Articles Written 1,831
Article Views 4,462,429

Tilly Berendt

Achievements

Become an Eventing Nation Blogger

About Tilly Berendt

Latest Articles Written

Who Jumped it Best? Showjumping with the Eight- and Nine-Year-Olds at Blenheim Edition

I love the eight- and nine-year-old CCI4*-S at Blenheim quite unabashedly. I love the chance that we’re seeing the fledgling start of top-level careers for horses that could well go on to be absolute legends of the sport — after all, the class has an insane track record of producing five-star winners. I love the wide-eyed, starstruck horses who gradually grow into themselves through the week. I love the figuring-out process of a first-timer and the big sophomore-in-high-school vibes of the horses who are coming back for their second year. I love the developmental process. I love it all so much that I even rolled out of bed at 6.00 a.m. on Saturday to be there in time for just under 100 horses to begin showjumping at 8.00 a.m., before a full day of cross-country. Commitment? Insanity? Who knows.

Our WJIB today takes us back to that cold, dewy, early morning start. It might be quite mean to use an upright for this game — after all, they don’t exactly tend to pull beautiful bascules out of horses, especially eventers. But I’ve chosen it for two reasons: one, because it was one of the fences I could easily photograph without sacrificing proximity to a coffee machine, and two, because it was part of an interesting line on the course. It came just over halfway through, and after landing from this upright, riders had to execute a pretty sharp right-handed turn to an oxer, which they could get to on either an outside line around another fence, or a nifty inside one. Time was pretty easy to rack up out there; for some riders, the morning dew on the grass added a slip factor, and the whole arena’s pretty undulating, too, which meant that showjumping became influential — so influential, in fact, that first-phase leaders Tom McEwen and MHS Brown Jack were eliminated for having too many rails down. Sometimes, it’s too early for a plot twist, y’know?

So, with all this in mind, cast your eye over our selection of horses and riders to decide which you think made the best effort over the fence in order to, hopefully, negotiate the next question — and then scroll down to plug in your vote.

Emily King and Jackpot. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

James Avery and Dallas 13. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Katie Malensek and Landjaeger. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Saffron Cresswell and Vivendi Hero. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Selina Milnes and Cooley Snapchat. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Stephen Heal and Quidam de Lux. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tiana Coudray and D’Artagnan. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Now, it’s over to you, folks — cast your vote for the best of the bunch below:

EN’s coverage of Blenheim is presented by Kentucky Performance Products. Click here to learn all about their full line of science-backed nutritional support products, including Neigh-Lox Advanced for digestive support.

Blenheim Palace International: [Website] [Entries] [Live Stream]

Safety is the Ultimate Style: Save 20% During SmartPak’s Safety Week Sale

Here’s a few facts for you: did you know, for example, that wearing a properly-fitted and certified helmet can reduce your risk of a fatal injury from a fall by up to 80%? Did you also know that even without having taken a hit — because I hope, by now, that we all know we need to replace our helmets after a fall or even just a drop on the floor! — your helmet has an ‘expiry date’, and after 3–5 years, you should be replacing it as a matter of routine?

Riding horses certainly isn’t without its risks. Statistically, it’s more dangerous than downhill ski racing, motorcycle racing, hang-gliding, and American football, and a study carried out in US hospitals proved that in terms of injuries for children, only being actually hit by a car has a higher severity. But there are so many sensible ways to mitigate that risk; don’t, for example, go against your gut instinct when it comes to throwing a leg over a particularly naughty young horse, even if you think you need to ‘prove yourself’ in order to advance as a rider (ask me how I found that one out the hard way…); don’t move up a level until you’re really, truly, utterly bored with the one you’re already at; and, of course, make sure you invest your funds wisely into protecting yourself as best you can. That means shelling out for a really good helmet and, whenever possible, donning a comfortable, flexible, and truly well-made body protector, too. (Yes, they do exist; no, you don’t have to pay for a breast reduction to find one. Your local retailer will be able to help you find the best one for you and when you do, I promise you, it’ll be life-changing.)

This week is Safety Awareness Week, and as good a time as any to dig out your helmets and really consider whether it’s time for them to go to the great tack room in the sky. As an enticing incentive, our friends at SmartPak are offering up to 20% off a number of their most popular — and safest — helmets and vests all week, including Charles Owen, Tipperary, One K, and more, with great options at every price point and plenty of useful info on each listing about how the hats are tested and the rigorous safety standards they need to meet. There’s even plenty with MIPS technology, which is a pioneering bit of design that got its start in the motorcycle racing world. You can check out everything they’ve got up for grabs here. I’m particularly keen on this Charles Owen MIPS helmet, which is a seriously budget-friendly $136.

Charles Owen, incidentally, is the helmet brand of choice for dressage supremo Silva Martin, who credits her helmet with saving her life during a 2014 schooling accident. She shared the story with SmartPak, and you can read it in full here, but here’s a helpful debrief:

It was in 2014, just two weeks after Silva’s gold medal win with Rose Cha W as a part of the U.S. Team at the Wellington Nation’s Cup, that Silva had an accident of her own.

“If I didn’t have the helmet on that day, I would for sure not have made it.”

The ride was routine, schooling a mare on the piaffe. There was no big spook, or flapping tarp, not even a loose dog. The mare simply got a leg stuck in the fencing of the arena by accident. In her surprise and effort to keep her balance, the horse flung her head back, making direct contact with Silva’s face. Stunned, Silva fell from the saddle and was hit by the mare’s back leg as she got untangled from the arena fencing. Says Silva, “It was definitely not the horse’s fault, she did nothing wrong. She just tripped over; it was the most boring accident.”

From that fall, Silva suffered a seizure, a mid-brain bleed, and was lifted by helicopter to nearby Delray Hospital. She remembers none of it, not the falling, nor the helicopter. She does know, however, that at the hospital she was told surgery was not an option and if the bleeding did not stop, she would die.

Eventually, Silva made it home to their farm in Pennsylvania where she was treated at Bryn Mawr Rehab Hospital. Her continued recovery for a year consisted of outpatient therapy for six days a week as well as continued daily support from friends and family. It wasn’t easy, as Silva recalls, “I had to learn how to walk and how to talk for over a year. I was 100% dependent on other people.”

After a long, hard-fought rehabilitation and being cleared by her doctors, Silva made her return to the show ring. Her first competition back required a new routine including naps between each ride, as she wasn’t able to stay awake for long. Even “getting back on the horse” so to speak was no longer the same. Silva’s team was there to support her—both emotionally and physically as she was nearly lifted onto her horse—but Silva remembers how good it felt to get back in the ring and do it again.

Since then, Silva continues to recover both in and out of the saddle. As a result of the accident, she only has vision in one eye and a skewed sense of depth perception. Riding down centerline is still the same high, but is more challenging.

Now at Windurra USA, the main training facility owned by Silva and her husband Boyd Martin, they stress the importance and necessity of helmets for every ride. According to Silva, “Nobody at our place gets on without a helmet ever.” This includes the Martin’s two small boys, Nox and Leo. Silva says her children don’t know life without a helmet. They don’t question if you should or should not put a helmet on before getting on a horse—it’s just what you do.

“Even now, if the doctor’s look at my injury they say they cannot believe I’m walking and talking and that if I hadn’t had that helmet on, there’s no question that I would have died.”

Want more info on helmet safety, and how the technology is progressing? Check out this insightful episode of the US Eventing Podcast, in which Dr. Barry Miller of Virginia Tech’s Helmet Lab and Catherine Winter of Ride EquiSafe discuss the data on biomechanics, injury risks, and how hats are levelling up to keep you as safe as possible.

 

British Riders Revealed for Boekelo Nations Cup Showdown

Laura Collett and Dacapo take the day one lead at Boekelo in 2022, and set a tough standard to beat. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

There’s just one FEI Nations Cup leg left on the 2023 calendar, and boy, is it a big one: the Military Boekelo CCIO4*-L in the Netherlands, which will take place from October 4–8, is undoubtedly most riders’ favourite outing of the year. That’s not just because of the pomp and circumstance of a series finale, nor because of the pivotal chance to claim a berth at the Olympics for unqualified teams — it’s also because it’s the biggest party of the year. Priorities, people. It’s all about the brewskies in the final throes of the season.

The Brits are one of those teams who don’t have to think at all about the fight for an Olympic place, since they qualified in the first possible instance at Pratoni last year, but they absolutely will be hoping to nab gold in this battle of nations. While we don’t yet have confirmation of which combinations will be on the team and which will ride as individuals, we do now have a first look at who’ll be making the trip over to fly the Union Jack (and a chance to rank them, in a confidential and unpublished Google doc, based on how likely each of them is to bring the noise at the Tuesday night riders’ party. Laura Collett, we’re just saying — we expect big things from you.)

The riders and horses named are as follows:

  1. MHS Seventeen Ros Canter – Owned by Lady Milnes Coates and Deirdre Johnston
  2. Dassett Cooley Dun Ros Canter – Owned by Kate Willis and Mel Pritchard
  3. Dacapo Laura Collett – Owned by Mr and Mrs M. Smedley, Carolyn Taylor, Gillian Morris-Adams and Diana Chappell
  4. SBH Big Wall Izzy Taylor – Owned by Jane Timmis
  5. Rehy DJ Yasmin Ingham – Owned by The Sue Davies Fund and Janette Chinn
  6. Class Vista Flora Harris – Owned by Rider
  7. Cooley Snapchat Selina Milnes – Owned by Mr and Mrs William Rucker
  8. D.Day Caroline Harris – Owned by Fiona Olivier, Lucy Matthews, Marie Anne Richardson and Heather Royle
  9. Ellfield Voyager Alex Whewall – Owned by Sheila Rowe
  10. Hi Tech Xanthe Goldsack – Owned by Rider
  11. Global Quest Georgie Campbell – Owned by Diana and Lance Morrish
  12. Ngong Valley Harriet Wright – Owned by Rider
  13. Igor B Kristina Hall-Jackson – Owned by KHJ Eventing and Rider
  14. Deerpairc Revelry Max Warburton – Owned by The Paske Syndicate
  15. Fever Pitch Storm Straker – Owned by Victoria Straker
  16. Just Have Faith TN Alfie Marshall – Owned by Rider
  17. Bob Cotton Bandit Laura Birley – Owned by Rider
  18. EG Michealangelo Rose Nesbitt – Owned by Rider and John and Francesca Nesbitt
  19. Templar Juno Katie Preston – Owned by Juniper Syndicate and Rider
  20. Solsboro Sweetpea Alicia Wilkinson – Owned by Henrietta Wilkinson

British Eventing has also released a short waitlist of horses and riders, who will be called in, in order of the list below, should any of the original twenty not be able to take up their place for any reason. These are:

  • MC Parco Pete Tyler Cassells – Owned by Amanda Hemming
  • PSH Gazelle Aimee Penny – Owned by Gary Power
  • Opposition Aphrodite Kirsty Chabert – Owned by Carole Somers
  • Sportsfield Freelance – Laura Collett

As always, EN will have boots on the ground for this incredibly exciting, oftentimes truly weird event, with its bar-for-every-fence and its mid-morning nightclubs out on course. Buckle up, prepare your electrolytes, and let’s get silly.

Tuesday News & Notes from Kentucky Performance Products

One of my great regrets at every event is that there are only so many hours in a day to cover the stories that unfold there — particularly somewhere like Blenheim, with nearly 200 competitors! For every winner, there’s also always a bunch of hardworking, incredible riders who are making their dream come true in their own ways — like Sophie Callard, who has been dreaming of riding at Blenheim since attending on foot at the age of 12. You go, Sophie — keep making those lifelong goals happen!


Events Opening Today: 
Texas Rose Horse Park H.T.-Modified Pending USEF ApprovalRocking Horse Fall H.T.The Eventing Championships at Galway Downs,

Events Closing Today: Woodside Fall InternationalMARS Maryland 5 Star at Fair HillApple Knoll Farm H.T.Middle Tennessee Pony Club H.T.WindRidge Farm Fall H.T.Ocala Fall Horse TrialsThe Maryland Horse Trials at Loch Moy Farm

Tuesday News & Notes from Around the World:

A small stud in the UK had a double dose of sadness — and miracles — recently. After all four of their broodmares delivered healthy foals, tragedy struck when two of the mares died shortly thereafter. But the stud’s owners didn’t have to pull in external foster mares — because their other two mares adopted the orphaned foals, alongside their own babies. Read the full story here.

Time for the latest chapter in the ongoing Eric Lamaze sh!tsh*w. Now, he’s facing legal proceedings from the FEI for shirking a mandatory drug test a couple of seasons ago. We all remember Lamaze’s ropy history of drug test violations, right?

Leaving a barn can be a really tricky, turbulent time. Not just because you need to do all the practical logistical elements of moving your horse, but because, for some reason, it always feels like you’re burning serious bridges in doing so. This personal essay comes from someone who experienced just that.

Over on our sister site Horse Nation, they love a bit of myth-busting. Today, they’re tackling your horse’s cool-down — and diving into whether you REALLY need to walk your horse out after a ride. Click here to see the answer.

Watch This: 

Relive the winning Burghley round:

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Doug Payne (@dpequestrian)

Well this is very sweet, isn’t it — lovely Quinn is enjoying a seriously lush retirement, and Doug Payne and his team got the chance to visit him while competing at Tryon. There are few things I like more than seeing these great horses in their twilight years.

National Holiday: It’s National Cheeseburger Day. Does any cheeseburger ever taste better than the one you have right after completing cross-country?

U.S. Weekend Action:

Aspen Farm H.T. (Yelm, WA) [Website] [Results]

Flying Cross Farm H.T. (Goshen, KY) [Website] [Results]

GMHA September H.T. (South Woodstock, VT) [Website] [Results]

Marlborough H.T (Upper Marlboro, MD) [Website] [Results]

Otter Creek Fall H.T. (Wheeler, WI) [Website] [Results]

The Event at Skyline (Mt Pleasant, UT) [Website] [Results]

The Fork at Tryon (Mill Spring, NC) [Website] [Results]

Major International Events:

Blenheim Palace International: [Website] [Entries] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

Your Monday Reading List:

Do your test sheets often read ‘needs to be rounder?’ As someone whose horse is shaped like a city bus, this is a struggle I know all too well. I’ll be diving into these tips from dressage rider Amelia Newcomb to try to develop that bus into a Mini Cooper this week — give them a go yourself here.

While I’m at it, I’ll be tuning up my transitions. There’s a lot of room for error in this essential little movements — but done right, they’ll get your horse working better than ever and prepare him for a much more difficult next movement. Come on a deep dive into the mechanics of them here.

We often think of women centuries ago being shut away to have babies and maintain households. While that’s true an awful lot of the time, some new historical evidence suggests that women in 10th—14th century China had rather more going on for them, at least where riding is concerned. Find out more about the role they played across the disciplines.

And finally… I don’t really know why I bothered working 16 hour days to cover all the action across two classes at Blenheim, when the Daily Mail once again proved that you can do a truly comprehensive and not-at-all stupid job of it in just about five minutes flat, if you’re committed enough.

Morning Viewing:

Blenheim’s not just about four-stars — check out all the fun in the Eventers’ Challenge grassroots competition here!

 

“She Wants To Do It More Than I Do!” Oliver Townend’s Cooley Rosalent Takes Blenheim CCI4*-S

Oliver Townend meets the influential lake crossing for the first time aboard Cooley Rosalent. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s been a Blenheim for the books this week, and after yesterday’s surprise-filled CCI4*-L cross-country, the CCI4*-S for eight- and nine-year-olds certainly didn’t disappoint in the drama stakes, either. Of the 90 competitors who came forward for today’s cross-country, 73 went on to finish, and 60 did so without jumping penalties — an 81% completion rate and a 67% clear rate. On paper, that’s generous — and should be, arguably, for these inexperienced, developing horses — but there was still change aplenty across the leaderboard, with the time proving achingly difficult to catch and a number of very good horses and riders picking up penalties along the way, particularly at the main water complex at 10abc, which saw 18 competitors run into trouble, and the first lake crossing at 8ab, which added penalties to the score cards of 10 competitors.

But before all that drama really kicked off, there was a bright light: six horses in, and with just two clear rounds logged in that time, Piggy March left the startbox with the eight-year-old Brookfield Future News, whose only previous Advanced run, in the eight- and nine-year-old class at Aston-le-Walls, had seen him top the leaderboard. But even with that under his belt, he’s arguably one of the least experienced in his field. Nevertheless, he crossed the course as though it had been built just for him, not just delivering a clear, but doing so five seconds inside the time.

Would that mean that other, more seasoned horses would join them en masse in the zero faults club? Not at all — until the latter stages of the day, when one horse would join them, becoming the only competitor in the class to finish on their dressage score.

That was, of course, overnight leader Cooley Rosalent, ridden by Oliver Townend.

“She’s incredible,” says Oliver. “We’ve always thought she was exceptional — we’ve had her since she was four years old, and she’s been special since the word go. I’ve been lucky enough to produce her, but in all honesty, most people could have produced her, because she’s very straightforward, exceptionally talented, and finds everything very easy. She wants to do it, probably even more than I do sometimes! She’s very keen and enthusiastic, and it’s very nice to go around a course with [a horse with its] ears pricked and a lot of blood that’s taking you places.”

Unlike Brookfield Future News, with his eight International cross-country runs, Cooley Rosalent has fifteen to her name — and that mileage showed in how capably she ran to the minute markers, finishing easily right on the 6:54 optimum time.

“She found it, as always, very comfortable,” says Oliver. “But the course, in general, was extremely tough for an eight- and nine-year-old class, which I think it should be — it’s our eight and nine year old championship, and it was a fair course, but at the same time, you definitely don’t want to be coming here on anything that’s even half green, because even for the ones that have enough mileage, it’s definitely a big step up for them.”

One of the holes in ‘Rosie’s’ belt? A five-star debut — a very rare accolade for a horse to bring to this class. She stepped up at Luhmühlen this year, finishing 27th after gaining an education, rather than truly putting up a fight, in each of the three phases — and that experience, Oliver says, has been huge for her.

“She went to Luhmühlen, and it would have been very easy to take her to Bramham and win, but my idea was that at the places we’re aiming her, she needs to come across as many people and atmosphere as much as possible,” he says. “We wanted to know how she coped with it, and what we needed to do from a management point of view and an educational point of view for the future. She wasn’t going to Luhmühlen to win; she was going to see people, and umbrellas, and arenas. But that mileage has been absolutely second to none, and then when you bring her to a place like Blenheim, she felt like a much older horse going around there.”

 

Piggy March and Brookfield Future News. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Second-placed Piggy March was the picture of pure joy after crossing the finish line with that early, influential round with Brookfield Future News behind her — and rightly so. As one of the youngest and most inexperienced horses in the field, he was also the fastest by a margin of six seconds, and proved that his rider’s long-held belief in him was always well-founded.

“He was bloody brilliant — just amazing!” says Piggy. “And I’m just so excited because he’s everything that I’ve thought he’d be from the age of six. He’s a bigger blood horse, so he’s not always been the fanciest — he’s come second quite a lot, but I’ve always believed in him, and he’s been one of my favourites. Quite a few people, because he’s a bit chunky, have said, ‘oh, he might not have the quality’, but I’ve said all along, ‘you have no idea what this is underneath the bonnet!'”

