Classic Eventing Nation

Photo Gallery: Sunday Sights at Luhmühlen

Luhmühlen: a place of hopes, of dreams, of ill-advised lederhosen on very sweaty days. Du bist das Gelbe vom Ei. We will be sad to see you go, but if some of your uniformed riders are anything to go by, happy to watch you walk away. You have been a place of merry lunacy and jolly good sport, all wrapped up in a bun and served with sauerkraut. You have also offered us a marvellously luminous arena surface, which lent itself to pure joy as we photographed an enormously enjoyable showjumping session. And so, dear chums, dive into an image gallery showcasing the goings-on in Germany today. It’s been emotional.

Luhmühlen: Website|Final Scores|Live Stream|EN’s Coverage|EN’s Twitter|EN’s Instagram

Monday News & Notes from Fleeceworks

The dream team of Chatwin, Kelly Prather, Frankie Thieriot-Stutes and Tamie Smith. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Frankie Thieriot-Stutes and Chatwin had a fairytale week at Luhmuhlen in their CCI5*-L debut, delivering the best U.S. result at a European five-star since Marilyn Little and RF Scandalous also finished fourth at the same event in 2017. She was able to make the trip to Germany thanks to receiving the $50,000 Rebecca Broussard International Developing Rider Grant last year. Thank you to the Broussard family for their incredibly generous and continued support of U.S. eventing. Well done, Frankie. We are so proud!

National Holiday: National Take Your Cat To Work Day

Major Results:

Luhmühlen: WebsiteFinal ScoresLive StreamEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

U.S. Weekend Results:

Aspen Farm H.T. [Final Scores]

Woodland Stallion Station H.T. [Final Scores]

Seneca Valley Pony Club H.T. [Final Scores]

Full Gallop June H.T. [Final Scores]

Silverwood Farm H.T. [Final Scores]

Honey Run H.T. [Final Scores]

Golden Spike H.T. [Final Scores]

Valinor Farm H.T. [Final Scores]

Bucks County Horse Park H.T. [Final Scores]

Larkin Hill H.T. [Final Scores]

Your Monday News & Notes:

Maj. Gen. Jack Burton passed away on May 29, and his children wrote a wonderful obituary detailing his lifelong dedication to equestrianism and eventing. Jack served a 10-year term as Executive Vice President of the USET, a three-year term as USCTA president, and as an FEI judge and Technical Delegate in three disciplines until he retired at age 92. [Major General Jonathan R. Burton (1919-2019)]

Irish event rider Camilla Speirs shares a jumping exercise for improving agility, straightness and lead changes over a fence in this latest column from our friends at Horse & Hound. [#SundaySchool: how to improve lead changes over a fence]

Wayne Quarles judged the USEA Area IX Charles Owen Technical Merit Award at Golden Spike Horse Trials in Ogden, Utah, yesterday and shared insights into what he looks for in the riders. “I’ll be looking for riders with the right balance and the way they handle the turns and terrain. I want to see how they adjust themselves to ride whatever is happening underneath them.” [Judging the USEA Charles Owen Technical Merit Award with Wayne Quarles]

SmartPak Sweepstakes: Fill out this form to enter for a chance to win a Rambo Fly Buster Vamoose with No-Fly Zone from Horseware. [Rambo Fly Buster Vamoose with No-Fly Zone Sweepstakes]

Your Very Odd Monday Video:

This video has had the EN team cracking up all weekend. We don’t know why Tilly Berendt’s day one dressage report from Luhmūhlen is on YouTube with a Siri-like voice dictating every word, or why an incredibly random slideshow of photos gleaned from EN accompanies it. But we do agree that the unicorn slippers and Sam Watson dressed for a heist somehow make this solid gold.

Luhmühlen CCI5*-L Show Jumping: Tim Price Keeps it in the Family

Tim Price and Ascona M take the win in Luhmühlen’s CCI5*. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

One year ago, Tim Price was busy running a string of young horses at England’s Nunney Horse Trials. In a break between classes, he dashed to the organisers’ office, just in time to pull up the Luhmühlen live-stream and watch wife Jonelle take the victory riding her feisty grey mare, Faerie Dianimo. This year, the tables were turned, and Jonelle, who runs her own string at Nunney this weekend, was the one running for the nearest iPad.

“At least, I hope so,” laughs Tim, who delivered a clear round with 3.6 time penalties to take the win with his own feisty grey mare, Ascona M. “Maybe she’s just riding her horses and will find out later and tell me what I should do better!”

It’s a fitting touch that Tim’s win – his third at this level, and his second at this venue – should fall on Father’s Day. After all, it was fatherhood that brought the eleven-year-old mare to his string. For Tim and Jonelle, who have mastered the balancing act of parenting their young son, Otis, and scooping up a plethora of major wins as they do so, it’s all part and parcel of the day job – but the newly-crowned World Number One still feels the thrill, and the disbelief, of finding himself on top.

“It’s quite special coming back here; it’s like coming home,” he says, praising the efficient organisation and inimitable hospitality of the German showcase. “I still feel like I’m trying to make my way in this sport. I know that sounds silly because I’ve become Number One, which was also a surprise. It’s a great place to be, but it also feels like you’re carving your way. To come to somewhere where I’ve won before [at the five-star level] is a new feeling for me – a good feeling! This was the home of my first-ever five-star win, and no matter which one you go to, they’re so hard to win. These days don’t come around every day, or every year, or every half-century! It’s been a long, hard road – we have to invest so much time and faith into every horse, but then when you get there, it’s so much fun for everyone.”

