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I N F O R M AT I V E , I N S P I R AT I O N A L & A S P I R AT I O N A L
Inside: VICKI
ROYCROFT CHRIS
CHUGG EDWINA
TOPS-ALEXANDER DAVID
FINCH
MICHELLE
LANG-MCMAHON VICKI
WILSON
JUMPI OUR
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JUMPING Heroes OUR
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Cover photo: Jenny Sheppard - The horse is called Vivarchi and Vicki is winning a young horse class at the Sydney Jumps Into Spring Championships in September 2018 Published by Equestrian Hub PO Box 13, Tintenbar NSW 2478 info@equestrianhub.com.au www.equestrianhub.com.au
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VICKI ROYCROFT
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CHRIS CHUGG
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EDWINA TOPS-ALEXANDER
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MICHELLE LANG-MCMAHON
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DAVID FINCH
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VICKI WILSON
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of course ‘Finchy’. Respected in every
WELCOME
Dreaming Big – Jumping Bigger
field he works in, his main ‘man’ at the moment is the beautiful 17hh grey sporthorse stallion, Charlemagne Ego Z. With every new stallion coming up through the ranks at Finch Farm, Finchy’s impact on the world of Australian jumping is assured. Last but by no means least, we have Vicki Wilson, from across the Tasman – not an Australian, we know, but close enough,
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we reckon, to include this extraordinary
elcome to ‘Our Jumping Heroes’ – the very first print edition of HorseVibes!
young woman who has done more in her 26 years on the planet than most people twice her age. This World Cup showjumper is also a stunt rider,
I’ve been editor of HorseVibes for two
trainer; the inventor of the Equisystem
years now, and it’s been my privilege
bandages; the US Road to the Horse
to gather most of the interviews for the
winner - for two consecutive years - and
main feature on ‘Our Heroes’.
a champion of the Kaimanawa – New
Speaking with this amazing collection
Zealand’s wild horse.
of human beings, all of whom are stars
All of us who have ever jumped a fence,
in the equestrian world in their chosen
and felt the thrill of that moment of
discipline, has been inspirational for me.
suspension in mid-air, and the sensation
I think what has stood out for me is the
of a horse under us that we trust
special quality they have that enables them to continue chasing their dreams - through thick and thin, and I take my riding helmet off to them.
of the partnership, with her husband Peter, behind this month’s Aquis, and is also now a successful racehorse breeder.
Vicki Roycroft, loved by all of us, has
Says Michelle: “I don’t really recognise
won more World Cup Qualifiers than any
the concept of not being able to do
other Australian rider, on more than 12
something.”
different horses and has been to four
Then, of course, there’s Chris Chugg
World Cup Finals representing Australia. Vicki, now in her 60’s, jumps with a replacement hip and one eye, and is still right at the top of her game.
– affectionately known as ‘Chuggy’, this hugely popular showjumper is a five times Australian Showjumping Champion, for three consecutive years
implicitly, know the hard work, the bravery and the exceptional dedication that goes into the making of a champion rider – and a champion horse. Our ambitions may have changed as we’ve progressed through life, but talking to these champions, pursuing and achieving their dreams, I’ve come to realise that anything is possible. For those who simply love to watch horses and riders taking off over fences – there’s plenty in here for you to enjoy,
You might notice that four of our
on Vivant; he’s been an Australian
‘Jumping Heroes’ are women, and so
representative at the World Cup Finals in
they should be. Edwina Tops-Alexander
Paris and at the World Equestrian Games
this adrenalin-filled spectator sport.
is currently rated 11th in the world,
in Kentucky, and he is well known as a
We hope you enjoy this special printed
and is the highest-ranking female rider,
trainer, buyer and breeder.
edition. Don’t forget to visit our website,
Following in the tradition of Australia
or find us on Pocketmags and subscribe
shortening names for their favourite
to read our exciting equestrian stories.
stunning the world with her brilliant mare California. Michelle Lang-McMahon, as well as
people, Queensland-based showjumper,
representing Australia at the World
breeder, trainer and the Chair of
Equestrian Games several times, is part
Equestrian Queensland, David Finch is,
and perhaps to learn a bit more about
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“None of us could really do anything for
VICKI ROYCROFT
Vicki Roycroft ... a Legend in her own Lifetime
12 months,” she says, “so I was able to recuperate, and by the time I was out competing again I’d adjusted.” In fact, she says, the experience of riding with one eye gave her a new appreciation for a horse’s ability to ‘read’ a jump. “Horses eyes are not really designed to look straight ahead,” she says, “they’re designed to look back and yet they can determine what’s a vertical or horizontal oxer, what’s a triple combination, what’s a double. I also found, to my surprise, that when
Vicki Roycroft is one of the most successful Australian riders ever at World Cup Finals. She talks about a life lived in the spotlight, the highs – winning the Rome Grand Prix on Apache, for example, and the lows, the worst of which was the tragic death of her son at the age of 17.
you lose an eye you don’t lose half your peripheral vision, which is what you’d think – you only lose around 30% because the other eye adjusts.” By the time the restrictions of EI were over Vicki was well and truly back on top form, and for this rider, who has seen
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more than her fair share of tragedies
She told us that she was a bit concerned
brother and sister rode, but to be honest
because she’d been having blurry vision
I used to kick and scream my way
for sometime, and that it wasn’t easy
around the horse shows. It wasn’t until
jumping the classes she was in with a
I was 13 or so that I go interested and
“bung eye.”
then my siblings gave up as they got
and triumphs, life continued as normal.
can remember the last time I spoke to Vicki Roycroft in person as if it was yesterday. She was competing at what was then the
Strangely though, for someone whose entire life has been based on horses and riding, she wasn’t that keen on it as
Elysian Fields Showjumping competition
a child. “I was born in Melbourne, and
on the Gold Coast, and my son’s horse
my mum was horsey,” she says, “and we
was stabled near hers.
moved to Sydney when I was seven. My
older whereas I just kept on going.”
