Sunday, August 09, 2015

Recreational Trails Program in Senate Highway Bill

horsecouncil.org

Submitted by admin on Thu, 08/06/2015

On July 30, the Senate passed its version of a multi-year national highway bill, called the DRIVE Act. The bill would reauthorize the Federal Highway Administration’s Recreational Trails Program (RTP).

An amendment by Senator Mike Lee (R-UT) was filed that would have eliminated the Transportation Alternatives Program, which includes the Recreational Trails Program. However, this amendment was not considered and the RTP program will continue un- changed if this bill becomes law.

Grassroots support from recreational trail users, including equestrians played an important role in making sure RTP was included in the Senate-passed bill. The AHC appreciates all the individual horsemen and organizations that contacted their Senators in support of RTP.

Since its inception RTP has provided money for thousands of state and local trail projects across the country, including many that benefit equestrians. RTP provides funding directly to the states for recreational trails and trail-related facilities for all recreational trail users. It is funded with a portion of the gas taxes paid into the Highway Trust Fund by recreational off-highway vehicle users.

For now, because of disagreements over funding a multi-year highway bill, the House of Representatives is unlikely to consider the Senate Passed DRIVE Act.

In the meantime the Congress has passed a 3 mouth extension of the current highway bill, which includes the RTP program.

If you have any questions, please contact the AHC.

On the XP: Local Families Take A Historic Ride Across the West

Northcoastjournal.com - Full Article

POSTED BY LINDA STANSBERRY ON SAT, AUG 8, 2015

The Pony Express occupies a relatively small window in American history, but an outsized place in Wild West mythology. The mail service, in which riders carried messages via horseback for 1,800 miles from St. Jackson, Missouri to Sacramento was only in existence for 19 months — from April 3, 1860 to October 1861 — before being usurped by the modern marvel of the telegraph. It is credited with linking the then brand new state of California with the rest of the country. A good rider could gallop the distance in just 10 days, changing horses every 15 miles.

Today the trail is part of the National Park Service's trail system, and endurance riders take it at a slower pace. Four teams from Humboldt County recently completed the trail over the course of eight weeks, averaging about 50 miles a day. The XP, as it's known colloquially after the brand that once marked the flanks of Pony Express horses, still exerts a pull on the hearts of many.

Katie Azevedo, of Arcata, shared a horse with her mom Linda for the ride. While some equestrians compete for time, Katie said that she was more motivated by the opportunity to bond with Linda and get a unique perspective into the region's history...

Read more here:
http://www.northcoastjournal.com/Blogthing/archives/2015/08/08/on-the-xp-local-families-take-a-historic-ride-across-the-west

Nine years since her last Tevis Cup, Napa's Lindsay Graham Fisher makes Top 10 again

Napavalleyregister.com - Full Article

August 9 2015

By Andy Wilcox
They’ve been companions on many memorable 100-mile rides during their eight years together – the 2010 World Equestrian Games in Lexington, Ky., the 2011 Patriot’s Day Endurance Ride at Lake Almanor, where they broke the North American record with time of 6 hours, 53 minutes, the 2012 Presidents Cup in Abu Dhabi – and now the oldest 100-mile trail ride in the world.

Napa’s Lindsay Graham Fisher returned to the Tevis Cup 100-Miles-In-One-Day Trail Ride after a nine-year hiatus on Aug. 1, this time with trusty 13-year-old gelding Monk, and pulled off her second Top 10 finish in three tries at the ride along the Western States Trail from Truckee to Auburn.

They placed eighth out of 201 entrants, only 90 of which were able to finish within the 24-hour limit. They arrived at McCann Stadium 18 hours, 9 minutes after the 5:15 a.m. start at Robie Park.

“Monk is an incredible horse and athlete. He has been gifted with talent that not many horses have,” Graham Fisher of the horse, which is owned by Chris and Nancy Martin of Penn Valley. “I am not sure that I can put into words how much Monk means to me and how lucky I am to have been able to share so many wonderful experiences with this horse. Monk means the world to me. I would do anything for him, as he has already done everything for me.”

It was Graham Fisher’s first Tevis Cup attempt since 2006 when, just six years after graduating from Vintage High School, she pulled off a seventh-place finish – at the time the best-ever finish by a Napa Valley entrant in the ride. Her horse was 19-year-old Phoenix Affair, which after this year’s ride remains the oldest horse to crack the Tevis Top 10. This year’s third-place horse came close, though, at 18 years, three months...

Read more here:
http://napavalleyregister.com/sports/nine-years-since-her-last-tevis-cup-napa-s-lindsay/article_d5dec725-5212-5f07-8c49-c969415abaaf.html

Saturday, August 08, 2015

Back Country Horsemen of America Maintains and Repairs Multi-Use Trails

August 6, 2015
by Sarah Wynne Jackson
 
Back Country Horsemen of America values our nation’s beautiful landscape and works hard to protect our right to enjoy these lands by horseback. They also believe in being good stewards of this limited natural resource by practicing sound outdoor ethics, participating in trail maintenance, and sharing the trails with other users. To this end, BCH folks forge strong relationships with other user groups and the agencies that manage our public lands. Back Country Horsemen in Montana and Missouri recently completed trail projects that exemplify this spirit of collaboration.
 
Humbug Spires Wilderness Study Area
 
The three mile trail leading to the Humbug Spires in southwestern Montana is normally a gentle walk through postcard-perfect scenery in an old growth forest braided with a clear creek. The Humbug Spires Wilderness Study Area contains a group of over fifty granite spire formations just southeast of the continental divide. Popular with rock climbers, over 10 spires rise 300 to 600 feet above the forests like cathedral towers. The highest point of the study area is Mount Humbug, at 8265 feet, which offers stunning vistas of big sky country and lends a truly alpine feel to all endeavors.

A series of microburst storms in 2014 left the area riddled with downed trees, making the path challenging for even the most athletic hiker. Although the annual trail cleanup here typically consists of 10 to 20 trees, this year’s crew faced over 100 downed trees. As part of the Wilderness 50 celebration and National Public Lands Day, Mile High Back Country Horsemen of Montana assisted employees from the Bureau of Land Management’s Butte Field Office in re-opening this scenic trail.
 
The Humbug Spires Wilderness Study Area is an 11,175 acre roadless preserve managed by the BLM as a de facto wilderness, which excludes the use of motorized or mechanized equipment. In these types of areas where the environment and ecosystem must be protected, horses and mules are invaluable for performing maintenance, repairs, and other needed work.
 
Six members of Mile High Back Country Horsemen assisted the trail-clearing project by hauling food, water, and hand tools on their pack and saddle stock. Some of the BCHers had already seen the trail’s condition first-hand on a pleasure ride where they found it impassable, so when the BLM asked for help, their answer was a resounding “yes.”
 
After a day’s work, the crew cleared 138 trees that were down on the trail, plus an additional 40 to 50 dead and leaning trees. Over a dozen water bars were fixed and several other trail repairs performed. The BLM and Mile High Back Country Horsemen of Montana hope to make trail maintenance at the Humbug Spires an annual joint project. 
 
Meramec Conservation Area
 
The Indian Trails Chapter of Show-Me Missouri Back Country Horsemen recently improved a multi-use hiking, biking, and horseback riding trail at the Meramec Conservation Area near Sullivan. They worked in cooperation with Show-Me Missouri BCH President Larry Bast, members of the Eastern Missouri Chapter, and the Missouri Department of Conservation.
 
The Meramec Conservation Area consists of nearly 4000 acres of varying forest types, including plantations established by the first state nursery. Sheer cliffs along the Meramec River form the western border of the area, offering a scenic view of the river valley and surrounding hills. Historic sites include a Civilian Conservation Corps camp, Lone Hill fire lookout tower, and old mines. The area is home to abundant wildlife, including a great blue heron rookery and bat caves (closed to the public to reduce the spread of white nose syndrome).
 
BCH volunteers used hand tools to reshape the trail and spread about 8 tons of gravel donated by Capital Quarry. Chapter member Barb Wagner drove the dump truck donated by Havin Material. The gravel was then hauled from the parking lot to the work site by horses loaded with panniers. Volunteers also closed off an old trail that was eroded and will be repaired at a later date.
 
The folks at Trail Blazer Magazine heard about the project, contacted Show-Me Missouri Back Country Horsemen for more information, and featured the work in their Trail Savers column.
 
About Back Country Horsemen of America
 
BCHA is a non-profit corporation made up of state organizations, affiliates, and at-large members. Their efforts have brought about positive changes regarding the use of horses and stock in wilderness and public lands.
 
If you want to know more about Back Country Horsemen of America or become a member, visit their website: www.bcha.org; call 888-893-5161; or write PO Box 1367, Graham, WA 98338-1367. The future of horse use on public lands is in our hands!

Peg Greiwe
Back Country Horsemen of America

Haggin Cup winner, Auli Farwa, is a Special Horse

Horsereporter.com - Full Article

by Pamela Burton
7 August 2015

He actually believes that cantering everywhere is possible

7 August 2015, California ~ The Tevis Cup 100-mile Western States Trail is a pageant of endurance. In the after hours of the ride, top ten finishing horses over the course are given the chance to show for Best Condition. For the 1 August 2015 ride, this examination and observation gave the 2015 Haggin Cup Award to Auli Farwa (Far), a flashy 15-year-old Arabian gelding with a bold white face, ridden by Jenni Smith of Moraga, California.

The Haggin Cup, created in 1964, honors the horse in the most superior condition and recognizes the rider’s sportsmanship and horsemanship.

Smith and Far finished fifth, 54 minutes behind Tevis Cup winners Potato Richardson and SMR Filouette.

Smith said her chance to ride Far was due to a skiing accident.

“I was supposed to ride Kevin Myers’ horse Stoner (Farrabba) and he was to ride Far – the same as we had done in 2014, said Smith.” But in early February, a Telluride ski slope had other ideas and Kevin required knee surgery. Myers thought Far would be up for the Haggin Cup this year, and was the better choice for Smith.

Smith picked up the story: “I was very much up for riding Far, even though he is a jack hammer. He’s fun, he’s got bottomless go and he’s all business on trail. If there’s trail, he’s goin’ down it. And he actually believes that cantering everywhere is possible, which alleviates some of the punishment.