Tim Price and the ‘outrageous’ Ascona M. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tim has certainly invested his fair share of faith in Ascona M, who is jointly owned by Sir Peter Vela, Suzanne Houchin, and Ben and Lucy Sangster. Talented but unconventional, she’s never been the most straightforward of rides.

“She’s wildly talented, and sometime’s she’s wildly wild – but she’s incredibly good, and now she’s learned to deliver that talent at the top level. It’s all still new discoveries with her, but it’s been a joy to bring her here and see that she’s very capable,” Tim explains. This is the mare’s second five-star: her debut came last year at Pau, where she sat in the top five after dressage but went for an early swim after an exuberant leap into the water. Nevertheless, Tim prevailed.

“This is her first time at this level, properly – we had one go before, unsuccessfully, and it lasted about one-and-a-half minutes on the cross-country! She’s now completed, which is job number one, and to complete with consistency in all three phases is something we all strive for, particularly with a green horse. It’s something I’m really proud of for her.”

As he rode into the arena today, he knew he was up against the real deal: fuelled by pickled herring sandwiches and incomprehensible German disco bangers, course designer Martin Otto builds a notoriously colossal course for the final phase at Luhmühlen. By the end of the 22-strong class, only two would manage to complete without adding penalties. Life, as the Germans say, is no pony farm – and nor is showjumping.

Tim Price and Ascona M leave nothing to chance in the main arena. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tim’s 3.6 time penalties might seem slightly drastic, but the time was among the tightest we’ve seen at this level – and after Alex Bragg and Zagreb knocked an unfortunate rail, Tim had over five penalties in hand. He could have had a rail, sure, and he could have had time – but to have both would have been to play with fire. Although Tim was once rather adept at juggling flaming batons, allegedly, his fire-playing days are well behind him, and so he rode a tactical round that allowed the mare, with her unique form, to record a steady clear.

“Today, I put myself into a mode that I was in for Burghley last year – [Ringwood Sky Boy] is a fairly similar horse,” he explains. “He’s much more experienced, but he’s lanky and not the most careful, so I tried to go to that place where I could just be relaxed and methodical and bring the jump out of her in the warm-up. I was a little bit slow, but she certainly jumped really well the whole way around, so I just need to find a little bit more time, maybe cut a few more turns and get a little bit closer, but I’m really pleased with her.

“What you feel in the moment is assertiveness from her, and determination, and then the athleticism through the questions. Then I watch it back and she’s upside-down, she’s throwing her head on landing, and I’m like, ‘ugh, that’s not as pretty as it felt!’ But I think the fact remains that she’s been very determined, and that’s why, despite not jumping every jump quite the same out here and sometimes doing something funny with her legs, it’s all through her desire to leave the poles up and get to the other side. She’s a stern mare.”

Tim’s victory makes five five-stars for the Price household. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Competitive success is all well and good, but the real question on everyone’s minds was this: why had Tim been so conspicuously absent from Luhmühlen’s party scene all week?

“Focus is a 24/7 thing for me, I think,” he explains, finally – and mercifully – parked in front of a drink for each hand. “It’s the whole process, from when you arrive until the moment you leave, so that I can feel good within myself and comfortable. Then it’s the closest I can get to feeling like I’m riding at home. That, with a little bit of the juice that the adrenaline gives you in the moment, is the recipe I’m looking for.”

“I call him Mr Fig because I can’t say his long name” – Tom McEwen and Figaro Van Het Broekxhof finish second. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

 

A clear round with just 1.2 time penalties allowed Tom McEwen and Figaro van het Broekxhof to climb from fourth after cross-country into second place. Although Tom is best known for his partnership with the spectacular Toledo de Kerser, he’s been quietly creating a superstar out of the fourteen-year-old gelding, tactically picking out the best of what’s been left behind by his several previous riders and adding his own touch to the recipe, too. One of the crucial elements has been his ability to gallop – and this season, it’s clear that he’s finally learned how to trust in, and transition within, the gait.

“I’m absolutely delighted with Mr Fig,” says Tom, for whom this is a career-best finish at this level. “Cross-country he was spot on the optimum time, and although he made me work towards the end, he’s so honest and true. He’s got an amazing heart in him, and an amazing, kind character that just wants to please you. Even though he’s tired, if you get him there with the right energy, you know he’s getting to the other side. I’ve never been past ten minutes [on cross-country] with him, so to feel him actually getting a bit tired yesterday and then to come out and jump a super clear today, well, I couldn’t be happier with him.”

Alex Bragg and Zagreb: back to their best. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s been a bittersweet week for Alex Bragg, who has skated so close to the top spot from the word go, but whose pole today stopped him from taking his first-ever five-star victory.

“It cost me the win, so it was pretty expensive,” he says with a sigh. But after a spring season of uncharacteristically lacklustre performances, he knows all too well how fleeting success can be – and to have his fifteen-year-old partner back to his very best is the first step on his committed campaign to taking the win he’s due.

“Zagreb felt amazing after cross-country, and he trotted up well. I was probably thinking after the treble combination that the bulk of the work was done, and the one thing I needed to do was put some pressure on Tim,” he explains. “The time was tight, so I needed to make the time to put that pressure on. I cut across the upright, thinking that it was an easy fence for the horse to jump so I wouldn’t have to waste time, and unfortunately he touched it with a back toe and dropped the rail. Where I was trying to grab an inch, I actually lost a place.”