As it transpired the bung eye was
A chance conversation between her
both more and less serious than she’d
mother and Tommy Smith resulted in
imagined. “I’d been having flashes of light in my eye, as if a car was coming at me,” she recalls, “and when I was up at the Elysian competition I went to the Gold Coast hospital where they did a whole heap of tests and told me that I had fluid on my retina. I remember saying to them, ‘well, that’s good I
was back home I saw my doctor who referred me to a specialist, and within 15
Time, who went on to become not only a champion hack but also an eventer
minutes I had the diagnosis that I had a
and showjumper. “He was too slow
large melanoma at the back of my eye,
to race,” she says, “much to Tommy’s
and that I needed to have my eye taken
disgust because he’d been expensive,
out. It was a bit of a shock.”
but he was the most wonderful horse.
thought I had a brain tumour’. But
That was in August 2007, and as luck
it kept on getting worse, so when I
would have it – for Vicki at least – EI hit.
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the arrival of a thoroughbred, Harvest
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He retired with us when he was 20.” Surprisingly, given her stellar career -
A: Congo Z competing at the Boneo Park World Cup Show January 2015. Photo: Jenny Sheppard © Snaffle-it Snap Shots
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representing Australia in three Olympic Games and three World Championship Teams, as well as herself being Australian Champion in Three Day Eventing and in Showjmping, Vicki remarks wryly that despite competing at Sydney Royal: “I wasn’t a great junior rider. In fact most of my generation were pretty hopeless to be honest. I got lucky in my last junior year when I was riding Kevin Bacon’s Bindi – but that was the only time I won
B: Condo Z at Sydney Jump Club in 2016.
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C: Vicki on her famous Thoroughbred, Apache. D: After winning New Zealand Horse of the Year.
and I can tell you it was the pony, it wasn’t me.” It concerns her that these days there is so much pressure put on younger riders. “The fact is in equestrian sports, in most disciplines, your best years are from your early 30’s through to your 50’s,” she says. “We should be building careers to last, not putting so much pressure on them at the start.” It wasn’t until the young Vicki met the then-doyen of Australian eventing and showjumping, Bill Roycroft (who died in 2011), that her riding began to show its true potential. “Bill was a bush rider in many ways,” she says, “but he
Bold General jump thistle patches in his
“I think the most important thing
paddock, and thought he might have a
George taught me straight away was
bit of talent.
that you can’t have ego,” she says. “I
“It was 1982, if I remember correctly,” says Vicki, “when Tim rang me about this little horse that he thought had
thought I was pretty good the first clinic I did with him – I didn’t ride Apache at that clinic, he was still very hot to handle but I reckoned I was doing ok, and
was always in a perfect position over
talent but he was having a bit of trouble
a jump. Although he was a great rider,
with. I remember I thought he’d done
he wasn’t so good at teaching – it was
more with him than he had, so I put
Wayne, his son who has always been
him straight at the jumps the more
a brilliant coach.” When Vicki married
experienced horses had been jumping.
Wayne in 1976 at the age of 24, she
He was a bit rough – he’d never jumped
became part of an Australian equestrian
anything like those jumps before, but he
dynasty and although she and Wayne
was willing, and he had something.” So
divorced in 2000, their marriage was
Bold General was sold to Vicki for $500
a partnership that produced more
and trucked off to Mt White to begin his
winning combinations for Australia
new career with a new name – Apache.
Vicki had a chance to turn a very
in showjumping and eventing than
It wasn’t an auspicious start – the horse
quick profit when an Irish dealer was
anything before or since.
was small and skinny – and Wayne was
out looking for horses not long after
not impressed. “I hid him in a paddock to
Apache’s first few shows. “I was thinking
fatten up,” she says, “but when I started
I’d ask ten thousand – which isn’t a bad
to ride him he showed me straight away
profit from $500, but Wayne, to my
that he had something.”
surprise put $20,000 on him, and the
And then of course, there was that horse – the 15.2hh Chestnut with heart and courage to burn. A racehorse so slow that after seven dismal starts the syndicate who owned him had no
At around the same time the stellar
choice but to sell him for $250 to one
coach and showjumper George Morris,
of the owners, Tim Egan, who had seen
entered Vicki’s life.