Besides, I was going for my 10th finish and attempting on a horse with a perfect score of 62 lifetime starts, all of which he’s completed, seemed prudent...

Read more here:
http://www.horsereporter.com/2015/08/07/haggin-cup-winner-auli-farwa-is-a-special-horse/

Friday, August 07, 2015

Two AERC Trail Master Classes for 2016

August 7 2015

The Trails and Land Management Committee is pleased to announce two AERC Trail Master Classes scheduled for 2016.

The first is March 31-April 3, 2016 at Elkins Horse Creek Camp by Pedro, Oh.  That is the area where Ohio, Kentucky, and West Virginia, all merge.  Mollie Krumlaw-Smith is the host.  Please contact her for information and class space at mkrumlaw@webcincy.com

The second class is July 21-24, 2016 at Silver Falls State Park by Silverton, Or.  Silverton is south of Portland.  The class is sponsored by PNER.  Carlene Benson and Gail Williams are the contact people.  You may contact Carlene at bensonwc@mac.com and Gail at hadablondmoment@gmail.com.

Or feel free to contact Monica Chapman, AERC Trails and Land Management Committee Chair at monicachapman1987@gmail.com

Canadian mother and daughter conquer Tevis Cup

Devondispatch.ca - Full Article

August 6, 2015

Alex Boates
devondispatch.news@sunmedia.ca

Last weekend the annual Tevis Cup race took place in California.

The race is known worldwide as being one of the most gruelling, treacherous and dangerous endurance horse races in existence.

But that didn’t scare away 22-year-old Jaylene Janzen and her mother Christy. The duo made their way down to California last week to take part in the ride, which covered 100 miles over some of the most difficult terrain.

“The terrain there is something I’ve never been on,” Jaylene said. “The first 36 miles was on a mountain in rocks, stuff that our horses aren’t used to. We’ve done mountain rides before in the Rocky Mountains here, but it’s completely different there.”

The mother-daughter pair had only 24 hours to complete the race. With 198 riders taking part, only 90 managed to cross the finish line.

Jaylene and Christy were two of those 90.

Both finishing with final times of 23 hours and 18 minutes, the two began their race at 5:15 on the morning of Saturday, August 1. The Janzen women would cross the finish line together at 4:33 the next morning...

Read more here:
http://www.devondispatch.ca/2015/08/06/local-mother-and-daughter-conquer-tevis-cup

Tuesday, August 04, 2015

Fall Special: Discounts for New Endurance Riders from the AERC

AUBURN, California – August 4, 2015 – The American Endurance Ride Conference (AERC) is making the first step to endurance riding a little easier this fall with their 2015 Fall Special promotion.
 
Beginning now, new members can join for the remainder of the 2015 ride season and all of the 2016 ride season, which runs through November 30, 2016, for the discounted price of $88.75. Additional adult family members are $57.50; those 17 or younger are $27.
 
More than a thousand riders have requested AERC’s free “Discover Endurance Riding” booklet, which shares the adventure and camaraderie experienced by members of the nonprofit organization.
 
“Fall is a great time to get started in endurance riding, with cooler weather and spectacular autumn foliage,” said AERC Executive Director Kathleen Henkel. “If you’ve been riding regularly, your trail horse may be ready for one of AERC’s limited distance rides of 25 or 30 miles.”
 
Many endurance rides also offer 10 to 15 mile “intro” rides, just for equine and rider teams to get acquainted with ride procedures and etiquette. Each equine, even at fun rides, will be checked by a veterinarian before and after the ride, with a check that includes heart rate, limb soundness, hydration and gut sounds, to ensure the horse is deemed “fit to continue.”
 
“Last year’s Fall Special brought in 100 new members to AERC,” said Henkel. “We’re hoping to get even more signed up this year.” Members receive a monthly magazine, Endurance News, in the mail every month, as well as an endurance riding handbook, rule book and educational materials that come along with their membership card. Fall Special members will receive both 2015 and 2016 AERC ID cards.
 
About the AERC
In addition to promoting the sport of endurance riding, AERC has encouraged the use, protection, and development of equestrian trails, especially those with historic significance, since 1972. Many special events of four to six consecutive days take place over historic trails, such as the Pony Express Trail, the Outlaw Trail, the Chief Joseph Trail, and the Lewis and Clark Trail. The founding ride of endurance riding, the Western States Trail Ride or Tevis Cup, covers 100 miles of the famous Western States and Immigrant Trails over the Sierra Nevada Mountains. These rides promote awareness of the importance of trail preservation for future generations and foster an appreciation of our American heritage.

The American Endurance Ride Conference, established in 1972, is headquartered in Auburn, California, “The Endurance Capital of the World.” For more information please visit us at www.aerc.org.

IT'S ALL GRAVY: Potato Richardson cruises to his 3rd Tevis Cup title in field of 90 finishers

Auburnjournal.com - Full Article

Monday Aug 03 2015
By: Ike Dodson of the Auburn Journal

Potato Richardson rode into the Fast Fridays Arena to the roar of applause with his head held high and his equestrian helmet hoisted even higher.

The 72-year-old endurance riding icon of Greenwood finished the 2015 Tevis Cup, a 100-mile endurance ride, in 10 hours, five minutes Saturday evening to claim his third event victory and 22nd finishing buckle on the Western States Trail.

A little tired, but radiating with post-race enthusiasm, Potato took pride in the latest feat of his life’s greatest passion.

“It took dedication, staying focused on goals,” Potato said a few minutes after his finish. “I knew I had it about three miles back.

“It’s not over till you cross that line...”

Read more here:
http://www.auburnjournal.com/article/8/03/15/its-all-gravy-potato-richardson-cruises-his-3rd-tevis-cup-title-field-90-finishers

Monday, August 03, 2015

Auli Farwa Receives Haggin Cup at 2015 Tevis Ride

Thehorse.com - Full Article

By Marsha Hayes
Aug 3, 2015

After hours of observing the top ten finishing horses over the course of the 100-mile Tevis Cup ride, which took place Aug. 1, the cup committee named Auli Farwa (or "Far"), a 15-year-old Arabian gelding, and rider Jenni Smith of Moraga, California, the 2015 Haggin Cup winners.

The Haggin Cup, created in 1964, honors the horse in the most superior condition and recognizes the rider’s sportsmanship and horsemanship...

Read more here:
http://www.thehorse.com/articles/36209/auli-farwa-receives-haggin-cup-at-2015-tevis-ride

Richardson and SMR Filouette Win 2015 Tevis Cup

Thehorse.com - Full Article

By Marsha Hayes
Aug 2, 2015

A tough 60th anniversary Tevis Cup field packed with former winning riders and horses proved no match for Potato Richardson, 72, of Greenwood, California, and his 14-year-old chestnut Arabian mare SMR Filouette.

Running up front nearly all the way on the 100-mile Western States Trail in California, Richardson and Filouette finished 30 minutes before the second place team—Sizedoesntmatter, a 9-year-old gray Arabian gelding, ridden by Gwen Hall...

Read more here:
http://www.thehorse.com/articles/36206/richardson-and-smr-filouette-win-2015-tevis-cup

Thursday, July 30, 2015

Tevis: Mother and daughter ready for a true test of endurance

Devondispatch.ca - Full Article

Thursday, July 30, 2015 1:52:41 MDT PM

Alex Boates
devondispatch.news@sunmedia.ca

The Tevis Cup is no joke. The annual endurance horse race is known worldwide as one of the toughest, most gruelling horse races in existence.

And this Saturday, a local mother and daughter are giving it their best shot.

Jaylene Janzen and her mother Christy have headed down to California for the event, which features 100 miles of unforgiving terrain and hardly any rest points.

Competitors have a limit of 24 hours to complete the race, a feat that many riders are unable to achieve.

“It’s 100 miles of the most gruelling, treacherous terrain that any rider or horse will ever come across,” said Lisa Rosales, a family friend of the Janzens. Rosales will also be heading down to California to serve as a crew member for the Janzen team, along with Jaylene’s brother Brett...

Read more here:
http://www.devondispatch.ca/2015/07/30/mother-and-daughter-ready-for-a-true-test-of-endurance

Hero on Horseback

Independent.com - Full Article

Celebrity Steed Rescues Two Dehydrated Runners in Dramatic Fashion
Wednesday, July 29, 2015

This year’s Santa Barbara 100-Mile Endurance Race saw a unique display of valiance in John Parke, a hero atop the back of steed Remington, whose deft riding through the Santa Ynez Mountains during the weekend of July 10 saved the lives of two race participants.

Parke, a regional director for the American Endurance Ride Conference (AERC), volunteered himself and his 27-year-old Icelandic pony as trail sweepers for their fifth consecutive race. He and Remington rode through parts of the trail with no vehicle access to ensure the runners made it safely through the course from where they set out on Friday at 6 p.m. to the finish, which they were expected to reach by 6 a.m. on Sunday...

Read more here:
http://www.independent.com/news/2015/jul/29/hero-horseback/

Monday, July 27, 2015

Familiar Trail: Placer freshman Claire Ross will take on the 2015 Tevis Cup

Auburnjournal.com - Full Article

July 20 2015
By: Ike Dodson of the Auburn Journal

Over 200 riders will traverse the Western States Trail from Tahoe to Auburn Aug. 1 for a 100-mile trek that’s considered the oldest endurance trail ride in the world —― the Tevis Cup.

The event, now in its 60th year of exhibition, will provide a particularly historic moment for a Placer County family that sprouted its root on the Western States Trail.

Claire Ross, an incoming freshman at Placer High and 13-year-old junior rider, will follow in the footsteps of her father, James Ross, and mother, Sandra Ross, by embarking on a family journey...

Read more here:
http://www.auburnjournal.com/article/7/20/15/familiar-trail-placer-freshman-claire-ross-will-take-2015-tevis-cup#.VbZ_WIS7wlY.facebook

Saturday, July 25, 2015

Last Week for AERC Nominations

July 25 2015

July 31st is the last day to nominate your worthy humans and horses for the 2015 Hall of Fame Member, Hall of Fame Equine, Pard'ners Award, Volunteer Service Award, and Ann Parr Trails Preservation Award.

