Nicholson on track for eventing Grand Slam, leads Rolex

Six-time Olympian Andrew Nicholson of New Zealand is sitting in the top two spots at the Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event going into the final phase Sunday, April 28. He’s in first place on Quimbo (38.0 penalties) and in second place on Calico Joe (40.8).

Nicholson will have a one-rail margin of error Sunday over third place rider Buck Davidson (Florida) on Ballynoe Castle. 

If Nicholson wins in Kentucky on Sunday, the victory would put him two-thirds of the way to the $350,000 Rolex Grand Slam of Eventing. He won Burghley (England) last September. He would need to win at Badminton (England) next weekend to become the second rider to claim the prize.

Quimbo is considered to be a particularly good showjumper, so he may be in good shape to take a victory in Lexington on Sunday.

Penn State quarter horse sale will stream live online

If you can’t attend the Penn State Quarter Horse Sale on Saturday, April 27, you can watch it live online. If you’d like to bid over the phone, contact Brian Egan to set up a bidder number at 814-863-0569.

Doors open at Snider arena at 8:30 a.m. with the sale horse demonstration at 10. Farm tours will be given at noon and the bidding begins at 2 p.m. A used tack and clothing sale will be held starting at 8:30 a.m.

Eleven 2-year-olds and five yearlings will be sold at the sale. View the catalog of sale horses including videos.    The reserve on 2-year-olds will be set at $1,500. Last year’s sale average was $3,300.

The Penn State breeding program features the AQHA stallion Dynamic Krymsun, who placed at the 2012 Congress (7th, Green Western Riding; 5th Limited, 6th Open Performance Halter Stallions) He has earned his Performance ROM with points in Western Pleasure and Western Riding and was the recipient of the 2011 PQHA Breeder Award and the Joyce Armstrong Memorial QIP Stallion Award. Point Earning producer in first foal crop including a finalist at the 2012 Quarter Horse Congress. See his Congress Western Riding run at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHigccd81y0.

The 15.2 hand bay stallion is by One Hot Krymsun and out of the Dynamic Deluxe mare, Dynamic Zippo. He was bred by Penn State with a donated breeding from One Hot Krymsun. Offspring in the sale by Dynamic Krymsun include:

  • Lot No. 1: Krymsun in Blue: 15.3 hand 2011 sorrel gelding out of  MLF Rhapsody In Blue (Sky’s Blue Boy)
  • Lot. No. 2: PSU Willy Be Krymsun: 15.2 hand 2011 red roan gelding by Willy Invite Her.
  • Lot No. 7: Coby Zipped in Black: 14 hand yearling bay gelding, out of Zipped To A Te

The sale also includes several horses by the university’s reining-bred quarter horses. Willie Be Nimble, a 1994 chestnut stallion by The Jac Be Nimble, is the sire of Lot No. 11: PSU Smart N Nimble, a yearling gelding. Willie B Nimble was donated to the Penn State program after the university’s reining stallion, Kuel Minnick (Minnick Minder) died. Kuel Minnick is the sire of  four of the sale’s 2-year-olds.
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Also in the sale are offspring of Image of Shadow, Time to Score, Suddenly Secret and Genetically Loaded.

PSU Solid Investment

Lot No. 3: PSU Solid Investment is by reserve world champion Potential Investment out of Dynamic Krymsun’s dam, Dynamic Zippo.


 

Twin foals born at Penn State

PSU Shadows Bonita, a 7 year old AQHA mare, gave birth Saturday, April 20, to twin bay foals at Penn State. This was her second pregnancy. The foals, a colt and a filly, are by the university’s stallion PSU Dynamic Krymsun (One Hot Krymsun). Both are healthy and doing well.

While some view allowing twins to be born as poor breeding management, Brian Egan, an instructor in Equine Science and Penn State Horse Farm coordinator, said “PSU has been breeding Quarter Horses for over 50 years and have had two sets of twins during that time while foaling between 15 and 20 mares per year. What needs to be considered is the work that our farm management staff put into the last 6 weeks since the mare started to act like she was going into early labor. During this time, the mare was maintained in foal and now she has delivered two live, healthy foals just 7 days short of her due date.”

Penn State is holding its annual quarter horse sale Saturday, April 27, at the university’s Snider Ag Arena. Bidding begins at 2 p.m. Eleven 2-year-olds and five yearlings will be sold.

 

Fashion doesn’t pass the horse sense test at Rolex

The Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event first horse inspection appears to the equestrian fashion show portion of the event. (I love Buck Davidson’s red socks!) But after seeing the outfits that ranged from colorful to classic, I was taken aback by the footwear many of the women choose to wear as they ran down the drive next their equine partners fit to perfection.

The ladies turned to colorful scarfs and pants to standout against their horses. (Trust me, if women are involved, the clothes will suddenly be anything but simple.) But it was the open dress shoes that made my toes curl with the imaginings of shod hooves stamping down upon them. Horsemanship sticklers had to be cringing where ever they were that the elite athletes of equestrian sports were snubbing their noses at the basics of equestrian attire. Forget the helmet police that I have seen shame riders on even the quietest of old school horses that they should be wearing protection on their noggins, where are the shoe police enforcing proper attire during a competition as huge as the Rolex Three-Day Event?

