Classic Eventing Nation

Friday News & Notes Presented by Stable View

 

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A post shared by Jonelle Price (@jonelle_price)

It feels like a million years ago that I found myself chatting to Jonelle Price in the lorry park at Bicton, and she spilled the beans that she’d taken embryos from Classic Moet and paired them with semen from Tom Carlile’s exceptional Upsilon. The end goal, she hoped, was to get a horse with his movement and jump, and Molly’s heart and stamina — though, she conceded, breeding is rarely that easy. Now, though, we’re finally getting to see the fruits of their labour: one of the two offspring, Golly, looks very exciting indeed as a five-year-old! Hopefully we’ll get to see lots more of her this year and over the next few seasons — perhaps a trip to Le Lion, where he sire was so successful, could be on the cards for the youngster.

U.S. Weekend Preview

Equestrians’ Institute H.T. (Kenmore, WA) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

Flora Lea Spring H.T. (Medford, NJ) [Website] [Volunteer]

May-Daze at the Park H.T. (Lexington, KY) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

Mill Creek Pony Club Horse Trial (Kansas City, MO) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring][Volunteer]

Spring Coconino H.T. (Flagstaff, AZ) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

Tryon International Spring H.T. (including the USEA Intercollegiate Eventing Championship) (Mill Spring, NC) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

USEA MDHT YEH Qualifier (Adamstown, MD) [Website] [Volunteer]

Virginia Horse Center Eventing (Lexington, VA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer][Scoring]

Willow Draw Charity Show (Weatherford, TX) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring][Volunteer]

Woodside Spring H.T. (Woodside, CA) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

News From Around the Globe:

Goodbye to the truly excellent Hidalgo d’Ile. The former five-star champion — who won Badminton with Nicolas Touzaint back in 2008; the only French win ever recorded at the event — has died at the ripe old age of 28. Poignantly, he took his last breath on cross-country day of this year’s event — 15 years to the day since his win. [Relive his career here]

If you aren’t following Mia Farley yet, you should be. The talented young up-and-comer, who rides as part of the O’Connor Event Team, is putting the miles on the clock in order to gain experience at the upper levels with her exciting string of horses, and we reckon it won’t be long at all before we see her representing the US in team competitions. [Meet her and her string]

We all like to sit on a reliable jumper — but is it actually for the best if a horse will jump, no matter what? Writer Ellie Woznika thinks not. [Read her thoughts on the matter]

Rider weight is a topic that gets a lot of airtime — but what about equine weight? Studies have found that a worrying number of horses and ponies in the UK are overweight, and that can come with serious consequences. [Start weight-watching]

Watch This:

Catch up on some Tryon two-star action with Elisa Wallace and Tullymurry Fifi!

Millbrook Horse Trials is Back on 2023 Eventing Calendar

Millbrook’s water complex. Photo by Amber Heintzberger.

The Board of Directors of the Millbrook Horse Trials is delighted that the annual event is back on the calendar for July 27-30, 2023. Millbrook is one of the few remaining horse trials in the Northeast, is by far the largest, and is the only one that still runs all levels through Advanced.  The event typically attracts world-class equestrians including Boyd Martin, Phillip Dutton, Buck Davidson, Doug Payne, Will Coleman and many others.

The Millbrook area is characterized by large areas of open farmland and has a strong equestrian tradition. It boasts a local Pony Club, thriving foxhunt and active polo club, and is home to riders of all types. The Horse Trials features natural cross country courses over preserved countryside, world-class competition, first-class social events, and entertainment for the whole family. It enjoys strong support from the local community.

Mimi Babcock and Caroline Merison took over as co-chairs of the board when longtime chair Simon Roosevelt stepped down at the end of 2022.

Merison said, “Mimi and I are excited to take on the challenge of re-invigorating the Millbrook Horse Trials after a couple of years’ hiatus. It is a wonderful event that has 30 years of history and we feel that it is important to keep this event on the map. We are well aware that there are areas that need improvement, but we are starting with wonderful raw material: a beautiful natural track, a small but hardworking team and, especially, a wonderful and supportive local community.”

Babcock added, “We have been humbled by the support from so many of the local community who recognize the importance of equine pursuits in preserving the signature open farmland of Millbrook.”

For now, both co-chairs agree, the board is principally focused on making Millbrook 2023 a success on which to build. “Morgan Rowsell and his team are working hard on improving and extending the cross country track, we have made a small first investment in new equipment and we are developing a longer term maintenance plan. We are also building up the country fair for the local community as well as riders and owners to enjoy. It should be a fun weekend for everyone!”

Sponsorship opportunities are still available. Sponsors this year include Yellowframe Farm, Goldman Sachs Gives, Danbury Porsche and Audi, Taylor Harris Insurance, HW Guernsey at Compass, Bank of Millbrook, Purina, Triple Crown, Millbrook Equine, and Millerton Agway as well as numerous families, farms and individual patrons

For sponsors and patrons, social events include a Saturday morning brunch at the Yellowframe Farm Waterview tent, overlooking the water complex during upper-level cross country, and a Sunday luncheon in private ringside tents overlooking the show jumping arena, where the climax of the competition can be viewed in style.

General admission and parking is free of charge. Food trucks and vendors will be on-site, with a petting zoo for children as well as free access to the Millbrook School Zoo next door, and an arts and crafts tent on-site. Tailgating is available during cross country. A welcome party for competitors and volunteers takes place Friday evening, sponsored by Purina and Triple Crown.

For more information visit www.millbrookhorsetrials.com

Brilliant Bicton: Your Guide on How to Watch This Week’s International

Francis Whittington and DHI Purple Rain at Bicton. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This weekend in the UK, it’s all about Bicton International Horse Trials in beautiful, beachy Devon, where some of the world’s best horses and riders — and no shortage of talented up-and-comers — have convened for four days of sport. The competition will host a CCI4*-S feature class, sponsored by TopSpec, and long-format classes at two- and three-star, including a CCI3*-L for Young Riders. Courses at each level have been designed by Helen West, assisted by Captain Mark Phillips — and you can preview them in their entirety via the CrossCountry App. We’ll be expecting plenty of Bicton’s signature terrain and some much overdue sunshine, too.

Tomorrow and Friday will see all classes take to the dressage arenas, while Saturday will be jam-packed with long-format cross-country. The CCI4*-S competitors — including the likes of Laura Collett and her Badminton champion London 52 and Mollie Summerland and her Luhmühlen winner Charly can ter Heiden — will showjump on Saturday with cross-country to follow on Sunday. ClipMyHorse.tv will be broadcasting all of the cross-country and the long-format showjumping action; you can watch along here.

While EN sadly won’t have boots on the ground at Bicton this week, we’ll be keeping you up-to-date on all the happenings from the weekend. Go Eventing!

Bicton International Links: Website, Live Scores, Live Stream, EN’s Coverage

The Lesson of a Lifetime

Liz Halliday Sharp and Miks Master C. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s not every day you get to take a lesson with Liz Halliday-Sharp — and for amateur Leslie Maslowski, doing just that truly was a once in a lifetime experience. 

As part of Eventing Nation’s 12 Days of Giveaways over the holidays in 2022, Ocala Horse Properties sponsored a prize of one lesson with Liz Halliday-Sharp. Ocala Horse Properties owns several of Liz’s horses, including Deniro Z, Miks Master C, Cooley Nutcracker, Cooley Moonshine, Cooley Quicksilver, Shanroe Cooley, and Cooley Be Cool. 

Leslie entered the giveaway with plans to gift the lesson to her trainer, who would ride her horse. “I had hoped my horse would benefit from a jump lesson with her, as I don’t jump any more and wanted my trainer to ride,” Leslie says. “But I couldn’t work out two busy women’s schedules! Liz was most gracious about emailing back and forth several times. In the end, I rode in what was to be a dressage lesson.”