Please send your nomination for any of the above awards directly to Vice President Lisa Schneider at honeybear3371@adelphia.net. Alternately, you may mail your nomination statement to the
AERC Office, P.O. Box 6027, Auburn, CA 95604.

For more details on the awards and more instructions, see
http://aerc.org/Static/Temp/2015_NominationForm.pdf

Friday, July 24, 2015

Tribute to Pat Fizgerald on KAHI Radio Saturday

July 24 2015

Tomorrow, July 25, Shannon Weil will join host Connie Watson on the KAHI CORRAL Radio program, 8-9 AM Pacific time, for a tribute to Pat Fitzgerald, who passed away on July 14th.

Pat was a pioneer of the sport of endurance riding. He completed the Tevis Cup 15 times, winning it twice, and he completed the Virginia City 100 13 times.

Tune in Saturday morning, 8-9 AM Pacific time, to The Kahi Corral - Horse talk and a lot more - http://kahi.com/kahi-audio-on-demand/

Competitive, Eclectic Entries in the Tevis Cup 60th Anniversary

July 24 2015
by Merri Melde-Endurance.net

With just over a week left till the 60th anniversary of the Tevis Cup on August 1, a glance at the current entry list numbering 205 shows an competitive, diverse list of entries.

Nine previous Tevis Cup winners - five riders and four horses - will contest this year's event. Potato Richardson ('98, 02), Heather Reynolds (2003, '14), Jeremy Reynolds ('04, '07, '11), John Crandell ('06, '10), and Garrett Ford (2012), are the winning riders; and SMR Fifi d'Or ('05), Heraldic (06, '10), The Fury ('12), and French Open ('14) are the winning horses.

Eleven previous Haggin Cup winners - 7 riders and 4 horses - will return. Heather Reynolds ('99, '03), Michele Roush ('05), John Crandell ('06, '07), Jeremy Reynolds ('04, '11), Melissa Ribley ('09), Garrett Ford ('10), and Junior Barrak Blakeley ('14) are the riders; Heraldic ('06), The Fury ('10), Farrabba ('12), and MCM Last Dance, ('14). are the horses.

John Crandell calls his horse Heraldic, 17, "a freak of nature". He has overcome serious injury in his career to return to phenomenal winning success. After winning the "Triple Crown" of U.S. endurance in 2006 - the Old Dominion 100, Tevis, and the AERC National Championship 100 - he seriously injured his stifle and was off for two years. He came back in 2010 to win the "Triple Crown" yet again. After another setback and over three years off, the gelding came back again, winning this year's Old Dominion 100 again last month under Marcia Hefker-Miles. Marcia will be aboard him again in Tevis. Crandell will ride LR Bold Cody, who was second to Heraldic, and got Best Condition, in the Old Dominion.

Another major comeback horse is Chris Martin's Monk. In the process of qualifying for the 2012 WEC in England, Monk set the North American record for the fastest time in the 100 mile distance, 6:53, in the Patriot's Day ride at Lake Almanor in July of 2011. At the Texas Trials in the spring of 2012, the now-13-year-old gelding tore a left front suspensory. Following treatment with PRP and stem cells, and a long rehab, Monk returned to the endurance trails after 3 years. With his regular rider Lindsay Graham, he finished a 35-miler and a 50 in March of this year, and with Linday's mother Susan, he finished another 25-mile ride. He's held up to strenuous training, and he's fit and ready to take on the Tevis course, a trail that's been on Team Monk's bucket list for a long time.

Nine Rushcreek horses are set to contest the trail - Rushcreek: Hugh (age 21), Karl (19), Nerf (16), Nel (16), Oats (15), Rambler (12), Seth (11), Tootsie (10), and Brave (8).

There are a number of 'oldies but goodies' in this year's ride. The oldest horse is PL Mercury, at 24, ridden by Lisa Downs. The Arabian gelding finished Tevis in '09 and '10. Whin Dance, 22, ridden by Carl Kimbler, finished Tevis in '06. Rushcreek Hugh, 20, ridden by Kelly Blue, finished Tevis in '04. 20-year-old Chipov Karahty, ridden by Sonja Willitts, attempted Tevis in 2011, but was pulled lame. There are 6 19-year-olds and 3 18-year-olds on the starting list.

Three Tevis super-veteran riders return to the trail. Pat Chappell, with 20 Tevis buckles, is riding Razz Couger Sheen (they finished Tevis together in '07). Kathy Perry, with 22 buckles, is riding Presario S. Barbara White, with a record 33 buckles, is riding Djubilee (they finished together in '13 and '14).

You'll see three Hall of Famers (Kathie Perry, Robert Ribley - Pard'ners Award, and Suzy Hayes - Pard'ners Award), three National Champion horses (Monk, Farrabba, Heraldic), five National Champion riders (Lindsay Graham, John Crandell, Heather Reynolds, Christoph Schork, and Robert Ribley), and several National Mileage Champions (Laurie Birch and Scudd Run, Karen Chaton, and Juniors Anya and Katya Levermann, and Claire Taylor).

You'll see some Tevis first-timers, and you'll see some interesting breeds. Besides the ubiquitous Arabians, you'll see some mustangs, a couple of Tennessee Walking Horses and Akhal Tekes, a Standardbred, a Kentucky Mountain horse, a Spotted Saddle horse, and a mule.

You can see the current entries here.

Teviscup.org will soon have a page where you can follow your rider through the ride.

Stay tuned here for Tevis updates, tweets, stories, photos, and more!:
http://www.endurance.net/international/USA/2015Tevis/

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Pat Fitzgerald Passes


Charles Barieau photo

July 21 2-15

Pat Fitzgerald, a pioneer of the sport of endurance riding, passed away on July 14.

Friend Gordon Ansleigh shared a tribute:

Pat Fitzgerald was an astoundingly unique human being who blazed his way into the early history of endurance riding, most remarkably aboard his famous horse, Quist. Even in his time, he was a tough-as-nails representative of a bygone time. He lived life on his own terms, and could have fit in somewhere in the American West anytime after 1845.

I still chuckle about one of the pranks that Pat pulled on me. Way back in 1972, my girlfriend Terre and I were invited to join a ride from Cliff Lewis' stables in south Reno, up to Virginia City. Terre was going to ride my horse Rebel, and Pat Fitzgerald said he would bring an extra horse along for me. When I first got on Pat's horse, I had a terrible time getting it to go when and where I wanted it to go. He wasn't mean and didn't buck or bite, but he acted like he didn't know anything. Gradually, we worked it out on the way to Virginia City, and the trip back down to the Washoe Vally in the moonlight was fairly pleasant. Later, I found out that Pat was bragging and laughing about having loaned me a horse that had never before been ridden, and about how he got me to break and train a horse of his for free. Pat was telling people, "After Gordy got done with him, he fit right into my dude string."

Pat was part of my life from the time I started riding the trails in 1971. We were both such unusual people. Pat was one of the people around me and encouraging me during my seminal run of the Western States Trail in 1974, and we continued to enjoy each other's company through the 1970s and into the early 1980s. Pat was just tough and strong and so much a man in every way. We all knew he had a powerful will to do whatever he wanted to do in life, but he still astounded us when he entered the Western States 100-Mile Run back about 1980, and finished in a decent time. That had a lot of people going "Wow!" in the endurance community. Pat was no spring chicken at the time.

However, for my money, Pat Fitzgerald's most astounding performance was when a woman client at his stable in the Sierra complained to the SPCA about the way he was treating one of his horses. The woman showed up with another woman, an SPCA officer intent on citing Pat for animal cruelty. Pat asked if the complainant could identify the horse that he had supposedly mistreated. The lady pointed to the horse in question. Pat went to his office, came back with a Winchester 30-30, and shot the horse dead in the head. Then he said to the ladies, "Now, if you'd care to point out any other horses I've mistreated..." The ladies left terribly upset, but couldn't do anything about it because there was no animal cruelty involved. Pat said that was the last time he was seriously bothered by the SPCA. They came out at other times but were very polite and never threatened him with legal action again. Pat said he actually did the horse he shot a favor because it was a behavior-problem horse, and he had been planning to sell it for chicken feed. He said shooting it was a good investment in getting better treatment from the SPCA folks, and actually kinder to the misbehaving horse than going through the horror of a slaughterhouse experience. Pat viewed it as a win-win for all concerned.

Pat and Quist have been immortalized on the buckles of the Nevada All-State Trail Riders Virginia City Ride, and on Australia's Quilty Cup Ride. No man ever rode a horse more perfectly than Pat Fitzgerald.

I tip my glass to one of the most remarkable men I have ever known. Best wishes for a magnificent ongoing, Pat Fitzgerald!

Cindy Collins and the Big Horn 100: The Magic Ten



July 21 2015
by Merri Melde-Endurance.net

When Cindy Collins rode across the finish line of the 2015 Big Horn 100 endurance ride near Shell, Wyoming, a little before 2:00 AM on July 12, after 18 hours and 42 minutes in the saddle, she collapsed into the arms of Melanie Thompson, her crew, and cried. To be sure, part of it was from a bit of pain and fatigue, but it was mostly from the momentous jubilation of it all. It was Cindy's 10th completion of the legendary 100-mile endurance ride, a feat only 4 other riders have accomplished in the ride's long and storied history over 40 years. "Melanie pretty much dragged me crying off of my horse," Cindy said. "It was a very emotional ride, for a lot of reasons."

Reaching 1000 Big Horn miles in the 100-mile distance has been a long term goal for this 60-year-old veteran endurance rider from Cody, Wyoming, who has logged nearly 10,000 AERC miles over 30 years of endurance riding.

And she owes it all to the Big Horn ride. "Back in 1979, there was an ad in the Cody paper about a meeting in Graybull, Wyoming, about the Big Horn 100 mile horse ride," Cindy recalled. "My husband had just bought me an unbroke 3-year-old Arab gelding. I had heard that Arabs were good at endurance, but that was the extent of what I knew. So I went to that meeting, and I met Tom and Arlene Van Gelder, and many of the other people who started the Big Horn 100, and that was really my start of my lifelong love affair with endurance riding."

Cindy's first two endurance rides were Limited Distance rides, in Mississippi and Alabama in 1980, due to the fact she and her husband had to move south for a couple of years. Back in Wyoming, Cindy did her first 50 - the Big Horn 50 - in 1981, beginning a decades-long journey over "the most beautiful trail in the world," with memorable people and horses and adventures along the way.