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George knocked that out of me straight away. I was shattered, to be honest, I thought I was hopeless. And then I just thought, ‘I’ll show him I can ride’.” Not only has Vicki been showing George she can ride ever since, the pair became firm friends and when he comes to Australia he gives clinics from Vicki’s property at Mt. White.
dealer pulled out. Wayne knew that he was going to be amazing.” And amazing he certainly was. Nine
months with no rail down. Winner of more big competitions than most have had hot dinners, winner of the Grand Prix at Wentworth Park, which shot them both into the European spotlight, where he was immediately runner-up in the Geneva World Cup round. After a sensational European season Apache was ranked one of the top ten horses in the world. As a chosen rider in the Nations Cup in Rome, it was a bit “wild”, Vicki says time we got to the Grand Prix, he was in great shape – there were only two double-clears going into the jump off. One was me on my tiny hot horse, the other was this massive 17hh German horse, Argonaut, who’d won it the year before. Well, he went in first and had a rail down, and I went in and the crowd went wild. I was pretty sure I could go faster than Argonaut, so instead of going for slow and clear I decided to beat his time – and that’s what happened, I had a rail but we were faster.” To add icing to the cake, the Australians won the Nations Cup and the party, she adds, as if it’s an everyday occurrence that an opera singer should host a party for showjumpers, was at Pavarotti’s. She was the first Australian, and the first woman to win the Rome Grand Prix. These days if an Australian rider takes a horse to Europe and wants to bring it back there is Sports Commission funding, in those days there was none. And after a year away from home, and
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at first. “He was so strong, but by the
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Apache lived to a ripe old age, and is buried on the Mt. White property.
with the dollars they could get for Apache, Vicki had to make the heartbreaking decision to sell him - but in a rare happy ever after ending, she bought him back when he was 19, and actually did one more season with him at home. “He got to mini-Prix,” she says, “and won the warm up class for the World Cup at Horseworld, and that’s when I decided
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E: Vicki Roycroft withDynamite Bay in the 1.4 m class. Photo: by Jenny Sheppard at Sydney Jump Club
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to retire him. I thought it was so great he could go out on a good note.” Apache lived to a ripe old age, and is buried on the Mt White property. The property has been an anchor for Vicki for decades now, and never more so than when, in 2003, only three years after her separation from Wayne, their only son, 17-year-old Mark, died in a tragic accident on January 14 after he was caught in a notorious rip at Birdie “I was never going to have children,” says Vicki. “I was terrified when I found out I was pregnant, and Wayne and I had no idea how to be parents. Mark simply evolved with a lot of love along the way and turned into a beautiful, loving, kind young man. I couldn’t discuss it for a long time, but finally although you never get over it, you get through it. We had him in our lives for 18-years, and for that I’m thankful. Every day I use a tea-cup he gave me for my birthday and not a day goes by without me thinking of him.” Mark was a good swimmer and surfer, and the sad irony that it was the surf that claimed him, rather than an equestrian accident, is not lost on Vicki. “Every time you ride, it’s a risk,” she says. “After I lost Mark for a long time I thought I would just give up riding, but then I thought I would have lost everything I love, so I just kept going, day after day, and in the end what they say is true – time is a great healer.”
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We had Mark in our lives for 18-years ... and not a day goes by without me thinking of him.
She is vocal about certain aspects of
the talented young stallion Dynamite
horses and riding. “I’m absolutely with
Bay, whom she rode recently at Aquis.
George Morris on the importance of
“He’s a bit quirky, as stallions can be,” she
flatwork,” she says. “Particularly these
says, “but he’s got talent for sure.”
days when the courses have got more and more technical. If you don’t nail your flatwork you won’t nail your jumping,
Fortunately for Vicki a new partner came
it’s as simple as that. I’m also a great
into her life after Mark’s death, and that
believer in sitting lightly on your horse,
plus her continuing commitment to
and not over-riding it, you want a willing
her horses, riding and coaching meant
partner – one that asks, ‘what would you
that in the end she realised that Mark
like me to do?’ I’m also really strong on
would not want her to be unhappy,
groundwork. I go crazy when people let
and that the genuine pleasure she gets
their horses rub up and down on them.
from coaching and teaching was a way
It all starts on the ground.”
in which she could give back to the equestrian community.
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Beach in Lake Munmorah National Park.
Does she, I wonder, have a theory around the difference between mares, geldings and stallions? “Well, certainly with stallions you have to be more assertive. After all, they’re the alpha males, and there’s a lot of testosterone floating around, and a tendency to have a high opinion of themselves. Geldings are easier-going without a doubt, and mares are temperamental, but,” she says, “get the mare that will give you
At Mt. White she currently has 21 horses,
her heart, and she will give and give
with ten or so of them in work, including
and give.” She’s always fascinated by the
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progression of her young horses, and the potential they show. A recent hip replacement – “they said I couldn’t ride for 12 weeks but I was riding in four,” has actually been a godsend she says. “I can hop up on a horse from the ground again,” she says. “I haven’t been able to do that for years.” Time has mellowed her somewhat, but scratch the surface and the fire still burns bright. “I don’t have the same huge ambitions I once had,” she says, “but still of course, I would love to have a horse I could win an Olympic medal on since despite everything that remained out of my grasp. But that would be the only way I would be aiming that high again. There’s no point in simply making up the numbers.” I don’t think that anyone could ever say that Vicki Roycroft has ever or will ever,
Vicki Roycroft has won more World Cup Qualifiers than any other Australian rider, on more than 12 different horses. She has been to four World Cup Finals representing Australia. She is an NCAS Level Three Showjumping and Eventing Coach and a Member of the NSW Elite Showjumping Squad. She was Chairman of the Equestrian Australia National Showjumping Committee from 2005 to 2013 and Chairman of the Australian Showjumping Riders Association from 2003 to 2011.
‘simply make up the numbers’.
F: Vicki at the Jump Off final at Boneo Park.
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A: Chris Chugg and KG Queenie3 © Australian jumping.
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CHRIS CHUGG
‘Chuggy’ – keeping it real Showjumper Chris Chugg talks about the serious side of building a horse business.