Far from inexperienced herself, 63-year-old Leslie has been riding horses for six decades. “I’ve had a succession of horses and never outgrew my love of all things equine,” Leslie says. “I’ve ridden and shown hunters, done barrel racing, shown on the Quarter Horse circuit, and competed in dressage and eventing. I’ve worked for two stables, including managing, riding and showing client’s horses, breeding, foaling and starting the young ones under saddle.”

Leslie’s dance partner for the day was her horse, She’s My Valentine (barn name “Swizzle”). She bought Swizzle three years ago when the OTTB was just 6 years old with a goal to go low-level eventing. Unfortunately, their plans were sent awry when Leslie had a fall while jumping. Together, Leslie and Swizzle work on the flat, while Leslie’s trainer takes her jumping and to competitions. According to Leslie, “Swizzle is very laid back, definitely a kick ride. She’s grey and very thin-skinned, and she hates to be groomed.”

Many riders would be intimidated by the thought of taking a lesson with a world top ten eventer, like Liz — and Leslie was no different. She admits she was more than a bit nervous for her lesson.

“I’ve been riding, taking lessons, and showing for over 60 years, but I was so undone by presenting myself to Liz, I was an anxious, nervous wreck,” she says. “And it showed! I didn’t ride well at all and consequently my horse wasn’t at her most cooperative.”

Despite the challenges of having the “yips,” Leslie kept her spirits up and Liz helped her work through some of her nerves throughout the lesson. The two focused on impulsion, transitions, maintaining connection, and Leslie’s “death grip” with her thighs. According to Leslie, “These were all things I already knew, but with emphasis on how MY riding was affecting my horse’s performance.”

This lesson sunk in deeply, as on that particular day Leslie’s nerves were having a big impact on how Swizzle was going. Despite the challenges, Leslie stayed positive throughout the lesson and had a great mindset. “But that’s why one takes lessons, to learn from our mistakes and improve, which we did by the time our lesson concluded.”

By the end of the day, Leslie and Swizzle were working together once again and had learned a few new tricks thanks to Liz’s expert guidance. “In the end we produced a couple trot-canter 20 meter circles, a proper transition here and there, connected and forward! Liz reminded me that I must always prepare for and ride proper transitions, no matter what, when or where. Even just hacking.”

Leslie took her lessons learned from Liz back to her own barn. She says that she’s been working on Liz’s advice at home, and it’s paying off. “At home we practice. Of course I’m much more relaxed, without feeling I had to be outstandingly perfect and impressive in Liz’s presence. My thighs are more relaxed and I’m working on keeping my right shoulder back and my upper body straighter. And Swizzle is responding to my conscious efforts — she’s much happier, which makes me happy and our rides less frustrating.”
A big thank you to Liz Halliday-Sharp for her time and effort and to Ocala Horse Properties for sponsoring such a great prize. Congratulations on winning this giveaway, Leslie!

Thursday News & Notes

Between the ears in Alabama! Photo courtesy of Cindy Beresh-Bryant.

I’m very sad that I won’t be competing at my favorite show of the year this weekend, Virginia Horse Trials, but I shall be in attendance for coaching and cheering all my friends! This spring was a lesson in how I wish I had worn my helmet more as a teenager, as I accumulated a few too many concussions from being a human lawn dart in my youth, and didn’t get my horse fit for competition. I used to pride myself on my ability and willingness to “get on anything”, but that was before I wised up and realized I should really be doing more groundwork with most of these horses to help them be slightly less terrifying under saddle. Anyway, turns out if you bang your head one too many times, you can get concussion symptoms later in life from just getting jostled. Cue me puking every day for two months straight and not being able to really ride my horse consistently. Friends, wear your helmet, and replace it when you fall off. Also, learn good groundwork, your head and your horse will thank you.

U.S. Weekend Preview

Equestrians’ Institute H.T. (Kenmore, WA) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

Flora Lea Spring H.T. (Medford, NJ) [Website] [Volunteer]

May-Daze at the Park H.T. (Lexington, KY) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

Mill Creek Pony Club Horse Trial (Kansas City, MO) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring][Volunteer]

Spring Coconino H.T. (Flagstaff, AZ) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

Tryon International Spring H.T. (including the USEA Intercollegiate Eventing Championship) (Mill Spring, NC) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

USEA MDHT YEH Qualifier (Adamstown, MD) [Website] [Volunteer]

Virginia Horse Center Eventing (Lexington, VA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer][Scoring]

Willow Draw Charity Show (Weatherford, TX) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring][Volunteer]

Woodside Spring H.T. (Woodside, CA) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

News From Around the Globe:

What’s it take to win a five-star with a seventeen-year-old horse? A whole lot, for many years, and an entire team of people behind you. It takes years and a full team effort to develop a horse to the top level of equestrian sport— with riders, owners, grooms, coaches, and many more focusing on giving a horse the best chance at success. This process was true for Mai Baum, known as Lexus, on his road to winning the 2023 Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event with Tamie Smith in the irons. Smith remembered seeing Lexus, a 2006 German Sport Horse gelding owned by Alex Ahearn and her parents Ellen Ahearn and Eric Markell, for the first time when Alex rode him at Tamie’s farm. She was immediately impressed by the horse’s talent, but she didn’t know what was in store for the two of them. [The Lexus Journey]

The competition at CHIO Aachen this year will feature a retirement ceremony for Ingrid Klimke’s Hale Bob. What can we say about Bobby, other than he’s a legend of the sport? World Championships, European Championships, Olympic Games, five star wins he’s done it all. With 70 international events on his resume, and at nineteen years old, we will all get to watch him do one last lap of glory in Aachen. [Hale Bob Retires]

British Eventing has announced a “full stakeholder review” of abandonment insurance, as the fixtures calendar continues to be hindered by cancellations. BE said in light of the “unprecedented abandonments due to the prolonged adverse weather” it is undertaking a “full stakeholder review of the existing arrangements in relation to abandonment insurance”. This follows the cancellation of Rockingham International (18–21 May), as the ground had not dried “sufficiently to allow the event to proceed in a safe manner”. Chatsworth International (12–14 May) cancelled some classes, including the CCI2*-S, after heavy rain. Chepstow at Howick (16–17 May) also abandoned because of the weather. [BE Fears Calendar Collapse]

If you want to shave some points off your dressage score, who better to ask than Carl Hester? “We want the horse in self carriage, and that means the rider has to be in self carriage and without a strong core, that is very difficult to do. Then you won’t need your arms or legs to hold you in the saddle – they must be soft and independent of your body.” [Carl on Self Carriage for Horse & Rider]

 

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Create an Expressive Trot

Funnily enough, the trot is always the gait I’ve struggled with the most in the ring. Maybe that’s because I’ve mostly competed full or nearly full Thoroughbreds, all of which have had brilliant canters, which I’ve found it so easy to adjust and train within, only to move back down into the trot work and find the connection falls apart. My method of working through it has been to use the canter work to set up the balance and contact for the trot work, but dressage rider and trainer Amelia Newcomb has lots of other ideas for you to try (and frankly, I’d take her advice over mine!). Check out this great video and put her lessons to use in your schooling sessions this week to create a real ‘wow’ trot that doesn’t skimp on balance or suppleness.

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A Bumper Fortnight for Eventing, Part One: Observations from the Ground at Badminton

Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

What a season the 2023 one has been so far – in many respects, it feels like it’s scarcely started here in England; in others, I feel as though I’ve been on the road for months. With several long-haul flights, two five-stars, and a handful of short-formats behind me so far, I suppose I have.