She finished the Big Horn 100 for the first time in 1984 on a borrowed endurance horse owned by Tom Van Gelder. "I had a really good endurance horse, but he was really good at 50s. He wasn't a great 100 mile horse," Cindy said. "So Tom gave me a gelding that he owned that he felt he was too heavy to ride.

Left, Cindy on GE Dandy in 1984; Right, Donna Fitzgerald

"Actually, it is a great story. This was the year I finished with my leg in a cast. They had a calcutta betting on whether or not I would finish. My cast was cutting into my leg so badly I had blood running into my boot, so Tom Van Gelder and Richard Hickstein were using a hoof knife to modify the cast while my husband took care of my horse. My foot was broken in 5 places and I brought my stirrup into my ortho doc, and he built my cast for riding the Big Horn with my foot at the correct angle. I finished the ride, but of course, we destroyed that cast completely and I had to get another one the next week."

GE Dandy ended up carrying Cindy through the Big Horn 100 in '84, '86, '87 and '88. The Collins bought him in 1987, after he had come to live with them in 1984. "By the way," Cindy added, "he only had one eye.

"I really had the bug then!"


She finished on FM Fad Serene in 1991, had an unplanned and unwanted break in endurance from 1993-1997, then finished in 1998 on Serya Robask, both borrowed horses. She finished it again in 2002 (for the 7th time) on her mare Sagebrush Nellie, "a really good, consistent horse."

Cindy is sure that pair would have finished two more times but for those misadventures along the trail that sometimes happen. One year, they lost a stirrup in the first section of canyons. Despite 5 people helping to look for 20 minutes in the waist-high sagebrush, the stirrup was never found. "I'm not one of those people that's good enough to ride really well with one stirrup, so we were overtime when we got to the Vet Check."

The other time was when she and riding companion Frank Solano caught up with a gal as they were coming to the canyons approaching dark. "She freaked out on the canyons, and she got off her horse and sat in the trail and wouldn't go. We just couldn't leave her there. We kind of dragged her and finally got her into the last vet check, but we were overtime."

There was a long gap between Cindy's seventh Big Horn 100 finish in 2002, and her next one. She participated in very few rides (and not the Big Horn) from 2004-2008, due to either health problems, or not having the right horse. Luck wasn't with her when she returned to the Big Horn trail from 2009 to 2012, with results being a metabolic pull, two rider option pulls, and a completion on the 60 miler instead of the 100. "The hardest thing was that stretch from 2003-2012. I started thinking that I just wasn't a 100 mile rider any more. It was very depressing," she recalled.

Her luck turned around in 2013. Cindy's last three Big Horn 100-mile completions in 2013, 2014, and 2015, (her 8th, 9th, and 10th finishes) have been aboard her outstanding mare AUR Sierra Wind, a granddaughter of the great Sierra Fadwah.


And this year's completion would not have happened without her crew Melanie Thompson, her husband Keith, and her good friend Angie McGhee.

Last December, Cindy fell and had to have major knee surgery. It healed pretty well, and she managed to get through 2 50-mile rides in May, so she figured she would be able to ride the Big Horn 100. Or, as she puts it, "I figured I could gut my way through it."

Her knee did hurt. She did have to gut her way through the ride. But her knee wasn't the major problem. "If you hurt one thing at my age, there's all these repercussions on the rest of your body that you don't even realize, all these biomechanical things. About three years ago I had torn the peroneal tendon in my ankle, and nursed my way through that, and got it rehabbed. You know, it's there, but it was pretty good. I think something in the way I was holding my body during the ride - my leg, and my knee - must have aggravated that old tear in the ankle, and it started tearing again. And by about 60 miles, it was really, really starting to fray," she laughed, though it wasn't funny at the time.

"The ankle was extremely painful, and it would literally collapse on me as I was posting, and it hurt really bad when it would collapse, because it would rip that tendon."

Angie McGhee, from Wildwood, Georgia, riding the Big Horn 100 for the first time, aboard Suzanne Solis' horse ALA Thor, was riding with Cindy, but would not leave her behind.

"I begged Angie to go on," Cindy said. "Both our horses easily could have finished two hours faster, absolutely no doubt. But Angie would not leave me. She stayed with me and she opened 25 gates, and she's about 5 foot tall and she was on a 15.2-hand horse."

Angie confirms this. "The challenge there for me wasn't the size of the mountains. It was the number of gates and the size of Thor! Thor is a TRUE 15.2 hands, and I am 5 feet. I rode with Cindy who, in most people's books, should still have been on medical leave for knee/ankle problems and couldn't mount from the ground. I think there were something like 28 gates, and I opened 25 of them." She added with a grin, "It would have been very convenient though if she had been on Thor (she's tall!) and I had been on her little mare."


Cindy said, "We even got down to the point where Angie would say, 'We're going to trot 10 steps and walk 20'. But we finished the ride in mid-pack, and our horses looked great, and they truly could have gone a lot faster. I have a really, really fantastic mare, truly. That made a huge amount of difference. She's pretty special."

It's sometimes hard to put into words exactly what it is that keeps people coming back again and again to the challenging, arduous, isolated Big Horn ride, but Cindy has the words. "I've ridden a lot of places, and I just think it's the most beautiful trail that there is. I also think that there aren't many single loop 100 mile rides left, and I think that also makes it something really special.

"Tevis has 500 volunteers. We have 20. On a good day! It is extremely remote, through the whole thing. It's very rugged, and it has very limited help, and I think it's more 'Old School' endurance.

"I think our vets root so hard for the riders, and try so hard to try to get everyone through safely. Here you really feel like it's very personal, and they really want you to finish, and they really care about you. And I think it's a warmer feeling, because it is such a small group, that surely by the end of it, everybody knows everybody.

"The Big Horn just has a tremendous amount of sentimental value to me, I guess. It's just something that I love.

"It's been a loooong, looong goal! I do owe this finish to Angie. She was a very very good friend."


**The Big Horn 100 is one of the original, traditional, most beautiful, arduous, single-loop 100-mile rides in the country, and a silver Big Horn belt buckle is most coveted. Read more stories, and see photos from the Big Horn rides here:

http://www.endurance.net/international/USA/2015BigHorn/


Monday, July 20, 2015

Bernice “Lady Long Rider” Ende makes stop in Langdon on ocean-to-ocean 8,000-mile ride across the country

Cavaliercountyextra.com - Full Article

It was like a scene from an old western, a lone rider on horseback came into town on a hot, sunny afternoon.

Posted on 7/18/15
By Melissa Anderson

The townsfolk stopped and stared as the woman rode by, wondering who she was and where she had come from.

According to the rider, Bernice Ende, this is how things usually go until someone gets the courage, or a fellow horse person happens by and introduces themselves to her.

“You ride in and nobody comes out. I feel like Clint Eastwood in one of his movies, riding into town with a low gaze and covered in dirt,” Ende said.

Riding into Langdon was one of the exceptions to this occurrence. Not only was Ende approached almost immediately upon her arrival, but was offered a place for her and her horses to spend a few a days and rest up.

“I was greeted with handshakes and smiles,” Ende stated.

Ende refers to herself as “Lady Long Rider” and for good reason. The Minnesota native has been doing long distance riding for over a decade, with her first ride in 2005 from her residence in Trego, Montana down to Edgewood, New Mexico.

“By the time I finished that first ride, I was so profoundly changed, I kept saying ‘How am I going to go back?’” Ende said.

Ende never really did go back to what many consider a “normal life,” and from that point on has done a long ride every year or two with most of her riding being in the western part of the country and the lower half of Saskatchewan and Alberta, Canada. From that first ride to now, Ende has covered over 20,000 miles on horseback...

Read more here:
http://www.cavaliercountyextra.com/2015/07/18/bernice-lady-long-rider-ende-makes-stop-in-langdon-on-ocean-to-ocean-8000-mile-ride-across-the-country/

Adams pursues passion for horses

GCTelegram.com - Full Article

By Alana Flinn aflinn@gctelegram.com
July 19 2015

While some people spend years trying to find a passion or hobby, Garden City local Joyce Adams was lucky enough to discover a love for horses early in life, and has now dedicated her life to working with them.

The dedication to her lifelong passion is even noticeable when you call Adams and hear her voice mail message that says, “I’m probably out riding, so leave me a message.”

Adams founded the Miles of Smiles Therapeutic Riding Program in 1997, which blended Adam’s love for horses and teaching special needs children. The program offers horse riding lessons to special needs children in southwest Kansas.

“Just watching the kids gain some self confidence in themselves and see them improve their physical and mental abilities is amazing,” Adams said. “It gives them something to do, and in their minds, it makes them equal with everyone, because they’re doing something that a lot of kids don’t do.”

After several years as the director of Miles of Smiles, Adams took a step back from the organization in 2007. However, she wanted to continue working with horses, so Adams decided to pursue a longtime dream of hers: endurance riding...

Read more here:
http://www.gctelegram.com/lifestyle/neighbors/adams-pursues-passion-for-horses/article_0dd46b87-1119-5f2a-b17b-7c1083998d2e.html

Sunday, July 19, 2015

Popular Breyerfest starts Eriday at the Kentucky Horse Park — draws thousands from around the world

NKYTribune.com - Full Article

Breyer Animal Creations, makers of the world’s most realistic model horses will hold its 26th annual festival for horse lovers and model horse collectors at the Kentucky Horse Park in Lexington, starting today through Sunday.

This fun, family-friendly festival celebrates the world of horses and especially the real horses that inspire the Breyer models.

Breyer marks its 65th anniversary this year and the iconic toy company’s biggest fan festival, BreyerFest, will bring more than 10,000 horse lovers and 200 guest horses from around the world to the Kentucky Horse Park.

BreyerFest’s theme this year is Vive La France, and Simba du Pont de Tournay, a rare French Ardennais, one of only 15 in the U.S., is this year’s Celebration Horse. Simba, a red roan stallion weighing approximately 1700 lbs., is owned by Joyce and Gene Concklin of Florida. A limited edition collectible Breyer model of Simba is included with every three-day ticket purchase to BreyerFest!