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f I’ve heard one constant refrain over the years from my vet and my chiropractor it’s been about the dangers of over-lunging, and
all their efforts are going into the team they’ll take up to the Aquis Champions Tour at the Elysian Fields near Canungra,
yet for many trainers and riders it’s still
Queensland, which runs between April
normally a go-to method of training.
26 – May 5.
Not Chris Chugg, though, whose ability
“Aquis is a great event,” says Chris. “It’s
to raise and train top showjumpers is
equivalent to a 5* show in Europe. The
legendary. He’s as clear as day on the
prize money may not be as high as
topic of circles.
Europe, but the footing, the jumps, the
“The fact is that horses aren’t built to go
great stables – the manicured grounds
in circles,” he says bluntly. “Everything
all create a fantastic environment for a
about their bodies, including all their
good event. Gabi and I will be taking
joints, are designed to go in a straight
eight horses, including Cassiago and
line. If you ask a horse to do circle
Flare. It comes straight after Sydney
work before it’s mature enough, strong
Royal so it’s a busy time for us.”
enough and supple enough to do it, you’re just asking for problems.”
Talking of how he and Gabi work their horses, he says that they’re lucky they
These days, Chris says, particularly in
both admire each other’s riding. “We
Europe, people are now paying attention
train each other,” he says, “and we ride
to the surfaces, and the size of arenas
each other’s horses. Gabi has a great eye
their horses are being worked on.
for a horse, and we both enjoy bringing
“We use a lot of different training
on young horses.”
surfaces and different areas,” he says.
But although Chris may not be a fan of
“We swim our horses, we use a treadmill, we work them on a very large arena.”
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showjumping world, and at the moment
circle work too young, the final goal of having a horse work ‘round’, is the same
The ‘we’ that he’s referring to of course,
he says, he just likes to find the way
is his partner in life and in jumping, the
each horse likes to engage with what
incredibly talented showjumper Gabi
they’re doing. “There’s a lot of pressure
Kuna, also Chris’s fiancée. Together the
for horses to look like everybody else’s
couple are a formidable force in the
horses; even for riders to look like other
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B Representative at the World Cup Finals in Paris in 1987, in Gotenburg in 1991 and in Geneva in 2010, and an Australian Representative at the 2010 World Equestrian Games in Kentucky, finishing 21st individually on Vivant. He’s an NCAS Level 3 Showjumping instructor, and, with his former wife, Helen Chugg put together a formidable Warmblood breeding program, for jumpers and dressage horses. Chris has always had horses in his life. “My mother, Bev, was heavily involved in the trotting scene,” he says. “From the time I can remember I was around horses, and for many years our extra money came in from horses we used to buy at McGrath’s Hill, the old Homebush saleyards – where the Olympics were held.” It was a quick turn-over. The family would buy on Friday, and sell on Saturday and Sunday through a regular ad in the paper. “Where we lived wasn’t very horsey,” he says, “so we used to go to the local park and ride.” When his mother decided to take out a trainer’s license, the family moved out to Riverstone, continuing to deal in horses, an endeavour which brought along Chris’s first competition horse, Del Bart, a grey 15.3hh purebred Arabian. “Not the
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obvious choice for a competition horse,” riders,” he says. “But they don’t all work
leg which is so important for jumping,
the same. It’s vital for all horses to have
and the horses are kept in a hilly area
self-carriage, to be able to balance
around Tennyson near Sydney.” The
themselves up, to work round – but
early tragedy of losing Del Bart means
often you’ll need to chop and change
there are no steel fence posts. “You learn
how you work a horse, because every
to keep your horses safe,” he says.
horse is a little different.”
Over the decades Chris, always known
he says, “but we did very well jumping at pony club together.” Chris loved his horse, the pair of them growing into showjumping together, until sadly they came home after the Championships and Del Bart injured himself beyond repair on a fence post. His knowledge of the breed stood him in
For Chris and Gabi keeping their horses
as ‘Chuggy’, has built himself up a
sound and happy is paramount. “They
fearsome reputation as a competitor. He
to finish school early, to make a living
get regular chiropractic treatment and
is a five times Australian Showjumping
showing Arabians for Paul James from
acupuncture; we use the treadmill for
Champion (three consecutive years on
Arabian Park. “That was a great job
building muscle and weight on the back
the extraordinary Vivant); an Australian
for me,” he says. “I learnt a lot about
good stead however when he decided
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conformation and handling stallions. The main stallion I used to ride was
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a beautiful purebred black Egyptian stallion called Hakim. He was wild and fierce, and I enjoyed that about him. I had to be tough with him because he had a lot of bad habits. He’d actually been banned as a ridden horse from The Royal because he’d thrown his rider.” Already not one to pass on a challenge, Chris schooled Hakim as regularly as he could. “I once rode him in a Karl Mikolka clinic,” he says, “and Karl said to me that he looked like a Warmblood not an Arabian. He was very big on long reins, and so we put Hakim in the long reins. We taught him two-time changes and one-time changes, and he drove me like I was at the Vienna Riding School for weeks on end. Hakim came out of it at Prix St George level which was pretty incredible.” Almost without realising it, Chris was learning a valuable lesson about horses – and himself as well. “I’m not sure that as a teenager I even thought about whether I was particularly good with horses,” he says. “I made pocket money training horses, leading stallions, riding and showing, and I just gradually realised that I seemed to have a talent for it. I think Hakim showed me that when you get horses that are good at what they do, you stick with it. It’s nice to work with smart animals, to teach them trust and that they can believe in themselves – then it either becomes a great partnership, or they become a very saleable item, and you can make sure they go on to a great home.” It seemed as if Chris was headed in the direction of eventing when his eventing horse, Kustah, died of an aneurysm at the Melbourne 3DE.