“It’s very unfortunate – we’re all here to try to win, and obviously I’m thrilled to be here and on the podium today, the horse has done a great performance. But I’d love to be sat in Tim’s spot as the winner, and that’s what I’m always going to try to do. But it was no fault of the horse – it was just enthusiasm from me to try to put that pressure on so he would make a mistake. And he didn’t – he went steady, and he had the time in hand that he needed. I’m not going to leave here disappointed, that’s for sure.”

Frankie Thieriot Stutes and Chatwin finish clear and with one of the fastest rounds of the day, adding 0.8 time penalties to finish fourth. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Amid a top ten filled with enormously experienced five-star competitors, a debutante pair made a profound mark. Frankie Thieriot Stutes has been waiting a long time – fifteen years, to be precise – to compete at this level, and just to start this week with her phenomenal partner Chatwin was a dream come true. To finish in fourth place after jumping clear and adding just 0.8 time was something beyond dreaming.

“He’s just such an amazing horse – he’s pretty tanked today,” laughs Frankie. “In the warm-up, I felt like he was a little tired, and he went in and as always, he just tried his hardest. All the way to the last fence, he gave me everything he had.”

Despite balancing her competitive pursuits with motherhood and the running of her own marketing business, Frankie takes a decidedly focused approach to how she prepares for her runs. As a result, she was able to ride into the main arena today without feeling the weight of intimidation when she saw the tough course towering over her.

“I’ve been practicing a lot, actually, at home with Erik Duvander and my showjumping coach, so I was lucky to have set up a 1.30 course in our practice ring last week with Erik,” she says. “That was so helpful. It helped me, too, that there weren’t a tonne of related distances, so I could just keep it coming through those turns. I think it was a big track where you had to keep coming – we had a tiny little bit of time, sure, but those are things to work on for the future.”

The girl’s done good: Frankie Thieriot Stutes celebrates a clear round with Chatwin. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The future is something Frankie talks about a lot, and always as something to be worked towards. Despite her incredible result this week, she’s already begun to dissect the elements she can improve upon, ready for her next run.

“I knew he was capable of producing the result. One of the judges came up to me in the prizegiving and said ‘we really thought you and your horse were going to make the time [yesterday]’,” she says. “I thought so too, but we learned so much – this is a different track than anything we’ve ever experienced, and I know how to be a little quicker through the trees next time. I’d walked very careful lines through the trees, and every single turn, but it comes up very, very fast in there – you just end up in survival mode around those turns!

“I think we have some really good homework, and I’m elated with how things turned out, and so, so proud of my horse. I’m so grateful to have had Kelly [Prather] and Tamie [Smith] here, too, and Allie [Knowles], and Sherry [Stewart], and everyone from the US – I think it’s just really special. My mom and my boys are at home, holding down the fort, and today’s Father’s Day – it’s hard to miss those things, but I’m so lucky to have an amazing family that lets me run off to Germany to do this.”

A team effort: Frankie Thieriot Stutes and Chatwin have been well-supported this week. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Frankie has made her way to Germany with the support of the Rebecca Broussard grant, a legacy fund set up in honour of its late namesake, a prominent member of the US eventing community.

“I wouldn’t be here without that grant,” says Frankie. “When you’re a Rebecca Broussard recipient, it’s a tremendous honour, and it means that people believe in you – sometimes more than you believe in yourself! I really wanted to come here and show them that believing in me was worth it. I hope we did that.”

Sarah Bullimore and Reve du Rouet. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Sarah Bullimore might be one of the most underrated event riders in the world, but don’t be surprised when one of these days, she storms in and takes every available spot on the leaderboard. She finished in the top ten aboard both her horses – top ride Reve du Rouet tipped a single rail to finish fifth, while the sharp, spooky Conpierre produced one of the two fault-free rounds of the day, finishing eighth. A remarkable feat, sure, but this isn’t the first time we’ve seen Sarah quietly dominate a five-star – she took three horses to that famously tough Pau in 2017, missing out on the win by a tenth of a penalty and completing with all three horses clear and in the top thirteen.

Yoshiaki Oiwa and Calle 44. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though the chance of a first five-star win for Japan was scuppered by the unfortunate retirement of Kazuma Tomoto yesterday, the hugely experienced Yoshiaki Oiwa made sure that his home nation maintained a presence in the top ten. He finished sixth with his 2017 Bramham winner Calle 44 after knocking a rail but adding no time penalties.

Sam Griffiths and Paulank Brockagh, one of the most experienced combinations in the field, finish seventh. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Two time faults and a knocked rail from the second element of the double saw 2014 Badminton winners Sam Griffiths and Paulank Brockagh finish seventh. Remarkably, this means that Frank and Paula Cullen’s sixteen-year-old mare (Touchdown x Calendar Girl) has now had a top-ten placing in all four of Europe’s five-star events.

Becky Woolven and DHI Babette K record a career best for the rider. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Becky Woolven enjoyed her best-ever result at this level, which she ordinarily frequents with Charlton Down Riverdance. This week, she rode five-star debutante DHI Babette K, who climbed from nineteenth after dressage to eventual ninth, toppling one rail today but remaining in situ. Rounding out the top ten is Denmark’s Peter Flarup and the exceptional Frankie, making it a double of top-ten finishes for the pair.

That’s all from us for now from what has been a truly weird, wonderfully vibrant week of sport at Luhmühlen. We’ll be back shortly with a full image gallery from the five-star and a report from the CCI4*-S Meßmer Trophy – but in the meantime, we’ll be dealing with our end-of-event Kummerspeck – that is, the excess weight we’ve put on from all our emotional eating. Literal translation? GRIEF BACON.