In any case, it turns out that, no matter how many seasons I do this job, I continue to walk away from the big ones with a million thoughts and ideas zooming around my head — for better or for worse, where my energy levels are concernedAnd so this will be the first in a short series of faintly chaotic collections of musings spanning the last few weeks of top-level sport: its highs, its lows, its controversies, and what it might all mean for the future. First up: some thoughts in the aftermath of Badminton, where our 2018 World Champion Ros Canter took her first five-star title, the rain came down hard, and we all waded into the quagmire of public opinion – a quagmire we’ve not yet come out of.

Emily King heads to the start box with Valmy Biats. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

There’s no time like the present

When the going gets tough, the first thing that needs to go by the wayside is the idea of chasing the clock — and that was a widespread notion at Badminton, where several riders, including Harry Meade, opted to turn or take it off entirely before heading out on course, giving them one less distraction as they worked on feeling the horse beneath them. Those who did opt to ride with one largely did it just as a tool to track how long they’d been galloping — or, in the case of Francis Whittington, “to give me a bit of motivation — hearing the beep every minute just reminded me to keep going, and keep thinking forward.”

(As an aside, Francis’s cross-country round at Badminton was one of those moments where I love nothing better than to be proven wrong: of all the horses in the field who might have found themselves in Badminton’s tough conditions, his DHI Purple Rain certainly wasn’t one I’d have put forward. The extravagant gelding has huge, round movement — almost, at times, more akin to a carriage horse than a blood event horse — and I would have expected that that would get in his way, and cause him to lose energy more quickly than a more economical type. But this, DHI Purple Rain’s third five-star, was arguably his most impressive: he came home clear with 42.8 time penalties and looked better and better as he went. This, Francis explained, came down to a thorough rethink of the gelding’s fitness programme after retiring at Burghley last year: “There, he hit the door and didn’t know how to open it — now, he’s been given the tools to open it and continue through it,” he explains, citing long, steady gallops with sprints at the end, which work the horse mentally as well as physically, as being the key.)

Time and time again, we saw riders slow down, check in with their horses, and make decisions that often sacrificed a potential leaderboard gain in favour of a sympathetic ride. The tough conditions on the cross country course meant that weariness was almost always something that we, as spectators in the media mixed zone, could see from its onset, and how riders chose to deal with that was insightful. Lithuania’s Aistis Vitkauskas, mounted on one of my favourite cross country competitors in Commander VG, felt his game and experienced horse begin to tire, thought about making the call to retire, and then opted to take each fence as it came and let his horse tell him when, and if, he was done – but as each fence appeared, the gelding pricked his ears, lifted his head, took the bit between his teeth, and sailed over it. The pair came home with a serious amount of time penalties, but Aistis’s willingness to immediately steady the pace and give his horse the chance to enjoy his job was heartening.

In a different vein, several people may have wondered why Caroline Powell decided to keep going after a couple of issues on course with the young talent Greenacres Special Cavalier, who had proved her chops with a placing in her five-star debut at Pau last year. But after those green wobbles, ‘Cavvy’ soon settled into a rhythm, began jumping much better, and very visibly learned as she went around. When Caroline came back to the mixed zone afterwards, her explanation was simple: she could have pulled the mare up and saved her for another day, because there was no chance to take home a placing now, but, she said, there was still value to be found in continuing on as long as the mare was happy to. By doing so, she would get the chance to learn the horse’s staying power over a very different course to Pau, and she’d learn, too, how she’d jump the day after a tough test like the one presented at Badminton. For a horse who’s been considered a Paris prospect since her Le Lion days, this is crucial intel: at ten minutes, and built at four-star dimensions and technicality, the Olympic challenge has nothing on Badminton, but knowing that a horse can handle considerably more is seriously useful for a competitor who will, some day soon, likely need to plumb the depths of her horses’s competitive zeal.

On the flip side, there were the riders who made the equally wise call to put their hands up. I often say there’s one undeniable truth in eventing, and that’s that nobody ever regrets withdrawing or retiring — and that, I’m confident, is absolutely true even for those riders who saw the door open for them to climb up the leaderboard on such a tough day of sport. At the forefront of that has to be Richard Jones, who is such a consummate cross-country phenom with his Alfies Clover that we all shut up and crowded around the screens in the mixed zone to see just how high they’d get on the leaderboard. It was a shock, and a touch deflating at first, to see him retire — but equally, it was absolutely the right call when he felt his horse just start to tire, and that level of horsemanship is more admirable even than a placing at Badminton. Likewise, I could have kissed Emily King for her decision-making: she and Valmy Biats were enjoying a barnstorming round up until the Lake, which they popped neatly into – and then, inexplicably to us all at the time, she aimed the gelding right past the corner in the water, calmly put her hand in the air, and pulled him up. For the next 24 hours, all of us were asking one another, ‘have you spoken to Emily?’ and ‘does anyone know what happened there?’, because they’d looked so fluid on course and there wasn’t a visible hint of tiredness to be seen. But when Emily finally emerged and cheerfully explained that she’d felt him get a bit tired and decided not to push him, she truly earned her brownie points: the mark of a great rider is one who listens to their horse first and foremost. That she’d been able to feel Valmy’s limit approaching well before anyone could see it, even through the red mist of competitive zeal, is something we should all be aspiring to. I promise not to kiss anyone who does that, if that’s any incentive.

Oliver Townend and Swallow Springs. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Could the FEI’s sanction system benefit from increased clarity?

Once again, we’ve sadly seen a great victory slightly overshadowed by drama surrounding another competitor, and whichever side of the pro- or anti-Townend debate you fall on in this instance, I think we’re all pretty well united in agreeing that it’s a great shame when eventing hits the mainstream because it’s being torn to shreds by a skeptical public.

But here’s the thing about eventing: no matter how much we love it, it really does just boil down to consumer entertainment. If the entire concept of eventing were to disappear overnight, there’s a relatively tiny swathe of people who’d be very sad about it, and an even smaller swathe who’d need to find new jobs, but the world at large wouldn’t change in any fundamental way, as it would if, say, the entire concept of brain surgery disappeared overnight. Being a professional event rider is very hard work, I certainly won’t dispute that – but it’s also an inessential role, which makes it a privilege, and one in which ego must be shelved, because ultimately, it’s not about the event rider. It’s about the audience. The world doesn’t need event riders, in the very same way that the world doesn’t need eventing journalists; as a result, even when I’m exhausted from working back-to-back five-stars an endless eighteen hour days, I sometimes need to pull myself out of what I’m doing for a second, give myself a shake, and thing, ‘is what I’m creating here actually serving the audience? Or am I phoning this in?’ The second I spot myself capitulating to my own ego — giving my audience less than what they deserve so I can go to the riders’ party, or to sleep, early, for example — I know I’m abusing the privilege of being in a role that doesn’t need to exist, even if it’s often a tough job. Likewise, the second a rider appears to consider themselves beyond the scope of the social license conversation, and looks puts their own desire to win or finish above serving the optics of the sport, even if that’s not necessarily the case behind the scenes, it will all begin to fall apart, because it is all inessential without audience approval. It’s that simple.

We all know, at this point, that horse riding generally, and eventing especially, aren’t viewed favourably by the general public. We are all sick of the social licence conversation, which feels like it comes up at least once a week — and roughly once per day, if you work in equestrian media. It’s an exhausting, constant reminder that eventing is still dithering at the dangerous crossroads it was at long before I ever made the move from grooming to writing. We are on our last lifeline; we don’t know if we’ll continue on as an Olympic sport past the next couple of cycles; though we know differently, to the average person, what we do probably looks roughly as senseless as, say, horse diving once did. You don’t see horse diving anymore, and that’s no bad thing — but there’s not an awful lot to stop us going the same route.

This means, though, that every single move we make as a singular unit has to be decisive. There is no wiggle room anymore when it comes to wishy-washiness on welfare. And subsequently, there needs to be total clarity on what constitutes a breach of horse welfare standards – and how that’s dealt with.