New to BreyerFest this year will be the exciting sport of Horseball. Horseball is fast-paced team sport that combines aspects of polo, basketball and quidditch! Presented by the American Horseball Association in cooperation with the International Horseball Federation, top international players from France, Spain, Portugal and Canada will present an exciting demonstration of horseball each day.

Other special equine guests include: Wismer Clydesdales six-horse mare hitch from Canada; 2011 Endurance Horse of the Year OT Sara Moniet RSI and owner/rider Crockett Dumas from Utah...

Read more here:
http://www.nkytribune.com/2015/07/popular-breyerfest-starts-today-at-the-kentucky-horse-park-draws-thousands-from-around-the-world/

Friday, July 17, 2015

Kelsey Russell Wins Endurance Individual Gold, USA Southeast Claims Team Gold

USEFNetwork.com

ELEASE: July 17, 2015
AUTHOR/ADMINISTRATOR: Phelps Media Group, Inc./USEF

Kelsey Russell of Williston, Fla., won the individual competition of the North American Young Rider Endurance Championship aboard My Wild Irish Gold on Thursday with a time of 5:43:56.

Hanna Weightman (Shamong, N.J.) took the Individual Silver medal with Syrocco Rabia finishing in a time of 5:46:07, and Hope Misner (Webster City, Iowa) earned Bronze with GDE Sweete Legacy with a time of 5:52:03. Russell rode for Team USA Southeast, Weightman for USA Northeast, and Misner for USA Central.

“I didn’t think she was going to stop,” said a grinning Russell, 19, after she dismounted.

Fourteen riders started the 120 km (75-mile) 4* course at 6:30 a.m. in crisp weather and a soupy mist that made it challenging to see at a distance. By noon, however, the sun was shining brightly, and the air was a hot, heavy blanket of Kentucky humidity. The first horse crossed the finish line shortly after 3:00 p.m.

Because of torrential rains earlier in the week and for the safety of the horses, portions of the course were rerouted the previous day. The entire race (five loops) took place on the 1,200-acre Kentucky Horse Park grounds instead of crossing adjacent private properties, as has done previously and was planned this year.

Although there were some muddy stretches, Russell said the course rode very well. “Emmett Ross, [the course designer], did a really good job. By the end of the last loop most of the footing was dry. We took it easy the first two loops, and by the third she was ready to rock ‘n’ roll.”

Owner Valerie Kanavy, a legendary endurance rider, who is also Russell’s coach, bred her mount. Kanavy said the 11-year-old mare will have some time off as a broodmare after this event. She described Russell as “a very special young lady,” adding, “She works her tail off and is already managing our whole training program, which has 17 horses. She’s amazing – a straight-A student who can do just about anything.”

After this race, Russell has finished 13 of 14 starts, placing within the top five in each, including the 2013 FEI World Endurance Championship for Juniors and Young Riders. She is starting her sophomore year in college as a business major and plans to become a veterinarian.

The USA Southeast team claimed Gold with a combined time of 19:35:15. The members are:

Kelsey Russell and My Wild Irish Gold
Katie Baldino and Questafir
Annie Whelan and RF Priceless
Mary Kathryn Clark and Kalilas Legacy
Mallory Capps and SA Belshazzar

The endurance medals ceremony will take place on Friday afternoon along with the announcement and presentation of the best-conditioned horse award.

For full results or to learn more about the Adequan/FEI North American Junior & Young Rider Championships presented by Gotham North, please visit www.youngriders.org.

Thursday, July 16, 2015

Hannah Pruss, Suzanne Ford Huff Tie for First in Big Horn 100

July 11 2015

Hannah Pruss, riding Stuart, and Suzanne Ford Huff, riding SD Expressa, tied for first place in the Big Horn 100 near Shell, Wyoming on July 11, in a ride time of 13:35. Pruss finished second in 2013 and first in 2014 riding Krusador. Huff won the Big Horn in 2006 aboard Chase The Wind AH. SD Expressa won this year's Best Condition award. 34 riders started and 26 completed the 100-mile distance.

Cindy Collins, finishing 15th on AUR Sierra Wind, became only the fourth rider to earn her 10th Big Horn buckle. She exhibited human endurance and fortitude, persevering through some major leg pain during the last half of the ride.

Tom Noll, earning his 6th Big Horn buckle by finishing 23rd on Rocky, also was awarded the "In the Spirit of Endurance" award in honor of Marirose Six. "Last year, I rode with Marirose as we came off the mountain and Marirose helped me finish with my big red mustang," Noll stated. "This year, I was with the wild Okies as we descended on a night black as coal. We rode the final miles through the shale badlands in silence. Many times, I caught a fleeting glimpse of a horse and rider silhouette in the darkness. The night was so black and the figure was so formless that I was never sure if it was even real. Perhaps it was the shadow of Marirose, just out of reach.

"I am honored and deeply humbled to receive this award. I have been fortunate to share the Big Horn trail with some genuine characters -- riders, horses, and mules. I am a lucky man."

The Big Horn 100 is a tough ride, but a beautiful and near-sacred one to many riders who return year after year. Noll summed it up: "100 miles, one day, tough trail, tough horses, and tough riders. There are no other rides like Big Horn which is why I keep coming back. The Big Horn 100 exerts a very strong pull on my soul."

The (unofficial) finish of the 100 can be seen here:
http://www.endurance.net/international/USA/2015BigHorn/

Tevis Ride Nears Rider Limit

July 16 2015

With 2 weeks and 1 day left till the 60th running of the Tevis Cup on August 1, 2015, over 200 participants have entered the ride. The maximum number of entries allowed is 220. If you have submitted an entry and you know you are not riding this year, please notify the office right away so they may know how many open spots remain.  If you would like to ride this year and do not have an entry in, please send it in ASAP so they can have an accurate list of entries.

Tevis entry form is here.

See the current rider list here.

Julie Jag, Out and About: Back in the saddle after the baby

Santacruzsentinel.com - Full Article

By Julie Jag, Santa Cruz Sentinel
POSTED: 07/15/15

SANTA CRUZ >> It’s probably a good thing it all happened so suddenly. I didn’t have time to second-guess my decision or make excuses for why I couldn’t do it.

My friend Steve Shaw contacted me a week before the Fireworks Endurance Ride, a horse “race” through a series of Santa Cruz County parks, and asked if I was interested in riding his horse in it. I gave him a tentative yes on Monday. On Wednesday, another friend, Don Roth, met me at Henry Cowell State Park to make sure I could still ride.

By Saturday, I was literally back in the saddle.

It had been more than a year and a half since I’d climbed onto a horse’s back. My last ride had been a 50 miler in December 2013, when I was three months pregnant with my now 13-month-old daughter. It feels like a gross understatement to say a lot has happened since then. My priorities, my body, my perspective — my entire life has been turned upside down.

So, I guess it shouldn’t have come as a surprise that when I showed up for that practice run, I couldn’t remember how to put on the horse’s tack. I fumbled around with the girth and the chest plate, cursing myself and my sudden-onset dementia until Don kindly showed me the ropes, again...

Read more here:
http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/sports/20150715/julie-jag-out-and-about-back-in-the-saddle-after-the-baby

Legendary endurance star rescues marathon runners from mountain

Horseandhound.co.uk - Full Article

Pippa Cuckson
16 July, 2015

A horse who is a legend in US endurance, is in the news again after rescuing two distressed runners during the Santa Barbara 100-mile marathon earlier this month.

Remington, a 27-year-old 13.3hh Icelandic and his owner John Parke have annually patrolled the last 30 miles of the Santa Barbara 100-mile marathon through remote and rocky parts of the Santa Ynez mountains, looking for lost athletes, without major incident.

Yet this year Remington had to rescue two casualties during the long night of Saturday 11 July.

John found the first at the 75-mile mark...

Read more at http://www.horseandhound.co.uk/news/remington-endurance-pony-rescues-marathon-runners-502437#8tYsdkkBLuxVw2ts.99

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Mustang Extraordinaire Does It Again



July 15 2015
by Merri Melde-Endurance.net

When Janet Tipton says, "I am so proud of this little mare!" she's got good reason.

After becoming AERC's highest-mileage Limited Distance horse in October 2013 at the Moab Canyons ride in Utah with 3985 miles, Lady Jasmine set a new mileage standard July 12 at New Mexico's Fort Stanton multi-day endurance ride. After completing Day 1's 35 miler, the 13.2-hand, 19-year-old mustang mare passed 5000 LD miles.

Tipton, from Erda, Utah, has owned "Ladybug" since 1999, when she adopted her as a 3-year-old from the Logan, Utah, wild horse adoption, although Tipton will say that Ladybug chose her, instead of the other way around. Besides endurance, Tipton and her multi-talented mare have also found the time to participate in Extreme Cowboy Challenges, dressage, drill teams, and parades, and - since it's inevitable when you live in the West - moving cows.

Ladybug's record currently stand at 193 completions in 195 starts (the pulls were a rider option, and an overtime), 25 Best Condition awards, and 5065 miles. But the dynamic duo isn't resting on their laurels. They are currently competing in the last 3 days of the 6-day Fort Stanton ride.

For more background on Tipton and Lady Jasmine, see:
http://merritravels.endurance.net/2013/11/mustang-extraordinaire-lady-jasmine.html

Top photo: Janet Tipton and Lady Jasmine, Owyhee Canyonlands 2012

Tuesday, July 14, 2015

Support National Forest Trails Bill Today! 

On Thursday, July 16, the Senate Agriculture Committee is scheduled to hold a hearing on the National Forest Service Trail Stewardship Act of 2015 (S.1110). The bill would direct the Forest Service to take several actions to help address the current trail maintenance backlog that is adversely impacting all trail users on many national forests, including equestrians. This bill is strongly supported by the American Horse Council.

AHC urges all recreational riders and trail users to call their Senators and ask them to support the National Forest Service Trail Stewardship Act of 2015 (S.1110) and to please co-sponsor this legislation.

You can reach your Senator through the Capitol Switchboard at 202-225-3121.  Once connected to the Senator's office, ask to speak to the staff person who handles public lands issues. 