The final top ten at the conclusion of Luhmühlen’s CCI5*.

Luhmühlen: Website|Entries|Live Scoring|Form Guide|Entries & Start Times|Live Stream|EN’s Coverage|EN’s Twitter|EN’s Instagram

Meet Hylofit’s Next Top Amateur and Her OTTB

EN received an overwhelming response to Hylofit’s Next Top Amateur Contest. Thank you to all who entered and shared your stories. EN and Hylofit ultimately selected Canadian event rider Courtenay Tuxhorn as the winner. She will receive the Hylofit System and a lifetime membership to help prepare for her goal of competing in the Training Three-Day at Rebecca Farm and beyond.

Hylofit also selected four finalists who will receive a discount on the hardware and a lifetime membership. Congratulations to our winner and the four finalists: Kathy Nolan, Jolie JantzJeffie Chaplin and Mallory Stiver. EN will publish all five of their entries, starting with our big winner. Read on to meet Courtenay and her OTTB, Bam. Go Eventing.

Courtney Tuxhorn and BA Messenger. Photo by MGO Photography.

In January 2017, BA Messenger (“Bam”) was a newly-retired race winner on stall rest for a bowed tendon at Laurel Park in Maryland. I was an adult re-rider and recent transplant to Canada, spending a few evenings a week after work at an eventing barn outside Calgary getting a failed school horse fit to sell.

I had been browsing the CANTER trainer listings on and off for a while — I saw Bam listed on the site, and it was like I had stepped into a dream. Years of waiting, saving, and riding other people’s horses … yes it’s cliché, but this horse was the one. I picked up the phone, found help among friends and family on the ground in Maryland, and a week later I owned a horse. He spent eight months relaxing in a field, and then boarded a semi-truck bound for Canada.

“What if you ship him all the way up here and he doesn’t jump?” my husband asked me. “Then we’ll do dressage,” I shrugged. “But I think he can jump.” Now, just two years later, Bam and I are qualified for a classic format Training Level three-day event, on our way to realizing our 2019 goal of competing at Rebecca Farm in July.

Bam is not the only ex-racer in this partnership. I was solely focused on riding when I was growing up – galloping thoroughbreds, finding restart projects, and competing in hunter/jumper shows in Maryland and Virginia. I thought I would always be an equestrian, but when the financial reality of entering the job force after college pushed me out of the saddle for more than a decade, I found a cheaper yet also exhilarating form of riding: on two wheels.

Over the next decade I won bike races, learned to swim, won triathlons, won a marathon, and, then, like my horse, suffered a career-ending injury. During this process I taught myself a lot about preparing an athlete to excel at three different disciplines simultaneously — it’s one big reason why, when I finally felt grown-up enough that I could afford to ride again, I wanted to find and train my own Thoroughbred to three-day event.

Training with Hylofit

As a former professional athlete, I know first-hand how important heart rate is for fitness management. I trained with a heart rate monitor throughout my racing career, using it to target load during workouts and to monitor my recovery and my adaptation throughout my training cycle. I would be thrilled to integrate the Hylofit System into Bam’s and my training, and will use it to make us even better at our new favorite sport.

Leading up to the classic format event at Rebecca Farm, I will use the Hylofit System to optimize Bam’s fitness sessions. Specifically, I’ll verify how he’s responding to our canter sets and adjust workouts as necessary. Is his heart rate at threshold during each canter segment? Is 2 minutes the right time between sets for his heart rate to come back into an aerobic zone? How quickly over time is he getting more efficient at performing the same workout?

Because we are located in Canada, most of our training this year has been in an indoor arena. Now that the snow is finally gone, and we can ride outside, what’s happening to his heart rate as we perform fitness workouts over terrain? Similarly, now that we have space to gallop, I’d like to determine his average heart rate at our competition speed and then use that information to do threshold sets on moderate inclines, in order to lessen the impact on his legs while still getting the cardiovascular workout he needs.

We will also use the Hylofit System in our dressage work, specifically to learn what triggers his anxiety both in and out of the ring. He has such a powerful desire to excel that in dressage it can manifest itself as tension. Using Hylofit, I will observe what techniques and what habits in my riding can most effectively calm his pounding heart when he gets nervous. He has demonstrated he can earn 8’s in his movements, and I know Hylofit can help us earn them more consistently by helping us refine our strategies and our timing.

While Bam’s fitness is my top priority, I will also use the Hylofit System to monitor my heart rate during rides alongside his. How in sync are we?  Is my heart rate showing signs that I need to pay more attention to my fitness out of the saddle? I will also observe my heart rate during competitions to see if I can glean some heart rate-related insights into managing and channeling my nerves.

Finally, the Hylofit System will help me fulfill my most important responsibility as Bam’s owner and rider, which is to take care of his health and happiness. On average, Bam and I take two or three lessons per month. Most of the time we are on our own, following a training plan I have designed for us with my research, feedback I sense from my horse, and input from the coaches with whom we ride.

After both of our experiences with injury from racing, I am a worrier verging on over-protection — and to me there is no better antidote to anxiety than data. I video our rides to keep track of our progress. I monitor his vital signs regularly, and I know the contours of his legs and back better than my own. Hylofit will help me take his care to the next level, adding quantitative data to the qualitative data we are already collecting.

Bam is an incredible athlete, and has demonstrated time and again that he’s more than willing to do whatever I ask of him. With Hylofit, I can ensure what I ask of him is always fair, always something he is fit enough and ready to do.