‘Matthew’s’ low mileage isn’t just down to his age — it was also a tactical call on the part of Piggy, who believed a less-is-more approach would best set the horse up for a bright future.

“He’s probably run in four or five events this year, because he was amazing at Le Lion last year, and I know he’s a five-star horse,” she says. “The owners have just been brilliant, because I just said, ‘I don’t want to do masses — I don’t want to just run him for the sake of running. Can this be his target, and I’ll just start him at Aston Advanced, and if he’s what he feels like he’s going to be, I really wouldn’t do much more — he could do an OI and then go to Blenheim.’ Thankfully, they trusted me, and he came out feeling like he just was on his job.”

The pair had begun their week in joint second place with Oliver and Rosie; they then stepped into overnight second on their own after yesterday’s showjumping. That phase saw dressage leaders Tom McEwen and MHS Brown Jack eliminated for tipping five rails, and while Piggy, like Oliver, jumped a clear round, she ended up adding two seconds, or 0.8 time penalties, to her score card when Matthew slipped in the dewy morning grass and lost time regaining his footing and balance. That slip might seem like it cost them the win — but actually, as they were so swift today, they’d have been relegated to second regardless for being further from the optimum time.

“It’s absolutely brilliant — obviously, right at the minute I’m sort of like, ‘oh god, that was annoying to have my slips in the showjumping’, but who cares in the grand scheme of things,” says Piggy — interviewed, at that point, before Oliver’s round. “He’s eight, and he’s so exciting — I think it’s exactly what we all do this for. The days and moments like that; you give the owners a hug and we’re all buzzing, because it’s a horse we’ve done the journey with and we’ve always believed in, and to then get on a stage and do that… it’s cool!”

Pure joy: Piggy March crosses the finish with Brookfield Future News. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though Piggy had all faith that John and Chloe Perry and Alison Swinburn’s gelding would thrive at Blenheim, she also went into today’s finale with the pragmatism of someone who’s produced plenty of young horses, and knows all too well that they’re always an unknown quantity until they’ve actually got stuck into their biggest challenges.

“I was hoping it wouldn’t be too much,” she says, “but there’s a couple of times that he looked, especially coming down to the waters — and he’s not funny with water at all. But I think with people, with lots going on, this is more of an occasion — and that big main water crossing is quite an eyeful. My little Halo did the same thing last year; coming here for the first time, they just come down to it and have a little bit of a like, ‘Is that for real? What are we about to jump into across here?’ And so I was hoping he would just take that in his stride.”

Something that’s helped prepare him for the big atmosphere of Blenheim, she thinks, is the variety she’s injected into his education.

“I even took him showjumping a couple of times. We went to Bolesworth, because I had to go with one of our young breeding horses, and I thought, because he’s not running very much I’ll give him a different experience with absolutely no pressure, but with speakers, music, a bit of razz, different type of course-building — it’s square, it’s bigger, and there’s quite a lot to look at. I think that will have done him a good bit of good.”

Tim Price and Jarillo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tim Price has been a particularly busy boy this week, with three exciting up-and-comers contesting this class. His first, Viscount Viktor, was among the earliest rounds of the day; he picked up 20 penalties at the back water en route to 65th place, and his last, the exquisite Chio 20, ran clear but steadily to move from the top ten down to 18th with 15.6 time penalties.

The star of the show, though, in his string at least? The nine-year-old Jarillo, who has stayed in the top ten all week, and maintained his overnight third place by adding just 2 time penalties today.

“He doesn’t make many mistakes,” says Tim of the Dutch-bred gelding, who he rides for Lucy Allison, Frances Stead, and James and Rachel Good. “He’s just a really classy little horse, and he keeps trying very hard. It’s quite rare for such a careful horse to be so brave on cross-country, and today was a big test and with a lot of different things. He’s done one four-short before in Ireland, but this was definitely a step along, being what it is, and he dealt with it all really well.”

All three horses, Tim hopes, will do big things in the years to come — but Jarillo, particularly, has a certain something about him.

“He’s so nice to ride,” he says. “I’m very lucky, because he can do a lot of different things. He’s quirky; he’s horse-shy, and he’s a bit sharp and he has his little idiosyncrasies, but ultimately, he’s looking at the fence, at the profile, at the ground, and he’s very careful. Some horses have got something special with the way they deal with it all. He’s one of those.”

The course, Tim explains, was a big ask for these inexperienced horses, and gave plenty of opportunities for educational moments — whether they were the productive kind, as far as the leaderboard goes, or not.

“It came quite thick and fast after just a couple of minutes, so it was quite a bit for them to look at, first with the water crossing, and then the big water at the back. So you saw quite a few have a green moment that they either paid for or got away with — but he was good, and he just grew into the course as we went and came home full of running.”

Caroline Harris and D. Day brave the rain to threaten the podium. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Caroline Harris has been always believed in D. Day, but this season, she’s giving the rest of us plenty of reason to buy into the dream, too. Despite the very nearly impossible conditions of the spring season, he finished third in a very tough CCI4*-S at Chatsworth, and today, he took fourth place in this class, putting just 2.8 time penalties on his score sheet in the heaviest of the afternoon’s rain.

“He was really, really super,” says Caroline. “I tried to go as quick as I could, but it’s a bit slippery now that it’s rained a bit. He made it feel very, very easy, though; I’m so lucky to have him. He’s very clever. I’ve never actually ridden a horse quite like him — all he wants to do is please, and do his absolute best, and he’s such a quick thinker.”

Selina Milnes and Cooley Snapchat. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Selina Milnes and Cooley Snapchat made their first big bid for the sporting spotlight at Bramham this year, where they handily won the tough CCI4*-S class, and it was that experience gained that enabled the nine-year-old to improve upon last year’s result here — a fifteenth place finish in his four-star debut — to finish fifth, picking up 4.4 time penalties on course to add to their dressage score of 29.4.

“He just took everything in his stride — we didn’t have one scary moment,” says Selina. “He was good through the top water, which they’ve been going a bit green at, but I probably wasted a little bit of time getting to the first water because I thought we need to stay out, but he was really good. He jumped round here last year as an eight year old without the pressure, and this year I thought, ‘come on then, let’s have a crack.’ I ride probably better under pressure, because I’m more forward, and he’s really stepped up this week.”

Tom Jackson and Plot Twist B. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The influence of the course allowed for some major climbs up the leaderboard, and one of the most significant of those was that of Ireland’s Padraig McCarthy and Pomp N Circumstance, who executed a weeklong climb from 35th to sixth after adding just 4 time penalties, and nothing at all in yesterday’s showjumping, to their first-phase score of 31.8. Similarly, Tom Jackson and Plot Twist B were able to climb from 27th to seventh, beginning the week on a score of 30.5, tipping a pole yesterday, and then making light work of the course today with one of the fastest rounds of the day and just 1.6 time penalties.

Vittoria Panizzon and DHI Jackpot. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Italy’s Vittoria Panizzon took eighth place with the nine-year-old DHI Jackpot, who nipped around with 7.2 time penalties to add to his first-phase score of 29, completing a climb from 14th place. This is just his third four-star run, though in a field such as this one, that still counts as reasonably hefty experience to bring to the party.

“Maybe he’s done a little more this year than some of the other horses, but I saw quite a few look a bit green this morning, and I’m delighted he wasn’t,” says Vittoria. “He was completely at ease with all of it. I’d have liked to be a little bit quicker, but it’s the first time he’s seen more crowds. He’s done a few four-stars, but this is the first one that’s a big party, so I just wanted to make sure that we focused on the jumps.”

Part of bringing young horses to big events such as this, Vittoria explains, is learning what you can do, and how you can hone the plan of action, in the future.

“To be honest, he’s got such a long stride, I could have taken a few more strides out in some combinations. But you feel a bit presumptuous thinking that when you haven’t seen anyone do that all day,” she says. “But that hollow [13AB], at which everyone I know of did four, that four was very short for him — we barely fit it in. In hindsight, I’d do three there, but that’s thing with the young horses that’s good at these events — you know what you could chance next time.”

The water crossings and top water, which were so influential through the day, posed no issue for the attractive gelding, who’s practically part fish thanks to a unique element to his training routine.

“I’m glad that, as I predicted, he wasn’t worried about the lake because we take him to swim in the River Wye, so he’s used to going in a big river every week and leading everyone swimming,” explains Vittoria. “It’s been a fantastic way to build a relationship with him, because I’ve ridden him since last year, not since a baby. He was beautifully produced before, but we needed to really get that bond. I need them to completely read me, and completely trust me, and like they’d do anything for me as long as I try and point them in the right direction.”

Julia Krajewski and Nickel 21. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Germany’s Olympic champion Julia Krajewski stepped up to ninth place with the exciting Nickel 21, who finished third in the German National Championship at Luhmühlen’s CCI4*-S this summer. As he had there, he delivered a cross-country round that brimmed with confidence and competence, and added just 6.8 time penalties to his tally, which saw him add nothing in yesterday’s showjumping to his first-phase 29.5.

James Avery and Dallas 13. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tenth place became the domain of Kiwi James Avery and everybody’s new favourite horse, the seriously smart and swift Dallas 13, who stepped up from first-phase 24th when adding just 2.4 time penalties today and a rail yesterday. This is just the second four-star start for the gelding, who caught everyone’s eye in the first phase, not least for his extraordinarily pretty, almost effeminate head.

But “looks can be deceiving,” laughs James. “He got a couple of ABSOs for chasing people around the paddock at home and biting them.”

“He’s well known to the police,” says his partner, eventer Holly Woodhead, wryly.

It was Holly who, with her sister, dressage rider Amy Woodhead, bred the gelding — though not with any intention of creating an eventer.

“He was supposed to be a dressage horse, and he turned out not to be one — he enjoyed jumping, but he was very late to eventing,” says James of the son of Dimaggio. “He’s a spirited character. He stepped up to four-star at Hartpury [last month], and I was really proud of him there. The bigger fences were good for him, because he’s been slightly cocky, and around Novice tracks, that enthusiasm was challenging!”

James first sat on him as a six-year-old; until then, he’d ‘done a bit of everything’ and spent some time in Cornwall with a young rider, who, Holly says, “he just towed around everywhere!”

Now, though, with his bad boy younger years behind him, he’s giving James and Holly plenty of reason to continue with his ongoing education, even if he still has his ‘Dallas moments’ — for example, he likes to travel with someone in the box with him.

“Dangerously, you probably start dreaming about what you could do,” says James with a smile. “But he’s just so confident, and he gives you the confidence to ride and be fast. That’s what you want, to know that they’re going to find their way over.”

James was full of praise for David Evans’ course, which he earmarks as a particularly important milestone for his developing horses.

“I think he’s done a fantastic job of asking questions of young horses. There’s no traps, there’s one way to ride it and you just ride the young horses with confidence to that, and if they make a mistake, then they’re here for education. It was a course on which he just grew and grew and confidence and a lot of that is down to course designing. We like to pick and choose whose courses we ride, and this is one of them.”

Katherine Coleman and Sirius SB. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Katherine Coleman was our only US completion after a shock tumble for Hallie Coon and Cute Girl at the penultimate fence took them out of the top-ten spot they’d occupied overnight. Both are absolutely fine — and fortunately, crossing paths with Katherine and her exciting Sirius SB on her way to the startbox while walking back to the collecting ring didn’t put her off. She cruised around to add a developmental 17.6 time penalties to her 30.3 dressage and single rail and time penalty, which put her in a final 33rd place — and with lots to look forward to with the exceptional gelding.

Katie Malensek and Landjaeger. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Canadian grant recipient and amateur rider Katie Malensek and her Landjaeger picked up a frangible penalty at fence three, but were otherwise clear to cross the finish line with 24 time penalties, finishing 64th with a 29.9 dressage and four rails yesterday on their scorecard, too — and, like Katherine, plenty to look forward to and lots of education to savour from their week at Blenheim.

Course designer David Evans was delighted with the outcome of a packed weekend of cross-country, which saw nearly 200 horses across the two classes tackle his tracks.

“I watch every single horse, and I thought that it was educational for them,” he says. “The ones that shouldn’t go through have probably learnt from it by having the odd runout here and there, because it wasn’t a straightforward course — there was lots to think about all the time. When I’m asked where the problems will be, you never want to think [there’ll be a specific place] — you want the penalties to be spread around the course. And they were, so it was a good day, I think.”

Designing for the CCI4*-L is a very different beast to designing for the eight- and nine-year-olds, he explains — and not just because of the difference in length.

“[In the CCI4*-L], potentially you’re getting them ready for five-star or championships,” he says. “I’ve walked courses of other people’s design and learned from them, and then I put bits and pieces together. You’ve got to make them think from the beginning to the end, and you’ve got to start with a pretty serious question. That says, ‘this is how it’s going to be, boys and girls, from now on’. I think this year, I gave them a few more options at fences, so actually, they get to it and go, ‘I’m going to do this’ or ‘I’m going to do that’.”

For today’s CCI4*-S, he says, “it’s a championship, and it’s got to be a four-star, but you’ve also got to back off a little bit. You might have an extra stride or an extra two strides, but it’s got to be educational. The other thing that is really, really difficult is when there’s 100 horses in a class — you don’t know what mix [of ability] it’s going to be, so it’s a hard one.”

That’s all — for now — from a jam-packed, wall-to-wall, extraordinarily busy week at Blenheim, where we’ve seen stars born and reconfirmed alike, and, perhaps, the five-star champions and gold medallists of the not-too-distant future — after all, this class in particular has an almost spooky track record of producing those within a year or two of a win here. Pick your favourites now, folks — their time is coming.

The final top ten in the 2023 Blenheim eight- and nine-year-old CCI4*-S.

EN’s coverage of Blenheim is presented by Kentucky Performance Products. Click here to learn all about their full line of science-backed nutritional support products, including Neigh-Lox Advanced for digestive support.

Blenheim Palace International: [Website] [Entries] [Live Stream]

“It’s All About Understanding Him”: Ros Canter Wins Blenheim CCI4*-L on Quirky Rising Star

Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s been a seriously excellent week for reigning World Champions Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir, who returned to Blenheim to work on regaining their 2021 title and led from the offset, delivering the rider’s best-ever international score of 20.5 in the first phase, and adding nothing to it across the country, putting a couple of frustrating run-outs this season well behind them. They looked well on track to seal the deal today, jumping an almost balletic, effortless showjumping round — until the final fence rolled out of its cups.

“He’s very agile, and he’s super careful — and I’ll probably be analysing that video all winter, wondering what the hell went wrong,” says Yas with a laugh. “But that’s just horses, isn’t it? Some days you come out on top, and some days you don’t. But I’m very pleased; we’ve achieved everything we wanted to achieve, and now he can go in the field and have a nice holiday and we can get ready for next year.”

Ros Canter and Izilot DHI take Blenheim’s CCI4*-L. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

That rail pushed her down into a final second place, and allowed overnight runners-up Ros Canter and the ten-year-old Izilot DHI, who had jumped clear, to win, having added just 0.4 time penalties yesterday to their first-phase score of 21.6.

“I’m delighted, and not just with the result — I’m just so proud of him, how he’s dealt with the whole week, and how he jumped today, particularly with how sprightly he felt,” says the newly-minted World Number One, who stepped up into that top spot in the FEI rankings after winning the European Championships last month with Lordships Graffalo.

Her star mount this week is no less talented than Lordships Graffalo, but has been rather more mercurial throughout his career: in his eighteen FEI starts, he’s finished in the top ten eleven times, and won seven times, including in CCI4*-S classes at Blair last month and Burgham and Bramham last year — but he’s also had some high profile whoopsies, most notably at Bramham CCI4*-L this summer, when he had an early, spooky run-out on cross-country while leading the dressage.

But that, Ros explains, is just ‘Isaac’ — he’s a tricky, odd, exceptionally talented, weird horse who, she says, has taught her more than any other horse she’s ever ridden, and continues to do so every time she sits on him.

This week, though, he’s been at his very best, and proving that time, patience, and tact are so often the fundamental keys to a horse like this — even when they keep surprising you, as Isaac did for Ros today.

“He was quite picky and spooky today, which is his personality, but the last couple of times he’s done a three-day, he’s been a bit flatter for the showjumping,” she says. “Today, he felt strong and well, and so that was really exciting — that he’s getting stronger in his body, because he’s still a weak horse with lots more developing to come.”

Ros Canter and Izilot DHI. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

That sprightliness didn’t come as a spanner thrown for Ros, who explains that “that’s generally how he is at a one-day — so I’m quite used to that feeling! I was able to give him a bit of work, and they had the zebra wings out in the warm-up, so we cantered a few circles around them — he still spooked at them when we got in the ring, though! But we were really able to stick to the plan, but it was lovely because I had a fresh horse under me.”

“I think it’s experience and strength and time. He’s ten, but when we bought him, he was running a year behind, really — I think he was picked out of the field as a three-year-old, but he was running with the two-year-olds, because he was a real runt.”

Bolstered by the proof in the pudding that her approach is working for the gelding, Ros is looking ahead to continued education, continued strengthening — but probably, she admits, no cessation of those funny little Isaac moments.

“I think those moments will still come!” she says. “This time of year is much easier for me, once he’s run a bit, the sun’s been on his back, and he’s been out in the field all the time — things like that. I think the spring will be difficult again next year, when he could easily go out to his first Open Intermediate and run out of something because there’s a wooden duck or something in the wrong place. That’s Isaac for you, and I’m not sure that’s going to change anytime soon. But I’m starting to get the hang of how to build him up for a big one where I really need his brain in the right place. I don’t think that’s something that I can have every week of his life.”

The key to moderating that mental pressure is something she’s still working out, but at the forefront of Ros’s mind all the time is adaptability.

“It’s certainly not about drilling him with hours and hours of work,” she says. “It’s just gradually getting him in the right place. Some days I just get off him and he goes back in the field, and when he comes back in we do another 15 minutes. He came in on Tuesday, and the weather was bad and it was much colder, and his eye was much sharper. When we were tacking up, he was on edge. When I rode him, he was on edge. And so I decided I’d come here on Wednesday via cross-country schooling, because out in a field, he tends to be more settled and I can just give him a pop and play with him. You maybe wouldn’t do that with most horses on the day the competition starts, but it wasn’t a cross-country school to train him, it was a cross-country school just to let him relax, to jump, to settle his mind so he stops spooking at silly things. So it’s just all about understanding him, and everybody on the floor, as well, has quite a job to do with him. If he’s in a bit of a sharp, feral mood, there’s no point getting frustrated. You’ve just got to give him all the time in the world. And if it takes two hours, it takes two hours. It can’t be, ‘we’ve only got 20 minutes, so that’s all we’ve got’ with him.”

Harry Meade and Annaghmore Valoner. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The mark of a good long-format event is positive movement on the leaderboard — and sixteenth to third place is a pretty good run, all things considered. That leap was achieved by Harry Meade and the eleven-year-old Annaghmore Valoner, with whom he’s sharing his second season.