horse that was to become famous. The Palomino first-cross Quarter Horse stallion, Chico D’Oro, had done a bit of everything when he was purchased as a dressage horse for Bev – but he had other ideas. All these years later Chris still laughs at the memory. “He was no dressage horse,” he says. “He was a
But Chris had a surprise around the
playful, bucking handful. As soon as I
corner. His mother had bought a
was old enough I got to ride him, and he
B: Gabi and Cristalline, and Chris and Cera Cassiago: “They are both riders’ horses”. Photo: The Horse Magazine. C: Top: A win at Sydney Royal for Sky High. Seond Greg McDermott and Mr Shrimpton, third, Vicki Roycroft and Mickey Mouse. Bottom: Sky High on the tarmac at Sydney Airport heading off to Paris and a big learning curve.
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Something that Chris enjoys is buying horses at a young age, and working them up through the grades, perhaps because of the wonderful journey he enjoyed with Sky High. “My mother was on the hunt for a breeding stallion when she found Sky High, a two-year-old Hanoverian Warmblood,” says Chris. “Sky High was completely different to Chico –
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I didn’t even recognise Sky High. He’d lost about 200kgs.
took me to Grand Prix showjumping.”
longevity. “Jumpers last much longer
Google Chico D’Oro and you can see
than high-level dressage horses or
how he won the hearts of so many
eventers,” he says. “Horses that are
an European-bred horse, slower and heavier. He weighed 750kgs so you wouldn’t think he was built for speed but he was fast, very fast. We took him slowly up through the grades, and I won my first World Cup on him at Armidale when I was 21. I’d won the Mini Prix, and I thought, well I may as well try the World Cup. I won that, and my Mum had bought me in the Calcutta the night before, so she won more than I won in prize money!” Chris still remembers the thrill of being chosen to represent Australia at the World Cup final in Paris in 1987, but also the massive learning curve of discovering what can happen if you don’t travel with your horse. “I’d never done it before, and of course they sent a groom to travel with him – the horse got sick, and they worked him after he’d arrived,” he says. “I arrived four weeks later, and walked straight past him in the stable-block. I didn’t even recognise him. He’d lost about 200kgs. I was
– with hundreds of posts about his
well looked after will jump well into
bloodlines. He went on to sire a number
their teens, they can still compete at
of good jumpers, including Ashico,
Olympic level up until they’re 16 – even
and, says Chris, they were lucky to be
older sometimes, so they’re well looked
coached by Di Lawson (Gala Nigh, Tick-
after. I believe you can create a really fit
Tac). Chris soaked up everything she
jumping horse in 12 weeks or so, then
had to teach him. “She was a great rider,”
really you’re just asking them to work
he says. “She could take a horse that had
for sixty seconds every now and then
learned the basic ropes and turn them
to keep them ticking over, you don’t
goes nowhere without us. I travel with
have to ride them for two hours like a
any horse we take to Europe 24 hours
One of the reasons that Chris enjoys
dressage horse. Showjumping is really a
a day. Owners know their horses like
working with showjumpers is their
light, easy way to ride.”
no-one else does, and you have to
into a really great horse.”
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devastated.” Sky High was sick for weeks, but recovered to give the pair a few starts prior to the final in Paris. “In the very first class he trod on a shoe in the first double, and that was it, we were out. I figured it could only ever get better. It taught me a valuable lesson. The horse
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have your finger on the pulse. They’re big animals, but they can get sick very easily.” Staying on in Europe to work at Paul Schockemöle’s place for a few months, cleaning stables and riding young horses, gave Chris some more major life lessons - namely that the horse industry in Europe was massive in comparison to Australia, but that he didn’t want to live in Europe. “I knew that I wanted to come and produce my own horses, and have Europe as a place to go to for purchasing horses,” he says. “I’ve never regretted that decision. For me living in Australia and doing what I do with horses is the best possible life.” Fast forward a few decades to THAT mare, and by now Chris’s eye for a young horse, and the combined training and riding of Cristalline by both Gabi and Chris of the horse they’d purchased as a five-year-old, created what he refers
D: Clockwise from top left: Kustah cross country, late 70’s; Chris and Chico D’Oro, 1977; Chris and a four-year-old Sky High in 1979; Chris and Chico D’Oro at Peat’s Ridge Showjumping, 1978. E: Mr Currency and Chris at the World Cup final, Sweden, 1991.
to as: “A freak of nature. Cristalline has an incredible level of self-confidence,
He’s as straight-shooting as it’s possible
black horse, that could piaffe in-hand.”
but again, it reinforces how important
to be on the way to build a business.
Chris wasn’t entirely convinced but took
the early years are in a horse’s life. You
“A lot of people think they can create a
can have Incredible talent in a horse, but unless you nurture it correctly, and create a relationship of trust with the horse, the results won’t happen.”
business out of one great horse – you can’t,” he says. “You might for a little while if you’re winning, and the horse is doing really well, but I’m sorry, one horse
Mr Currency home on trial for a week. He was going to sell him on quickly, but fortunately changed his mind. A good decision as it turned out since only three years later they were at the World Cup final in Sweden.