Sunday Video: Speed Around Luhmühlen CCI4*-S XC with Andrew Hoy

Australia’s Andrew Hoy and Vassily de Lassos posted one of seven double-clear rounds out of 51 Luhmühlen CCI4*-S cross country starters, and the fastest time of their division. Now he’s posted the helmet cam so that we can ride along.

You’ll recall this striking chestnut powerhouse from the 2018 World Equestrian Games in Tryon, where the 10-year-old Anglo-Arab gelding (Jaguar Mail x Illusion Perdue, by Jalienny), owned by Paula and David Evans and the rider, finished 4th.

You know it’s serious when there’s unicorn emoji involved!

The pair sits 7th heading into Luhmühlen show jumping on their dressage score of 31.8. You can view the complete CCI4*-S leaderboard here. A German is almost guaranteed to take the win … but which one?

We’ll be along shortly with a full report from the headlining CCI5* division, which has been won by Tim Price and the great grey mare Ascona M.

Go Eventing.

Luhmühlen: WebsiteEntries & Start TimesLive ScoresLive StreamEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

Luhmuhlen CCI5*: All Horses Pass Final Horse Inspection

Frankie Thieriot Stutes and Chatwin share a quiet moment after successfully presenting to the ground jury. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

After the drama of yesterday morning, all anyone wanted was a relaxed, drama-free start to Sunday at Luhmühlen. And that’s exactly what they got: each of the 22 horses who completed cross-country were brought forward in front of the ground jury of Christina Klingspor (SWE), Anne-Marie Taylor (GBR), and Martin Plewa (GER), and each of them was accepted. Done, dusted, and all the more time to find oneself a Fischbrötchen and wipe away the last debris of a long night singing along to this banger:

The five-star showjumping will get underway at 11.45 a.m. local time/10.45 a.m. BST/5.45 a.m. EST, and will run in reverse order of merit. While we don’t have set times for each horse and rider combination, we can tell you that Frankie Thieriot Stutes and Chatwin, who sit in eighth place, will be fifteenth to jump. We can also tell you that the showjumping course, in true Luhmühlen fashion, is seriously big and seriously tough. It’s not going to be an easy feat to win this one today, folks.

Overnight leaders Tim Price and Ascona M. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Live-streaming, as usual, will be available via Horse&Country TV – check out our footer links to find your way there. Now, one last time, jetzt geht’s um die Wurst. Catch you on the flip side, chums.

Luhmühlen: Website|Entries|Live Scoring|Form Guide|Entries & Start Times|Live Stream|EN’s Coverage|EN’s Twitter|EN’s Instagram

Sunday Links Presented by One K Helmets

Photo by Abby Powell.

Every single time I come out of the dressage ring at a show my dad looks up at me from the ground and says, “Looked good to me.”

It’s funny (and he knows it – he’s full of those patented “Dad jokes”) because he has no idea what dressage is supposed to look like — he’s not a horse person. Yet despite not being a horse person, he’s been to almost every single one of my horse shows I’ve ever competed in, including many that have fallen on Father’s Day. Thanks Dad, for being the best non-horsey horse show dad around. But really, thanks for just being the best Dad.

National Holiday: Father’s Day

Major Events:

Luhmühlen: WebsiteEntries & Start TimesLive ScoresLive StreamEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

U.S. Weekend Action:

Aspen Farm H.T. [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Woodland Stallion Station H.T. [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Seneca Valley Pony Club H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Full Gallop June H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Silverwood Farm H.T. [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Honey Run H.T. [Website] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Golden Spike H.T. [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Valinor Farm H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Bucks County Horse Park H.T. [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Larkin Hill H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Sunday Links:

Time to Get Qualified For the YEH Championships!

Tips for Greener Horse Trails

Correct Use of the Dressage Whip

Dressage horses opt for lower rein tensions than those used by their riders – study

Hot on Horse Nation: How to Fill Your Hay Net the Easy Way

Sunday Video: Tamie Smith for the win! She wrangled up a bunch of clips of Frankie and Chatwin out of course!

View this post on Instagram

@frankietstutes & Chatwin clips from today at Luhmuhlen!!

A post shared by Tamie Smith (@tsmitheventing) on

Luhmühlen CCI5* Cross Country: Tim Price Romps into the Lead

The beginning of the deluge. Also an excuse to look at Andreas Ostholt. #sinningiswinning

Earth had been many days in the making, proclaimed the Book of Genesis, when the big guy in the sky looked down upon his creation and realised that its denizens had become all tangled up in immoral excesses, illicit behaviour, and idolatry. You know, the fun stuff. As a result, he sent a sweeping flood to wipe out all the very naughty boys and girls, so he could start again with whoever had made it onto Noah’s Ark. What’s the best way to solve a crisis of morality? Generations of inbreeding, apparently.

Luhmühlen is known for a lot of things: its almost indescribable German hospitality, its very good doner kebabs, and, well, its parties. And this iteration certainly hasn’t disappointed – lured in by a free bar, like a gleaming apple in the Garden of Eden, the great and good of the eventing community descending on Thursday for a night of truly exceptional excess. If there is a deity greater than all of us, he was not amused. And so he sent the floods.