Call them today and tell them;

• You support the National Forest Service Trail Stewardship Act of 2015 (S.1110) and it is important to trail riders and all recreational trail users in your state.
• The Forest Service has deferred trail maintenance needs that exceed half-billion dollars. This maintenance backlog is causing access and safety issues for equestrians and all trail users on national forests.  
• S. 1110 will direct the Forest Service to develop a strategy to more effectively utilize volunteers and partners to assist in maintaining national forest trails and identify and prioritize specific areas with the greatest need for trail maintenance in the national forest system.
• This bill will help improve trail maintenance without adding to the federal budget deficit. 
• The bill is bi-partisan and supported by a wide range of recreational users of public land.
• Please support and co-sponsor this important legislation.
If you have any questions please contact the American Horse Council.

Monday, July 13, 2015

American Endurance Ride Conference Signs On as Title Sponsor for Horses in the Morning ‘Endurance Day’ Radio Show

AUBURN, California – July 13, 2015 – The American Endurance Ride Conference (AERC) has signed an agreement to become the Title Sponsor of the Horse Radio Network’s popular monthly Horses in the Morning “Endurance Day” radio show that airs online from 9:00-10:30 a.m. EDT on the second Tuesday of each month. The ‘Endurance Day’ show is hosted by accomplished endurance rider and AERC member, Karen Chaton, and is among the most popular on Horses in the Morning, drawing tens of thousands of listeners for each episode.

This month’s show, which airs on Tuesday, July 14, will focus on the iconic 100-mile, one-day Western States Trail Ride (commonly known as the Tevis Cup) which begins on August 1 at 5:15 a.m. and features 200 riders representing 24 U.S. states and 10 countries. Now in its 60th year, the Tevis Cup is a highlight of the endurance ride calendar and is considered by many to be the pinnacle of achievement in endurance riding here in the United States.

“Sponsoring a quality radio program like this is a natural fit for the AERC,” said Lisa Schneider, AERC vice president. “We’re looking forward to using our time on the show for sharing important AERC news and information, and for collaborating with host Karen Chaton on various episode topics that are sure to be of interest to listeners.”

Part of the Horse Radio Network, the Horses in the Morning radio show/podcast is the leading morning radio show for horse lovers worldwide with listeners in more than 90 countries. Listeners can access Horse Radio Network shows online at www.horseradionetwork.com or on their phones or tablets by downloading the free app (IOS or Android)—just search for Horse Radio Network.


About the AERC

In addition to promoting the sport of endurance riding, the AERC encourages the use, protection, and development of equestrian trails, especially those with historic significance. Many special events of four to six consecutive days take place over historic trails, such as the Pony Express Trail, the Outlaw Trail, the Chief Joseph Trail, and the Lewis and Clark Trail. The founding ride of endurance riding, the Western States Trail Ride or Tevis Cup, covers 100 miles of the famous Western States and Immigrant Trails over the Sierra Nevada Mountains. These rides promote awareness of the importance of trail preservation for future generations and foster an appreciation of our American heritage.

The American Endurance Ride Conference, established in 1972, is headquartered in Auburn, California, “The Endurance Capital of the World.” For more information please visit us at www.aerc.org.

Media Contact:
Candace FitzGerald
Dobbin Group
candace@dobbin-group.com
603-738-2788

BreyerFest® Celebrates Vive La France!

Breyer’s 26th Annual Model Horse Collector Festival and Horse Fair

July 17-19, 2015 § Kentucky Horse Park, Lexington, KY

(Pequannock, NJ – July 10, 2015) – Breyer Animal Creations, makers of the world’s most realistic and beautiful model horses launches its 26th annual festival for horse lovers and model horse collectors July 17-19, 2015 at the Kentucky Horse Park in Lexington, KY. This fun, family-friendly festival celebrates the world of horses and especially, the real horses that inspire the Breyer models! Breyer marks its 65th anniversary this year and the iconic toy company’s biggest fan festival, BreyerFest, will bring more than 10,000 horse lovers and 200 guest horses from around the world to Lexington!

BreyerFest’s theme this year is Vive La France and Simba du Pont de Tournay, a rare French Ardennais, one of only 15 in the U.S., is this year’s Celebration Horse. Simba, a red roan stallion weighing approximately 1700 lbs., is owned by Joyce and Gene Concklin of Florida. A limited edition collectible Breyer model of Simba is included with every three-day ticket purchase to BreyerFest!

New to BreyerFest this year will be the exciting sport of Horseball. Horseball is fast-paced team sport that combines aspects of polo, basketball and quidditch! Presented by the American Horseball Association in cooperation with the International Horseball Federation, top international players from France, Spain, Portugal and Canada will present an exciting demonstration of horseball each day!

Other special equine guests include: Wismer Clydesdales six-horse mare hitch from Canada; 2011 Endurance Horse of the Year OT Sara Moniet RSI and owner/rider Crockett Dumas from Utah; Quarter Pony Supreme Champions Smokin Doubledutch from Oregon and Pinto Champion Chocolate Chip Kisses from Minnesota; undefeated National Arabian Hunter Champion Oration from New Jersey; and Appaloosa Heritage and World Champion Lil Ricky Rocker from Ohio.

On Saturday evening, BreyerFest will host Dreaming of Horses at the Alltech Arena, a special evening entertainment created by Yvonne Barteau of KYB Dressage starring Yvonne, the KYB Dressage troupe and Dan James of Double Dan Horsemanship. Lights, music and horses will illuminate this special event. Admission is included with all three-day tickets and single day tickets holders can upgrade their ticket to attend.

BreyerFest is an immersive experience and there are lots of things for people to see, do and experience. There are three days of live horse exhibitions in the arena featuring breeds as diverse as Baroque breeds, miniature horses and Fell Ponies! And, US National Singles Driving Champion Sterling Graburn will perform along with drill team and vaulters! American Parkour experts, The Tribe, will be

giving demos and teaching kids their urban gymnastics, while Splash Dogs will again host its Eastern Regional Championships at BreyerFest. In addition, America’s top young riders will be competing in the North American Young Riders Championships in Dressage, Show Jumping, Endurance and Eventing that weekend. The Tonka® Fun Zone will feature a playground dedicated to Tonka toys!

Other activities include meet and greets with our special equine guests, free pony rides and an exotic petting zoo, 65-booth Trade Fair, a mega Breyer Store filled with models created especially for BreyerFest, a Craft and Activity Center with free crafts and face painting, model horse displays and shows, workshops and free seminars. Tickets include access to activities at the Kentucky Horse Park too!

BreyerFest takes place Rain or Shine. Save $3 per ticket by pre-purchasing now through Tues. July 14 at www.BreyerHorses.com. Tickets are available on-site at the BreyerFest Ticket Booth. Call 800-413-3348.


# # #

About Breyer Animal Creations

For horse-crazy girls, there are only two kinds of horses: real horses and Breyer model horses. The iconic Breyer brand, a division of Reeves International, was founded in 1950, and is the leader in creating the world’s most authentic and realistic model horses for play and collecting. These hand-painted, collectible model horses and animals have a worldwide following, thanks to the incredible sculptures that form the foundation of the line. Today, Breyer has expanded its line to include play and craft activity sets and horsey accessories for its younger fans and its collector lines to include resins, crystal and porcelain. To see the complete line of Breyer horses, find a retailer near you, and to learn more about Breyer events and the model horse hobby, visit us at breyerhorses.com!

Contact: Kathleen Fallon, Breyer Animal Creations
Email: kfallon@reevesintl.com; Tel.: (973) 349-1704; Cell: 917-592-5185

Thursday, July 09, 2015

AERC Parade Rider's Group Accepted into 2016 Rose Parade



July 8 2016
by Merri Melde-Endurance.net

"It's official!" announced Lisa Schneider, Vice President of AERC. "The AERC Parade Group has been accepted into the 2016 Rose Parade! This group of 25 riders, headed up by AERC member Gayle Pena, will be marching in the Rose Parade on New Year's Day. They had to go through a rigorous qualification process and submit applications, photos, and list their parade credentials." The AERC Parade Group is one of approximately 20 elite equestrian units, chosen from applicants around the country, who will participate.

Crysta Turnage, from Spanish Springs, Nevada, will be one of the participants in the famed Pasadena, California parade, aboard her Arabian, Dream Makker. "Riders are required to be an AERC member, and have parade experience on their horse," Turnage explained. "The 25 riders in the group include our 'Living Legends' of Connie Creech, Dave Rabe, John Parke, Dave Nicholson, and Karen Chaton. Gayle Pena is the main impetus behind the group and the one coordinating everything."

Lisa Peck is the group's official photographer, and she created a video fitting the theme "Find Your Park- Ride Your Adventure" as part of their Rose Parade application.

Riders were required to purchase all their own uniform gear, including custom tack from The Distance Depot and tights from Crazy Legs Tights. "All riders had to submit a full color photograph of themselves and their horse, along with a personal information sheet to the Group Marshal (Gayle Pena)," Turnage said. "These items were then coordinated into a custom group binder by Gayle and Lisa Peck, along with several videos including the group's Equestfest drill team performance and past parade appearances. This full package was submitted to the Rose Parade Committee for the equestrian team selection process.

"There are two 'satellite' groups for now," Crysta added. "One in southern California, headed up by Gayle, and one here in northern Nevada, which Karen Chaton coordinates. 

"We'd love to see this take off around the country by other regions."

According to Tournamentofroses.com, "Find Your Adventure" is the theme of the 127th Rose Parade presented by Honda. The theme grew out of a unique partnership between the Pasadena Tournament of Roses and the U.S. National Park Service. The 2016 Rose Parade will help shine light on the centennial celebration of our nation’s national parks.

Both the Tournament of Roses and the National Park Service aim to preserve history, connect people through real-life experiences and engage the public in new adventures. As proponents of the American spirit, we encourage you to find beauty in the landscape that builds the backdrop of your lives. From coast-to-coast, we will add your stories of adventure to our collection while protecting our unique heritage and looking to the future.
Every person’s adventure is different – you may find yours at the top of a mountain while mine is in my backyard; your adventure may be extraordinary while mine is familiar. Our hope for the New Year is that however you define it, you will find your adventure and enrich your life. 

"We wish them all the best and love the international exposure this will garner for AERC and endurance riding!" Lisa Schneider said.