But when results do happen, a
is a hobby not a business. If you want to
professional stable has to face the
be in the showjumping game, the only
One pointer Chris gives to people
difficult choice, particularly with a
way to do it is to buy the breeding lines,
wanting to buy a showjumper is that
younger horse, of whether to keep it,
buy the ones that are naturally athletic,
even though, in the past, thoroughbreds
or sell it. In 2016, Cristalline was sold
smart, willing and keen to do it. Take
were the mainstay of the industry,
to US rider Adrienne Strenlicht, for an
them through the grades, and make the
the difference these days between
undisclosed amount.
choice – at the right point – to sell them.”
thoroughbreds and warmbloods
“I’m not going to say that it’s not tough
Chris’s liking for young horses almost
selling horses, it is,” he says. “But if you
meant he missed out on Mr Currency
want to be in the business of horses,
one of the great horses of his career. “He
and not just have them as a hobby, you
was six, so he was really at the upper
have to sell them. Bringing them on
level of the age limit for me,” says Chris.
from youngsters and selling them before
“Helen and I were actually looking for a
they reach their teens is what brings in
Palomino for a friend, but when we went
It brings him back to his central point - if
the money to sustain the business and
to see this horse it had been sold. Then
you want to do horses professionally
provide our lifestyle so it just has to be.”
there was another one – this 16.3hh
it has to be a business. “If you do it on
has become greater. “These days thoroughbreds are bred leaner, and flatter, and less uphill. For a great jumper you need a horse that is uphill, and in the main you won’t find that in a thoroughbred.”
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F: A young Vivant.
the fringes it will just keep you poor,” he says, “if you try and do it in a big way and you don’t have the support you’ll go broke. Remember that to feed a top-performing showjumper costs $40-$50 a day. What you want to look for are your foundation mares, and a gold medal stallion. It’s a great game this one, but some months our vet bills would bankrupt some people. I learned, from buying and selling my own horses, that I could make a living. When I was young we had incredible diversification. My Mum had her trotters, we had
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manage the business of horses.” And then of course, there was Vivant. The very first horse that Chris and Helen Chugg looked at on one of their trips to Europe, the horse that finally retired two years ago at the age of 18, having
– 50% are mares, and 50% stallions or geldings. We are now producing five to eight embryos, and before you know it we’ll have 20 or 30 young horses to train and sell. For me personally the icing on the cake is to go overseas, find a going
dominated the World Cup scene for
four-year-old, bring it back and take it to
many years. “He was an unbelievable
the next level.”
horse,” says Chris, “scopey, careful and
In the meantime, after Aquis there’s
brave. A warmblood with thoroughbred
a December wedding to plan for, the
characteristics – a perfect jumping
next World Equestrian Games, and of
horse. He was the best athlete I’ve ever
course the 2020 Olympics. What about
had the privilege of working with.”
their own personal breeding program,
Quarter Horses and Appaloosas, and my
These days Gabi and Chris’s breeding
I wonder. Chris laughs. “’Well I’ve had
performance horses. Put it all together
program is carefully worked out. “We
a vasectomy so it would have to be
and it made something. You have to
try to stagger our horses and have them
reversed, but Gabi is only 30 so you
have big dreams, but at the same time
at every age,” he says. “Our first crop
never know – and in the meantime
you can’t afford to not learn how to
of two year olds have been broken in
horses are our family.”
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Edwina Tops-Alexander with Cevo Itot du Chateau. Photo: Lena Saugen, Equipromotion.
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EDWINA TOPS-ALEXANDER
Olympics, seemed not quite as easy to achieve, but the goal was a portent of things to come.
Riding high
Even her first horse wasn’t exactly star material. “He was an un-broken fouryear-old pinto,” she recalls, “not exactly first horse material when you’re eight, but somehow we survived.” Edwina attended Pymble Ladies College, and after school gained her degree as a Bachelor of Physical Education, all the while training and riding. Her
Edwina Tops-Alexander is the highest ranked female showjumper in the world. We profile the life and times of an inspirational rider.
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he list of Edwina TopsAlexander’s firsts just keeps tumbling – unlike the fences she’s jumping.
In December she became the second woman to win the Paris Longines Grand Prix on her amazing mare, 11-year-
competitive streak didn’t take too long to assert itself, and by 1995 Edwina had won the Australian Young Rider Championship. Even determined champions have
competition at the World Equestrian
their rough patches, something all of
Games, finishing fourth.
us would do well to remember, and
Originally from Turramurra, in Sydney’s northern suburbs, Edwina started riding when she was eight-years-old. “We weren’t a horse family,” her mother
the sport almost lost her when she was 18. “I had a horse that just refused all the time,” she recalls, “and I almost stopped riding.” But she persevered, training, and riding different horses and
has said, “but we had neighbours with
in 1998, only three years after her AYR
horses, and Edwina used to watch
Championship, she made her debut
winner’s podium. Only a week later,
them ride. She decided she wanted
riding for Equestrian Australia in Hong
at the Coruna World Cup in Spain,
to learn, and she loved it so much
Kong, moving to Europe later that same
Tops-Alexander and her nine-year-old
she joined the Avondale Pony Club in
year taking her horse Mr. Dundee to
gelding, Vinchester won their first 1.60m
North Turramurra.” The young Edwina’s
Belgium with her. Edwina was based
class together, with the horse having
ambitions were mostly relatively
with Belgian showjumping star Ludo
only just jumped 1.50m a few days
modest. She wanted her ears pierced,
Philippaerts for three years before she
before that stellar performance. Her
a navy blue jacket and a chestnut
made the decision to branch out on her
winning streak continued when Edwina,
pony. The other ambition, to ride at the
own, creating her own company buying
Australian to take pride of place on the
once more riding California, became the first ever winner of the inaugural $1.4m Longines Global Champions Tour Super Grand Prix in Prague on December 16, 2018 – beating German veteran Ludger Beerbaum by a mere half-a-second. But half-a-second is all the tripleOlympian needed to cement her place in equestrian history. All of this topping her success in Aachen, Germany 2006, when she became the first Australian to make the final of the individual jumping
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old California, and became the first
He was an un-broken four-year-old pinto,” she recalls, “not exactly first horse material when you’re eight, but somehow we survived.”