Incredible thunder storms racked Luhmühlen through the wee hours of the morning, rendering the previously sun-soaked venue almost completely unrecognisable. In the lorry park, the water was so deep that rogue bales of shavings were dancing their way to a new life somewhere far, far away, and the trade village could have been used as an extra water complex. In the middle of the flooding, a lone coffee van stood open, endlessly optimistic, while its operator peered around at the new landscape before him. Somewhere on course, Alex Bragg sheltered beneath a tree, broadcasting the storm as it ricocheted around him. (Yes, that’s right, he stood beneath a tree and used his mobile phone while lightening sparked and cracked around him. Look, he’s very nice, and he’s a very good rider, so we’ll forgive these transgressions of sanity and sense.)

It could have gone either way, really – any other venue, not blessed with such well-draining ground, might have had to cancel. But the Germans are nothing if not efficient and determined, and with the help of the local fire brigade – and some savvy re-timetabling – the show could go on. The immoral sons of Eventing Jesus were victorious.

Well, mostly. 33 competitors started on course in the third five-star of the year, and 22 would complete – exactly two-thirds, which is the magic number we tend to expect from a competition of this level. Of those 22 who made it to the finish, 19 would jump clear, and four would romp home within the optimum time. This makes Tim Price our first course-preview expert to accurately guess the number of time-makers, which we’re sure is his proudest victory of the day.

Tim Price and Ascona M step into the lead after a nearly perfect cross-country round. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We kid, of course. Tim Price and Ascona M stepped into the lead after offering up a masterclass in cross-country riding, and following the unfortunate retirement of dressage leaders Kazuma Tomoto and Brookpark Vikenti. They added just two time penalties, sadly marring a remarkable record: until now, Ascona M had never added a single time penalty across the country in any of her long-format completions. Not one. But who cares, really, when you’re sitting aboard an ultra-talented up-and-comer, ready to fight to keep a trophy in the family?

“Ascona’s a really lovely mare with a lot of talent, but often being a bit too courageous in her approach to a job,” says Tim of the German-bred mare, who was sourced reasonably locally to Luhmühlen at Peter Thomson’s yard. “She’s maturing now, though, and I feel like I can let her do the job, and she understands everything. That’s what I was hoping for today.

“The time, for me, was quite difficult – she’s not a full-blooded mare, so I needed to be in the rhythm from the beginning. She’s a little bit inexperienced at this level, so I had to begin a little bit conservatively to make sure she was organised in her mind and in her body, so then I could press a little bit more as we went on. That’s possibly where we lost the time. All the combinations were as I was hoping, except for one or two places – at the Meßmer Water, I left one out coming to the skinny, which wasn’t the plan, but it seemed like the right thing to do. Other than that, it was just a nice round. They get more tired as you go round, but she stayed with me and stayed focused, and I was really proud of her.”

Ascona M shows off her typical flamboyance. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Ascona M was originally piloted by Luhmühlen’s reigning champion – Tim’s wife, Jonelle.

“It’s a bit of an advantage, not only to have two riders in one camp, but to have two very different riders. When we got Ascona M, she wasn’t anywhere near the size she is now, and so she was for Jonelle, who produced her for the first couple of years. But then she grew and grew as a seven, eight, and nine-year-old, which is quite late, and that was the first time that I gave Jonelle a little nudge and said, ‘maybe she’s a little bit tall for you…?’ But the real natural thing was that Jonelle became pregnant, so I took on a few rides. Then, the mare just stayed with me as a bit of a natural transition.”

Alex Bragg and Zagreb. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

One of the first riders on course was also one of the first to deliver a blazingly fast clear round, leaving some to wonder if the time would, perhaps, be all too catchable. But this is what happens when you see pure class in action: it makes everything it touches look laughably easy. That’s exactly what second-placed Alex Bragg and his back-on-form Zagreb did.

“He’s a great horse – I’ve had him since he was four, and he’s forged my career, really,” says Alex. “I think he’s very much like me – he’s taken my characteristics. He’s a bit of a warrior; a month ago, we were at Chatsworth, and I was chasing the time in the Event Rider Masters, turned a little bit tight, and we both hit the deck – and a month later, here we are at Luhmühlen, and he’s just pulled out a fantastic clear round inside the time. I think he was pretty much foot-perfect. He’s 100% committed to the job, and he always gives me everything he can. You’ve got to love a horse for that. It’s my job, now, to pick the right runs for him and do him some justice, so he can earn those successes. He works so hard for me, and he deserves some good results.”

Twinkle toes: Alex Bragg and Zagreb race into the main arena. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though it feels like we’ve been able to enjoy Alex – and Zagreb – at the top levels for years, he’s actually a reasonably recent convert to the sport. The former farrier was actually a rugby player in a previous life, before a chance encounter over a hot anvil led to a meet-cute with his now wife, Simmone. When she fell pregnant with their first daughter, Alex began to ride her eventer, doing fitness work to keep it fit while she was out of action.

“That’s how my eventing career began,” says Alex, as Tim reaches over for a high-five. “I’d never been cross-country before, and it was something I wanted to do more of. But as you can imagine, from playing rugby, I was in the gym a lot and I was very muscular – so I looked like a gorilla doing dressage! Slowly, over the years, I’ve managed to change a bit. I wouldn’t say I’m as good as some of these guys, but I’m getting better all the time … Tim says I look like a chimpanzee now! But I’m still better-looking than him, so that’s all good.”

Alex maintains his farriery skills by shoeing his own horses, as well as the ponies owned by his children – and, when the need arises, those of his competitors in the stables at events.

“I love this community – it’s a real family feel,” he says. “We’re all competitors, but we’ll all go downstairs and have a drink and a laugh together. I think that’s what’s so wonderful about equestrianism, but most of all, about eventing.”

We’ll raise a glass to that, Alex. Meet you at the bar.