There was an interesting piece in The Irish Field this week, penned by writer Christa Dillon, which pointed out the worrying discrepancies in the number of sanctions handed out by discipline. Every discipline governed by FEI rules has a yellow carding process in place (except endurance, which… feels like another op-ed for another day, frankly), but looking at the ‘Big Three’, dressage got away most lightly: between early May 2022 and early May 2023, when the last update was made, dressage saw just three yellow cards handed to riders, and none for abuse of horse infractions. (And yes, I am very aware of dressage’s own issues.) Showjumping saw 38 yellow cards over the same period. Eventing saw 71. 55 of those were for abuse of horse infractions, which can include pressing a tired horse, overuse of the whip, visible blood, and so on.

There is often some amount of nuance to the situations in which a yellow card is handed out, but it’s important to note that whether a rider is handed a yellow card or a Recorded Warning, they all get the right to speak to the ground jury prior to the awarding of the sanction. In every case, riders can explain the circumstances from their perspective. There is a chance to fight the good fight if, as a rider, you feel your actions and intentions have been misunderstood. Often, though, receiving a sanction simply comes down to being, quite probably, a good horseman who made a slightly suboptimal decision.

One of the key issues, though, is the transparency of the sanctions process, which seems lenient at best – two Yellow Cards within 12 months leads to a two-month ban; three Recorded Warnings within 24 months will yield the same punishment – and lacks clarity to outsiders as to why an offence might earn one and not the other. ‘Pressing a tired horse’ can be a Recorded Warning offence, or it can be a Yellow Card offence, for example, but the threshold appears to be subjective and the information about how to differentiate isn’t made public. (And what to make of those verbal warnings, visible in the sanctions list, often citing an abuse of horse issue, but without any clarity on why they’re considered less severe?) Though there is, no doubt, plenty going on behind the scenes, I suspect it may be time to make these inner workings clearer to the public, if only to show that horse welfare is taken seriously in our sport.

I’ll be the first to admit that racing isn’t my field of expertise at all, and much of the limited knowledge I possess on its intricacies comes from being friends with several very good journalists who spend a lot of time in that world. What I do know, though, is that its disciplinary structures are much more robust than ours, and handled with an extraordinary amount of clarity. I’ve spent quite a bit of time this week diving into recent sanctions and appeals, which are all laid out clearly on the British Horseracing Authority website. And when I say laid out clearly, I mean it: every moment of the ride is analysed, every position on either side of the argument is presented with no shortage of detail, and even a horse racing illiterate like me can make sense of the situation at hand. There’s a surprising amount of human touch to the whole thing, too: when one young jockey was charged with overuse of the whip, after a lengthy examination of the circumstances, the Board made a point of clarifying that they saw no evidence that the overuse was performed maliciously, but rather as a result of overenthusiasm and inexperience. A punishment was still delivered in accordance with the misdemeanour, but that punishment also focused on education: the young jockey was made to serve one day of his suspension in a training course, and his reputation will have been preserved by the powers that be. It’s all done with a deft and educated touch, and more importantly, it’s easy to understand. Even a layperson can see that actions come with clear consequences. For a sport that’s living on the edge as ours is, this seems like a necessity.

I know what the counterarguments will be: eventing is already deemed expensive and impractical to our own powers that be, and adding in processes like this would cost manpower and money that we, an industry with considerably less fiscal capital than racing, simply do not possess. I understand that. But I wonder if we’re also now at the point where we have to stop making excuses and simply find a way to do it properly, or lose the sport altogether. I wonder if we’re finally at the point where we have no choice but to stop bickering and get it done.

For example, let’s take a look at the whip rule, and how contraventions of it are dealt with in British racing under rules:

  • The whip can be used a maximum of six times in a Flat race or seven times in a Jump race. Any more than this will prompt the stewards to review the ride
  • As well as the number of times the whip is used, The Whip Review Committee will look at the force with which it is used, whether it was used from above shoulder height, whether the horse has been given time to respond, the purpose for which the whip was used, whether the horse was in contention or clearly winning at the time it was used, and whether the whip has been used in the correct place (i.e. on the horse’s hindquarter rather than flanks)
  • Any rider found to have contravened the rules or guidance will face a period of suspension, and any rider picking up third suspension in a six-month period will be referred to the Judicial Panel for penalty
  • Should the whip be used four times or more above the permitted level, the horse and rider will be disqualified from the race

Suspensions work differently in racing than in eventing: jockeys and trainers will have races in their diary with a far greater frequency than eventers have events, and each race represents a much more significant earning potential than what we’d see in eventing. There’s no doubt that a two-month suspension for an event rider with repeat offences would have a hefty impact: in those two months they’d lose plenty of chances to secure MERs, particularly in a season plagued by cancellations, and may even lose owners, who don’t want to see their precious charges sidelined for a quarter of the season. It’s harsh stuff, but then, it needs to be: a rider who’s keen to keep their business on track will toe the party line for that reason, even if all others seem to be of secondary concern. In the midst of the busy bit of the season, a two-week ban could also be impactful – and perhaps it’s time that we see those brought into effect for abuse of horse sanctions. I doubt I’ll make many friends by saying it, but we’re in No Man’s Land now, and if we don’t make some tough decisions, I fear for the future of our sport.

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We deserve better than ‘#bekind’

I suspect I may have already lost a few readers with my crosshead, but hear me out. Social media can be both a blessing (it facilitates communication; it allows for free access to information and inspiration and all sorts of nice things; it lets us promote great stories and, we hope, get more people hooked on our world) and a curse (people can be really fucking mean. Also, there are child influencers telling other children that they need expensive stuff in order to be happy. Very dark! Very weird! Let’s turn it all off and go live in caves). The immediacy of social media means that people’s successes and their mistakes alike can be disseminated around the world in milliseconds, and the relative anonymity of it means that most people feel able to chip in on any given discussion with no holds barred emotional responses. A lot of the time, this stuff is just plain nasty — whenever there’s a young woman competing at a five-star, you can guarantee there’s a TikTok account somewhere dedicated solely to shredding her to pieces in real time, which is generally tantamount to schoolyard jealousy but can do real damage to a young person simply trying to focus under pressure. But oftentimes, we see a vocal response to a very real misjudgment on the part of an individual in the public eye that’s not wholly unjustified — it just requires more nuance.

Nuance is where the internet can fall short and — forgive me — where the horse world really tends to suffer. We often see big issues debated online as binaries: for example, when Mark Todd got into a spot of bother for using a branch to coerce a clinician’s horse into water, social media split like the Red Sea into two camps. You were either on Toddy’s side, and argued that he was the greatest horseman of our generation and absolutely justified in his actions, or you were convinced that he was the devil incarnate and surely doing much worse behind the scenes. Much rarer was the middle-ground, less emotionally charged, and arguably much more reasonable response: that Toddy is, indeed, a very, very good horseman, but one who, in this case, made an error of judgment. The thing with errors of judgment made by public figures is that even if they’re made without malice, they still have consequences. I worry we’ve entered an age of the Internet in which accountability is being summarily binned.

Looking outside the horse world, when Love Island graduate and influencer Molly-Mae Hague took on a tokenistic ‘Creative Director’ role at fast-fashion brand Pretty Little Thing, she quickly got herself in hot water when discussing the role on the Diary of a CEO podcast. There, she spoke about how she’d “worked her ass off” to get to where she was – despite not having the relevant experience or qualifications ordinarily required for a Creative Director role. Her assertion that ‘everyone has the same 24 hours in a day went like this:

“When I’ve spoken about that in the past, I have been slammed a little bit, with people saying, ‘It’s easy for you to say that, you’ve not grown in poverty, you’ve not grown up with major money struggles, so for you to sit there and say that we all have the same 24 hours in a day, it’s not correct. And I’m like, but technically what I’m saying is correct. We do. So I understand that we all have different backgrounds and we’re all raised in different ways and we do have different financial situations, but I do think if you want something enough, you can achieve it.”