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A. Charlotte Casiraghi, Princess Caroline and Princess Alexandra all attended the red-carpet wedding of Edwina Alexander and Jan Tops. B Edwina Tops-Alexander with Inca Boy Van T Vianahof. Photo: Malene Nilssen, Equipromotion C. The couple welcomed baby Chloe into the world in July 2017.
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D. Edwina Alexander-Tops and her husband Jan Tops at the 2012 London Olympics.
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It was literally a match made in horse-heaven...The partnership has allowed that talent to blossom.
and selling horses for Australian clients.
to be based in Europe.”
“The fact is,” Edwina has said, “that
As she became better-known in Europe,
unfortunately Australia is not the core
and the winner’s podium became a
place for my sport. If it was, I’m sure
regular event for her, another side to
many more of us would want to live
Edwina started to show itself to those
there, but Europe is where we have to
around her. Always interested in
be based. It was a great place to grow
fashion, her perfect turnouts, and her
up, and gave me the chance to compete
style gained her admirers in the fashion
in many different sports, but Europe is
industry and some A-list sponsors,
where the best showjumping is.”
including Gucci, and the Swiss watch
It wasn’t the easiest time though, starting over. “She had to prove herself
company Jaeger-LeCoultre, for whom she’s an ambassador.
B Edwina have used to describe the diminutive blonde, who says, as the highest ranking female rider in the world: “I don’t feel any different as a woman rider to any male - but it does feel good to beat the boys.” Edwina’s achievements have been consolidated with her extraordinary partnership – and marriage – to previous Olympian and renowned horse breeder and trainer Jan Tops. “She was raw talent when I first met her,” he says.
right from the start over again,” her
‘Strong’, ‘powerful’, ‘motivated’, ‘talented’,
“But she didn’t have a huge amount
mother says, “but after six months she
‘petite’, ‘determined’ – these are all
of knowledge about how to do the
came home and told us that she wanted
adjectives that people who know
technical flatwork and exercises that
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H O R S E V I B E S M A G A Z I N E - O U R J U M P I N G H E R O E S - M AY 2 0 1 9
would take a horse to the top.” It was literally a match made in horseheaven. The couple met when Edwina first moved to Europe, but didn’t actually begin a relationship until 2002. Edwina was keen to learn, and Jan to teach her. “She tries 100 percent every single day,” he says, “and that’s what sustains her.” In 2006 while they were at a show in Malaysia, Jan hatched a plan – the Global Champions Tour. Edwina could immediately see that the plan had merits. “All he had to do was pull it off,” she said at the time. In only five years the GCT has lifted the level of prize
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money by hundreds of thousands of dollars – in Aachen, for example, it went from $150,000 to $1million. The philosophy behind the GCT is that less should be more in showjumping. “Showjumping horses are valuable, unique and hard to come by,” Edwina says. “We believed that if we could create something that meant competitors could earn more, and jump their horses a bit less, then the horses welfare would be better looked after.” Jan was already famous in the equestrian world for his ability to create partnerships between horses and riders, but his partnership with Edwina (they married in 2011) has allowed that talent to blossom. “He’s found me amazing horses,” Edwina says. “But also what you need to remember is that every horse is different. You can’t ride every horse the same way, and so the right way to ride
Photo: Lena Saugen, Equipromotion.
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Informative, Informational & Aspirational
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H O R S E V I B E S M A G A Z I N E - O U R J U M P I N G H E R O E S - M AY 2 0 1 9
E the horse is as important as the horse itself.” And there is no doubt that some of the horses she’s ridden will be remembered forever. Horses like Pialotta, Socrates and Cevo Itot du Chateau, for example, with California and Vinchester hot on their heels as champions in their own right. But of all of those horses, it’s Cevo Itot du Chateau, affectionately known as ‘Toti’, that remains her horse of a lifetime. No fan of showjumping could surely ever forget the little 15.2hh chestnut gelding out of Le Tot de Semilly, given to Edwina by her husband as a New Year’s
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Eve surprise in 2007, that took her to victory not once, but twice in 2011 and 2012 on the Global Champions Tour. “He’s not anywhere as large as many of the other horses,” she says, “but he’s got heart and he and I just connected straight away. Toti has earned more than €3.5m in prize money – an amount even a top racehorse could be proud of. He retired in 2014 at the age of 18 but “He’s got a bit more weight than he used to have, but he’s still very active.” Perhaps the best bit of her recent inaugural LGCT Super Grand Prix win, was that she didn’t realise she had won! All three leading jumpers, Dutch
E. Edwina Tops-Alexander on Cevo Itot du Château.
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according to Edwina still rules the roost.