Sarah Bullimore and Reve du Rouet – third overnight. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Two exceptional clear rounds saw Sarah Bullimore keep both her rides in the top ten overnight, with Reve du Rouet stepping up into third place and staying on his 32.1 dressage, and Conpierre adding 8.4 time penalties to round out the top ten.

“I had to work a little bit at the end – we came up towards the last water, and he did think – ‘oh, there’s home!’ But then he had to turn away and keep going, so he was a little bit slow through that water,” says Sarah of third-placed Reve du Rouet, known at home as Blou. “That made him think he was a bit tired, but actually, he was really good. He jumped the last incredibly well and has recovered amazingly quickly.”

Reve du Rouet is as famous for his occasional trips to the dark side as he is for his undeniable talent, but as he gets older and more established, his old trick of bolting in the arena seems to have fallen by the wayside. That niggle has been made worth it by his incredible capacity for the job, as Sarah explains: “He’s such an awesome jumper, and I do trust him. If there’s one horse I’d want to jump any course on, it’s him. He’s got scope to burn, and you’d jump the moon on him, you really would. He’s amazing; he gives you such a good feel over a fence.”

With two horses to ride, bookending the day’s action, Sarah found herself falling out of touch with the day’s proceedings. That meant that, after a gratifying day in the office, it came as a welcome surprise to find out just how well she’d done.

“I don’t even know who else is here today – I haven’t watched anything,” she admits with a laugh. “I had no clue! When they said, ‘you need to go to the press conference!’ I said, ‘oh?’ And they said, ‘you’re in third!’ Oh! I had absolutely no idea. So then I was like, damn, that dressage score … but I was chuffed to bits with him.”

Prepare for take-off: Tom McEwen displays some vintage cross-country gumption, propelling Figaro van het Broekxhof through the tough final water with a hunting-style shout and some very committed elbows. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tom McEwen stepped into the top ten, climbing from eleventh to fourth aboard his Belton winner Figaro van het Broekxhof. This season, he’s been methodically creating a superstar out of the overgrown Belgian gelding, and today, it paid dividends – this is the horse’s second five-star start (though his first with Tom) and his first completion, and he finished inside the time after some decisive riding by Tom.

Sam Griffiths and Paulank Brockagh. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Japan’s Yoshiaki Oiwa and his WEG mount and 2017 Bramham winner Calle 44 added just two time penalties to climb two places into overnight fifth, while Denmark’s Peter Flarup and Frankie produced another impressive performance, coming home inside the time and proving that last year’s Pau result was no fluke. They’ll sit sixth overnight, just ahead of Australia’s Sam Griffiths, whose Badminton-winning supermare Paulank Brockagh skipped around the course with a smile on her face for 3.2 time penalties and seventh place.

“She’s very experienced and has done lots of five-stars now, so hopefully we can finish the competition and add this string to our bow,” says Sam, who took Badminton in a year that will forever be remembered for its horrific downpour. “I think anywhere else in the world, the event today would have been cancelled [after the rain] – it was like being in the tropics. It was great that we could keep performing, and it’s paid off so far!”

Frankie Thieriot Stutes and Chatwin. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Frankie Thieriot Stutes and Chatwin might have been contesting their first-ever five-star track, but you’d have been hard-pressed to guess it: they left the start box in a blaze of conviction, and returned in a blaze of glory. 6.4 time penalties saw them slip from third after dressage to overnight eighth, but for a five-star debut? Well, we’d take it.

“He’s such a fighter, that horse – he fought for me all the way to the end. I actually lost my stirrup at the last water, coming in, and I thought, ‘wow, what a time to lose your stirrup!’ But I just got him there, and he answered all the questions – I’m really proud of him. I’m disappointed to have a little time today, but if you can walk away from your first five-star just disappointed over a little time, then that’s okay – there’s just some homework to do, and this is a twistier course than we’ve ever done,” says Frankie. “It’s pretty special to bring my horse, who’s lived in the U.S. for the last six years, home to do his first five-star.”

Frankie sits just shy of two points ahead of ninth-placed Becky Woolven and DHI Babette K, who lie ninth overnight after climbing ten places.

Allie Knowles and Sound Prospect. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Problems were scattered evenly across the course today, with the two most influential fences – the skinny at 17 and the C element of the corner complex at 11ABC – only claiming three and four victims, respectively. Several notable names failed to complete: dressage leader Kazuma Tomoto and Brookpark Vikenti picked up twenty penalties for a runout at the angled C element of the coffin, and then another at the final skinny of the second water on course, where they ultimately retired. Allie Knowles was the unlucky recipient of a surprise dunking after Sound Prospect tripped in the first water, and Andreas Dibowski fell from FRH Butts Alvedon at fence 7, an innocuous table.

“To be honest, I thought I’d made it a bit soft – but by the end of the day, I was quite please I hadn’t made it much harder than it was,” said course designer Mike Etherington-Smith. “For me, it’s always interesting as a course designer – I spend the day watching horses, watching how they travel, how they work, and how they jump, despite what the riders may or may not do. But the last 800m to 1km is the most interesting – you watch them at the start, and you watch them coming home, and you can tell if they’ve had a good experience or not. Particularly with the younger horses, you want to see them grow as they go around – and I was pleased with what I saw as they came home.”

We’ll be back tomorrow morning with all the news from the final horse inspection, which takes place at 10.00 a.m. local time/9.00 a.m. BST/4.00 a.m. EST. Catch you on the flip side (or at the bar)!

The top ten after an action-packed day of cross-country at Luhmühlen.