Lisa Peck's video can be viewed at
http://lisapeckphotography.smugmug.com/VIDEOS/VIDEO-PROJECTS/i-JXZWvVS/A

Sunday, July 05, 2015

Back Country Horsemen of America Donated $14.4 Million in Volunteer Value Last Year

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 3, 2015

By Sarah Wynne Jackson
 
Back Country Horsemen of America protects our right to ride horses on public lands, cherishing America’s heritage of traveling this landscape as our ancestors did. That’s not just a conviction; it’s a way of life. For over four decades, Back Country Horsemen have volunteered their time, skill, and resources towards keeping trails open to horse use and promoting responsible recreation.
 
In 2014, Back Country Horsemen from coast to coast donated $14.4 million in volunteer value to this cause. The nearly 14,000 BCHA members cleared trails, restored trail treads, built bridges, educated youth and adults in horse use, spread the word about responsible Leave No Trace habits, attended public lands planning meetings, spoke with legislators, held food drives, cleaned up litter, and so much more.
 
BCHA Executive Director Jim McGarvey is leading by example. When his two year term as Chairman ended in April 2015, he announced his commitment to fill the vacant position of executive director on a volunteer basis for up to two years. During that time, he aims to raise the funds required to cover three years of salary and travel expenses for a professional executive director.
 
Back Country Horsemen of Virginia
 
In May, the Iron Mountain Chapter and the Eastern Divide Chapter of Back Country Horsemen of Virginia teamed up for a National Trails Day project in the east­ern end of the Mount Rogers National Recreation Area. The work party included 14 members on foot and four on horseback with one pack horse. They were joined by US Forest Service Ranger Stephen Hmur­ciak and two American Endurance Ride Conference certified trail masters to advise in the best way to solve the problems on the trail.
 
Located in southwest Virginia, the Mount Rogers National Recreation Area encompasses 200,000 acres of National Forest land, including four Congressionally designated wilderness areas; the Virginia Creeper Trail; the 5000 acre Crest Zone featuring elevations over 4,000 feet, large rock formations, and a mixture of bald mountain summits and spruce-fir forests; and a herd of wild, free-ranging ponies. 
 
In five hours, the group widened and repaired several hundred yards of tread on the Virginia Highlands Horse Trail and reworked a washed out switchback. They cut a tree to make cribbing and filled it with rock and soil to form a sturdy, wider trail bed. They also cleared deadfall from six miles of trail. Their work, which was done by hand using trail tools and a chain saw, made this treacherous area much safer.
 
Show Me Missouri Back Country Horsemen
 
The Tri-Lakes Chapter of Show Me Missouri Back Country Horsemen participated in another successful collaboration. They routinely carry trash bags on the trail and pick up garbage left by other users. The group recently approached the PepsiCo plant in Springfield to help fund the purchase of mesh bags that are easily carried on horseback. PepsiCo and SMMBCH pur­chased 5,000 reusable mesh bags print­ed with the Pepsi and SMMBCH logos, along with trail ethics statements.
 
Show Me Missouri Back Country Horsemen distributed the mesh bags to its chapters across the state to be used in trail maintenance. The bags are proving not only to be very useful and practical but also good for spread­ing the message of Back Country Horsemen val­ues and purposes. Bags were giv­en out at SMMBCH’s Leave No Trace display tent at the Missouri State Fair, and will also be made available at trailheads, saddle clubs, and to any interested equestrian individual or group.
 
This beneficial project was made possible by generous funding from PepsiCo and a grant from the Back Country Horsemen of America Education Foun­dation. Show Me Missouri Back Country Horsemen also works regularly with five differ­ent federal and state public land man­agement agencies to maintain and protect Missouri’s wild lands.
 
Ride Kansas Back Country Horsemen
 
The new Ride Kansas Back Country Horsemen expresses the same spirit of volunteerism BCHers are known for. Every autumn, they organize a benefit trail ride to raise money for improving the campground at Rockhaven Horse Park on the south shore of Clinton Lake in northeast Kansas.
 
With the money raised, Ride Kansas Back Country Horsemen have built over 30 steel pipe pens at the camping sites to go with the 18 electri­cal sites, 32 primitive sites, 14 centrally located pens, a shower house, and a shelter house. Along with 70 miles of wooded and scenic trails, these amenities make Clinton Lake one of the best trail riding destinations in Kansas.
 
The Things We Value
 
BCHA believes our nation’s public lands are a precious resource to be preserved and enjoyed. With federal, state, and local budgets shrinking, it’s our responsibility as citizens to pick up the slack. When we accomplish the required maintenance, all users can continue to recreate in these beautiful areas.
 
Back Country Horsemen of America highly values our right to ride horses on these public lands, despite the fact that every day more of them are being designated “No Horses.” Without a unified voice such as that of Back Country Horsemen of America, our heritage of equine use and our right to ride on public lands is in serious jeopardy.
 
About Back Country Horsemen of America
 
BCHA is a non-profit corporation made up of state organizations, affiliates, and at-large members. Their efforts have brought about positive changes regarding the use of horses and stock in wilderness and public lands.
 
If you want to know more about Back Country Horsemen of America or become a member, visit their website: www.bcha.org; call 888-893-5161; or write PO Box 1367, Graham, WA 98338-1367. The future of horse use on public lands is in our hands!

Peg Greiwe, Executive Secretary
Back Country Horsemen of America

Thursday, July 02, 2015

Tevis Early Bird Entry Rate Ends July 6

July 2 2015

You still have time to get the early bird rate for the 60th running of the Tevis Cup on August 1 if you get in your Tevis entry on or before July 6. The traditional ride entry fee, which includes drug testing, Robie Park camping, and 1 ticket to the Sunday Awards Banquet is $400 before July 6. On or after July 7, the entry fee is $500.

The specially designed 60th anniversary Tevis finish award buckle is $160 when reserved pre-ride and is nonrefundable. Buckles are $250 when purchased post ride. The Legacy Buckle program will not be offered this year due to low inventory of donated buckles from riders who have previously completed the ride.

For more information see
http://teviscup.org/tevis-2015/the-2015-tevis-cup

Wednesday, July 01, 2015

Many Miles Make a Rider

**please make sure you read the last paragraph of this story on the horseandrider link!**

Horseandrider.com - Full Story

Always up for a new adventure and a fresh challenge, a versatile young horsewoman keeps proving she’s got what it takes.

By Mary Homicz

I’ve done a lot of riding in my life. I’ve gone on 30-mile and 50-mile endurance rides, and competed in state horsemanship contests. I’ve ridden many different horses—a total of 17 so far, which may not seem like a lot unless you consider that I’m only 12 years old.

I think all the time I’ve spent in the saddle and on different horses and participating in various programs has helped me become a better rider. Plus it’s been great fun—I highly recommend it.

‘Kung Fu Pony’
I began attending American Endurance Ride Conference events at the age of 3. I didn’t ride then, of course. My mom rode and I stayed in camp with my dad.
At 6, I participated in my first AERC 10-mile fun ride. It was in the Redwood National Park near Orick, along California’s far northern coast. I rode Patches, my then 10-year-old Shetland Pony mare. Actually, we called her “Kung Fu Pony” because she’d buck and kick if other horses came too near. Sometimes I’d end up in front of the saddle horn. Then my mom, also on the ride, would trot up, lift me by the back of my shirt, and plunk me back in the seat.

I learned I prefer to ride in saddles without horns!

I did my first AERC 30-mile ride a few weeks later, the Cuneo Creek ride in Humboldt Redwoods State Park. After a couple of years, I moved up to riding my mom’s Morgan/Arabian endurance horse, Chief, then 20. A real “steady-Eddie,” Chief took care of me and was actually easier to ride than Patches.

My first AERC 50-mile ride was the 2014 Chalk Rock at the Chalk Mountain Ranch in Bridgeville. This time I rode Katir, a veteran 14-year-old Arabian gelding owned by Sharon Wimberg...

- See more at: http://horseandrider.com/article/miles-rider-28578?utm_source=HorseandRiderFB&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=Facebook#sthash.gYIZOMo9.dpuf

Monday, June 29, 2015

Pagosa Springs Endurance Horse Ride praised, results announced

Pagosasun.com - Full Article

By Kirsten Le Roux
Special to The SUN

“I would have paid double and driven twice as far to ride this event,” enthused Dawn Dobbs at the final vet check of Saturday’s inaugural Pagosa Springs Endurance Horse Ride. Dobbs finished after 13 hours in the saddle in the 75-mile distance.

Horses and riders braved a scorching 88-degree day to ride in Saturday’s inaugural Pagosa Springs Endurance Horse Ride. GECKO (Giving Every Child Knowledge of the Outdoors) hosted the event as a fundraiser...

Read more here:
http://www.pagosasun.com/pagosa-springs-endurance-horse-ride-praised-results-announced/

Friday, June 26, 2015

Kiona man to compete in upcoming Ride & Tie

Tri-cityherald.com - Full Article

BY ELEANOR CUMMINS
Tri-City HeraldJune 25, 2015

Dick Root knows how complex a horse’s personality can be.

The 71-year-old Kiona man has worked with horses big and small, in his career as a veterinarian and pursuing his hobby on the ride-and-tie competition circuit.

“They’re just like people: different body types, different minds,” he said.

Ride and tie is a relatively unknown sport that combines horse riding with trail running.

In a competition, two runners and a horse team up to complete a cross-country course of 20 to 100 miles. The final time for a team is given when all three members have crossed the finish line.

Root will participate in the 45th annual Ride & Tie World Championship on June 27 in Klamath Falls, Ore. He will run with his partner, Jen Titus, of Grants Pass, Ore., and his horse, Ali...

Read more here: http://www.tri-cityherald.com/2015/06/25/3626018/kiona-man-to-compete-in-upcoming.html#storylink=cpy

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Heraldic and Marcia Hefker Win the Old Dominion 100 Riding the "Heraldic" Lightweight Endurance Saddle by RP

(Oakland, CA) June 24, 2015 - World-class endurance horse "Heraldic" made a remarkable "three-peat" in winning this year's Old Dominion 100, widely considered to be the toughest endurance ride on the East Coast, adding to his wins in 2006 and 2010.
 
Heraldic's 2015 win with new rider Marcia Hefker, in addition to his prior wins with longtime owner John Crandell III, only enhances his reputation as "a freak of nature" - as Crandell once admiringly described his now 17-year-old horse.
 