“She’s been brilliant — she’s got so much talent,” says Harry fondly of the mare, who finished on her dressage score of 30.6. “She’s a little bit of a hothead; she holds her breath, but she’s got all three phases, which very few horses do. She’s a beautiful mover, she’s got loads of blood and gallop, and she just oozes class. It’s really about just trying to get her to breathe, relax, and settle her, particularly on cross country, and just letting her sort of breathe and relax in the atmosphere for the showjumping.”

That relaxation has been centre stage of the Irish-bred mare’s performances all week, helping her to her best-ever FEI finish.

“She’s been really happy and very settled all week; she went beautifully in her test and was really, really easy cross-country,” he says. His major goal on course, he explains, wa simply to “set out on the cross country just in a relaxed gallop, so she could just go at speed but in an efficient, lobbing way as if we were going 20 miles, rather than four miles, just to almost switch her off. She was super.”

The format of this afternoon’s showjumping, which left a generous amount of space between each competitor, rather than sending riders into the ring as the prior round finished, was another great boon.

“It was nice having a little bit of time in there,” says Harry. “They weren’t rushing the competitors through, so you could do a half a lap of the arena. So she was really good — she’s in a very happy place. She’s got the talent. And if the mindset’s right, the training’s there, the talent is there, and they’re feeling confident and happy, then hopefully it all comes together.”

Next year, he explains, will be a chance to consolidate all that the mare has learned at four-star this season, without any rush to move up to five-star — Bramham, instead, looks the likeliest goal on the agenda.

“This is her first four-star long, so I’d look to consolidate. Bramham would be very much the aim; I always like to go to the tougher ones, and I think if you’ve got one that you think is a proper one, Bramham’s a really important stepping stone to prepare for the five-stars.”

That slow-and-steady approach to big things is a Harry trademark — and it’s paid dividends so far as he’s worked to get to know the mare after her production to CCI4*-S by Australia’s Sam Griffiths.

“Sam’s a great friend of mine, and we talked a lot about her — she definitely comes with her challenges,” laughs Harry. “Sam was really open about what he had felt, and I very deliberately took a season together last year to establish a partnership with her. We did lots and lots of events without any pressure at Intermediate, and a few Advanceds, but really, it was a whole season of Intermediate to just try and consolidate and establish a partnership. She’s come out this season and been amazing, so I’m hoping that that sort of foundation will really help her to crack on and do some great things — and she’s already started to.”

Tom McEwen and Brookfield Quality are only at the start of their partnership — this is their second FEI start together after he took over the ride from Piggy March — but already, it’s an incredibly exciting one. They’ve delivered in every phase; as the very last pair to perform their dressage test this week, they put a 26.6 on the board for fifth place;  yesterday, they added 5.6 time penalties when Tom opted to give the horse an easy run in the back end of the course, dropping them to seventh; and today, they jumped a classy clear to move up again to fourth.

“What a lovely horse to have on the last day for showjumping,” says Tom. “He was acres clear and made it feel very easy, to be honest. He’s as straight as a die, he helps me out, and you can see how well he jumps — even if he sometimes does so uniquely! Norris is pretty cool on the last day.”

This is Norris’s first long-format since Blenheim in 2021, when he finished fifth with Piggy aboard.

“He’s come back out with only a handful of runs, and he’s been fantastic,” says Tom. “Bar me being a bit careful out the back [on cross-country] yesterday, he’d have quite comfortably finished on his dressage score. I’m delighted with him.”

Tom Rowland and Dreamliner. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tom Rowland has been quietly racking up top-level mileage over the last few years, but since pairing up with the Chamberlayne family’s exceptional Dreamliner this year, it’s clear he’s finally found the horse that’ll help him prove to the world who he truly is. Dreamliner, who was bred by the Chamberlaynes, probably wouldn’t be every rider’s match — he has a tendency to be strong, for example, which means that he gels best with a rider who can view that as a net positive and work with, rather than against it — but with Tom aboard, he’s been thriving this season. They began their week in 29th place on a 32.1, climbed to sixth yesterday when adding nothing to that score, and then moved up another place to final fifth today when crossing the finish just one second over the time allowed, which marginally precluded a fourth-place finish.

“I’m really pleased,” says Tom, who inherited the ride from Oliver Townend over the winter, and was tackling his first long-format with the thirteen-year-old this week. “It’s frustrating to have a time-fault, and that’s something I’ve been working on with all my horses, so it’s a shame to drop a place, but if someone said at the beginning of the week that I would be double clear and fifth… I came here hoping to be top ten, but you never know what’s going to happen, do you? I’m so pleased with the result, and also that he seems to have come out really, really well — full of energy, and hopefully ready to go for next year and for us to get to know each other even more.”

Their result today means that they’ve netted themselves a qualification for five-star — and Tom hopes that Badminton might be an achievable goal for next spring’s season.

“I feel like that’s a realistic target,” he says, before acknowledging the significance of this week’s performance. “I’ve been top ten before at Boekelo, but I think this is my best four-long result, so I’m really pleased. I’m really trying to not just be an also-ran and up my results and be up with these people, so this gives me confidence.”

Piggy March and Halo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Piggy March was disappointed to tip a rail with last year’s eight- and nine-year-old class winner, the ten-year-old stallion Halo, which saw them relinquish their overnight third, which they’d risen to from ninth by adding just 0.8 time penalties yesterday to their first-phase 28.7, in exchange for a final sixth place.

“He jumped really well — he was very cute,” she concedes. “I always have time faults on him, because I can’t go too fast; he just gets a bit over his front, so it was always my plan to turn inside to number six. He jumped that really well, and it did bring him back to his hocks, but then it ended up being a quiet six, and it walks as five strides. It still felt like it wasn’t too bad, or unjumpable, or a big fat miss, but it did make it a tighter distance, and so we had it down.”

“It just feels like it might have been the day when I’d have been alright going on the outside line and moving him and keeping him freer,” she laments. “But he’s been amazing; the dressage was below his standards, because he made a couple of expensive mistakes, which he hasn’t done before — and today was my error, which irritates me, because I don’t mind if you do everything right and the horse has a mistake; it is what it is, but if you cock up yourself, it doesn’t sit so well with me.”

And what’s next to come for the talented, compact little Holsteiner by Humphrey? That, Piggy explains, is still up in the air.

“He was primarily bought to do a bit and then breed, and he hasn’t bred yet, so it’ll be a question of whether that affects him,” she says. “The discussions will be had, but I think he’ll either do one thing or the other; he’ll either not breed at all and carry on competing, or he’ll breed and probably be used for that a fair bit next year, and then I’ll try again with sport to see if his temperament is the same or if that’s changed it. He might be able to do both, but he didn’t start out doing both, so it could affect him very differently to others.”

25-year-old Felicity Collins and her five-star partner RSH Contend OR were fourth in this class a year ago, when they rerouted from Burghley, and though they might have been expected to have appeared on that Big B’s entry list this autumn, a return to Blenheim was, she explains, always part of her 2023 plan.

“We made the decision a long time ago to come here rather than Burghley,” says Felicity. “I’ve had quite a tough year with my mum [former five-star eventer Vicky Collins] being poorly; she’s been in hospital since just after Badminton, but we’d already decided before we went to Badminton that we wouldn’t do Burghley, because I knew she’d be in hospital.”

Managing the yard she ordinarily runs alongside her mother has been a huge focus for Felicity this season, but that enormous external stressor wasn’t the only uphill battle she faced this week.

“On Tuesday before we left, Frankie, my head girl, texted me saying ‘I’ve just come down really, really ill — I can’t come to Blenheim’,” she says. “My other half, Johnny, was like, ‘don’t worry! I’ll learn to muck out! It’s fine!’ — but then I started feeling really poorly on Tuesday evening, to the point that when Wednesday morning came, I could barely crawl out of bed. So Johnny drove us here and has been mucking him out, grooming him, feeding him, taking him for a graze — it was a bit touch and go, and I came out of my dressage test panting. Today’s the first day I’ve felt a little bit better.”

Though a torrent of rainfall fell before Felicity’s showjumping round, which made her worry whether Mickey might slip in the ring as we’d seen some of the CCI4*-S competitors do on the dewy grass early yesterday morning, he was foot-perfect and confident in his trajectories, delivering his nineteenth four-star double-clear, which allowed the pair to move up from overnight tenth (that, itself, a climb from first-phase 31st) to seventh.

“He was just, as usual, amazing,” she says. “He’s just unreal — it’s just such a privilege to ride a horse like him. The aim is for myself and Avrina Milton, who co-owns him, to just enjoy him and make the most of having a horse like him, because I probably won’t ever get another one like this.”

British-based Australian Sammi Birch coaxed a career-best result out of the mercurial but talented thirteen-year-old Finduss PFB, beginning the week well down in 48th place on a 34.4 and then climbing up, up, and away to a final eighth by finishing on that score.

“I’m delighted with his performance,” says Sammi, who last competed ‘Loopy Louis’ at Burghley last year before handing the reins over to New Zealand’s James Avery for the bulk of this season. “I’ve not long ago had a baby, so I’ve only had him back about four weeks, and I love him to pieces; he really deserves it. He’s really delivered this week — the jumping phases are normally his thing, but he really tried in the dressage and I just felt like I was putting on a pair of old slippers. I’m so happy. Normally I’m quietly confident in the jumping, but today I was actually quite nervous, just because I haven’t had him back long. But he got better and better as he went round, and there was a lot going on for him, but he seemed to cope with the atmosphere.”

Alex Hua Tian and Chicko. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

China’s Alex Hua Tian has been forming an undeniably special partnership with the Polly Stockton-produced Chicko, which has seen the thirteen-year-old gelding take a runner-up spot in a hugely tough CCI4*-S at Chatsworth this spring and also help China to an Olympic berth at Millstreet’s qualifying event back in June. They began their week just a whisper outside the top ten in eleventh place, and climbed to fourth yesterday when adding just 0.4 time penalties across the country. Today, they hoped to elevate that standing again to a podium, but a frustrating pole in the final part of the combination meant they settled for a very respectable ninth instead.

“I’m a bit annoyed to have one down,” admits Alex, who rates the gelding as a really exciting prospect for the future — and understandably so. “He’s jumped so well all year, and he jumped so well in there, but every horse can have a fence somewhere if that’s the way the dice roll for you on the day. I felt he deserved to jump a double clear this week — he’s been tremendous. He’s very workmanlike, but he just puts his heart and soul into it.”

The top ten was rounded out by Italy’s Giovanni Ugolotti and his exciting new ride, Jo Preston-Hunt and Philip Hunt’s Florencina R, who climbed from first-phase 18th on a score of 30.8 to their exceptional finishing place on the strength of their classy clear yesterday, which saw them add just 4 time penalties, and a faultless showjumping round today. It’s an exciting first step onto the main stage for a horse who could have been awarded a special ‘who dat?’ prize for being an almost totally unknown entity to the wider eventing audience.

“She’s been off for quite a while, because no one could really figure out what was wrong,” he says. “She was here as a nine-year-old with Dan Jocelyn, but then she had a wind operation, and since then, she’s been off until the end of last season. My wife [Canadian eventer Kathryn Robinson] took her around a Novice, and then I took over the ride, because Kathryn is stepping down.”

Since then, the pair have won two of their three — now four — FEI runs, taking the CCI3*-S at Millstreet in June on their debut together and then winning the CCI4*-S at Mallow later that month.

“Then she came here and was just brilliant all weekend — I can’t fault her,” he says. Though the mare is now thirteen, she’s extraordinarily low-mileage; this is her first CCI4*-L, and, Giovanni says, “she’s still a little bit green at the level, but yesterday, she didn’t show any greenness. She’s ready to step up and be properly competitive at this level. I came here not really knowing what she was going to be like, but she was absolutely brilliant.”

Just one rail down saw US-based Kiwi Joe Meyer and Harbin climb to a final 21st place, up from first-phase 73rd, while two rails for Cali-based Australian Bec Braitling and Caravaggio II put them in a final 58th, up from first-phase 79th.

Stay tuned for plenty more news from Blenheim — and until then, Go Eventing!

The final top ten in the 2023 Blenheim Palace International CCI4*-L.

EN’s coverage of Blenheim is presented by Kentucky Performance Products. Click here to learn all about their full line of science-backed nutritional support products, including Neigh-Lox Advanced for digestive support.

Blenheim Palace International: [Website] [Entries] [Live Stream]

Holds, Overnight Withdrawals, But Otherwise Minimal Drama at Blenheim Final Horse Inspection

Overnight third-placed Piggy March and Halo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The Blenheim CCI4*-L field had thinned by two to 65 competitors before this morning’s early final horse inspection even began, with two overnight withdrawals: two-horse rider Katie Magee didn’t present Treworra, who’d executed a reasonably swift clear yesterday across the country, and Franky Reid-Warrilow also opted to withdraw Guilty Pleasure, who’d picked up a 20 on course.

Overnight runners-up Ros Canter and Izilot DHI. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though we saw no further eliminations throughout the course of the morning, the ground jury of Andrew Bennie, Angela Tucker, and Judy Hancock did have exacting standards, and asked to see a number of horses trot for a second time. These included Helen Martin and Andreas, 25th overnight, Ireland’s Ian Cassells and Master Point, 19th overnight, Tom Rowland‘s Dreamliner, sixth overnight, and Piggy March‘s 2022 eight- and nine-year-old champion, Halo, who sits third after cross-country. All were then accepted without going to the holding box.

Joe Meyer and Harbin. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Three horses, though, did go to the holding box for further evaluation. They were US-based Kiwi Joe Meyer‘s Harbin, 27th, Katie Magee‘s Enceladus, 33rd, and Michael Owen‘s Treworder, 39th. All were subsequently accepted upon representation.

Here’s how the top ten looks going into the showjumping finale:

The top ten in the CCI4*-L after cross-country.

Showjumping will commence at 11.30 a.m. (6.30 a.m. EST), and will be run in reverse order of merit. Cross-country for the CCI4*-S will begin at 10.00 a.m. (5.00 a.m. EST) and unfortunately won’t be run in reverse order of merit, but both classes will be live-streamed via Horse&Country TV, so the very committed eventing fans among you can negotiate some kind of fantastic split-screen streaming situation to keep up with it all. It’s going to be a seriously jam-packed day of sport, and one of the most exciting of the year — so don’t miss out, and tune back in to EN later on today for a full debrief on all the action across both competitions.

Go Eventing!

EN’s coverage of Blenheim is presented by Kentucky Performance Products. Click here to learn all about their full line of science-backed nutritional support products, including Neigh-Lox Advanced for digestive support.

Blenheim Palace International: [Website] [Entries] [Live Stream]

Saturday at Blenheim: A Surprisingly Influential Day Sees One Overnight Leader Eliminated and Another Reign Supreme

It wouldn’t be unfair to suggest that Blenheim Palace International’s CCI4*-L cross-country course is generally on the softer end of the level — a ‘B’ four-star, if you will, and if the FEI will ever take my suggestion about A and B four-stars into consideration for MER purposes, which I wish they would. That’s not a criticism of the event, nor of designer David Evans’s courses; they serve an essential purpose in developing less experienced horses and riders and helping to springboard them to the harder end of the level spectrum. They use terrain in a friendly way; many of Blenheim’s galloping straights are on flatter, easier sections of ground, over which horses can coast without tiring quite so much. Generally, we’d be unsurprised to see ten, even twenty pairs make it home inside the time, and a reasonably high clear rate.

Today, it wasn’t quite that sort of day. Though the course didn’t appear to be enormously different to last year’s at first glance, it pretty immediately began causing numerous issues from the word go — and not just for inexperienced horses or riders, but for those who’ve placed at five-star or been enormously consistent over tough tracks. That meant that our 93 dressage finishers became 88 cross-country starters following withdrawals — including that of US representatives Tiana Coudray and Cancaras Girl — and those 88 starters became 66 finishers, giving a 75% completion rate. Of those finishers, 50 completed without jumping penalties, yielding a 57% clear rate, and just seven were clear inside the time. While that’s not really far off the event’s previous numbers — in 2019, for example, it had a 78% completion rate and a 62% clear rate — it still felt like a pretty colossal day of cross-country due to the sheer stature of the horses and riders who slipped out of contention today.

Those  shock moments included a fall at the penultimate fence for Gemma Stevens from her Badminton mount Jalapeno, who had been third after dressage and were among the first out of the box today; a fall at fence five for overnight fourth-placed Laura Collett from Aoife Clark’s Calahari; a retirement for sixth-placed Pippa Funnell and Billy Walk On; a rider fall for German National Champions Julia Krajewski and Ero de Cantraie, who had sat tenth after dressage; a heaping helping of time for seventh-placed Kirsty Chabert and Opposition Loire, who subsequently slipped to 35th; and time and a missed flag for New Zealand’s Sam Lissington and Lord Seekonig, which pushed them from eighth to 45th.

Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

But nevertheless, our leaders remained unruffled. World Champions Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir have had a bit of a rollercoaster year, full of highs — such as becoming the first-ever British winners of CHIO Aachen over the summer, and helping the British team to gold at the Europeans — and surprising lows, too, including a shock run-out early at Kentucky and another while working towards that gold medal in Haras du Pin. But every exceptionally good — and still, really, very young — horse needs a season in which to work out how to cope with all the challenges that the sport can bring, and in every stage of the pair’s round across the country in Blenheim’s CCI4*-L today, it became clearer and clearer that they’d taken all those lessons learned and put them into coming back better than ever. They added nothing to their first-phase score of 20.5 — Yas’s career-best international dressage score at any level, no less — to retain their overnight lead and work towards regaining the Blenheim title, which they earned back in 2021, also while leading from pillar to post.

“It was really good round, and it was enjoyable — well, enjoyable to an extent!” laughs Yas. “He picked everything up super easy, and was right on his lines, and he responded when I said ‘go’ and woahed when I said ‘woah’. It was really important just to have a nice, enjoyable, positive round today, and I think he’s done that.”

That, she says, was her major goal all along in entering Blenheim, a decision that first came about because he came out of the Europeans, with its shortened track, so well — and because none of her other horses were ready to go out for their holidays in the field, so Banzai would have been flying solo in his downtime.

“I just wanted to have a nice time,” she says. “It’s so nice to come to this sort of event, and it’s just a beautiful place to be able to compete — my owners absolutely love it and my family come and watch, so it’s kind of just about having a really nice time between all of us and enjoying the horse, because he’s so special. He’s an absolute pleasure and just a joy to have so for us just to actually enjoy him and have nothing else think about is really nice.”

For Yas, logging a good round without external pressure — for example, that of a country’s expectations — was a good tonic, but it didn’t mean she went out of the startbox totally without pressure. The pressure she puts on herself, she explains, comes down to a desire to make sure everyone involved with her and her horse get rewarded for their efforts.

“I always just want to do my best and not let anybody down,” she says. “So many people put so much work into this; my team at home, and the team that come here, and everyone behind the scenes. It’s a massive group effort and when we have a good day, it’s everybody’s good day.”

Ros Canter and Izilot DHI. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Ros Canter remains in second place overnight with the very exciting Izilot DHI, who came out of the box as his most committed self today to cruise around just one second over the time. That sends the pair into tomorrow’s finale just 1.5 penalties — or three seconds — behind the overnight leaders.