Luhmühlen: WebsiteEntries & Start TimesLive ScoresLive StreamEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

 

The Usual Suspects: It’s Still Michi-Ingrid-Julia After Luhmühlen CCI4*-S Cross Country

Julia Krajewski (GER) with Samourai du Thot. Photo by Adrian Fohl.

It’s wildly entertaining to see Germany’s eventing heavyweights duking it out at the top of the Luhmühlen CCI4*-S Meßmer Trophy leaderboard, and the cage match continued on the cross country course today. The top two after dressageJulia Krajewski with Samourai du Thot and Ingrid Klimke with SAP Asha P, refused to budge, while third-placed Michael Jung kept his rank but switched out the horse.

When Luhmühlen got drenched with what EN’s boots-on-the-ground (Wellies, we hope!) reporter Tilly Berendt described as “an epic bucketload of rain,” the CCI4*-S cross country start got pushed back to lunchtime to allow for the floodwaters to recede get syphoned out by the local fire department.

Michael Jung was first out on course with his previously third-placed mount Creevagh Cooley. The mare, a new ride for Michael, fell at the second element of the #5ABC combination, a corner between two log skinnies. Bionic as ever, Michael went on to pilot his two other rides, Highlighter and Corazon, successfully around the course. A clear, fast round propelled Highlighter from 7th into 3rd; Corazon had 8.8 time penalties to move from 8th to 16th.

“I am super pleased with this young horse,” Michael said of Highlighter, an 8-year-old stallion. “He’s still a little green and I’ve brought him on slowly but today I was able to ride him a little faster to stay within the time and he presented himself beautifully in this difficult course.”

A tenth of a point separate Julia and Ingrid, who remain 1-2 on their dressage scores of 24.7 and 24.8 respectively. By all accounts the footing was no worse for the wear after the morning storms, as Luhmühlen’s ground can apparently take a lot of water and was excellently prepared. But the umbrellas lining the galloping lines did, apparently, take some horses by surprise — including the CCI4*-S leader.

“I know Sam really well and vice versa, which always helps,” Julia said. “At first he glanced at all the umbrellas but quickly focused back on me and the job at hand. He was superb and gave me a fabulous feeling all the way. Luckily he rides so well, which saves a lot of time at the fences.”

Ingrid was over the moon with Asha P’s performance today. “I was thrilled the mare rode so positively all the way round,” she reflected. “She thoroughly enjoyed our round and so did I. The spectators are brilliant and they really carried us round the course. Asha is a super fast horse and she rode just as I thought she would.”

German riders hold the next two leaderboard spots as well. Felix Etzel and Bandit are currently in 4th: “I am so happy we stayed without any jumping penalties in this technical course. Unfortunately, we didn’t quite make the optimum time. Bandit seemed a little taken aback by the atmosphere at first, but his concentration improved throughout the course.”

Rounding out the top five is Dirk Schrade with Unteam de la Cense, who jumped clear with 1.2 time penalties. “The ground was surprisingly good after all that rain we had this morning,” Dirk said. “But the quality of the grounds in Luhmühlen has always been very excellent. My horse was fantastic to ride but for me it was important to finish this course safe and sound.”

Japan’s Yoshiaki Oiwa is 6th with Bart L JRA.“So far my horse has only competed at smaller events last season and we haven’t been a team for long,” Yoshiaki said. “Today he rode amazingly and I could not be more pleased. This horse is quite shy and I thought he might find the atmosphere a little troublesome but he was great!”

As we noted yesterday, Luhmühlen’s CCI4*-S competition might not have top billing but it’s as equally fierce as the CCI5*-L headliner. A German dream team for the 2019 FEI European Championships is clearly under construction … who will we see back at Luhmühlen, which is hosting the Euros, in August? Stay tuned.

You can view the complete CCI4*-S leaderboard here.

CCI4*-S Top 10 After Cross Country:

 

Luhmühlen: WebsiteEntries & Start TimesLive ScoresLive StreamEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

Jill of All Trades: Watch Ingrid Klimke Post a PB Score in the Grand Prix Freestyle at Wiesbaden

Why do the Germans keep kicking everyone’s butts all over the place, all of the time? Certainly a piece of the puzzle is that, as opposed to being mediocre in three disciplines, the best Germans have become specialists in each of eventing’s three phases. Exhibit A: Michael Jung’s sideline success as a show jumper, or — see video above — Ingrid Klimke’s proficiency in the straight dressage arena. Sure, she’s got dressage in her DNA (literally), but it’s still impressive.

The video, posted by Dressage Hub, shows Ingrid performing her winning Grand Prix CDI4* Freestyle at last weekend’s Wiesbaden aboard Franziskus, an 11-year-old Hanoverian stallion (Fidertanz 2 x Antara, by Alabaster) owned by Wilhelm Holkenbrink. Her score, an 80.68%, was the highest dressage score of her career and her first above 80%.

In addition to winning the Freestyle, the pair won the CDI4* Grand Prix as well on 74.3%. And then Ingrid went on to place 3rd in Wiesbaden’s Event Rider Masters CCI4*-S class with SAP Hale Bob OLD. Their dressage score? An ERM record-breaking 16.4. See EN’s Wiesbaden report here.

Ingrid is currently second in the Luhmühlen CCI4*-S with SAP Asha P, just a tenth of a point behind leaders Julia Krajewski with Samourai du Thot after the cross country phase. Read EN’s cross country report here; you can view the complete CCI4*-S leaderboard here.

Go eventing — and eventing with a little dressage on the side!