Molly Mae, who grew up in relative wealth, probably didn’t mean to come across as completely tone-deaf. She probably didn’t even consider the unique hurdles that people in very low income households, who may have non-traditional dependents, or those with disabilities, for example, may face, and so I’m sure she wasn’t intentionally speaking down to them. She may not even have been aware of Pretty Little Thing’s habit of paying its garment makers a disgustingly low £3.50 an hour, making it one of the least ethical fashion companies around. But as a grown woman in her twenties, it was her responsibility to do her own research, and to think about what she said – and when she misspoke so publicly, it was absolutely right that she was held accountable for her error. The aftermath of the incident brought to light a lot of information about fast fashion houses that had been swept under the carpet for a long time, which had the knock-on effect of increasing the public’s ire about mistreatment in garment factories, which also springboarded high-profile boycotts of fast fashion — in short, all things that may actually have a long term positive impact on the industry and the individuals exploited by it. Plenty of people took to social media to try to silence the criticisms, citing the 2020 suicide of TV presenter Caroline Flack and urging people to ‘#bekind’. In the end, Molly Mae took some time and some PR guidance and released an apologetic statement, and is ultimately still absolutely fine, still working with Pretty Little Thing, and still very, very rich. She will, I hope, have learned something; maybe, one day, she’ll use her considerable platform to campaign for improved conditions and wages for the people she profits from. Even if she doesn’t, what they’re up against gained some much-needed public exposure from the whole thing.

My point? If, the very second public opinion turns against someone who’s made a mistake, we allow all criticism to be silenced while we make actually insane comparisons to the tragic death of a totally unrelated person, we do a few things: first of all, we completely negate the importance of accountability. People in the public eye are very much aware that they’re in the public eye. Being in that exalted position comes with responsibilities. In the case of our sport, those responsibilities focus largely on treating horses well. Anything outside of that is an issue. Secondly, the use of ‘#bekind’, and the casual implication of suicide risk, is actually reductive and harmful for those who genuinely are suffering from mental health issues. People very rarely commit suicide because someone has been unkind about them on Facebook. People who commit suicide generally do so because they are also suffering from a longer-term mental health problem that triggers suicidal ideation. I speak, in part, anecdotally: I have suffered from depression for twenty years, which has often manifested itself, quite inconveniently, as suicidal ideation. Getting help for this is extraordinarily, monstrously difficult. It is made all the more difficult as a result of the flippancy with which many people view mental health problems, and the fatigue that people can experience towards genuine mental health problems because of the boy-who-cried-wolf effect of so many people using vague insinuations of mental health as a weapon against criticism in this way. I saw somebody trawling through Townend-critical Facebook threads in the days after Badminton, and no matter what they were replying to, their comment was almost exactly the same: “if you criticise Oliver,” she wrote, “don’t you dare ever claim to support Riders Minds or #bekind.” The notion that being critical of a public-facing person’s wrongdoing equates with being against mental health initiatives — Riders Minds is an excellent mental health charity that had an on-site presence in the stables at Badminton this year — is absolutely baffling to me. Again, we’re lacking nuance here: you can be kind and also be critical. You can understand that every single human being on earth is a complex and multifaceted and difficult and confusing and probably deeply odd collection of contradictory thoughts and feelings and experiences and actions. You can call out the bullshit without being told you’re going to trigger a suicide, and you can also speak up about things you think are wrong without, say, doxing someone. We are capable of this! I believe in us! All of us — including the ones making those occasional mistakes — deserve something smarter than ‘#bekind’. We all deserve — and need — nuance.

Let me be clear: in no way am I advocating for some kind of social media free-for-all. Of course we should all be more conscious of the human beings on the receiving end of what we write online. We absolutely must be better, and, yes, kinder and more thoughtful — but in doing so, we cannot lose the skill of critical thinking. And when we reduce the complexities of the human experience to an epithet like ‘#bekind’, it becomes meaningless. Worse still, it becomes weaponised; it’s the swiftest silencer of meaningful discourse, because it immediately paints the person on the flip side of the debate as someone who simply doesn’t care whether the object of their criticism is wounded. It implies that the worst can happen to that object of criticism and the person will be unruffled. That’s so seldom the case, and such an unfair and lazy way of ending a conversation. We don’t make anyone kinder that way — we just make everyone slightly less proficient at communicating, bit by bit. But looking at eventing specifically, we no longer have the wiggle room to be able to avoid hard conversations. It’s time to grow a backbone. 

While we’re at it, let’s put the notion that it’s dangerous to be openly critical of ‘one of our own’ to bed. I’ve seen a few people arguing that we’re only drawing outside attention to the negative within our sport if we continue to post about it; this, I think, is patently untrue. The answer to fixing the social license issue isn’t to hide instances of horse welfare contraventions from the outside world, it’s to minimise their occurrences. We need to clean house, and it’s only those of us who are already in the sport that can do so in a way that allows us to blossom and grow — or, at least, to survive a little while longer.

Katherine Coleman and Monbeg Senna jump the long route at the contentious lake question. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

It’s MIMs o’clock: let’s adjust accordingly

One of the biggest topics of conversation going into cross-country day at Badminton — bigger, even, than the weather, if you can believe it — was the set of MIMclips used on the timber rails going into the lake. The direct route saw horses and riders land directly in the water; the very slightly longer route gave them a dry landing that immediately set them forth into the lake. William Fox-Pitt, always an outspoken advocate for positive change for riders, was vocal in his dislike of this fence, pointing out that well-trained cross-country horses will use the drag of their hind legs to rejig their balance as they jump fences like this, which could result in the safety devices being triggered, either unfairly penalising horses and riders who’d done the right thing or encouraging the wrong kind of ride into the fence. Course designer Eric Winter, on the other hand, presented the compelling argument that our sport must go in the direction of safety in order to survive; that when there had been a large log fence into the lake previously, many riders had simply gunned around the corner and scrambled over it, some turning themselves over in the process.

Who was right, and who was wrong? Both, and neither, I suspect. There’s never been a quick-fix answer to the issue of eventing in safety, nor to the issue of public perception — if there was, we’d have used it. I’ve seldom found myself sitting on the fence on anything; ordinarily, even if it takes hours of private reflection, lots of research, and plenty of opinions canvassed on either side of a debate, I’ll come to a firm conclusion and feel quite ready to argue it any given point. But on this, I was — and remain — torn. Eric’s right: nobody wants to see horses on the floor (except, perhaps, whoever it is who keeps making those ‘Best falls and refusals’ YouTube compilations after every five-star). Nobody wants Badminton to make it to the mainstream media because of an avoidable accident. He’s also right that as a course designer, his role goes beyond creating an exciting competition — it helps to define how riders train at home, and if he was sick of watching them career into a log fence into water and wanted to encourage a more considered approach, he certainly used his influence as intended there. But William is also right: while there are some cross-country fences that can be ‘showjumped’, we have also always seen how horses used their stifles to slow their trajectory. It is, after all, why we grease the hind legs. Is it fair to punish that?

As it turned out, we didn’t get to see many tackle that route, either because they didn’t get that far, or because they followed William’s lead and avoided the straight route. But we did get to see a small handful, and actually, it largely didn’t cause issues. The first rider to go straight was Dan Jocelyn with Cooley One To Many, who did trigger the MIMS clips after the horse looked to back off on the approach. As a result, he took off from a deep spot, leant on the rails, and was, arguably, saved from a fall. The next to go straight was Pippa Funnell with Majas Hope, who had thought about taking the long route here but ultimately decided that “if I can’t do it on him, I’ve got no chance!” Though she gave the rails a tap behind, there was no doubt they’d stay up. Austin O’Connor, who delivered the fastest round of the day with Colorado Blue, was another to go straight and clear — a note in my phone simply marks his route here as ‘textbook’ — while winners Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo went long.