“He was amazing. He felt really, really grown up out there; really honest,” says Ros, who’s logged some impressive wins with the ten-year-old — including in the CCI4*-S at Blair last month — but has also dealt with some high-profile disappointments, including an early 20 in Bramham’s CCI4*-L this year while in the lead.

Today, though, is “probably the first time I’ve pushed him for the time around a long-format like this. He felt a little bit weary two thirds of the way around, so it’s the first time he’s had to dig that deep, but he was so focused with the crowds and things, all the things we previously had problems with. He was fantastic.”

Of David Evans’s surprisingly influential course, she says, “he definitely created a thinking course. I think some of the distances were a bit different to what we maybe would have picked, but I think that makes it a course where you had to really decide, make a plan for your own horse, decide what canter you wanted before a fence, and commit to that canter. Some you could choose to roll on to,  others, you had to really make a difference to the canter — and that was the challenge of it. I think it was all about walking your lines multiple times, knowing what canter you wanted to get to, and knowing what horse you were on.”

Piggy March and Halo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Last year’s eight- and nine-year-old CCI4*-S champion Halo, ridden by Piggy March, stepped up from overnight ninth place on a 28.7 to two-phase third after adding just 0.8 time penalties for coming in two seconds over the optimum time. Their round was one of the last of the day, just before five in the afternoon, and saw them make the most of those gaps opened on the leaderboard by surprise problems.

“I’m over the moon — he was fabulous,” says Piggy, who confesses that she “hated today and being so late. I showjumped my first horse at five past eight or something this morning and then waited all day to see all sorts going on. I’ve never been so late at a three-day.”

That time, she says, wasn’t exactly put to productive use — instead, she spent most of it second-guessing her intentions in even running the inexperienced little stallion.

“I was worried about him; he’s not got much mileage, and good horses were having problems,” she says. “I think the world of him, so it was like, ‘is this right?’ I had all day to get in quite a tizz, and I thought, ‘maybe today’s not the day; maybe I’m not feeling it; maybe we don’t go’… I did about twenty wees in the last hour before I got on, thinking, ‘I’m getting too old! What am I doing?!'”

But then, she says, “I got out there and had a whale of a time! He felt fantastic. He gets a little bit on his head and a bit flat at the end, so I was just balancing to get them done, but he still finished so well. He picked up and galloped across the finish; he’s got some engine on him for a small horse, and he makes up all the distances. He eats them all up.”

Piggy was one of several riders to make mention of the distances as they were set on the course — and, specifically, that many appeared to walk on a half-stride, requiring adjustments to find a flowing rhythm though them.

“I didn’t mind it when I first walked it, but I didn’t love some of the distances,” she says. “But then I had a great ride, so it was good. It rode tough enough, and the second water was a big question — it was a big jumping effort, and you had to slightly angle it to make sure they could see the second part, so a lot of horses sort of guessed at that or held their breath a bit. Halo used to slither into water a little bit to start with which surprises me, because he’s got balls, so you’d think he’d try to be a bit more careful with those. But today, he jumped in really brave and was so balanced that he just sort of turned and then could ride to the corner. He was a little Pegasus, a little unicorn today!”

For Halo, who’s just in his ten-year-old season, his big autumn aim has thrown even more challenges at him than it reasonably should have.

“I just hope he’s okay,” says Piggy, “because when we arrived in the stables they’d put us in with mares all around us. I was just like, ‘are you kidding us?’ The first day was distracting enough, and he’s been quite chatty, but I don’t really blame him. I was disappointed with his dressage yesterday, because that’s not normally what he does, and that’s the first time he’s ever made mistakes in training or a show or anything, so I was just a bit disheartened. I was like, ‘is he on it this week?’ Because he’s stabled round so many mares, or something like that. I questioned it all — but then, he was a lion out there today.”

Alex Hua Tian and Chicko. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

China’s Alex Hua Tian stepped up from just outside the top ten to two-phase fourth with Kate Willis’s Chicko after romping home just one second over the 10:20 optimum time. It’s an exciting formative step for the new partnership, which came together at the start of this year; this is their first CCI4*-L in tandem and just thirteen-year-old Chicko’s second-ever start at the level. His first, here in 2021, was with former rider and producer Polly Stockton, but saw him eliminated in this phase after Polly took a tumble.

Since taking him over before the beginning of the season, though, Alex has been building towards an exciting sophomore attempt at the level for the game gelding.

“I was very quietly confident coming here,” he says. “I’ve had such an awesome year with him across the country, and as a partnership I just feel like we’ve clicked straight away. He wouldn’t have the range in his gallop of some horses out there, but he has a tremendous amount of heart, and I trust him so much. You can just go; he’s brilliant.”

That one little weakness — a slight lack of gallop — just means that Alex has to ride committedly and aim to maintain speed, impulsion, and energy around the course in order to economise.

“He had a little tired moment right at the top where everyone else was, too, but then he picked up coming home. It does mean I have to go out meaning business, and I have to make sure I stay tight to every line and I go forwards to everything as much I can. I took, maybe, a little pull maybe to the last, which was our one second over. But I don’t think I could have taken a pull much anywhere else.”

And as for the course, Alex, too, was critical but fair in describing it as, well, not everyone’s cup of tea.

“It suits him, but it wouldn’t suit lots of horses,” he says. “It didn’t walk big, but it was very bitty, and there were lots of decisions to make. There were no committed distances. Everything was either this or that, which is a polite way of saying ‘a little bit on the half distance!’ But it suits him, because he does give you all of those options. Some of my other ones would give you fewer options.

“From the moment I’ve had him, I’ve always really trusted him. He’s just a really cool animal. He’s maybe a bit more workmanlike as a type, but he just tries brilliant.”

Harry Meade and Annaghmore Valoner. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Harry Meade and Annaghmore Valoner move from 16th place after dressage to fifth overnight after coming in three seconds inside the time. That wasn’t Harry’s only speedy trip around the course today — he also delivered a clear inside the time with Et Hop du Matz, who sits eleventh going into the final day of competition. Et Hop Du Matz was one of the first rounds of the day, which, Harry reckons, might have played a part in his two positive rides.

“I think the course rode as it walked, and there’s an advantage, sometimes, to going early, because you don’t watch everyone,” he says. “You have a plan, although there’s an element of the unknown, because you don’t know if the plan is going to be totally suitable.”

But, he says, “I thought the course rode really well, and David Evans did a really good job. He had some good questions, and some attacking distances; the one thing I’d say is that, although my horses were good at it, the coffin was a bit long. Not so much the exit, but particularly the entrance — it was a bit long, so they’d dwell over the ditch, and that would then make the exit long. But it was a good course; it was clear to the horses, and it took some riding, but it was all of an appropriate standard.”

Annaghmore Valoner, for her part, made easy work of her first CCI4*-L, and her return to Blenheim for the first time since her top-ten finish in the CCI4*-S here back in 2021, when she was still under the saddle of Australian five-star winner Sam Griffiths. When Sam decided to take the role of New Zealand chef d’equipe, Harry was delighted to get the ride on the now-eleven-year-old, who he’s made his FEI debut with this year after she sat out 2022.

In this, her step up, he set out with a clear goal so that she could learn and improve throughout.

“She was super. She sweats up in the collecting ring, and walks at twenty miles per hour, so my main aim for her was to come out of the startbox, settle her into a gallop, and just let her breathe,” he explains. “She was up on her minute markers the whole way around and happy and confident — they both were.”

Tom Rowland and Dreamliner. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

One of the most interesting — and, perhaps, under-the-radar — horse transfers of the last off-season was that of the Chamberlayne family’s Dreamliner, who had previously been piloted by Jonty Evans, Padraig McCarthy, and, latterly, Oliver Townend, who stepped him up to five-star last season, to British rider Tom Rowland. They’ve been on a getting-to-know-you mission since then that’s looked very promising indeed, with a sixth-place finish in the tough CCI4*-S at Hartpury last month, and today, they really clicked into one another’s mindset to execute a classy clear two seconds inside the time, propelling them from 29th to overnight sixth on a two-phase score of 32.1.

Before he set out on course, though, Tom admits that he, like Piggy, felt a twinge of nerves.

“I felt a bit apprehensive, because I was maybe a little bit blasé beforehand, but I thought the course was pretty similar to last year,” says Tom. “I’d had two nice rounds here last year — okay, not on him — but then it caused chaos this morning. I was like, ‘oh my god, I’ve got to take this seriously!'”

But, he continues, “I actually had one of those really rare rounds where I didn’t have a single scary moment. There were places where, because he’s got a very long stride, I added in a distance here and there, which I wouldn’t have thought I should be doing on him. But in a way it works quite well, just to get a bit of time sometimes to see and then move him. I’m learning about him all the time and learning what’s right or wrong, and today, he was actually brilliant. He galloped all the way to the end and felt like he could have gone on for another three minutes.”

Every competition the pair go to represents another huge milestone in their tandem learning process, as Tom explains.

“He’s new to me; I’ve only ridden him [at competitions] four times, and obviously, he’s a very well-known horse. But I absolutely love him, and I feel like I’ve learned a little bit from him each round. He took me by surprise a bit at Burgham, because I found him really very strong, but I also felt that that was the best balance he’d galloped in. He’s so reliable and straight, but I’ve been trying to work particularly on our steering, because he’s a big horse, and I was really pleased with how adjustable he was today,” he says. “I think it’s an Oliver thing — you land over a fence and he’s gone. He’s so fast and so scopey.”

Tom’s not afraid to admit that the new addition to his string is keeping him dreaming — and understandably so.

“I’m so grateful to the Chamberlaynes for asking me to ride him over the winter. This is only my fifth event on him, but I hope he [comes out] feeling good, because I’d love to try to take him to a five-star next year. He’s such a tryer — I’m buzzing with him.”

Tom McEwen and Brookfield Quality now sit seventh, dropping from overnight fifth after adding 5.6 time penalties, while Sarah Bullimore and her talented young horse Irish Trump stepped up from 17th to eighth after adding just 2.4 time penalties to their 30.8 first-phase mark.

Will Rawlin and Ballycoog Breaker Boy also enjoyed a step up, moving from 13th on 30.2 to ninth with 3.2 time penalties to add, while a slimmer addition of 1.2 time penalties ushered five-star partnership Felicity Collins and RSH Contend Or into the top ten from first-phase 31st place.

Joe Meyer and Harbin. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Sadly, the plethora of problems caused around the course today also caught US rider Cosby Green and her Highly Suspicious and Canadian duo Hanna Bundy and Lovely Assistant in their slipstream. Both incurred eliminations on course, but eventing fans from across the pond had plenty to cheer about as Cali-based Aussie Bec Braitling piloted Caravaggio to a completion — though, frustratingly, with a 20 and 32 time penalties, which sees them sit 62nd overnight — and Ocala-based Kiwi Joe Meyer logged a quick clear with Harbin to add just 4 time penalties and climb to 27th place.

Tomorrow’s final day of competition begins with the final horse inspection at 8.00 a.m. (3.00 a.m. EST), and will be followed by showjumping, which we’re pretty sure begins at 11.00 a.m. (6.00 a.m. EST), but so many timetable adjustments have been made throughout today that we can’t tell you with full confidence whether this is accurate or not until tomorrow morning’s lists are published. We’ll be sure to update this once we receive confirmation, though.

The top ten in the CCI4*-L after cross-country.

Oliver Townend and Cooley Rosalent. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Before the cross-country kicked off, this morning had already seen plenty of action, thanks to an early start for several hours of showjumping in the CCI4*-S for eight- and nine-year-olds. Just 20 of the 94 starters delivered faultless rounds over a track that caused no shortage of both time and jumping issues.

The biggest, and most influential of those? The shock elimination of first-phase leaders Tom McEwen and MHS Brown Jack, who had an enormously uncharacteristic five rails down — “a beautiful round, sadly three holes lower than the course,” to quote one of our media cohorts — to incur elimination under this year’s new FEI rules.

That, plus 0.8 time penalties added to overnight-equal-second-placed, and now third-placed Piggy March and Brookfield Future News‘s tally, opened the door for a new face atop the leaderboard — that of recent Burghley winner Oliver Townend and Cooley Rosalent, who’s arguably the most experienced horse in this class’s line-up, with a five-star start to her name already. She added nothing to her 24.7 first-phase score, which had seen her sit in equal second overnight, and will go into tomorrow’s cross-country finale with a 0.8 penalty — or two second — margin over Piggy and ‘Matthew’, who picked up their time penalties while trying to execute conservative turns to avoid the effects of the slick dew on the grass.

Tim Price chopped and changed the order of his horses in the standings after the talented Chio 20 dropped a late rail to slip to sixth, allowing stablemate Jarillo, fifth after dressage, to climb to overnight third on the strength of his faultless round.

Similarly, Caroline Harris‘s D. Day stepped up from tenth to fourth, and Italy’s Vittoria Panizzon and DHI Jackpot moved from fourteenth to fifth.

Hallie Coon and Cute Girl pull the US into the top ten at Blenheim. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

British-based US rider Hallie Coon and Cute Girl also stepped into the top ten, to overnight ninth, with a double-clear, while Katherine Coleman and Sirius SB added a rail and 0.4 time penalties to sit 36th overnight. Tiana Coudray and d’Artagnan, too, added a rail and 1.2 time penalties, and will go into cross-country in 60th place, while 21-year-old Rowan Laird and Sceilig Concordio added nothing to their first-phase score of 41 and will sit 64th overnight.

Canadian travel grant recipients Katie Malensek and Landjaeger had an educational, rather than competitive, round, adding four rails to their first-phase score of 29.9 to move down to 82nd.

Tomorrow’s cross-country has been moved to a 10.00 a.m. start time (5.00 a.m. EST), and will be live-streamed on Horse&Country TV. We’ll be bringing you as much of a round-up of the day’s sport as we can — though unfortunately, the powers-that-be have made the decision to run both classes simultaneously and without the CCI4*-S in reverse order of merit, so you may have to bear with us as we do some interpretive event reporting. It’s all about adaptability, eh?

Until next time, folks: Go Eventing!

The top ten after this morning’s influential showjumping phase in Blenheim’s eight- and nine-year-old CCI4*-S.

EN’s coverage of Blenheim is presented by Kentucky Performance Products. Click here to learn all about their full line of science-backed nutritional support products, including Neigh-Lox Advanced for digestive support.

Blenheim Palace International: [Website] [Entries] [Live Stream]

Blenheim, Day Two: Ros Canter Poses a Threat in CCI4*-L

Ros Canter and Izilot DHI pose a threat in the CCI4*-L. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We certainly never expected anyone to topple the serious lead established yesterday by World Champions Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir in Blenheim’s CCI4*-L, where they delivered the talented rider’s career-best score of 20.5 — and today, nobody did so. But where Yas finished yesterday with a five-or-so mark margin over her nearest competitor, she now goes into tomorrow’s cross-country with a much slimmer lead. That’s all thanks to Ros Canter — herself a former World Champion — and the ten-year-old Dutch gelding Izilot DHI (Zavall VDL x Cavalier).

They didn’t just deliver the test of the day to earn a 21.6 — that’s 1.1 penalties off the lead, or less than three time penalties, before you start doing the hard maths — they also managed to snatch an elusive 10 for their second flying change, which is probably the first and last time I’ll ever write that in this sport, so let’s all enjoy it together, shall we?

“I was absolutely delighted with him,” says Ros, who comes to this, the gelding’s third CCI4*-L, off the back of a win in Blair’s CCI4*-S. “I’ve been a little bit braver today with just working him a little bit quieter, doing a little bit less. Previously, I’ve had to do quite a lot of work to get his brain, but he’s been feeling so good this week I thought I best actually reward him and be brave myself and trust him, and I was really pleased with the outcome.”

‘Isaac’ has been a formidable talent throughout his relatively short career, but not always the most straightforward horse to pilot — but in this phase, at least, he has bags of capability, and has previously gone sub-20 at four-star.

“We’re still scratching the surface to be quite honest,” says Ros. “There’s a huge amount more in there from him, I think. But I was delighted with his softness; we maybe lacked a bit of expression in places today, but actually, his softness, his throughness, and his flexibility at the poll was by far better than I’ve had it before.”

Though Ros enjoyed an excellent run in tough conditions — and an 18 dressage — at Chatsworth earlier this year, she explains that latter-season goals are best to help Isaac settle into his year and perform at his best.

“This time of year is a better time of year for him; he’s  very tricky in spring,” says Ros. “He’s tricky in bad weather, and things like that, so it’s a nice day for him today.”

Riding him, and learning how to eke the best out of him despite some setbacks, is also a huge educational opportunity for herself, she continues.

“I’m learning all the time; this horse has taught me more than any other horse has ever taught me. I learn every day when I ride him — playing about, working it out. He’s had a little bit of a head tip in the last few events and today I didn’t get that. That was a missing key I found yesterday, just working by myself and playing away, so he’s an absolute pleasure and he teaches me an awful lot.”

Laura Collett and Calahari. Photo by Tim Wilkinson/Eventing Images.

Gemma Stevens and Jalapeno, who sat second last night, now move down to third on their 25.6, while Laura Collett and Calahari (Casdorff x Atacama 5, by Night Storm xx) who she’s riding for Ireland’s Aoife Clark as she recovers from a particularly nasty broken arm, take overnight fourth. ‘Harry’ is a sensitive, sharp-minded type of horse — not, perhaps, the kind of horse who would ordinarily thrive with a change of rider at a pivotal point in his career — but after just a couple of months together, the fledgling partnership appears to be blossoming, with a win at Cornbury’s CCI3*-S serving as a great indicator and a confidence-boosting prep ahead of his first full CCI4*-L.

“I haven’t had him very long — he’s Aoife’s horse, and I’m just standing in,” says Laura. “At Lisgarvan and Cornbury it finally felt like we’re kind of gelling as a partnership, so hopefully just in time for a big one! He’s a really fun horse. He’s very, very different to my normal types, and it’s taken a while to kind of get the feeling and find the buttons, but hopefully I feel like we found them.”

Their test today earned them a 25.8 — the German Sport Horse’s best-ever four-star score.

“He really stayed with me. He can get hot but he didn’t feel at all buzzy — he was really rideable,” says Laura. “The trot work felt really good. He doesn’t have the best of walk and there’s a lot of walk in that test!”

Tom McEwen and Brookfield Quality. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

He’s already the overnight leader in one class here, and Tom McEwen‘s no slouch in this one, either — as the final rider of the day, he piloted new-ish ride Brookfield Quality to a 26.6 and overnight fifth place, ahead of Pippa Funnell and Billy Walk On in sixth (27.1) and Kirsty Chabert and Opposition Loire in seventh (27.9).

Their smart, polished test came despite having to negotiate the picky walk section of the test while facing a rearing horse in the neighbouring arena — but, laughs Tom, “I had no idea! Norris knows exactly what he’s doing now, thanks to everybody’s work — he’s brilliant. It was probably not the best work we’ve done, and not the best work we’ve done all week [while schooling], so in that department it was a little bit of a shame, but nothing more than that. He just cracks on with it — we had a late change, which was, again, a shame but he was just a little bit behind my leg at some points today.”