And that wasn’t even the most surprising. Two of the women wore heels! I would be ass over teacups days before I ever set foot on the cross-country course if I tried such a trick.These aren’t exactly western pleasure horses jogging in front of the judges. While these animals are gorgeous, I’m left impressed by these ladies’ ability to gallop down the road next to them wearing these:

Moving away from the shoes, color and classics dominated the field. Some things never go out of style, and in the end, it’s the horse that mattered.

Good luck to all the competitors as dressage gets underway tomorrow, Thursday, April 25. Everyone be safe and get home as sound as you were today in the inspection.

 

Rolex underway in Lexington, Ky.

The Rolex Kentucky Three-Day event is this weekend in Lexington, Ky., with 46 horses expected to compete. The event begins on Thursday, April 25, and runs through Sunday, April 28.

See photos of all of the horses presented Wednesday at the first horse inspection at http://useventing.com/news/2013-rolex-kentucky-first-horse-inspection

The event will be televised as the Rolex Equestrian Championships, presented by Land Rover, on NBC on Sunday, April 28, from 4:00-5:00 p.m. EDT.  Leading up to the NBC telecast, USEFNetwork.com is offering live, wall-to-wall coverage of the dressage, cross-country, and show jumping phases.
 
The full broadcast schedule is listed below and is available under the Live Broadcast Schedule tab at USEFNetwork.com. Times are subject to change.

  • April 25: LIVE Dressage on USEFNetwork.com, 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. EDT
  • April 26: LIVE Dressage on USEFNetwork.com, 10:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. EDT
  • April 27: LIVE Cross-Country on USEFNetwork.com, 10:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. EDT
  • April 28: LIVE Show Jumping on USEFNetwork.com, 12:00 noon to 3:00 p.m. EDT
  • Awards Ceremony on USEFNetwork.com, 3:00 p.m. ET
  • Rolex Equestrian Championships presented by Land Rover on NBC, 4:00 to 5 p.m. EDT

For more information about the event, visit www.rk3de.org.

Legendary Thoroughbred stallion Storm Cat euthanized at age 30

Storm Cat was euthanized Wednesday, April 24, due to complications from old age (possibly cancer) at Overbrook Farm in Lexington, Ky.

The Pennsylvania-bred stallion had produced at least 160 stakes winners who combined to top $127 million. Among his offspring were 91 yearlings that sold for more than $1 million. When Storm Cat retired from racing in 1987, his stud fee was $30,000, Overbrook Farm said in a news release. During his 20-year stud career, his fee at one point rose to $500,000, the farm said.

The Daily Racing Form reported: “Coincidentally, after (Veternarian) Copelan gave the injection, we heard a lot of thunder,” Overbrook’s former stallion manager Eduardo Terrazas said with a sigh. “It was a storm moving in. It started raining about 10 minutes after he passed. Copelan made the comment that the heavens were not happy because of this storm, and I said, ‘Maybe they are welcoming him up there.’”

AQHA Virginia Classic

 The 2013 Virginia Classic AQHA show was held April 10-14 in Lexington, Va., at the gorgeous Virginia Horse Center. The show boasted 6,600 total entries, although folks around the grounds could be heard talking about their disappointment with a light turnout. The weather was gorgeous, although perhaps a little windy on some days. Judges were Randy Alderson, Nancy Swarm, Andrea Simons, Tina Anderson, Laura Gilmer, Doug Huls, Louis Hufnagel, Daren Wright, Dolly Chayer, John and Betsy Tuckey, and Tanya Green.
Jay Starnes and Zip By Machine won the Hylton Maiden Three-Year Old Western Pleasure, and MWS Sevens Are Hot and Ryan Cottingham won the Harris Versatility Challenge Class. Find stories here about the winners:  

Animal Kingdom to have surgery

Kentucky Derby winner Animal Kingdom will have surgery for a fracture in his left hock, his owners announced Wednesday.

The 3-year-old old chestnut colt was out of training after a small fissure was found in the hock two weeks ago. X-rays were retaken this week and a larger fracture was found in the same area. Surgeons at New Bolton Center near Philadelphia will place a screw in the hock to compress the fracture.

Animal Kingdom is expected to return to training in time for the Dubai World Cup in March 2012.

A real horse whisperer

The documentary film “Buck” is creating a stir in and beyond the horse industry as a must-see film this summer. It won a Sundance audience award this year and will open on Friday in New York and Los Angeles, 

Buck Brannaman, a former rodeo perfomer who lived a rough life as a child and used those experiences to help shape him as a horse trainer, was one of the primary people that the lead role in “The Horse Whisperer” was based on. He now conducts clinics across the U.S. featuring his natural horsemanship style to training.

The movie will open June 24 in Charlotte, N.C. I full list of movie openings can be found on the film’s Facebook page. There is also a place where you can request that the film be shown in your area.

The film is receiving several good reviews, including from the Los Angeles Times who wrote, “The film is deeply moving yet never maudlin in telling this hard-knocks-but-hope-infused story.” It got a few not-so-great ones too, such as “much of the movie — too much of it — is just Buck in the corral, riding, working with ropes and flags, conditioning a horse to behave” from the Orlando Sentinel.

Barpassers Image dies at age 27

Leading quarter horse sire of performance horses, Barpassers Image, died at age 27.
Born in 1984, by Barpasser and out of Tee Command, he was a Superior western pleasure horse with wins at the Texas Classic Futurity and the Tom Powers Futurity in 1986, and was a Top 10 finisher at the World Show in 1988.
Some of his most noted offspring include Invitation Only, Barpassers Cody, and Barpassers Glow.