It’s a small sample pool to pull from, and ultimately, my view on safety devices remains the same as it ever was: we need them, if we want to survive — both as a sport and, unfortunately, quite literally on some occasions. We have to be seen to be doing everything we can to look after the people and the horses within the sport, and particularly the horses from a public perspective, because they cannot speak for themselves or make the decision about whether or not they pursue eventing as their career of choice. But all good decisions must come with a robust and reasonable action plan, lest we end up seeing pins and clips become the most influential part of our sport. Until the beginning of 2020, safety device penalties could be appealed: if a rider could argue, using the official footage as support, that their horse wouldn’t have fallen, they could see those penalties removed. The loss of the appeals process was felt most keenly at Tokyo in 2021, when Michael Jung was one of many riders to hit the corner at 14B. Footage shared on social media showed that the safety device didn’t activate until horse and rider were several strides away from the fence on departure, and the penalties added there cost them a gold medal — but by that point, that removal of the appeals process was well and truly embedded.

Look, I’m a realistic person, and I understand why the appeals were taken away in the first place: they require extra man power and man hours, and that’s something that costs both money (limited, at best, behind the scenes at most events) and experience (again, limited — we have relatively few people who are qualified to act as officials at the top levels). Appeals generally have to happen at the end of the day, which can delay the release of results, making the experience more confusing for spectators, as there may not be a clear winner until late in the evening. The appeals process will also always be at least a little bit subjective. And so it’s imperfect, but perhaps it’s better — if we could find the resources to appoint a small committee of people whose only role on cross-country day was to immediately review appeals ‘in-play’, so to speak, we might be able to hasten the process, and ensure that if another, more immediate and urgent incident, is keeping the rest of the team of officials busy, that progress can continue on in some respect. That, too, might avoid issues such as last year at Badminton, when Oliver Townend and Swallow Springs were held at length, allowed to continue, retroactively eliminated, and then reinstated into the competition. My argument for bringing this in isn’t necessarily because eventing will become less exciting for viewers if pins and clips begin to rule cross-country day — I’d argue that sitting lakeside with a Pimms in hand, placing bets over whether someone would go straight or not, or take the pin or not, is just as exciting as anything else, and much more fun than watching a horse go down — but because I can’t help but fear that younger competitors, who are raised to fear the penalty punishment of a knocked pin, will get in the habit of showjumping even the solid fences that aren’t pinned. That, to me, is a gateway to riding defensively and a little bit backwards; that, to me, is an even bigger risk to wellbeing.

Tom Crisp and Liberty and Glory: the people’s heroes. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

What goes up must come down: there are different ways to be a hero

Without making this all about me (she says, while knees-deep in an opinion piece), in doing the job I do, you get to know a lot of people quite well. Back in 2018, I met Tom Crisp, his wife Sophie, and their brilliant, bonkers family when they offered a lift down to Pau for my close friend and US rider Hallie Coon for her first five-star. We all bundled in to one lorry together, with two horses and too many people to count, and had one of the best weeks of my life, hands down. That week, Tom and the excellent Liberty and Glory finished in the top ten, marking Tom’s first time at the business end of the leaderboard at five-star, and over the following years, the Crisps dealt with niggling injuries, balancing family and eventing, and, of course, that pesky pandemic, to which the homebred ‘Lori’ lost some of her best years. All this is to say that every time they leave the start box now, I jump every fence with them, because I know how much has gone into getting there, and how much it means to every person in that family — and how much they all deserve it. On Badminton’s tough cross-country day, I thought for sure that Tom and Lori would be one of the heroes of the day, climbing and climbing after dressage to crack the top ten, as they had at Burghley last year. And boy, did they look like they were going to: up until the Lake, they were delivering one of the rounds of the day, which tiny Lori skimming over the top of the heavy going, pinging her way through all the toughest questions, and looking every inch the kind of five-star horse we all dream of sitting on. (For what it’s worth, I have sat on her, and she hated every minute of it.)

But then it all unravelled in the blink of an eye: after a beautiful jump into the Lake, Lori ballooned the corner in the water, cleverly twisting her ribcage to retain her balance in the air. Tom, who was riding with a hernia that’s due an operation this month, found himself jolted out of the tack, and without his usual core strength to help him regain centrality, he went for a serious swim. And then? He made himself a star. As spicy Lori cantered around grinning at all the applause from the huge lakeside crowds, Tom unstuck his face from the mud, gave everything a quick wiggle to make sure it all still worked, and then struck off in a comedy crawl that Michael Phelps would have been proud of. Finally, he stood up and took a bow, delighting absolutely everybody.

I can only imagine his frustration, and his disappointment, and the number of times he must have replayed those few strides in his mind, wondering what he could have done differently to sit that jump out and find a different kind of glory at the end of the day. But in some ways, this is his moment: Tom has always been a huge talent, as has the tricky, quirky little mare Lori, but we exist in a sport that’s overloaded with talent, and those moments in the sun are so rare, and so short, as a result. But if you can epitomise sportsmanship? If you can make people laugh on a day where an awful lot of what we saw looked like quite hard work? If you can remind people of the ‘good old days’ of Thrills & Spills VHS tapes and the fun of a dunking, rather than the constant fear and worry we often feel about the state of the sport at the moment? You’re a hero that people will remember long after the competition ends and everyone goes back to their normal lives. I hope Tom gets lots of money and opportunities thrown his way now that people have seen why all of us who are in his wider circles of friends adore him, but even if the only perk is public perception, then he’s really nailed that one. Bravo, Tom.

Author’s note: the original version of this article had some confusing wording regarding the athlete’s right to appeal an FEI sanction. This ‘right to be heard’ is only applicable prior to the awarding of the sanction, after the incident has occurred, and the wording has been changed to clarify this. Thanks to Clare Chamberlayne for her eagle eyes!

 

Olympic Qualifiers and Record-Breaking Entries: How to Follow Millstreet International

Kevin McNab, winner of the CCI4*-S in 2021 with Scuderia 1918 A Best Friend, is one of those making a return visit to Millstreet. Photo by Big-Media.

Millstreet in Co. Cork is set to be Ireland’s most international horse trials on record with entries received from a remarkable 20 nations. Eight are able to field teams in the FEI Eventing Nations Cup and six in the CCIO3*-L, which is also an Olympic qualifier for nations in Africa, the Middle East, South-East Asia and Oceania.

On June 1-4, the Duggan family’s magnificent Great Glens Arena in Millstreet will host the third leg of the FEI Eventing Nations Cup, run at CCI4*-S level, in which the current leaders are Belgium, following a win at Montelibretti, Italy, and third place at Chatsworth, Great Britain. Australia, Great Britain, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, New Zealand and Spain will also be represented, which should ensure a thrilling competition.

Six teams will contest the crucial CCIO3*-L: Australia, China, Japan, New Zealand, South Africa and Thailand. Australia, winners of multiple team gold medals but so far not qualified for the Paris Olympic Games in 2024, is taking no chances, fielding the Tokyo silver medal trio of Andrew Hoy, Shane Rose and Millstreet regular Kevin McNab.

New Zealand, who are qualified as the world bronze medallists, have two members from that 2022 team, world number two Jonelle Price and Clarke Johnstone, and the South African squad includes Cork-based Storm O’Connor, sister-in-law of top Irish rider Austin O’Connor who was recently a brilliant third at Badminton and who has a ride in the CCI4*-L class.

More than 350 horses will be on site, including those for the national four and five-year-old Eventing Discovery classes, which are a showpiece for Irish breeding, and other nations represented include Brazil, Denmark, France, Germany, Morocco, Norway, Sweden and the USA.

“We are overwhelmed and delighted that so many international riders are coming to Millstreet,” says Event Director Thomas Duggan. “There should be some really exciting competition and some fantastic horses. Who knows? We may be seeing the future gold medallists at Paris in action.”