That, he says, “could be down to many things. I worked him this morning and he’s just been doing one days, so he wouldn’t have had any of that. So it’s possibly something along those lines, to be honest, but I’m delighted with him. There’s plenty of people this afternoon to see him and he coped really well them. I’m still actually really getting to know him in many ways, and we’ve still got a bit of learning between each other.”

Tom inherited the ride from fellow Brookfield Stables pilot Piggy March, who campaigned ‘Norris’ up to CCI4*-L and handed the reins over in the middle of last season. This’ll be just Tom’s second FEI start on the gelding — they were third in Blair’s CCI4*-S last August in their first — but he’s already itching to get out on course and find out what the gelding’s made of on a longer track.

“He’s lovely. He’s the coolest, especially cross-country — he’s great fun, he finds the flags and off he goes, he absolutely loves it,” he enthuses.

Sam Lissington and Lord Seekonig. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

New Zealand’s Samantha Lissington goes into cross-country in overnight eighth on a 28.7 with the expressive German-bred ten-year-old Lord Seekonig (Lord Fauntleroy x Seekoenigin, by Carpalo). A mistake in the end of their canter work, which saw them earn 4s and 5s, precluded a higher-placed score, but considering the gelding’s age and experience level — he’s run at just three four-stars — Sam was thrilled to produce a competitive result.

“He was awesome,” she says. “I felt like I could really ask for all the movements. We just had one little confusion at the end where he thought I was asking for a flying change, but then we figured that out. The changes are a work in progress for him; the penny’s just starting to drop, but sometimes you do get the odd extra one. He’s a lovely horse to ride on the flat, though, and he’s come a long way.”

For Sam, taking the horse on a year ago from Ireland’s Alex Power represents a new challenge for her as a rider, too.

“He is still relatively new to me, and it’s the first time I’ve really ridden something that’s been produced by someone else,” she explains. “Normally, I produce them from scratch. So that’s been a bit of a learning curve for me, about making him feel like my own horse, and we feel like we’re just starting to get to that point now.”

Piggy March and Halo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Piggy March and last year’s eight- and nine-year-old CCI4*-S champion, the ten-year-old Halo, sit ninth overnight, slotting in ahead of German National Champions Julia Krajewski and Ero de Cantraie. But while the stallion is very capable of exceptionally low scores — he scored a 21.3 here last year en route to the win, for example — he didn’t quite have his usual sparkle in the ring today, and put a still-very-respectable 28.7 on the board to sit a margin of 8.2 penalties off the lead.

“I’m really disappointed actually,” admits Piggy. “He’s fine; he’s a lovely horse; he has it all there, but that’s not what he should be doing or has been doing. He just sort of went a bit into himself a bit and drew back behind me totally, and he’s not that sort of a horse. So whether it’s just a long day with the heat… I haven’t over-worked him, I don’t know. But it’s horses — we all know the drill! He’s been so much more lovely and expressive and consistent, but today he just came into himself.”

But, she reasons, “tomorrow’s another day, and another learning opportunity for him. I knew he wouldn’t trouble those really good guys, but he’s capable of taking five marks off that quite comfortably. You just always think, ‘what should I have done differently?’ and so it’s always a learning thing for me, too. It’s why it keeps us all so mental, riding these things!”

Cosby Green and Highly Suspicious. Photo by Tim Wilkinson/Eventing Images.

US under-25 rider Cosby Green and her thirteen-year-old Irish Sport Horse Highly Suspicious got their week off to a smart start with a pleasant test that lost some expensive marks in the walk and the flying changes, putting them on a first-phase score of 36.4 and into overnight 59th, which is still only a reasonably scant 16-and-change penalties off the top end of the board.

Canada’s Hanna Bundy and her off-the-track Thoroughbred Lovely Assistant sit equal with them on the same score. Like Cosby, Hanna is benefitting from time spent with Tim and Jonelle Price — though on a shorter-term basis as she benefits from a grant kindly supplied for the development of Canadian riders by Kelly McCarthy-Maine and Shane Maine.

Hanna Bundy and Lovely Assistant. Photo by Hannah Cole Photography/BPIHT.

“I was lucky enough to be one of the grant recipients to come over here for the Nation’s Cup in our Arville in Belgium — four of us came over at the beginning of August, did the Nation’s Cup, and then we’ve all chosen a different path,” says Hanna. “Jessie Phoenix did Burghley, and I’m doing Blenehim; Katie Malensek is doing the eight- and nine-year-olds, and then Kendal Lehari is going to do Boekelo. We’re just so grateful — we’ve been able to train here with Jonelle Price and also our team coach, Rebecca Howard. It’s been a huge learning curve and  so far — knock on wood — it’s all been going in the right direction, so it’s been exciting, really very lucky.”

Hanna had Jonelle’s (admittedly formidable) voice in her head as she navigated the test with her diminutive mare.

“Every single movement, every single transition, everything has to have a purpose and you have to do it right,” she says of her mentor’s training ethos. “You can’t just stay up there having no plan — you have to have a plan and you have to execute it well. That’s what I’ve learned from her, and she’s inspiring. She is so on it, 100% of the time, and she teaches that way too. It’s been awesome, and just watching Tim and Jonelle ride and everything and just watching their programme has been amazing.”

That translated into a test that slots in nicely with the mare’s new mid-30s wheelhouse.

“She can get quite tense and I was able to keep my leg on her the whole time, which is a plus,” says Hanna. “There were a few places where I lost some marks, but I was happy with it overall. She kept her head on her shoulders and did her job.”

Hanna was supported on the ground by an enviable crew that included her new UK-based cohorts and colleagues, but also her fiancé, Nick Hansen, who has been a pivotal part of her partnership with the twelve-year-old mare, who sticked at just 14.2hh when she was bought off the track for a dollar.

“Nick got her off the track as a three year old intending to sell her but she just jumped and then we were like, ‘let’s just hang on to her for a little bit longer!’,” says Hanna. “Nick’s sister, Juliana, produced her up to Prelim and did a great job, and I got her four years ago. Juliana decided she didn’t want to event anymore, so I got to take over the ride — which is amazing for me. Juliana did a great job; she knew her job already. She knew to go through the flags, she needed to go fast, so it’s been easy!”

Cali-stralian Bec Braitling also performed her test this morning with Caravaggio, whose European experience this summer has been helping him to cope with the big atmospheres of bustling events — and while they still had some tricky moments in their test, there were some very pleasing moments, too, and areas in which the striking gelding looked to more visibly relax into his work. They’ll go into cross-country on a 40.1 and in overnight 79th place.

Now, with the dressage in the rearview mirror, it’s on to the fun bit — cross-country. With 93 horses and riders to tackle David Evans’ track tomorrow, it’s going to be a seriously big day of action, beginning at 11.30 a.m. (5.30 a.m. EST) and continuing until just before 5.00 p.m. (12.00 p.m. EST), holds notwithstanding. Check out the course to come on CrossCountryApp’s interactive preview, and be sure to tune in to Horse&Country TV to follow along with all the fun through their live-stream — and, of course, head back on over to EN at the end of the day for all the insights and analysis you could ask for. Go Eventing!

 

The top ten after dressage in Blenheim’s CCI4*-L.

EN’s coverage of Blenheim is presented by Kentucky Performance Products. Click here to learn all about their full line of science-backed nutritional support products, including Neigh-Lox Advanced for digestive support.

Blenheim Palace International: [Website] [Entries] [Live Stream]

Blenheim, Day Two: Dressage Leader Unchanged in CCI4*-S But Big Bids in Top Ten

Oliver Townend and Cooley Rosalent are the best of day two in Blenheim’s CCI4*-S. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Friday afternoon dressage advantages be damned: throughout today’s packed day of CCI4*-S dressage for the eight- and nine-year-olds at Blenheim, we saw an extraordinary array of talent, but no one could usurp the top spot, claimed yesterday morning by Tom McEwen and MHS Brown Jack on an impressive score of 24.6.

Actually, admirable judging has been one of the major takeaways over the two days of this class — while the CCI4*-L has seen some major variations in several tests, the ground jury in the CCI4*-S has been the picture of consistency, with two of the three judges united in awarding a 75% score to Tom (the third, at C, was just marginally more generous at 76.25%) and, most remarkably, all three judges giving overnight fifth-placed Jarillo, ridden by Tim Price, a 73.33%.

They’ve been happy to reward greatness where such a reward is due, but similarly unafraid to penalise problems; eight of the 95 tests earned scores in the 40s.

With a quality field like this, that yields close margins — and they couldn’t be closer at the business end of the leaderboard. Piggy March and Brookfield Future News remain in a close overnight second behind Tom and Jack, just a tenth of a penalty off the lead on a 24.7, and today, they’re joined in equal second place by Burghley winner Oliver Townend and the exciting Cooley Rosalent (Valent x Bellaney Jewel, by Roselier), who’s one of the more experienced horses in this class with a five-star start under her belt already. That start, which came at Luhmühlen in June, was her last FEI event; though she underperformed in the first phase there with an uncharacteristic high-30s mark, the 2020 Six-Year-Old Reserve World Champion looked back to her best today, logging her second sub-25 at four-star.

 

Tim Price and Chio 20. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tim Price has a seriously exciting trio of horses for this class this year, and while yesterday afternoon’s ride, the splashy Jarillo, was relegated to overnight fifth on his score of 26.7, it’s hardly a hardship when another of the string takes the spot ahead. Today, that was the role of the nine-year-old Holsteiner Chio 20 (Castelan 3 x Nobelis, by Heraldik xx) who, with his expressive paces and natural balance, was a delight to watch — but even for all that, Tim was surprised to earn a 25.1 and overnight fourth place.

“He’s really hard work, actually — he’s quite agricultural to ride,” admits Tim. “I’ve got a little wheely spur on behind and double bridle in front. But he’s always got a very friendly face about his job, and it’s just who he is as a build and a type. He’s big and strong and always wanting to you run his balance long and down.”

Unlike Cooley Rosalent before him, Chio is very inexperienced, with just six FEI starts — and a decidedly up-and-down cross-country record across it — to his name, in comparison to Rosalent’s 15. But for Tim, the primary goal of this week is simply to continue quietly plugging away at the talented gelding’s education, one big milestone at a time.

“This was his first Advanced test, and it’s nice to get into some movements where they help everything, compared to 3*,” he says. “It’s nice to actually put him into a shape and make him go sideways, because it’s all improving. I’ve been looking forward to this stage.”

Tim initially sourced the horse as a six-year-old through Canada’s Rebecca Howard, who had got him from Kevin McNab and Scuderia 1918 via agent Francesca Pollara — and over the three years he’s been on the Prices’ yard, he’s made himself something of a main character.

“Rebecca was around for a barbecue one night and said, ‘I’ve got this big horse that is quite impressive’. That was him as a six year old. I bought him then and have just been quietly coming along with him, really, since then.  We’ve taken me a wee while to get to this level — he’s nine, but he’s been that sort of horse that I’m just taking  my time over. He’s quite a character; he likes to have everyone on, and he imposes himself on people a little bit, in a BFG kind of way.”

All smiles for Storm Straker and Fever Pitch after an exceptional test. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Just three-tenths of a penalty behind Chio, and on an impressive career personal best of 27, is amateur rider Storm Straker‘s nine-year-old German Sport Horse Fever Pitch (Tannenhof’s Fahrenheit x Sinfonie, by Sherlock Holmes).

“I felt a bit of pressure, only because it’s a big championship and you want to do well, don’t you?” says 25-year-old Storm. “But he was really good. He was a little bit tired, probably because of the heat, but he was quite responsive — normally, he can get a bit flat, but actually, he was with me, which was nice.”

Storm and her mother, Victoria, have owned the gelding since finding him as a four-year-old through friends in Germany, and now, he’s her sole international eventing ride; alongside her job in the farms and estates division of Howden Insurance, she also maintains two exciting young horses, one of whom she’s aiming for pure dressage. But riding and working full-time presents its own unique challenges: “It’s difficult — I don’t get to cross-country school very often, because I’ve got a full-time job, so balancing the two is a bit tricky,” she says. “But we’ve been getting a lot of help from Chris Bartle, and so I really put recent successes down to him.”

With Fever Pitch, who she describes as “a difficult horse, just because he’s so sensitive,” she’s had to be particularly methodical and smart with her time — and part of that sensibility is simply in giving him time.

“To start with, teaching him half-passes and things was a very slow process, but he started to really get it, and he trusts me now, which is great. He’s also started to show his character in the last year, which is really nice. He’s special, and we adore him. He knows he’s the king of the yard — it’s really nice that he’s shining. It’s time, and it’s training,” says Storm, who trains on the flat with dressage rider Nicola Naprstek, with whom she’s ridden since her early teens. “She’s really understood him, and that’s how it started to click.”

Stephen Heal and Quidam de Lux. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Stephen Heal and the Irish-bred Quidam de Lux (Boswell Mr Heartbreaker x St Breddans Lady, by Lux Z) move into overnight seventh place after a smart 27.5 — a four-star personal best on the 2021 British Seven-Year-Old Champion’s third start at the level.

“I’m really pleased. He’s done plenty of good tests and he generally always does a good one, he just sometimes struggle with the contact a little bit — but today he felt mostly on side. He always wins the warm up and then I go in and I’m like ‘that wasn’t quite as good as the warm up’, but it was fine,” says Stephen, who explains that finding the fine balance in getting the right amount of work into the gelding is an ongoing process. “He’s tricky like that, because he’s naturally actually quite a lazy horse. So I don’t actually want very long on him, but then you need long enough to get all the gears working. So factoring in quite a long walk down [here from the stables] is quite difficult. You’re like,  ‘It’s quite long, but I’m only walking’ —  so we’ve been playing around with things, but it feels like on the whole we got it about right today. I wouldn’t have wanted to be on him any longer in here.”

The flashy chestnut has progressed quickly while learning the tougher movements demanded at four-star, but as for any nine-year-old, this year has been all about learning to find the fine margins and eke out the work he can get at home while at a show.

“He struggles with his changes one way to the other, but he seems to just save them for the test,” laughs Stephen. “At Bramham I was in the warm up and I was like ‘I can’t do a left to right change’ and then he went in, and was like ‘I can!’  Everything’s there — all the lateral work and everything, it’s just getting it in the ring. At home, I can do an 18, and then you go in the boards and he goes a little bit tight and a little bit less off the leg and then you just lose that half a mark from where he will be, but then, he’s only nine.”

Stephen’s had Quidam de Lux since he was a four-year-old, and each year, the gelding has contested the British national age finals — “in the five- and six-year-old championships, he had his only fences down of each season, so winning the seven-year-olds made up for that a little bit!” — but Stephen admits that having such a prodigious youngster in his string also requires him to step back and retain some perspective.

“It’s always really easy to forget how young he is because I’ve had him five years,” he explains. “I’m like, ‘Oh, God, we need to keep up with everyone.’ But then everyone’s like, ‘Oh, he’s only nine’ and then I’m like, ‘Oh I suppose he is —  it feels like he’s about 15 now!’ When you look at these top guys that are still there… Ballaghmor Class won Burghley six years ago and then he’s just won it again and then you think, ‘oh, there’s actually loads of time’ — but you just panic!”

Clare Abbott and Mr Mighty. Photo by Tim Wilkinson/Eventing Images.

Ireland’s Clare Abbott and the charmingly-monikered Mr Mighty will go into tomorrow morning’s showjumping in eighth place on a score of 27.9 — their second-best score at this level, but not quite in the league of the 22.4 they picked up in their last run at the level at Lisgarvan.

“He’s very capable, but some things were just out of our control today,” says Clare, who balances competing at the top levels with part-time work as a maths teacher. “Like, a few people caught his eye in the seating area when we first went in, and then his first halt was dodgy, and in the walk, the flies were annoying him — we didn’t have enough fly spray on. It’s just small things like that, but he’s very capable, he just needs to get some mileage at events like this for experience.”

And, she says, he needs the mileage to learn to curb his enthusiasm for the task at hand.

“He has so many gears, and he’s so powerful — he’d like to be doing tempi changes and bouncier stuff, so the main thing, really, is keeping a lid on it to just do one flying change,” she laughs.

Clare’s particularly excited about riding around David Evans’ track come Sunday, and giving the smart son of Gatcombe another pivotal building block in his education.

“It’s definitely built with an eight- or nine-year-old in mind, which is nice. The course is progressive in size and difficulty, and they give the horses every opportunity to get built up into it. It’s great — we’re looking forward to it,” she says.

The top ten at the culmination of dressage is rounded out by Caroline Harris and the British-bred D. Day (Billy Mexico x Dillus, by Dilum xx), with whom she finished third in Chatsworth’s tough CCI4*-S earlier this season. There, they put a 26 on the board, and while their 27.9 is a marginally worse score on paper, Caroline is delighted with how the talented nine-year-old has come on since then.

“He’s just getting physically stronger,” she says. “He’s not the most flamboyant and flashy, so it’s just getting some strengthening into him. He  wants to do everything so correctly, so the stronger he’s getting, the more I can show him off and do better movements — better half passes, better changes. I still feel there’s a lot more to come when he gets stronger, and I think next year, when he can actually hold himself even more than he did last year, he’ll be even more impressive. He just tries so much.”

Tiana Coudray and D’Artagnan. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

British-based US Olympian Tiana Coudray sits 62nd overnight on a 34.9 with the nine-year-old Holsteiner D’Artagnan (Diamant de Semilly x Cherie Nema), who she describes as “the most generous horse I’ve ever met.”

“He was a Novice horse last year,” she explains. “We picked him up as a bit of a project — I thought I’d put a bit of form on him and sell them as a moneymaker, and he did one Novice, went Intermediate; did one Intermediate, was double clear; went to a 3*, jumped clear around that, and finished up the year having done three three-stars. This year he came out and was supposed to have a few Intermediates but they all got abandoned, so he came straight out at Advanced, and jumped double clear around that. He doesn’t know if he’s coming or going or which way is up, but he tries his heart out. He’s absolutely gorgeous.”

Now, she’s hoping to keep the ride on him for the future, if she can find a buyer or a group of buyers to invest in him, but more immediately, it’s all about giving him exposure and mileage — particularly where big atmosphere is concerned. And if all goes well here? A step up to CCI4*-L at Boekelo — arguably the most atmospheric of all the events — could be on the cards. His test today, she says, is a really positive start.

“He tried so hard,” she says fondly. “By the end, he was getting body tired and he was wobbling about and bouncing off the boards and he sort of fell onto the centerline, but it’s simply his strength. He got tired at the end of the test. He really is like a nine-year-old going on a five-year-old! But I couldn’t ask any more of him. He tried so hard in there.”

The final US competitor of the class was 21-year old British-based Rowan Laird, who trains with Angela Tucker — one of this week’s CCI4*-L judges — and competes this week with his own nine-year-old Sceilig Concordio. They’ll go into tomorrow morning’s showjumping in 89th place on their score of 41.

That showjumping phase is the star of the show for this talented group of nearly 100 eight- and nine-year-olds tomorrow: it’ll all kick off bright and early at 8.00 a.m. (3.00 a.m. EST) and run until roughly 11.00 a.m. (6.00 a.m. EST), prior to the start of the CCI4*-L cross-country at 11.30 a.m. (6.30 a.m. EST). Then, Sunday will see them head into their cross-country finale over David Evans’ educational track. Head on over to Horse&Country TV to follow along with all the action on the livestream here, and keep it locked on EN for an update on all the action tomorrow, as well as a full report to come tonight from the CCI4*-L dressage.