"Our entire company is thrilled to congratulate Heraldic again, and welcome Marcia to the family," said The ReactorPanel Saddle Company president and CEO Carmi Weininger.
 
Heraldic was the inspiration and model for his namesake the Heraldic Lightweight Endurance Saddle by RP, which has become the saddle of choice for many top endurance athletes and other riders who are particular about saddle fit and function.
 
"Heraldic is one of those legendary athletes that changes the stats. To be able to win the Old Dominion, Tevis and AERC National Championship in a single season, as Heraldic did in 2010, is almost unimaginable. Five years later, to come back from layup and win the OD 100 yet again is staggering. We're looking forward to seeing what this great horse will continue to accomplish," said Weininger.
 
Preparation Meets Opportunity

Marcia Hefker came to endurance via barrel racing and team roping in the ranch and rodeo world of her native New Mexico. She rode her first endurance race by accident, after seeing a flyer for what she thought was just a trail ride that sounded like fun.
 
            "I watched horses fly by me," she remembered, "and I decided, this is the sport for me! Endurance is my golfing: pleasure, relaxation, vacation. The competition is just another great aspect of it." Through the sport of endurance, she met great friends and mentors - among them Susan Norris, Susie Jones, Anna Wolfe - who still ride together whenever they can.
 
            A nurse practitioner by profession, and now also a nursing home administrator, Marcia is rapidly making her mark in her chosen sport. She top tenned and has twice completed the Tevis on her 2001 grey Arabian mare, Hindi Bint Samia, or "Cita", among other notable achievements in the endurance world, including a 2013 ranking among the top 25 FEI (International Equestrian Federation) endurance riders.
 
During Marcia's quest to qualify for the 2014 World Equestrian Games, Cita sustained an injury that put them out of contention, but Marcia stayed on at the Florida qualifier to volunteer. That's where she was introduced by the US Chef d'Equipe to another volunteer, John Crandell.
 
"We talked about our horses, how we trained them, and then we didn't talk again until this January, when John called out of the blue to ask about my plans for the year. I told him I had three younger horses in training, and he asked if I would be interested in riding Heraldic this year. How could I say anything but yes?" Marcia flew back and forth from her home in New Mexico to ride and train with John, who winters in Florida and summers in Virginia.
 
Marcia, Meet Heraldic


On her first trip to Florida, Marcia just got to know Heraldic, riding but not competing. On her second trip and first race with Heraldic, they won the February 2015 Far Out Forest 50-miler in the Ocala National Forest, where she met the intense competitor Heraldic becomes on course.
 
"Heraldic is unlike any horse I've ever ridden," Marcia said. "He's a perfect gentleman in the dressage ring and hacking on the trail, but in the race I discovered I had zero control. I sweated through three layers of clothes! We must have done more miles on the first loop than in the entire race, just circling and circling. After that, we got along great. He showed me how fast he could blow by everybody."
 
The next day, she offered to ride another of John's horses in the 25, where she finished second "without even trying" with Cody, an 11-year-old gelding John's mother had bred but who had always been "on the back burner" and never raced. Not surprisingly, Cody has now joined Heraldic on the front burners.
 
A month before the Old Dominion 100, Marcia and her husband Mark Miles flew to Virginia to prepare. "I did a pre-ride of the Old Dominion trail on Heraldic, over three days, with John riding Cody. It was a great time to strategize and develop my plan for the race. Originally John was just going to crew at the OD, but Cody did so well on the pre-ride that John decided to enter him." A good decision as it turned out: John and Cody finished second to Marcia and Heraldic on race day, and Cody won the AERC Best Condition award.
 
Winning the Old Dominion 100

Marcia's plan going into the race was to go steady for the first 80 miles, where five climbs in intense heat and humidity would test competitors, and then kick into racing mode.
 
            "In the high heat and humidity, it's important to get off and walk the steeps, and run downhills to save your horse's shoulders. We lucked out early in the day, which was cooler than expected, and some rain along the ridges was pleasantly cool, then as we descended, we hit pockets of humidity.
 
            "We kept a steady pace ascending, going over the rocky areas and saving our energy. In the last 20 miles, we did exactly what we planned, and let Heraldic be Heraldic. He was amazing.
 
            "He pulsed down rapidly at the first three vet checks, which gave us a few minutes lead time. After the fourth vet check, we had a two minute lead and we maintained that. I opened him up on what was essentially a road, into the pouring rain that cooled us off into another vet check. The rain continued to cool us off as we lengthened our lead through the last two vet checks, and we were rested by the time we finished.
 
"It was just his day," she said admiringly of Heraldic. "My goal was just to complete, but he had other plans. At age 17, Heraldic is a champion who has raced hard, and that takes extra care. Months before, his nutrition, his health, and our preparations were very focused on this race, and we took nothing lightly. It was very much a group effort, including my husband Mark Miles and stepdaughter Kaitlyn; and John's family including his son Yancy, parents John and Linda, brother Jeff, and nephew Josh. I appreciate everything they did for us as they were as focused as we were in this endeavor."
 
The Heraldic Lightweight Endurance Saddle by RP

"We understand that the endurance trail heightens problems due to stress over time," explained RP's Weininger. "If the horse has a physical issue, the trail will reveal it. Problems with saddle fit are magnified." With the proprietary ReactorPanel® technology, RP saddles respond to the moving horse's body by flexing and self-adjusting with every stride. Riders report longer, freer strides, better recoveries, and even lower heart rates.
 
"When John first challenged us to make a lighter-weight version of the RP endurance saddle back in 2012, I knew from our first discussion that this is a man who is all about the details. He makes the supreme accomplishments - like winning and BC at the most prestigious rides in the US - look like an afterthought; all of his time and energy is focused on the day-to-day details it takes to turn out a world-class performance."
 
Crandell has a lifetime of experience in the sport of endurance, and he approaches each element of training and gear selection analytically. When he began using ReactorPanel saddles in training rides in 2011, he learned first-hand how this unique saddle system helps horses comfortably carry the rider's weight mile after mile. But he needed a lighter-weight saddle to make weight in FEI competition, and Heraldic - the saddle - was born.
 
             That's something Marcia appreciated. "I rode Heraldic in the saddle RP made for him and John.  I enjoyed the functionality of it - it's beautiful, lightweight, and felt like it was perfectly made for Heraldic."
 
To customize Heraldic's Heraldic especially for her, Marcia called RP for advice. "Riding in his saddle for three days as we prepared for the race, I discovered things that I never noticed before. I called RP, and they couldn't have been more helpful. I ordered fleece fenders to protect my legs over the rigging, and then thought I'd be even more comfortable with a fleece seat cover, so I ordered that, too. Comfortable and functional - it worked out great!"
 
There's a ReactorPanel Saddle System for Every Ride
 
RP has been saddling top trail and endurance horses since the 1990s. Its flexible panel system is tried and tested at the top levels of the sport, with RP saddles going down the trail under every level of rider for more than 20 years, from XP to LD to FEI.
 
RP's proven flexible weight-bearing system ensures long hours in the saddle with equal comfort for horse and rider. For top endurance riders like John Crandell and Marcia Hefker, or for casual weekend riders, there's an RP saddle to suit.
 
"RP saddles are a unique and entirely different way to comfortably put weight on the horse's back, with a 20-year history of performing at the highest levels of sport," explains The ReactorPanel Saddle Company CEO Carmi Weininger.
 
"Our saddles are popular with top endurance riders from many countries, including some of the most successful riders in the world. These riders, who could have literally any saddle, choose RP because we give their horses a winning edge in competition. Our saddles are equally popular with pleasure riders who demand a pain-free experience for their horse and themselves, even after many hours on extreme terrain."

 
About The ReactorPanel Saddle Company
Since 1993, The ReactorPanel Saddle Company has produced the innovative and user-adjustable ReactorPanel Saddling System, the only saddle you cannot buy without a two-week FREE trial. RP makes this unique saddling system in models for dressage, endurance, hunter/jumper, eventing, fox hunting and pleasure riding. Based in Oakland, CA, RP's industry-leading programs reflect the company's commitment to providing saddles that are good for horse and rider, and in delighting customers with exemplary service, integrity and fair policies. Join the legions of RP fans by trying one yourself on the only proving ground that counts: your horse! Visit www.reactorpanel.com .
                                                                                     

Contact Us                                                            
The ReactorPanel Saddle Company
414 Lesser Street
Oakland, CA 94601
510-698-6272
info@reactorpanel.com
www.reactorpanel.com

For more information contact                              

Nan Meek - Dark Horse Media Biz
650-823-1671                                  
nanmeek@sbcglobal.net

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

2016 AERC Convention in Reno

Mark it on your calendar now! The 2016 AERC Convention dates are set! It will be held February 19 and 20, 2016, back at the Grand Sierra Resort in Reno. It's sure to be another great convention, so plan to come! If you have any suggestions for speakers or convention happenings, email: endurancenews@foothill.net.

See http://aerc.org/ for more info.

No Trails Means No Endurance Riding

June 23 2015

Information via the Back Country Horsemen of America (http://www.bcha.org) and the American Trails Symposium have made clear that proposed federal legislation (called "land transfer") may mean that federal public lands may be sold to individual states.

Monica Chapman, AERC's Trails Committee Chair, says, "Half of the federal budget for public lands which is billions of dollars is spent on fighting wildfires. Do you think your states or counties can afford that? I don’t." Please read up on the issue at http://www.westernpriorities.org/news.

Monica also urges you to join BCHA. Their website does have an easy link that can help you contact your legislators. No trails means no endurance riding.

Friday, June 19, 2015

6 Weeks till 60th Tevis Cup

June 19 2015

With 6 weeks left till the Tevis Cup on August 1, 129 riders have pre-entered the 60th anniversary edition. So far, 7 are Juniors (including last year's Haggin Cup winner, Barrak Blakeley). There are 18 Signature Riders. Foreign riders signed up are from Australia, Chile, Canada, the Netherlands, Wales, Israel, Guatemala, and Germany.

Entry forms are here:
http://teviscup.org/images/2015/2015_Tevis_Entry_5-15-15.pdf


For more information, see
http://teviscup.org