Millstreet has previously hosted Young Rider, Junior and Pony European Championships, plus an FEI Nations Cup and an Event Rider Masters competition.

The Duggan family have long been steeped in the Irish equestrian world, producing top-class competition horses and hosting international competitions. They are currently providing accommodation for more than 300 Ukrainian refugees.

To follow the competition, which takes place June 1—4, you can tune into the FEI’s YouTube channel, which will broadcast the CCIO4*-S Nations Cup cross-country, or click here for live scoring across the classes.

Doing Our Best for Our Horses with Allison Springer

Allison Springer is perhaps best known for her close partnership with her late horse, Arthur. The two spent 12 years together competing at the FEI level — which is no small feat. And while it would be a rare horse who could fill Arthur’s hoofprints, Allison has some very exciting new horses in her string. We caught up with her to discuss the best way to produce these horses up the levels and how to maintain them for a long career, while putting their health and happiness first.

Allison Springer and No May Moon. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Meet Her String of Up-and-Comers

Allison has quite a few new and exciting horses on her string, including full brother and sister Crystal Crescent Moon and No May Moon, both bred and owned by Nancy Winter.

Allison describes nine-year-old No May Moon as a “beast.” The quarter Connemara mare is sensitive and feisty, with a big personality, and lots of talent. She now has two CCI3*-L finishes under her belt, most recently claiming fourth place in the 3*-L at Tryon International. According to Allison, “She’s little, and she is fierce, and she’s fabulous. She’s on a roll.”

Her brother, 10-year-old Crystal Crescent Moon, unfortunately suffered an injury in 2021, but is on track to be back in the competition arena later this spring or summer.

Vandyke, owned by the RICO Syndicate and bred by Deborah Palmer, was purchased from Karen Dixon in Northern Ireland. The nine-year-old Irish Sport Horse gelding has been tricky to produce, but, as Allison said, “The juice is worth the squeeze.” While he was the Preliminary Horse of the Year when he was six, he’s had a few tricky years since then. “I think he got overwhelmed a bit as a seven year old at the Maryland three-star at the end of the year with all that atmosphere. So his eight-year-old year, he was a little bit tricky in the dressage. He’s just matured a ton since then. He’s a super, super jumper, so I’m really excited about where he’s at.”

Allison recently got the ride on Castle Howard Romeo, owned by Fran Robinson and previously competed by Leslie Law. While he’s currently at the at the three star short level, Allison is currently looking to move him up to a three-star long.

Last but not least, Allison has 6 year-old Monbeg Zebedee, owned by the Zebedee Group. Buying this horse took a little bit of faith, as Allison bought him sight unseen, off a video forwarded to her by Richard Picken and Joanie Morris. “I bought him off a video about this time last year from Kitty King. Kitty’s just such a straightforward, easy person to deal with and we just did a lot of videos back and forth on him and then I had my friend Rebecca Howard just go sit on him in England.”

Allison Springer and Castle Howard Romeo. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

A Standard Week on Allison’s Farm

Every top eventer has their own “secret recipe” for creating an upper level horse. Whether it’s their unique approach to fitness or daily horse care, they each have a different philosophy on producing young horses. Allison’s approach is to go slow.

Whether it’s a client horse or one of her own competition horses, all of the horses on Allison’s farm follow roughly the same schedule. “It’s a couple days of flat work, a day of jumping, a couple days of fitness sort of work and a day off. That sort of fluctuates a little here and there.”

When you hear words like flatwork and fitness work, your brain may immediately think trot sets, intense hill work, lots of collection, and the like. If this were a movie, it would be the montage scene with the Rocky theme song playing in the background. In reality, Allison’s standard work week is nothing like this. Her fitness and flatwork focuses on taking things slow – literally.

“They’re actually just doing light walking cavalettis in my field and some trot poles and canter poles. So it’s a really stretchy, over the back, short ride. I love walk cavalettis, because it really loosens their backs, makes them lift their legs. They’re not on the bit. It’s just kind of a loose rein. I think it’s just so good for their body.”

Allison is a big believer in walking and hacking. “My horses all do a ton of walking every day; even on their show jump days or dressage school days, they still go on long walk hacks. I just think that’s really important for their bodies, their minds, their everything.”

Depending on the horse, Allison may also include a day of work on the aqua treadmill at a nearby facility. Allison reserves this particular tool for horses who have a conformational defect that could benefit from strengthening without the added pounding of additional fitness work. For example, horses with a club foot or slightly crooked leg would get a day of work on the aqua treadmill under Allison’s watchful eye. “The aqua treadmill is great if you want to improve the top line. Actually, even the horse’s gait and walk really improves a ton.”

Allison’s goal with her fitness and conditioning routine is simple: to keep her horses happy. “I’ve always been someone who believes it’s my job to make my horses’ jobs as easy for them as possible, easy for them to understand, and easy for them to do physically. I feel like we have a real responsibility to keep them comfortable and happy.”

Leslie Threlkeld Photo.

Day-to-Day Care

If you walk into Allison’s barn at any point in time, you may find a horse getting a little extra TLC in the form of the latest technology. “We are always doing some sort of therapy. I have my Equilibrium back massager to warm up certain backs and that’s amazing. I have a Bemer system that I use on a number of horses. RevitaVet, I love the poll cap on some horses that have different issues. And I have my Multi Radiance laser. We can use all kinds of therapies that I have depending on what a horse may need.”

Allison also credits her horses’ good health to the team she has working with her. All of her horses get a monthly massage from Kendra McQuillen, who also checks the fit of her horses’ saddles — a check that Allison schedules in very regularly. “Most of my horses are pretty easy keepers, which is amazing even at a high level of sport, but their bodies will change quite a bit as they get fitter towards your long format events. So I think that correct saddle fit and having a consistent therapist be hands on is super important.”

She also works closely with her veterinarian, Dr. Susan Johns, and her long-time farrier, Sean Crocker, to ensure all of the horses get exactly what they need, when they need it. According to Allison, her horses wouldn’t get the care they need without the collaborative effort of her team. “Between those three, they notice whatever changes, and they’re always so good at communicating certain changes, and things that they may feel. It’s a pretty good collaborative effort.”

At the core of Allison’s horse care is her belief in listening to the horse. Of course, she says, some of her horses are more vocal about what they need than others. “[No May Moon] is super sensitive and fabulous, so she’s very good about letting us know if something’s wrong. She’ll give us her little angry llama face. Like ‘oh, Mazie’s not happy, what is it? What can we do for you?’”

Allison believes that the key to healthy, happy horses is in the day-to-day riding and management. “Their long-term soundness and health relies so much on how we ride and train them and make them happy, balanced, and correct athletes.”

Allison Springer and Crystal Crescent Moon. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Planning a Competition Season for Long-Term Soundness

Everyone talks about planning a competition season, especially earlier in the year when I talked with Allison. Because she has a great record of maintaining horses at the upper levels, I wanted to hear her approach to planning a competition season specifically with an eye to putting the horse’s health and soundness first.

Allison’s response focused on two key concepts: working backwards and leaving room for flexibility. “You work backwards as to what competitions, what fitness schedule [you’ll plan] leading up to your goal; what that’s going to look like and what’s the best thing for those horses. Always, when you’re planning a schedule, you have to have a little flexibility.”

Flexibility in a competition schedule is big for Allison, as it leaves room to make decisions that are best for the welfare of the horse. For example, says Allison, “What if the ground is hard and it’s not going to rain, and you’re going to miss your typical gallop day? Feeling like you have to gallop anyways is what’s not going to be good for your horse. You have to have some flexibility and then you also have to be smart about what that particular horse needs.”

“You make your plan, and now you have to listen to them and be able to change your plan if you need to.”