Until then: Go Eventing!

The top ten after dressage in Blenheim’s eight- and nine-year-old CCI4*-S.

EN’s coverage of Blenheim is presented by Kentucky Performance Products. Click here to learn all about their full line of science-backed nutritional support products, including Neigh-Lox Advanced for digestive support.

Blenheim Palace International: [Website] [Entries] [Live Stream]

The Greatest Sporting Event of the Year: Preview the MARS Maryland 5 Star Corgi Race

They’re fast. They’re furry. They’re the greatest athletes of our time. Photo courtesy of the Maryland 5 Star.

As a roving eventing reporter, I get the pleasure of seeing quite a lot of very good sport through the year. I watch horses take a leap of faith at the Cottesmore Leap; I see the world’s best-ranked riders calculate their spot to the Vicarage Vee as part of my ‘just another day in the office’ lifestyle. Just today, I saw World Number One Ros Canter receive a 10 for a flying change, which I actually don’t think I’ve ever witnessed before, so frankly, my bar is set quite high.

But still, for me, nothing can quite compare to a good Corgi race. It thrills me. Their little legs! Their absolute desperation to hit a 5mph sprinting speed! Their colourful, themed bandanas! Inject it into my veins and leave me here, surrounded by unlikely-looking small dawgs, for it is all I need to be happy. And now, if you’re among the uninitiated, you can get your first glimpse at why Corgi racing is the way forward for all sport, because the Maryland 5 Star folks, who so generously put on perhaps the greatest event in the noble sport of Very Fast Corgi-ing, are getting the mainstream media recognition they so richly deserve, thanks to local news outlet WBAL.

Check out the news spot from WBAL here — and to make sure you’re on site to catch all the action in this fast(ish) and furious (kinda) race for glory (and kibble), get your tickets booked for this autumn’s Maryland 5 Star, set to take place from October 19–22, right here. Tickets start at just $15 for single day admission, or you can nab a four-day pass to catch all the action from top to tail for $81. (There are also plenty of very tempting VIP and hospitality packages available, and speaking as someone who got the chance to sample the wares in the VIP tent last year, I can highly recommend this option. Yes, a very good Bloody Mary DOES make dressage more exciting.)

Blenheim CCI4*-L, Day One: Reigning World Champ Sets Personal Record

Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir take the CCI4*-L lead at Blenheim. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

When World Champions Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir showed up on the Blenheim CCI4*-L entry list, it felt like rather a sure thing — really, in this field of largely inexperienced horses or reroutes, how could anyone possibly live up to the standard they’d set?

But nothing’s ever quite as straightforward as all that in the horse world, and though the pair come here as previous victors — they won this class here in 2021 — there are no guarantees with horses, and their 2023 season hasn’t been totally plain sailing. They had uncharacteristic run-outs at coffins at both Kentucky CCI5* and the European Championships, with a historic CHIO Aachen win in between, and now, with the Paris Olympics less than a year away, it’s all about reconsolidating, ending the season on a high, and, of course, nailing down that long-format qualifying result.

Cross-country might, as such, be the main focus of their week, but before they get to all that, they started off on an extraordinary high note. They currently sit in first place — a lead that it’s hard to imagine anyone will pass tomorrow — on a 20.5, Yas’s personal best score at any international competition on any horse.

The clincher? A whole new mental outlook for the still-relatively-inexperienced French-bred 12-year-old (Nouma d’Auzay x Gerboise du Cochet, by Livarot).

“I’m always such a perfectionist, and I always want to try to be better all the time,” Yasmin says. “Today, he was really rideable and soft, and I felt like I could ask for more from him than usual, because usually we’re a little bit on the edge of maybe a slight explosion. It definitely always feels a little more fragile than it looks, but today it didn’t feel fragile at all, which is a really great feeling.”

Yas and Banzai du Loir. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The decision to come to Blenheim, just a month after that European Championships run with its shortened cross-country track, was almost circumstantial, Yas explains: “He came out of the Europeans so well, and we pondered for a little bit after that and thought, ‘It was at the beginning of August, all the other horses still have three more events to do, he has no one to go in the field with, and he ended up only running for about eight and a half minutes [at the Europeans]. So we decided that actually, it would be really good for both of us to go out and just finish the season on a good note. I think more than anything, it’s about positivity. I want to come out and just have a nice time and enjoy it.”

Although the Paris Olympics, for which the gelding was initially bought, is still very much on her mind, Yas is also focusing on the bigger picture, and working on just creating the best possible performances for where she and her exceptional horse are at.

“Obviously [the Olympics] has been a dream of mine since I’ve was tiny, running around on little ponies,” she says. “But what will be will be — as long as we do our best and hopefully have some good results, there’s not very much else we can do. At the moment, I’m just trying… not to forget about it, as it’s always in the back of your mind, but I’m definitely not hell bent or going to go absolutely nuts. I’d really like to have some good results, and then hopefully we’re still in the mix, but you just never know what will happen with horses.”

Gemma Stevens and Jalapeno. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Gemma Stevens was among the first group of riders in the ring, and she and the former Karin Donckers ride Jalapeno set a standard that wasn’t met for a long time. Ultimately, they moved down just one place to overnight second on their very good score of 25.6, which sees them sit a margin of 5.1 penalties behind the overnight leaders.

“She’s an old-timer, and she knows what she’s doing,” says Gemma, “but it’s such a shame we’ve got an early draw. We’ve been drawn before some of the multiples, which is a real shame when you’ve only got one horse — and one that’s so established on the flat. She’s got the ability, as we saw at Badminton, to do low-20s. But she’s gone in there this morning and done a lovely test, and tried really hard, and we’re on a 25, so it’s okay! It’s not going to lead, but it’s a good start, and for early on Thursday morning, it’s good.”

We last saw Gemma and Jalapeno in an FEI event way back in May, when they contested that extraordinarily tough Badminton. They finished sixth there, which was the culmination of an extraordinary amount of rehabilitation and fitness work on the part of Gemma and her team after the mare had sustained an injury a couple of seasons prior. In bringing ‘Jala’ back, Gemma had learned how to fitten a horse without overusing the gallops — a technique that her prior top horse, Arctic Soul, had relished — and since then, she’s adhering to the mare’s newfound routine.

“She’s literally just done a couple of Open Intermediates to keep her sweet and happy,” says Gemma. “We know she can jump ’round, so she doesn’t need to go run at hundreds of events — she just needs the odd run for her fitness, and to keep her sweet. She’s been swimming and treadmilling and gently cantering; that seems to work with her, so we keep it going!”

If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it, and all that; you can catch Jala doing her best David Hasselhof at a community pool near you. Maybe.

Pippa Funnell and Billy Walk On. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Pippa Funnell and her seasoned Billy Walk On sit third on 27.1 after a smart test that began with one unfortunate mistake: “He was a good boy. It’s just a shame that he bobbed into canter at the very beginning, but I was happy enough with him – 27 is around his standard mark. He’s not the most impressive of movers, but he’s a good boy in his temperament, and he was actually, if anything, a bit brighter than normal,” says Pippa.

That, she explains, probably has something to do with how she’s managed his routine this week as we’ve collectively faced something rather like summer, finally.

“I just have to be careful that I don’t overdo the work. Possibly he was maybe a little bit more inattentive than normal, but I didn’t want to overdo the work, because the ground has been drying up recently, and a lot of the warm up is quite sort of bumpy lumpy. He’s done lots of hacking, so I’ve been on him plenty, but not worked him hard.”

Still – it was a sweet starting point for the gelding, and as someone else in the top five proves, there are always plenty of interesting ways to pick up an unexpected penalty or two, even on the most solid of horses.

“I had a bit of a brain fart,” laments Kirsty Chabert, who holds fourth place despite a bit of a miscalculation in her test with the experienced Opposition Loire. That miscalculation? A near error-of-course in the canter work, which ultimately saw them find their way to the desired route — but with a few unplanned tempi changes along the way, a stunning bit of overachievement that, unfortunately, doesn’t earn any extra credit on the scoreboard. Instead, they picked up two 5s and a 4, slightly hampering their sheet that had otherwise been chock full of 7.5s and 8s.

“She’s the most consistent horse I’ve ever had on the flat — like, she’s the same every day of the week,” says Kirsty of her 12-year-old homebred (Opposition Heracles x Brooks Carnival Spirit, by Carnival Drum). “If a horse could nap to go into an arena… she effectively gets there and kind of goes, ‘thank God for that! I’m in the arena now! What would you like me to do?’ She’s just the most beautiful thing to ride on the flat — so I feel a bit guilty!”

The goal for Blenheim, Kirsty explains, is to put a positive cap on a year of ups and downs.

“She was at Badminton, and I had a few not-very-great runs with her in the spring,” explains Kirsty. “She’s not a fan of unpredictable ground, so basically, we’ve just been going back to Open Intermediates and three-stars and trying to get her confidence back. She was third at Bramham CCI4*-L last year, so it’s not that I don’t know she can jump everything, and then she went to Ireland a couple of weeks ago and did a four-short and was fantastic, so my aim of this week is for her to have her ears pricked and a smile on her face on Sunday.”

Julia Krajewski and Ero de Cantraie. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Germany’s Julia Krajewski, our reigning Olympic champion, wasn’t necessarily planning her year around a Blenheim trip — but when two of her students in the Warendorf young rider training scheme, Calvin Böckmann and Libussa Lubekke, opted to come over and compete in the CCI4*-L, she decided to bring her two star nine-year-0lds along for the ride, too. One of those, Nickel 21, will compete in the CCI4*-S for eight- and nine-year-olds this week; the other, French-bred Ero de Cantraie, with whom she won this summer’s German National Championship CCI4*-S at Luhmühlen, is contesting his first-ever CCI4*-L here. And what a start he’s had to the week: at the end of day one, he sits in overnight fifth on 29.6.

“He’s really come on leaps and bounds the whole year,” says Julia, explaining her choice in dividing and conquering among Blenheim’s two classes. “One year ago, he couldn’t even do a flying change properly, so he really came on this year. He’s maybe a bit more of a big galloper, so I thought he’d enjoy the hilly terrain here, while [Nickel 21] takes a good breath and then goes to Boekelo. I think a lot of Ero; he’s maybe a bit disadvantaged in the dressage, because he doesn’t have a naturally flashy trot, so we still have to make that a bit more. On a good day, there’s more, and on a day when he’s a bit more cautious there’s not as much, but I do think he’ll be super, super nice.”

And his best trait?

“He really wants to please. He wants to do well, and I think that’s the most important,” says Julia, who intimated at Luhmühlen that Ero’s brain reminds her of that of Samourai du Thot, her now-retired Olympic partner and CCI5* winner.

Coming from continental Europe, where much is done on a surface at competitions, Blenheim’s expanse of grass is also a useful part of Ero’s ongoing education.

“We’ve ridden a test on grass before in our first two-star — and it was very bad,” laughs Julia. “I like riding on grass generally; I do a lot at home, but I actually think it’s probably the warm-up and preparation that’s a bit different, because when you compete on a surface you have a surface to warm up on, and a surface to train on at the competition. That’s a bit different for the horses and how they can move.”

Like many French horses, Ero isn’t necessarily totally straightforward in his brain — but careful production over the last eighteen months has meant that he’s chosen Julia as a safety net of sorts, and every confidence-building experience she can give him is a net positive in his overall production, particularly in busy rings like Blenheim’s.

“He was sweet, and he doesn’t really mind atmosphere. He can come in somewhere and be a little bit cautious, but he never forgets himself, and that’s really nice. I’ve only had him a year and a half, and when I got him he was quite insecure and didn’t know where to put himself — but I think he decided to put himself with me, and that’s fine!”

Today, she says, that translated to an often elusive quality: consistency.

“He really stayed with me. He came in and went, ‘oh! Okay. There are more people than yesterday. It’s exciting!’ There are no massive highlights, but it’s very even throughout, which means that if we get everything half a mark better, it’s a lot — you don’t have to rely on only the medium or the canter. The second flying change wasn’t as nice, but it was through, and that means we’ve had no late flying changes all season, which I’m really happy about because he really didn’t have a clue a year ago.”

One of the changes that Julia has implemented this week, which she introduced while contesting the CCI4*-S last month at Arville, is a double bridle: “He’s actually the first one I’ve ridden in a double. I find he looks more dressage-y,” she laughs, “and he takes it well, so why not?”

Tiana Coudray and Cancaras Girl. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We’ve had one US competitor so far in this class, and that’s UK-based Tiana Coudray, who rerouted Cancaras Girl here after a couple of issues — and ultimately, a rider fall — at Burghley earlier this month. They sit 24th overnight on 34.3 after a sweet test, which is, Tiana explains, a means to an end rather than the goal in and of itself.

“She’s come on so much this season, and at Burghley I was so pleased with her because she really come on again,” says Tiana. “Today, no, it wasn’t the best test she’s ever done by any stretch, but there’s more maturity in the ring. This weekend is a little bit ‘after the fact’. She did a nice enough bit of work in there — nothing to get terribly excited about, but equally she didn’t misbehave or anything like that. So that’s fine! It’s a stepping stone, and then on to another 5* in the future.”

Rerouting to Blenheim, Tiana explains, works against her usual nature — but finishing the season on a high is a compelling override to her ordinary system.

“It’s been a bit weird coming here, because I think I’m quite methodical, and I’ve never come to an event just like ‘yeah, let’s go to this’,” she says. “I haven’t planned it out; I haven’t even had a chance to school the test before coming here, because off the back of Burghley she had a few days off and then a few days hacking and then it’s like, ‘right, let’s try again!’ So it is a bit weird being here a bit last minute. Not that she wasn’t prepped, obviously — she was prepped for Burghley. But it mentally for me it’s just taking me a minute to regroup and readjust to the goal.”

Though her Burghley was plagued with bad luck, including an extraordinary save at the Leaf Pit that lead to an inflated air jacket, which Tiana rode with for much of the rest of the course, she’s not letting herself take the easy way out in hindsight.

“At the end of the day, if you don’t ride well enough, you’re not going to go well enough,” she says sagely. “There’s no excuses — there’s plenty of things like I could have, should have, would done, or could do better. And then also, you do get a few things thrown at you that make it even harder.  I think it’d be very easy to make excuses and say, ‘oh, you know, I’ have gone clear inside the time if that hadn’t happened!’ No, the reality is we should have been better and it wouldn’t have happened in the first place. So we go home and try to train harder and try it again. It wouldn’t go amiss for both of us to have a really good confident spin around here and go away happy with things and build off the back of that.”

Tomorrow’s CCI4*-L dressage recommences at 9.00 a.m. local time/4.00 a.m. EST with Harry Mutch and HD Bronze first in the ring — and while there’s no livestream for the first phase, as in the CCI4*-S, we’ll be bringing you all the news you need as the competition unfolds. Keep it locked on EN — and Go Eventing.

The top ten in the CCI4*-L at the end of the first day of dressage at Blenheim.

EN’s coverage of Blenheim is presented by Kentucky Performance Products. Click here to learn all about their full line of science-backed nutritional support products, including Neigh-Lox Advanced for digestive support.

Blenheim Palace International: [Website] [Entries] [Live Stream]

Blenheim CCI4*-S, Day One: McEwen’s Unconventional Morning Alarm Heralds Success

 

Tom McEwen and MHS Brown Jack take the day one lead in Blenheim’s CCI4*-S for eight- and nine-year-olds. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Day one at the Blenheim Palace International Horse Trials didn’t quite start how Tom McEwen might have planned — “I’ve got puppies in my lorry, and they woke me up at five!” he bemoans with a laugh — but nevertheless, he rallied those dwindling energy levels to produce a serious test on Fred and Penny Barker’s oversized MHS Brown Jack to take, and hold, an early lead in the CCI4*-S for eight- and nine-year-olds. And as in the CCI4*-L, that day one gauntlet isn’t going to be an easy one for tomorrow’s competitors to catch: they posted the gelding’s four-star personal best of 24.6, uniting the judges at E and M, who each gave the smart test a 75%.

That test came despite an unforeseen challenge: “I was hoping he’d have a friend next door in the ring,” says Tom, referring to the side-by-side competition arenas, which have seen horses and riders entering in pairs to perform their tests in tandem through the day, “but there was no one there. So I was like, ‘right — he’s going to have to be really mature.’ And he was; he was fantastic.”

The ride, he says, was just about “on par with his test at Bramham”, at which he scored a 28.7, but today, both the highlights and the little errors were more numerous.

“With him, it’s just general progression through basics and strength,” says Tom. “His highlights are that there’s a lot more air time, but in a relaxed way rather than with tension, though that’s probably the wrong word. It’s just really nice air time. The little mistakes were that he just got a little bit tense coming into his last change, and because I went for a bit more extended trot today, we just took two seconds to find a balance.”

But, he reasons, “they’re all minor minor things and it’s all part of the learning stage.”

For a big horse — the nine-year-old Irish Sport Horse (OBOS Quality 004 x Gowran Lady, by Cavalier Royale) sticks at over 17hh — that time to learn, and to itemise one’s limbs, is key, and although he’s making his Blenheim debut a year later than planned thanks to last year’s clash with the World Championships, that’s something that Tom is taking in his stride as he fine tunes everything the gelding needs for a top-notch performance.

“He’s Mr Relaxed when he’s in a relaxed place, but he can be a bit of a panicker, and because he’s so big, he can move his weight a bit,” says Tom. “It’s just getting him in the right mindset, and the more he relaxes and listens, the more you can ride for a test like today — but when he panics, it’s time to just pop him away and try again later. He’s just taken time; he’s a powerful horse, and he’s better over a bigger course, and so we’re just playing around a bit with him.”

Piggy March and Brookfield Future News. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Just one-tenth of a penalty behind Tom is his fellow Brookfield Stables rider, Piggy March, who posted a 24.7 with Brookfield Future News to take overnight second for the eventing enterprise spearheaded by owners John and Chloe Perry and Alison Swinburn.

“He’s a horse I’ve always thought a lot of, and I think he’ll be a five-star horse,” says Piggy of the eight-year-old Irish gelding (Future Trend x Cashmere Breeze, by Last News xx), who she’s piloted throughout his international career. Like MHS Brown Jack, he’s a big horse — and like many Irish-breds, a slightly late-blooming one, and Piggy’s now beginning to dial up the pressure she puts on him in competition.

“He’s not done masses this year, and because he’s a big-framed horse, we’ve taken it easy with him,” she says. “This is a great competition for him — the jumping in the main arena on Saturday will be a whole new thing for him, and I’ll be really interested in how the whole week goes for him.”

That week has certainly begun positively; this is just his second CCI4*-S test, and though he’s scored exceptionally well at the lower international levels, his only previous test at the level saw him post a 34.8 — a ten mark difference between starts at the level.

“The work he did today is as good as he’s got at the moment, and I was so impressed that he wasn’t spooky at all — he was very settled, and he’s getting more and more expressive and starting to come off the floor,” says Piggy. “He’s a very blood horse, and so it’s great to see that there’s all this movement coming out of him.”

