will be distributed through 12th place individually, and EquiJet has also generously put forth a $5,000 voucher for the winner to use on a flight for their horse.

The course walk is at 12:30 p.m., with the first horse in the ring at 2:30 p.m. ET. A free live stream will be provided by EQTV featuring commentary by John Kyle and Cathy Wieschhoff.

Southern Cross Equestrian is located at 13440 NW Hwy 225 in Reddick, FL. Learn more about the Ocala Horse Properties Eventing Prix Invitational here.

Could the Olympics Be Cancelled Due to Coronavirus?

Andrew Hoy (AUS) riding Bloom Des Hauts Crets at the Ready Steady Tokyo Test Event. Photo by FEI/Yusuke Nakanishi.

Partnered with any epidemic is a heaping helping of wide-spread speculation – oftentimes with little grounding in science and cold, hard facts. But as current headline-hogger coronavirus gains in traction, murmurings about the fate of this summer’s Olympic Games — due to begin in Tokyo on the 24th of July — have been addressed by a senior member of the International Olympic Committee, or IOC.

Though the coronavirus outbreak has largely been localised in China, cases have been reported in every continent barring Antarctica. The number of cases has now hit 80,000 with a death toll of over 2,700, giving it a much smaller sample size than the common and widespread influenza virus, but a significantly higher mortality rate. These numbers currently pale in comparison to those of the SARS coronavirus epidemic of 2003, which yielded considerably fewer cases but a significantly higher mortality rate of 9.6%, compared to the approximately 2% mortality rate estimated by the World Health Organisation at this point in the coronavirus trajectory.

Nonetheless, it’s crucial to take fast-spreading illness seriously, and exceptional efforts to contain the virus at its source have certainly contributed to its diminished spread. Hotels, resorts, and cruise ships are among the global tourist attractions to go into quarantine after confirmed cases, and a number of major calendar events have been put on hold or cancelled to mitigate the movement of large numbers of people from place to place — including several in and around Tokyo. This includes J.League football, the country’s largest professional football series, which has been put on hold until the 15th of March, while the Tokyo Marathon, due to run on Sunday, will now feature just a select roster of elite runners after 38,000 confirmed entrants were told they wouldn’t be able to participate. This morning, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan has asked all of the country’s schools to close for a month to help contain the spread of the virus.

Three new cases of the virus were confirmed in Chiba, north of Tokyo, which is due to host the Taekwondo, surfing, wrestling, and fencing events at the Games, as well as four of the Paralympic disciplines. All three of these cases emerged among members of the same gym in Chiba. The host country for the forthcoming Games has also seen two deaths from the coronavirus outbreak. This brings Japan’s case total to 172 on land, plus a further 700 people who have been quarantined on the cruise ship Diamond Princess, moored in Yokohama and on lockdown since the 3rd of February.

Michael Jung (GER) riding Fischerwild Wave at the Ready Steady Tokyo Test Event. Photo by FEI/Yusuke Nakanishi.

All this has already had an impact on Olympic preparations. Training for the approximately 80,000 volunteers due to help at the Games was set to begin on the 22nd of February, but this has now been pushed back by at least two months. But if the outbreak – which is at risk of becoming a pandemic – hasn’t eased by then? It could be curtains for this year’s Olympics.

Former Canadian swimming champion Dick Pound has been on the IOC since the late 1970s, and is thus the longest-serving member of the current committee. In an interview with the Associated Press, he explained the logistical difficulties of rearranging an event of this scale.

“A lot of things have to start happening [over the next few months],” he said, explaining that there’s just a two- to three-month window in which the decision over whether to run can be made. “You’ve got to start ramping up your security, your food, the Olympic Village, the hotels. The media folks will be in there building their studios.”

But if the virus shows no signs of slowing its progress, there’s no Plan B for alternative arrangements.

“You just don’t postpone something on the size and scale of the Olympics,” he said. “There’s so many moving parts, so many countries and different seasons, and competitive seasons, and television seasons. You can’t just say, ‘We’ll do it in October.'”

Tokyo Bay’s Sea Forest, where eventing cross country is set to take place. Photo via Tokyo2020.jp

In the meantime, preparations are continuing as usual, and Pound encouraged athletes to continue their own preparations, too. As the Games creep ever closer, the IOC will be working in close conjunction with the World Health Organisation (WHO) to make a decision over the viability – and safety – of running this high-cost, high-risk competition.

“As far as we all know, you’re going to be in Tokyo. All indications are at this stage that it will be business as usual. So keep focused on your sport and be sure that the IOC is not going to send you into a pandemic situation.”

Pound also dismissed the idea of delayed the Games until the summer of 2021, pointing out that the enormity of the infrastructure required – and the $12.6 billion dollar cost officially amassed thus far – would make it an impossible task.

“You have to ask if you can hold the bubble together for an extra year,” he said. “Then, of course, you have to fit all of this into the entire international sports schedule.”

The modern Olympics have only ever been cancelled as a result of war, though several Games have seen mass boycotts on political grounds. In several cases, this has resulted in sport-specific fringe championships springing up around the world to accommodate athletes who were, well, all dressed up with nowhere to go. In 1980, for example, much of the world refused to attend the Moscow Olympics, and the creme-de-la-creme of the international eventing fraternity would, instead, head to France’s Fontainebleau for the alternative Olympics. In 1986, too, an alternative World Championship was set at Poland’s Bialy Bor, offering a chance to compete for those riders who didn’t want to travel their horses to Australia for the official championships. (Some riders did both, like Ginny Elliott, who became a double-World Champion that year when she swept both leaderboards.) But Pound worries that this approach takes away the essence of the Olympic ethos – its inclusivity.