A horse and rider canter through a water obstacle on cross country

Allison Springer and No May Moon. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

When to Move Up the Levels

How do you decide to move your horse up the levels, while also taking their long-term soundness and overall health into account? Every move-up is a risk, and depending on the horse, that risk could be big or small, but each time, we risk their safety and confidence. Allison’s approach of tuning in to the horse and letting them guide your goals mediates that risk.

“You just have to have patience, consistency, and belief,” she says.

According to Allison, it’s best to let the horse tell you when they’re ready to move up, which is no small feat. “It’s knowing your horse and doing everything you can for them to be fit enough and prepared enough for the competition you’re presenting them with. It’s hard. It takes a bit of experience for people, too. I mean, a lot of times you don’t know how your horse will handle the competition or what your horse needs.”

For example, No May Moon was a particularly challenging ride that Allison chose to take her time going up the levels with. “She was a baby and she was so fractious, and spooky, and irrational, and all those things. I took an extra long time with her. I just waited for her to tell me, and now she’s just so fierce and bold. I think that’s only because I just kept cooking; just let her stay where she needed to be.”

At the end of the day, my biggest takeaway from talking with Allison was that every rider, no matter how experienced, always has more to learn. What matters most is our intention, our goals, and that we keep trying to put our horses first.

As Allison says, “I don’t have it all figured out, but I’m trying my best to do the best for my horses all the time.”

This article is brought to you thanks to sponsorship from World Equestrian Brands, also longtime supporters of Allison and her program. Allison is grateful to be partnered with sponsors that have the same approach to horse welfare as she does. “Certainly Robin Moore with World Equestrian Brands is a long-time friend and she’s so committed to what’s best for the animal. And has always been so involved with that, and I’m so grateful to her.”

Allison’s favorite saddle isn’t just high-quality — it’s sentimental as well. “I, of course, love all my Amerigo saddles, but I have a special connection to my ‘Arthur’ dressage saddle! We just have one horse in the barn that goes in it now, but every time I sit in it I can feel him and all the great memories we made together.”

Allison Springer on Arthur beneath the iconic Rolex Stadium sign at Kentucky Horse Park

Allison Springer and Arthur. Leslie Threlkeld Photo.

Wednesday News & Notes from Ocala Horse Properties

Go the girls!

Right now we have women holding the Olympic, World and European titles, AND all three of the Grand Slam 5*s.

When Julia Krajewski took the gold in Tokyo, she became the first woman to win the Olympic title in eventing. But that’s not all. In a double whammy for womanhood, Amande de B’Neville may very well be the first mare to win gold too.

At the World Championships in Pratoni, Yasmin Ingham followed in the footsteps of two other women World Champions – Sandra Auffarth and Ros Canter – making it a hat trick for women being on top of the world.

And it seems good things really do come in threes. When Nicola Wilson won the European title, she was also the third woman in a row to do so, taking over the crown from Ingrid Klimke who won the title in 2017 and 2019.

On top of all this womanly greatness, this spring we’ve seen Tamie Smith taking Kentucky, becoming the first woman in 12 years to do so, and Ros Canter winning Badminton. They join reigning Burghley champion Piggy March – with the mare Vanir Kamira – for a grand slam of women eventers.

Go eventing women!

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U.S. Weekend Preview

Equestrians’ Institute H.T. (Kenmore, WA) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

Flora Lea Spring H.T. (Medford, NJ) [Website] [Volunteer]

May-Daze at the Park H.T. (Lexington, KY) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

Mill Creek Pony Club Horse Trial (Kansas City, MO) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

Spring Coconino H.T. (Flagstaff, AZ) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

Tryon International Spring H.T. (including the USEA Intercollegiate Eventing Championship) (Mill Spring, NC) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

USEA MDHT YEH Qualifier (Adamstown, MD) [Website] [Volunteer]

Virginia Horse Center Eventing (Lexington, VA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Willow Draw Charity Show (Weatherford, TX) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

Woodside Spring H.T. (Woodside, CA) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

Wednesday News and Reading

Take a trip back to the Badminton Horse Inspection and vote for your favorite Hot Trotters. Fairfax and Favor want to know which ‘fits had you drooling as the riders braved all the weathers on the runway. Voting closes tomorrow (Thursday), so get scrolling sharpish. [‘Fits Fit for a 5*]

Being open and curious, fascinated and fun-struck – it’s all in the beginner’s mind. Beginner’s mind is a concept that can bring a bit of zen to every experience, and you don’t have to be a yogi to benefit. Whether you’re mucking stalls, waiting in the pouring rain for your horse to decide he wants to come in from the field, trotting over poles or cantering another circle, the trick to beginner’s mind is to think – How would this be for someone who doesn’t get to do this day in day out? In this piece, Jec Ballou talks about how perceiving things from the point of view of a beginner can make you a more effective trainer – from relating to your students better, to preventing burnout. No matter how long you’ve been doing what you’re doing, beginner’s mind is something we can all tap into. [The Magic of the Beginner’s Mind]

Vaccination is something that’s been talked about A LOT in the last couple of years, for obvious reasons. But has the need to protect ourselves through vaccination made an impact on our attitudes to vaccinating our horses? Researchers have looked at low vaccine uptake in horse owners in both Australia and the U.S. and found parallels to the attitudes displayed by parents who choose not to vaccinate their children. Perceived proximity to risk is a clear motivating factor, as well as cost. The study suggests improved communication with horse owners to create a solutions-focused approach to zoonotic diseases, such as rabies. Whatever your views on vaccination, this is an interesting read if you’re looking for something a bit sciency to start your day. [To Vaccinate, Or Not To Vaccinate?]

Plastic bags, ghosts in the bushes, the bucket that was right there all morning – we all know horses can be hyper-sensitive to their surroundings. Using a basketball game and a guy in a gorilla suit (as you do), researchers were able to prove that humans focus so intently on a specific task that we become blind to other (arguably far more interesting) things. Ever tried walking your horse past a human-gorilla pounding on his chest and have them not notice? Thought not. It’s because of this that the horse-human team is such a powerhouse – like a Hallmark movie relationship, it’s like we’re meant to be. What humans are great at noticing, horses, not so much – and vice versa – thus creating the perfect team. [Pay Attention]

What’s the difference between a whip and a pair of spectacles? No, that’s not a trick question. In terms of eventing, it’s something we need to know if we want to avoid technical eliminations in the show jumping phase. Although it would be nice to have an exuberant trainer delivering advice via cheerleading chants from the sidelines, or for there to be designated traffic controllers sporadically arranged around the course giving directions, unauthorized assistance is strictly prohibited in show jumping. Knowing the rules is just as important as knowing your course and USEA’s rule refreshers are here to help. [Freshen Up]

It’s the time of year when we all wish we were back at college. No, I’m not talking Spring Break – although that might be fun, eventing is arguably better. It’s the Intercollegiate Eventing Championships this week and in Nicole Brown’s favorite show of the season, she’s been talking all things college eventing. [Listen In]

Sponsor Corner

Mini farm for sale in the gated Shady Grove community in Ocala! 6.8 acres with board-fenced pastures, just 15 miles from the World Equestrian Center. Click here to take a closer look via Ocala Horse Properties.

Video Break

In celebration of International Heritage Breeds Week, we’re taking a look at the Morgan horse.

All Morgans throughout history can be traced back to Figure, a stallion born in 1789. Taking on the name of his owner (who was given the horse as a debt payment), he became known as the Justin Morgan horse.

Morgans have played an important part throughout American history. From carrying out farm work to serving as the cavalry, a clear attribute of the breed is their versatility. The Morgan Horse Farm, part of the University of Vermont, is home to the oldest continuous Morgan breeding program in the world and is credited with saving the breed – preserving the magic of the Morgan into the modern day.

Intrigued? Here’s a look at the living history happening at The Morgan Horse Farm.