That tendency to spookiness hasn’t been a major factor in ‘Matthew’s’ production — “he’s quite simple,” but, Piggy says, “for some reason, every now and then, white boards do feel like they have dragons in them! It’s frustrating at times, but he’s a good boy — it’s just the confidence, and getting out and doing it. He was at Bramham for the CCI4*-S, and there were definitely dragons down at A that day, but the thing with these big arenas is they only get the confidence and experience by getting in there and doing it.”

Tim Price and Jarillo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tim Price has been introducing a fierce little string of future superstars to spectators so far at Blenheim; this morning, it was Viscount Viktor who took the spotlight, taking overnight 21st on a score of 31.4 and totting up another bit of valuable experience en route to becoming, as Tim describes him, his next big star — and this afternoon, all eyes were on the flashy Jarillo.

The nine-year-old Dutch Warmblood gelding (Dantos x Fiorilla, by Alicante) isn’t just flashy to look at — though he is that, with his four white socks and sweet white face — he’s also expressive and mature in his balance in his movement, too. That tidy little package combined to earn the pair a score of 26.7, putting them into overnight third place.

“He’s a very sharp little red-headed thing that’s a little bit scared of his own shadow sometimes,” says Tim. “But it’s nice to be somewhere for a couple of days, rather than at a one-day event, because we get to show him the places and give him the confidence to ask him a little bit more.”

Handily, the gelding finds the atmosphere and eery quiet of the main arena a more relaxing environment than the hubbub of a warm-up ring full of friends: “He’s actually a little horse-shy,” explains Tim. “It’s a nice way around to have it though. It’s the same in the showjumping; he’s a really cool little jumper, and sometimes the warm-up arenas are a bit manic, so when he finally gets in the arena, he’s like, ‘aaaah, this is better — let’s go and jump some jumps!'”

For now, Tim’s focus with Jarillo is development — but in time, he’s confident that the horse is going to be a real weapon in his arsenal. With four top tens out of six FEI starts on his record, and a clean sheet across the country in international competitions, it’s hard to disagree with him, and heartening to see him afford the requisite time to letting that strength develop at its own pace.

“He’s working at a good level, and he’s got a lot of exciting things in there,” says Tim. “As he gets more established at this level, I think I’ll be able to go for a bit more, to come out of a turn and really just hit the button for an extended trot, whereas now, I’m nurturing him around a bit.”

British-based Aussie Sammi Birch holds fourth place overnight on a score of 27.9 with Jutopia (Caretino Gold x Bali-Utopia, by Sandreo), who also adds a positive tick in the box for the Dutch Warmblood studbook.

“This is her first ever attempt at four-star, and so she hasn’t done this test in a competition before — and I’m thrilled with her,” says Sammi. “I had a baby earlier in the year, and she’s a nine-year-old, so she’s probably a bit greener than some of the others, but it’s very exciting to have her here.”

While Sammi was off games, Jonelle Price deputised by bringing the mare to Spain to showjump for the winter — a nifty little swapover that might not have worked so well for a young horse, were it not for Jutopia’s best quality: her brain.

“She’s just the sweetest thing, and she tries harder than any horse,” enthuses Sammi. “If they all tried as hard as her, we’d have a yard full of superstars!”

Mollie Summerland and Flow 7. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

2021 Luhmühlen winner Mollie Summerland might have bid a bittersweet farewell to her famous partner, Charly van ter Heiden, who’s now soaking up the sun in Ocala, but the horse who’s moving into the top spot in her string is no slouch, either.

“I really do think he’ll go sub-20 in the future,” she says of Paula and Adrian Cloke’s Flow 7, who rounds out the top five on day one with a score of 27.9. “He has so much ability on the flat and I think we’re just scratching the surface of what he’s capable of. It still feels so green, and he’s not seen many atmospheres like this, so I think he’s definitely one who’ll go right down.”

The Oldenburg gelding (For Romance x Hauptstutbuch Disney) only began his international career in the latter part of 2021, and as a big horse, has taken time to physically mature — a process that remains ongoing. But his progress is also clearly evident from event to event; where the flying changes were particularly tricky for him at the beginning of this season, they’ve already matured into something much more flowing and functional, helping him to nudge his four-star scores down from the mid-30s we’ve seen when they’ve slightly fallen apart in the ring.

“It’s quite remarkable, actually, what he’s achieved with the lack of mileage he’s got,” says Mollie. “He’s new to all this, and he’s big and still quite weak, but he continually excels himself. He has all the ability to be a top one, it’s just about time — I could take him up the hills and all that [to physically strengthen him], but at the end of the day, he’s a big horse and he just needs time to grow into himself.”

Mollie, who is herself a formidable dressage rider and trains with the likes of Carl Hester and Olivia Oakley, is also settling into translating the language that she shared with her former top horse into how she works with her greener up-and-comers.

“I knew Charly inside out, and he’d basically speak to me in the warm-up and tell me if he needed to do more or less,” she says. “With Flow, it’s a bit more of an unknown quantity; I wasn’t sure whether to do much more with him this morning, or whether to leave him, and so it’s still about building that relationship and learning what ticks with him and what the best system is like. We try different things at every event; at Jardy [Nations Cup] I actually undercooked him, and then with the big screen and the speakers, it wasn’t enough — but he’s coped really well in there today, so it shows how much he’s come on.”

Hallie Coon and Cute Girl. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The best of our US competitors in the ring today was Hallie Coon, who cruised the nine-year-old Cute Girl to a 29.5 and overnight equal seventh, just a fraction of a penalty behind sixth-placed Oliver Townend and En Taro des Vernier. For Hallie, who relocated from Ocala to base in the UK in December, getting to know the Holsteiner mare (Coventry x Caligula, by Clearway) has been a process of ups and downs, trial and error, and an unwavering commitment to learning, which has seen them spend much of their tenure here learning under Australia’s Kevin McNab, with whom the mare won the Seven-Year-Old World Championship two seasons ago. Now, they’re continuing to work part-time with Kevin, but have relocated to Wiltshire, to the base of fellow US rider Katherine Coleman, where they’re working with British team performance manager Dickie Waygood and, like Mollie, dressage rider Olivia Oakley.

All these factors, and all that education, have helped Hallie to unlock a new side to the occasionally mercurial but enormously talented little mare, who’s found a new flow to her extravagant movement in the ring.

“We’re just learning a lot about her and how to manage her,” explains Hallie. “I think the maturity is coming, finally, and the ability to just go in there and take a little bit of a breath. And now I’m able to, too, because I know a little bit more about what to expect with her, so that’s been really helpful. We’ve just been sort of grinding away things bit by bit.”

Getting the measure of Cute Girl’s massive movement has been a huge milestone, she continues: “It’s so hard to actually get it rhythmic within all the gaits; like, collected, medium, all the things in the same rhythm with her, because she is a little bit all over the place. And then she does use it against you — and when they move this big, if you don’t get it just right. They absolutely nail you. So consistency is really what we’re after.”

Katie Malensek and Landjaeger. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Canada is out in force at Blenheim this week thanks to the help of a set of travel grants kindly put forward by Kelly McCarthy-Maine and Shane Maine, which saw a full north-of-the-border team take on the Nations Cup at Arville, Belgium, this summer, and then continue their education on this side of the pond. One of those? Small animal veterinarian and reptile specialist Katie Malensek, who’s been based with Tim and Jonelle Price through her tenure here and will continue to be so until after the CCI4*-L at Lignieres in France at the beginning of next month.

Her partner for her exciting sabbatical is the nine-year-old Landjaeger, who she’s owned since he was a weanling and with whom she’s made her return to the upper levels for the first time since her Young Rider years. Today, they tackled their third four-star test as a partnership, and showed the extraordinary consolidation of skills they’ve been working on since flying over, delivering a significant level personal best of 29.9 to take overnight tenth, just fractionally behind equal-seventh-placed Tom Crisp and Dassett Rock Star (“this horse might actually make me enjoy dressage,” he quips) and ninth-placed Oliver Townend and Caunton First Class.

“I’ve been working with Jonelle over the last month or so, and we’ve really been working on trying to change his shape and get a little more energy and power in the gaits,” says Katie. “For where he’s at in his career, I’m super happy. It’s about balance — he’s not built with the most uphill, smooth conformation, so he works against himself a little bit, but he tries really hard, and he always wants to do the right thing.”

Being able to take the time away from work to train, thanks to “a great crew at home” has been transformative, says Katie.

“It’s been an amazing experience. I have a full time job; I’m a small animal veterinarian and I own a practice, so to have the time to just focus on this horse and the training and just immerse myself in the programme with the Prices and watch and just take it all in… I’m definitely not taking any of it for granted. I have to go back, because someone’s got to pay for it, but honestly, I feel I’m very proud of the fact that I’m an amateur, I work really hard at it, and I find a way to do it.”

And to do so with a horse she’s had throughout not just his career, but his life? That’s even more special.

“We’ve raised him, broke him, trained him — and I’ve actually tried to sell him several times because his legs are all crooked and I didn’t think he’d get this far,” laughs Katie. “He just keeps surprising me — so now he’s not for sale!”

Katherine Coleman and Sirius SB. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

One of the most exciting horses of the day was, arguably, British-based Yank Katherine Coleman‘s Sirius SB, who’s probably one of the greenest horses here — he’s making his Advanced debut in this class — but also quite possibly one of the most naturally talented. You’d be forgiven, at a glance, for mistaking him for World Champion Banzai du Loir — “I get that a lot,” laughs Katherine — not just for his stamp, but for his effortlessly airy movement. The pair impressed roundly in their test, just losing marks here and there for inexperience, to earn a 30.3 and overnight thirteenth place.

“This is his first time doing changes in a test, so it’s really exciting,” says Katherine, who sourced the horse from Jody Amos, who had, in turn, sourced him from Harry Horgan. “I think he’s one of the nicest horses I’ve ever had. His trot’s amazing — it’s unreal, and his gallop is insane. He gallops the way that he trots. His weak point at the moment is just his showjumping; he’s super scopey, but he doesn’t quite know what to do with it yet!”

This week will be a foundational milestone in his learning journey — and whichever way the competition itself plays out, Sirius is absolutely in his element.

“He’s so funny — he’s actually calmer at a show than he is at home,” Katherine explains. “At a three-day, especially, he just gets into his stall and takes a breath, but at home, he’s such a busybody — he’s dancing around in the cross-ties and pawing in the truck. He comes to the competitions and he absolutely loves it.”

Tomorrow sees the CCI4*-S dressage resume again at 9.00 a.m. (4.00 a.m. EST), with Italy’s Vittoria Panizzon and DHI Jackpot first into the ring. Alas, there’s no livestream for this phase — but keep it locked onto EN for all the news and updates from this class, and stay tuned for a full report on the feature CCI4*-L shortly!

The top ten in the eight- and nine-year-old CCI4*-S.

EN’s coverage of Blenheim is presented by Kentucky Performance Products. Click here to learn all about their full line of science-backed nutritional support products, including Neigh-Lox Advanced for digestive support.

Blenheim Palace International: [Website] [Entries] [Live Stream]

 

How to Follow Blenheim Palace International All Weekend on H&C+

Piggy French and Brookfield Inocent win the CCI4*-L in 2019. Photo by William Carey.

This weekend sees the return of one of eventing’s biggest and busiest upper-level fixtures: come Saturday morning, it’ll be time for the ‘fun bits’ of the 2023 Blenheim Palace International Horse Trials, which will see nearly 200 horses in total take to the jumping phases across the feature CCI4*-L and the CCI4*-S for eight- and nine-year-old horses.

Unfortunately, there’s no live-stream for today and tomorrow’s dressage, but Horse&Country TV will have wall-to-wall coverage of the entirety of cross-country and showjumping this weekend. Here’s how that schedule is looking at the moment:

Saturday, September 16

  • CCI4*S: showjumping, 8.00 a.m. — 10.00 a.m. (3.00 a.m. — 5.00 a.m. EST)
  • CCI4*-L: cross-country, 11.00 a.m. — 17.00 p.m. (6.00 a.m. — 12.00 p.m. EST)

Sunday, September 17

  • CCI4*-S: cross-country, 11.00 a.m. — 14.00 p.m. (6.00 a.m. — 9.00 a.m. EST)
  • CCI4*-L: showjumping, 11.00 a.m. — 13.00 p.m (6.00 a.m. — 8.00 a.m. EST)

To watch on Horse&Country TV, you’ll need a membership pass — and you can take advantage of a seven-day free trial, or choose a monthly or annual membership or an event pass, here. Your H&C+ membership gives you access to a whole host of archival content as well as live events — so happy streaming, and Go Eventing!

 

Resources to Rely On: FEI Launches Digital Grooms’ Toolkit

US groom Taylor Greene at Boekelo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

One of the FEI’s points of focus over the last few years has been the improvement of conditions for grooms — and, concurrently, an increased standardisation of their education, in a bid to create a cohesive and welfare-first environment for everyone in international sport. The latest development in this quest? The launch of the FEI Grooms Toolkit, a one-stop shop for accessing up-to-date resources and information (and a boon for anyone who’s ever tried to work out what’s actually going to inadvertently cause a drug test failure, frankly).

The nine sections of the Toolkit link several of the FEI’s apps, with segments focusing on, yes, doping regulations, but also covering biosecurity, tack rules, third-party insurances, workplace safety, and a wealth of useful content from FEI’s Campus programme, which is packed full of educational articles and videos and plenty more.

Even more excitingly? The Toolkit incorporates Giving Grooms a Voice, in partnership with the International Grooms Association and the Grooms Consultative Group, to ensure that positive progress continues to be made and allows for the easy submission of feedback to improve conditions at events.

“It is by ensuring that the highest welfare standards are maintained that we can grow our sport in a positive and sustainable manner,” says the FEI. “As governing body for international sport, the welfare of the horse is of vital importance to the FEI and it is imperative that the wellbeing of horses remains at the forefront of all our undertakings, in whatever capacity.”

Check out the Grooms Toolkit here — it’s a free resource for anyone to use, and while you’ll need to sign up for an FEI Campus account to use the wealth of educational resources, it’s a quick and painless process that doesn’t require you to actively work as an international competition groom. Open access to equine educational resources, led by industry professionals? That’s our favourite flavour of internet.

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Recap Cross-Country at Blenheim’s 2022 CCI4*-S

We’re just a couple of days away from one of the best weekends of the year: that is, cross-country weekend at the Blenheim Palace International Horse Trials, which gifts us a day full of CCI4*-L action on Saturday and then a hundred or so more horses in the CCI4*-S for eight- and nine-year-olds on Sunday. This latter class, in particular, is so exciting: it’s got a reputation for pulling winners who then go on to take a five-star or championship win within the next couple of seasons. Prepare yourself for all that’s to come with this full coverage video of last year’s CCI4*-S cross-country action across one of the most beautiful parklands in the world.

Support Normal Insulin Regulation

InsulinWise®

Metabolic dysregulation is characterized by weight gain and unhealthy insulin levels that can lead to unsoundness. Maintaining normal metabolic function and sustaining healthy weight through dietary supplementation will support normal insulin levels and healthy laminae structure in the foot.

InsulinWise:
Maintains healthy insulin regulation and normal body weight.
Supports a decreased risk of laminitis.
Formulated with a research-proven blend of polyphenols and amino acids.*

* Manfredi JM, Stapley ED, Nash D. Effects of a dietary supplement on insulin and adipokine concentrations in equine metabolic syndrome/insulin dysregulation. In J Equine Vet Sci 2020:88:102930.

The horse that matters to you matters to us®. KPPVet.com

NEW EVENTING STICKER AVAILABLE! Visit https://kppusa.com/summer23/ to grab one for your barn.

93 Horses Pass Colossal CCI4*-L First Horse Inspection at Blenheim Palace

British-based Dutch rider Jillian Giessen and the ex-racehorse Gold Nugget. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s been a few years since EN has been able to have boots on the ground at Oxfordshire, England’s Blenheim Palace International Horse Trials, a competition that’s managed to clash with the World Championships and CHIO Aachen over the last couple of years — but what a joy it is to be back. Not only is the estate, which is famed as the former home of wartime Prime Minister Winston Churchill, a feast for the eyes, but the event itself, which hosts both a CCI4*-L and a CCI4*-S for eight- and nine-year-olds, is a crucial fixture in the annual calendar. That CCI4*-L, which is generally situated on the softer end of the level, is a super end-of-season aim for less experienced horses and riders, while the eight- and nine-year-old class has an extraordinary track record of developing young horses who go on to become five-star winners, generally within just a year or so of their success here.

Former eight- and nine-year-old victors — and World Champions — Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir come forward to try to win the CCI4*-L (for the second time!). Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Don’t believe us? Let’s take a look at how that roll of honour stacks up since the inception of the CCI4*-S back in 2009. The first winner, Piggy March’s Flying Machine, went on to a top-five finish at Luhmühlen in 2011; the second winner, Mark Todd’s NZB Land Vision, won Badminton the following spring; the third winner, William Fox-Pitt’s Oslo, won Pau just a matter of weeks later; the fourth, Andrew Nicholson’s Quimbo, went on to win Boekelo the next month and Kentucky the following spring. Catch your breath for a moment, and then let’s move to the sixth: Jonelle Price’s Faerie Dianimo, who won here in 2014 and then took Luhmühlen the next summer; in 2017, Chris Burton won it with Cooley Lands, who then headed to the following year’s World Equestrian Games; in 2018, Laura Collett and London 52 nabbed it, and we all know where that trajectory led them; in 2020, when the class was temporarily relocated to Burnham Market, it was won by Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir, who then became World Champions two years later. It is, in no uncertain terms, a very big deal to score a victory here, and this year’s field of entries, which sits at 98, is absolutely chock-full of talent. We’ll see the likes of five-star winner Mollie Summerland bring forward young talent — she’s got a serious entry in the Cloke family’s Flow 7, who made his British team debut at Jardy’s Nations Cup this year — and we’ve got a former Young Horse World Champion in Cute Girl, piloted by US rider Hallie Coon. Reigning Olympic champion Julia Krajewski pilots Nickel 21, with whom she finished on the podium in Luhmühlen’s German National Championship this summer, while Oliver Townend has a formidable contestant in nine-year-old Cooley Rosalent, who’s been very successful at Le Lion d’Angers and stepped up to five-star this summer. You can check out the entries for the class in full here.

Will Rawlin and Ballycoog Breaker Boy. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

But that’s the CCI4*-S, and today, our attention was wholly on the CCI4*-L, which has no such age restrictions for its equine entrants. A golden late-summer afternoon unfurled over Blenheim’s picturesque parkland — one of the few such summery days we’ve seen this year, frankly — as its 93 entrants presented in front of the ground jury of president Andrew Bennie, Judy Hancock and Angela Tucker.

Selina Milnes and Gelmer. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

All 93 of them ultimately passed into the competition, with minimal drama; just Selina Milnes and Gelmer were sent to the holding box, and were accepted upon representation. A number of horses were trotted a second time, mostly because of an excess of jolly spirits: those included Tom Rowland and Dreamliner, who he recently inherited from Oliver Townend, Scotland’s Louisa Milne-Home and the striking palomino Future Plans, and US rider Cosby Green, currently in the midst of a season based with Tim and Jonelle Price, and her lop-eared Highly Suspicious.