“[It wouldn’t] constitute an Olympic Games. You’d end up with a series of world championships,” he said, pointing out that finding appropriate venues and infrastructure for that amount of sports within a 17-day period, and with only a few months of preparation time, would be extraordinarily difficult.

London, which successfully hosted the 2012 Games, has been mentioned as a possible candidate for a relocated Olympics – but this scenario looks unlikely.

Offers of help from further afield have only added extra tension to a tricky situation. Shaun Bailey, the Conservative party candidate for the 2020 London mayoral election, has suggested that the city – which successfully hosted the 2012 Games – take over this year’s iteration, prompting Tokyo governor Yuriko Koike to accuse him of using the virus for political gain.

Though much remains uncertain about the summer of sport, the next two weeks are a crucial window in which to curb the progress of the coronavirus in Japan, and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has called for all major sporting events in that timeframe to be cancelled or postponed to aid in its containment.

So what do you do, if you’re at the helm of the world’s biggest sporting celebration as an epidemic unfurls around it? You think like a horse person: that is, you prepare for the worst and you hope, ineffably for the best. That’s exactly what Olympics Minister Seiko Hashimoto is doing.

“We believe it is necessary to prepare for the worst-case scenario to improve our operations to achieve success,” he told the International Sports Press Association, or AIPS, intimating that plans are in place “to keep the Tokyo Olympics safe.”

But, he continues, “it is impossible to exclude the cancellation of the event at the moment. We will consider every detail, every data and ask ourselves if we are in control, and what risks are still present. As of now, we can say that the Olympics will take place and in Tokyo and that we are going ahead in the preparation, as athletes must do. Stopping an Olympiad is a huge decision that will certainly not be taken only by us.”

Should the situation be regarded as a done deal? Not necessarily. After all, the Rio Olympics carried on despite an outbreak of Zika virus, which hit tens of thousands of cases in the city, the epicentre of the epidemic. Despite calls for the Games to be moved, postponed, or cancelled altogether, the decision was made to carry on with increased protective measures against mosquitoes, the unwelcome carriers of the virus.

The IOC Executive Board will meet from the 3rd to the 5th of March in Lausanne, after which there may be an update on the – somewhat bumpy – trail to Tokyo. We’ll keep you up-to-date with all the developments as they’re released.

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

Be the cover of the calendar! Photo courtesy of MD Horse Trials.

Want to be the cover photo for the next Maryland Horse Trials Loch Moy Farm Calendar? You can be the star of the show — just submit a jumping photo of yourself and your horse competing at Maryland Horse Trials (bonus points for a logo banner) to this post on their Facebook page. Brb, searching to see if I have any cool ones from last year.

National Holiday: National Toast Day

U.S. Weekend Preview:

Twin River Winter H.T. [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Rocking Horse III H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Chattahoochee Hills H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Sporting Days Farm March H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

News From Around the Globe:

Tune in at 6 p.m. tonight for The Jon and Rick Show,  this week joined by USEF Developing Athlete Alex O’Neal. It’s sure to be an entertaining evening! [Jon and Rick Show]

One of the beautiful things about dressage is your ability to manipulate gaits with good training. Take it from somebody who rode a horse with a pony trot for many years, there are wonders to be achieved by training different things in the trot, and it can be modified from a rather plain pony gait into something more useful for the upper levels. International dressage judge Stephen Clarke gives advice on how to approach different types and improve their gaits with exercises. [How To Get the Most Out of Your Trot]

How do you compete in jumpers with little to no central vision? Wren Blae Zimmerman started suffering eyesight loss at just 17, learning soon after that she had Stargardt’s Macular Dystrophy, which destroys your central vision, leaving you with some peripheral vision intact. Not only this, but she started riding after college, and was immediately determined to try jumping. [The Horse Lends Me His Eyes]

A relaxed horse is a good partner, and relaxation is sometimes elusive. Tik Maynard thinks of relaxation and tension on a 1-10 scale, and believes when your horse is above a 3 on that scale, they’re not in a learning mindset. Figuring out what the physical signs of relaxation and tension are for your horse could be integral to improving your performances together. [How To Determine If Your Horse is Relaxed]

You can now register for the 9th edition of the FEI Sports Forum, which will take place April 6-7 at the IMD business school in Lausanne (SUI) and is open to all members of the equestrian industry and interested individuals. Since being launched in 2012, the Forum has become an essential tool in the FEI’s decision making process and an important platform for dialogue and consultation with the community. The deadline to register online is March 23. [Register]

Best of the Blogs: Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Doesn’t Deter Pearce-Dean

Featured Video: Intro spotlight! Randi Koehn and Wall Street won the Introductory B division at Fresno County Horse Park (Feb. 14-16), leading from start to finish on a score of 29.2. Here they are cross country, courtesy of Ride On Video.

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Introducing Let It Be Lee

Five-star eventer Elisa Wallace has a new upper-level partner in her string. Introducing Let It Be Lee, a 12-year-old Thoroughbred gelding (Bernstein X Sugaree, by Broad Brush) owned by Donna Biggs and Rosemarie Spillane. “Lee” raced under his Jockey Club name Leerider, making 12 career starts and earning almost $13,000 before coming off the track in 2011, and has previous eventing experience with Kyle Carter who produced him up to the Intermediate/ CCI3* level.

After first trying out Lee in December, the new team got their first run together under their belts with an outing at the Preliminary level at Three Lakes Winter I H.T. before stepping up to Intermediate at Rocking Horse Winter II where they finished in 10th place on a score of 50.4. Elisa shared this video of their first Intermediate together and walks us through each phase and how she’s working on building a relationship with her new partner. Good luck Elisa and Lee — we can’t wait to see you out and about more this season!

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