Gaspard Maksud and Kan-Do 2. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Jewellery company Hi-Ho Silver were on hand to award Best Dressed prizes; these went the way of Tom Grant and Frankie Reid-Warrilow, while a one-off ‘special prize’ was given to British-based Frenchman Gaspard Maksud, who delivered a delightfully odd nod to the sport of golf with a loud set of trousers and a beret designed to look like a hole, complete with hovering golf ball. Never change, Gaspard. Never change.

Now, there’s an awful lot of competition ahead to think about, and both of these enormous classes will get underway promptly at 9.00 a.m. tomorrow in the main arena. The pathfinders for the CCI4*-S class will be Jonelle Price and Fernhill Kankan, while the CCI4*-L will hit the ground running with today’s Best Dressed Male, Tom Grant, riding Penhills Optimax.

There isn’t, unfortunately, a live-stream for the first phase, which will play out through tomorrow and Friday, but you’ll be able to follow along with all the cross-country and showjumping over the weekend thanks to Horse&Country TV. But don’t worry — we won’t let you miss out on any of the news and views from this hugely important fixture, which will be run under new directorship this week after the early termination of the Jockey Club’s tenure. Keep it locked on EN for full reports daily — and until then, Go Eventing!

Blenheim Palace International: [Website] [Entries] [Live Stream]

Tuesday News & Notes from Kentucky Performance Products

How’s this for a bucket-list moment? British-based Italian eventer Giovanni Ugolotti recently got a very cool opportunity to ride racehorses on a beach, and that’s hardly the first time we’ve seen cross-over between the sports — Laura Collett famously makes a big chunk of her living from riding racehorses and training them to jump for National Hunt racing; Jennie Brannigan has been vocal about the positive effect of riding out on her as an eventer, and more and more, I’m seeing friends of mine start to pick up morning shifts out galloping. It’s an incredible way to strengthen your whole body and get comfortable riding — and thinking — at speed, plus, it’s also a handy method of spotting a very good OTTB before they’re actually, you know, OT!

Events Opening Today: YEH West Coast Championships & Last Chance QualifierWaredaca Classic Three Day Event & H.T. Chattahoochee Hills H.T.

Events Closing Today: Tomora Horse TrialsFleur de Leap H.T.Old Tavern Horse TrialsESDCTA New Jersey H.T.Sundance Farm H.T.Stable View Oktoberfest 2/3/4* and H.T.Spokane Sport Horse 9th Annual Fall H.T.Jump Start H.T.Course Brook Farm Fall H.T.

Tuesday News & Notes from Around the World:

Galway Downs has a busy week coming up at the start of November. The California venue isn’t just hosting one championship — it’s hosting a whopping four of them. Get the score on what’s to come here.

The latest instalment in the does-Eric-Lamaze-actually-have-cancer serial mystery is here. The Canadian showjumper spoke to Horse&Hound, saying he’s on the brink of death and had no idea that falsified medical documents had been submitted, though he ‘has his suspicions’. He didn’t happen to bring up any of the many lawsuits currently being pursued against him for selling dodgy horses, mind you. Read it here.

We’ve been huge fans of the Equestrians of Color project since its inception. But if you haven’t yet checked it out, this is a great introduction to the photography blog, which profiles an equestrian each week and gives them a platform to tell their story, with Shelley Paulson and her colleagues’ beautiful portraiture alongside. It’s a wonderful way to ‘meet’ riders with a huge variety of stories to tell. Dive on in.

Hot on Horse Nation: The training scale gets bandied about a lot as we put solid foundations into our horses — but how does it actually translate to the challenges we’re set at different levels of competition? This week, HN dives into First Level dressage to demystify where on the scale you should be at, and how the judges want to see that expressed.

Sponsor Corner: Are you feeling the post-AEC blues? Relive some of the action and discover new stories in this roundup of 4 short stories from the American Eventing Championships. Coverage sponsored by Kentucky Performance Products.

Watch This:

Get a first glimpse of this week’s course at Blenheim!

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by West Palms Events (@westpalmsevents)

Horse show parents truly are a different breed, aren’t they? Even if you’ve not been lucky enough to have your own, I hope that you’ve been caught up in the positive, bonkers, supportive, snack-providing slipstream that a horsey mum or dad creates around them in the barn aisles at a competition. Those special folks make everyone in the community part of the family, and I know that my own turbulent teenage years were so positively impacted by having them around and letting them care about me and my horsey escapades. So here’s to you guys — the horse world wouldn’t work without you. (Even if you are, in fact, Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson.)

Day of Importance: It’s September 11.

US Weekend Action:

Applewood Farm YEH & Mini Event (Califon, NJ) [Website] [YEH Ride Times] [Mini Event Results]

CDCTA Fall H.T. (Berryville, VA) [Website] [Results]

Five Points H.T. (Raeford, NC) [Website] [Results]

Flora Lea Fall H.T. (Medford, NJ) [Website] [Results]

Larkin Hill Fall H.T. (North Chatham, NY) [Website] [Results]

UK Weekend Results:

Cornbury House International and British Young Horse Championships (Finstock, Oxon.): [Results]

West Wilts (3) (Holt, Wilts.): [Results]

Frenchfield (2) (Penrith, Cumbria): [Results]

Savills Chillington Hall Regional & 80/90 Youth Championships (Wolverhampton, Staffs.): [Results]

Burnham Market (2) (Burnham Market, Norfolk): [Results]

Your Monday Reading List:

Captain Mark Phillips is back in H&H with his latest opinion column. This week, he’s discussing the positivity that Burghley brought to the sport, the fickle nature of eventing’s ups and downs — and, briefly, Haras du Pin’s failures in putting on a European Championships this year. Check out his views here.

Some horses are just, well, total drama queens. That’s the case for recently crowned AEC Bates Preliminary Amateury Champion Excel Star Pluto, who decided to put on a really good show of a colic on the way home — but actually just wanted someone to come hang out with him in the trailer. Now, he’s home and back with his bestie, Jalapeño the donkey, and his owner, Kelly Beaver, is reminiscing on the week that was. Relive the AECs with her and fall in love with Pluto.

As a gal with a horse shaped like a city bus, and the arm muscles to prove it, I read this with great interest. It’s just a little snippet of advice, but it’s for those of you who also have heavy-fronted horses and need to lighten them up and shift all that energy to their hind ends. Let it take a literal load off for you today.

This is something that’s hit close to home for me: can horses develop dementia? It’s something that’s had so little research, comparatively, because most horses’ bodies give out long before their minds. But at my yard, we were lucky enough to enjoy the company of our free-range Shetland pony, King Pepi, until his 47th year – yes, really! – and in the last couple of years, we watched his confusion increase. We’ve got a footpath running through the farm that the public can use, and more and more frequently, we’d find him trying to follow a random family home, trit-trotting after them as fast as he could and letting out these sad, high-pitched, confused whinnies, until we fetched him back and put him back in front of his best friend, Tony the Pony. As such, I’m fascinated to read about this fledgling field of research. Here’s a Pepi photo for tax.

And finally, are you guilty of lifting your hands up over a fence? (I know there’s a few of us out there — even at the top levels!) A floating release is a pretty annoying little habit, but it’s well worth taking the time to fix it — because it’ll help your horse jump better and keep you more stable and secure if you do. Get some great tips from Beezie here.

Morning Viewing:

Catch up with Blyth Tait and the Eventing Weekly lads:

Friday Video: USC Aiken’s Eventing Team Makes the Mainstream

Over here in the world of niche equestrian media, we’re always looking for ways to bust out and infiltrate the mainstream — whether it’s with stories of derring-do at the top levels or inspirational moments achieved by horsey folks that can connect with even the, well, unhorsiest of folks. And so we’re delighted to see the ladies of the USC Aiken Eventing Team giving our sport a big tick in that box, when they made the news with their historic win at the Intercollegiate Championships. Catch up with the riders in this segment and found out how they did it.

“A Pain in the Arse 362 Days of the Year”: Looking Back on Vanir Kamira’s Career on Her Retirement

Goodbye, Tillybean! Photo by Libby Law.

One of the most poignant moments of last week’s proceedings at the Defender Burghley Horse Trials didn’t come about as part of the competition — rather, it was one of the bookends of Sunday’s finale.

Though Piggy March‘s two-time five-star winner Vanir Kamira had ostensibly retired from top-level competition at the start of the season, she’s continued to run for fun here and there, including nabbing a second-place finish in the CCI4*-S at Burnham Market this spring. But over the weekend, the eighteen-year-old Irish Sport Horse (Camiro de Haar Z x Fair Caledonian, by Dixi) officially bowed out of an extraordinary career.

“A special moment today with Vanir Kamira retiring from competition at her favourite event – Burghley,” Piggy writes of ‘Tilly’ on her social media channels. “She felt like she really enjoyed herself and was so relaxed in all the atmosphere, which was fantastic. She has been such a superstar for me and I’m so proud of everything we’ve achieved together. I really wanted her to finish whilst she was still at the top of her game and delighted she retires sound, fit and well and still loving her job. Thank you everyone for your appreciation and thank you Tilly for all the amazing days you has given us all. One in a million.”

‘Tilly’ has given us all so many happy memories over the years – join us as we look back on some of our highlights.

BADMINTON 2019

Piggy March and Vanir Kamira win Badminton in 2019. Photo by Nico Morgan.

By the time Piggy and Tilly headed to Badminton in 2019, they already had a glittering resume together: they’d come together at the start of the 2017 season, after the mare had spent time under the saddles of both Izzy Taylor and Paul Tapner, and although the mare had had a reasonably unremarkable record at five-star before their union, they finished second at Badminton that year. In 2018, they racked up top ten finishes in CCI4*-S classes at Belton and Hartpury, and put a tumble at Badminton behind them with a fifth-place finish at Burghley.

And then there was Badminton. They began their week in fourth place on a very good score of 26, and then moved up to second place after cross-country with just 0.8 time penalties — but by the time they faced showjumping, their weakest phase, they were a seemingly insurmountable 5.3 penalties behind two-phase leaders Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class.

When Piggy and Tilly jumped a classy clear round, Piggy galloped around the arena as though she’d won the whole thing, such was her joy in the mare’s achievement — and moments later, when Oliver dropped a mid-course rail, and then had to adjust in the middle of a combination to combat a half-stride, ultimately adding four seconds on the clock, she really had.

“It’s these little horses that make it for us,” said Piggy, whose win with Trevor Dickens’s mare came by just 0.3 penalties — less than a time penalty. “She’s a pain in the arse 362 days a year, and she’s really tricky to manage. She’s not the nicest of things to ride, you know, and she’s difficult, but she’s amazing – I say it all so fondly, because we all love her to bits. She’s a true five-star horse that comes to form at Badminton and Burghley. The rest of the time, she feels pretty ordinary, and you have to work pretty hard for what you can get. She doesn’t find any of it easy, and if I’d built that course at home and practiced it on the same side of the arena, I could do it fifty times and never have a clear round. There’s something about her, and those great little mares that just do enough when they need to. If they’re on your side, they’re just incredible.”

Piggy March and Vanir Kamira jump the biggest fence on Badminton’s track in 2019. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

And of the win?

“It’s a complete fairytale, if I’m honest,” she smiled. “It’s such a team effort, and I know everyone says it so much, but nobody has a bloody clue what you go through to get to the level, to be competitive at this level, and actually get your nose in front of the line first. It’s impossible, and you kind of get used to saying ‘well done’ to everyone else, and going home and thinking ‘oh, I had a rail; I could have been here, I could have been there.’ You go home and you work away, and you dream again, but you get way more knock-backs. It’s so hard, and it’s just having those people here when it all comes together means so much. It’s such a team effort.”

BICTON 2021

Piggy March and Vanir Kamira execute the fastest clear round of the day to move into the lead. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Vanir Kamira was one of those unlucky horses who entered her peak just as the pandemic hit — and that loss of competitions was even more disruptive to these true five-star galloping horses, who are never at their best at short-format internationals. We missed out on seeing her through all of 2020 and most of 2021, but when Bicton announced that it would hold a pop-up Burghley replacement in the late summer of that year, we were treated to seeing her do her thing on the world stage again.

Though she didn’t ultimately win — a couple of rails on the final day dropped her to third and saw Gemma Stevens take the win with Chilli Knight — she was our cross-country leader after making light work of a seriously terrain heavy Captain Mark Phillips course. Their round was the fastest of the day, and saw them cross the finish line nine seconds inside the optimum time.

“For these wonderful old horses, to miss two full seasons of their careers, and from being fourteen and running well at Badminton and Burghley… they’re not tennis rackets or footballs; you can’t put them in the cupboard and do nothing,” said Piggy. “’Tillybean’ doesn’t run very much; she doesn’t really do one-day events, so I came here just hoping her experience from previous years was going to carry us through. I knew how to get her fit, but still, in the back of your mind you think, ‘I hope she remembers!’ And, ‘I hope I remember how to ride!’”

She needn’t have worried. From the start of the course until the very end, Piggy and Tilly gave a masterclass in accuracy, confidence — and old-school event horse fitness. This had always been the mare’s best quality; she’s learned to put together a mid-20s dressage test through correct, sympathetic training, and her showjumping was always be just a tiny bit scrappy, but get her out on a mountainous eleven-minute track and she was wholly and completely in her element.

“She was like, ‘come on, mother!’ She puts her snout on the floor and truffle snuffles the whole way around like ‘come on, let’s go!’ – we don’t give anything much height, but we’re flying along,” said Piggy. “She looks for the flags and the moment I try to slow her up a bit or think ‘let’s give this a bit more time’, she’s like, ‘nope, we’re going!’ But the confidence you can have in a horse like that who knows her job, and wants to do it — she’s a gritty, hardy little mare.”

“I’ve joked before, saying she’s a pain in the arse 362 days a year, but those few days when you’ve got a big competition and really need something with guts and heart is when she just comes into her own. I’m so very proud of her and so very proud of Trevor Dickens, as well. He’s owned her all her career, and what a fabulous horse to have had. These are the moments: she’s been a Burghley horse, she’s been second there twice and fifth once, and it’s been so sad for her not to have had one event that was hers to have a go at [since 2019]. She’s made for hills, for terrain, for grit and heart, and she did it, exactly as she always does it, today.”

BADMINTON 2022

Piggy March finds another level of depth to Vanir Kamira’s extraordinary well of try in her return to Badminton. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Last year, we finally got Badminton back — and for Piggy and Tilly, it was a chance to try to defend the title they’d held for three years.

It was to be Laura Collett and London 52’s week, but it was an exceptional fourth-place finish for Piggy and Tilly, who had added just 0.4 time penalties across the country.

“It’s probably the best she’s ever jumped, even though there was a pole,” Piggy said. “I’m just over the moon; I felt like I left quite a lot out there yesterday. I was down on the clock for three minutes and I felt like I rode very hard for the majority of the course, and she left her heart out there — she gave everything. So I was just a little bit worried today, and I don’t want to expect things of her, because of what she’s done for me and her age.”

Though many riders might have been disheartened by feeling their horse flop over a small warm-up fence, which Vanir Kamira did while preparing for that showjumping round, the stumbling effort actually proved a great sharpener ahead of their performance in the ring.

“It was the best thing that she did,” said Piggy, “but then she went in there and [jumped like that]. That’s sort of been her character — just when you think there’s absolutely no way, she just has something in her that tells me to do one straightaway, and says ‘I’m here, mum, I’m here with you.’ It’s just brilliant, and it’s just so nice to come away from the week with such a special buzz.”

BURGHLEY 2022

“I can’t quite believe it”: Piggy March adds Burghley champion to her resume with Vanir Kamira. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

And then, after a win in the CCI4*-S at Hartpury as prep, what a last hurrah: at the tail end of last year, Piggy and Tilly did the double, and won Burghley. They began their week on an exceptional 22.6; then, after coming home just one second over the time, they stepped up to the lead on cross-country day. By the time they jumped, they’d been afforded two rails in hand — and they used one of them at the first part of the double at fence 4. A few more would bounce, but no further fell, and the Burghley title was theirs.

“I can’t quite believe it, really, but I’m just so relieved,” she said.”I felt like I put more pressure on myself today than I normally do; I’m usually pretty… well, relaxed might be a strong word, but I definitely understand that what will be will be. Today, though, I just felt so much that this little horse deserves it as much as any horse here does. I just didn’t want to let her down. You’ve just got to go and do your thing, but I was just so desperate for her name to be up there on the plaques at Winners’ Avenue. She’s been a Burghley horse through and through — she’s been second twice, fifth, and has now won, and she’s got a total of 4.8 time penalties across all of those runs. It’s the toughest cross-country course in the world to make the time, and she’s a very special horse for that reason.”

How did that measure up to her previous successes?

“It’s really what dreams are made of, and without a doubt, this’ll be one of the best days, if not the best day, along with Badminton for me,” said Piggy. “I’m just so proud; it’s a massive, massive achievement, and even out there taking the trophy pictures with the cars, I can look back on all the pictures of Oliver, of Pippa, of William, and everyone you see in the magazines. You think, ‘oh, that just looks amazing — will it ever be me?’ You believe it in your training, and you believe it going, but it can easily not be. We all know that, and it’s the same in every sport — but you just keep trying and keep believing and you just hope that someday, someone’s looking down and it’s your day. We all know that as sports people and horsepeople; you have your moments every now and then, and someone was looking down today to say it was the moment for me.”

Thank you, Tilly, for all you’ve given our sport: for showing the world that guts and heart are more important than anything else; for being something so extraordinary in such an outwardly ordinary package. This is what eventing is all about — and as horses go, this one has been emblematic.

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Hitch A Ride ‘Round Burghley on Vitali

Though their weekend might have ended with a touch of disappointment when several rails down precluded a win, Tim Price and Vitali certainly enjoyed a good enough day in the office on Saturday at Burghley, where their classy clear round ensured they maintained their first-phase lead at the end of the day. This is a particularly interesting hatcam video to watch, though, because even though it’s a great round — no one leads Burghley on a janky effort — it’s also a round that Tim describes as a ‘tough day in the office’ and not the usual feeling he has with the horse. Sometimes, I think those might be the most useful videos to watch, to try to pick apart how a horse might be given the chance to build in confidence across a big, tough course. Happy watching — and riding, sort of!

Support Normal Insulin Regulation

InsulinWise®

Metabolic dysregulation is characterized by weight gain and unhealthy insulin levels that can lead to unsoundness. Maintaining normal metabolic function and sustaining healthy weight through dietary supplementation will support normal insulin levels and healthy laminae structure in the foot.

InsulinWise:
Maintains healthy insulin regulation and normal body weight.
Supports a decreased risk of laminitis.
Formulated with a research-proven blend of polyphenols and amino acids.*

* Manfredi JM, Stapley ED, Nash D. Effects of a dietary supplement on insulin and adipokine concentrations in equine metabolic syndrome/insulin dysregulation. In J Equine Vet Sci 2020:88:102930.

The horse that matters to you matters to us®. KPPVet.com

NEW EVENTING STICKER AVAILABLE! Visit https://kppusa.com/summer23/ to grab one for your barn.