F. : Lena Saugen, Equipromotion
Australian couldn’t actually see her
“I really didn’t think I’d won. After I had
and Edwina all had four penalties over
results. “I thought the crowd was just
the fence down, I thought, ‘right, I just
two rounds. Pulling all stops out, the
cheering because I’d finished,” she says.
rider Frank Schuttert, Ludger Beerbaum
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He (Toti) is not anywhere as large as many of the other horses,” she says, “but he’s got heart and he and I just connected straight away.
have to go for it.’” And so she did! Although she is a strong advocate for women in sport – across the board – she does not like to see showjumping as ‘Men against Women’. “For me it’s horses against horses,” she says. May the best horse win. For more information go to: www. edwinatops-alexander.com
A: Michelle riding KS Capulet Ego Z. Photo: OzShotz
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MICHELLE LANG-MCMAHON
Aquis – Aiming High One thing showjumper Michelle Lang-McMahon knows only too well is that if a thing’s worth doing, it’s worth doing well. For the organiser of the upcoming Aquis Champions Tour showjumping competition, it was the logistics that were most nerve-wracking about taking on the massive project, which is now entering its fourth year.
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oth myself and Peter have done a lot of global shows,” says Michelle Lang-McMahon, the
the effort that goes into putting on any show, let alone a major event. We had to plan classes, and create ideas for classes,
showjumping mother of three, “and
get course designers, jumps, stables,
right from the start we wanted it to be
sawdust – article numbers - I knew
top class. Not,” she adds, “that it was
nothing about article numbers! You
something we were originally looking to
could give me the numbers of jumps in
do – not by a long shot.”
a jump-off and I knew about those, but
In fact, it was five years ago when the
article numbers – what were they?”
McMahons were holding a George
Michelle is a good example of Heath
Morris clinic at their place, and Michael
Ryan’s theory that in Australia it’s mainly
Keane was there watching his wife Kelly participate.
the parents that make our equestrian champions, because although her
“Michael asked Peter if he’d like to
parents were not horsey themselves,
resurrect the Elysian Fields event, and
they did have a passion for the sport of
the pair of them organized to have
eventing. “As soon as it became obvious
dinner, so next thing you know we’re
that they had a rider for a daughter,
all having a meeting, and Michael told
I was encouraged to event,” she says,
us that he’d give us $125,000 to put on
“I was also lucky enough to have a
an event,” she says, “so that was that!
cross-country course at our property,
The very next day my daughter Meleah
Equestrian Australia held events there,
and I sat down for three days straight
so I evented.”
planning a program.”
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the first time in my life I appreciated
But perhaps like all true showjumpers
To say it was a learning curve is an
Michelle was not fond of the dressage.
understatement Michelle says, looking
“I told my parents that I just wanted to
back at the first couple of years. “It was
jump, and that was that, we ditched the
a massive learning curve,” she says. “For
eventing and off we went.”
Not, she hastens to add, that she doesn’t
as if this was an easy task, but make no
nice TB with Sir Tristram bloodlines,
believe in the importance of dressage
mistake about it, representing Australia
KS Double Up – he was really skinny
training for all competition horses. “We
at the highest level of jumping, is
and under-nourished so I got my Mum
actually have a dressage trainer, Ron
anything but easy – in all ways. “What
to look after him while I was away
Patterson, for our horses,” she says, “and
a lot of people don’t realise is how
and when I was back he really proved
he’s brilliant with our horses, it’s just it’s
lonely it is,” she says. “I made the team
himself quickly – in his first World Cup
not really for me.”
with Odds On, but really it’s very boring
he came third, and I really wanted him
By the time she was 19, Michelle had
riding one horse a day, the weather
for the Olympics in Sydney, but then we
a horse with huge potential – an ex-
is vile, and the Europeans aren’t that
discovered he had a degeneration of the
racehorse, Odds On. “My dad sent me
friendly. Obviously once the team
pastern joint.”
to George Sanna’s to train for three
turned up it was a lot of fun, but up until
months,” she says, “and by the next year
then it was a bit ordinary.”
we were on the World Cup circuit. We
Odds On went on to qualify again two
the horse further, but Michelle’s belief
years later, with an outstanding season
in him was so strong that she decided
leading to the World Cup in Geneva, and
to have surgery performed on him by
in the wings was another ex-racehorse
Jim Vasey, a vet who had done it twice
superstar in the making. “Before I went
before. So down he went all the way to
back to Europe I’d bought another
Goulburn, and although he missed the
won a big one in Shepparton, and when I was 22 I went to Europe to try and make the team for the World Equestrian Games.” Michelle says this almost off-handedly
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Most people, with that kind of information might well not have taken
B: Michelle competing at Aquis Champions Tour. C: Michelle with Real Surreal.
B Olympics, by 2001 he was back in work. “I took him to Sydney Royal in 2002 and he won Champion Part 1, then he won Champion Horse. I took him to Europe and made the team for WEG with him,” she says. “He was the highest scoring horse, and the best-performed horse at Rotterdam. At the time I didn’t know that would be the last time I sat on him, but Jan Tops wanted to buy him, and he kept him to the end. He was 27 when he died and very much loved. I came back from WEG and was very sad to say the least. It was the best trip I’d ever done. Edwina (Alexander) and I were up to no good most of the time, and it was just one of those periods of life where we couldn’t do a thing wrong. We had the
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Michelle was pregnant, marrying in
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October that year, and by 2004 she was back competing at Brisbane Royal. “Pete was asked if he would ride a mare, Genoa, who wasn’t behaving the best,” she says. “So he did and won the Grand Prix on her. He was really impressed with her – he told me he thought she was the horse he could really compete on. To be honest I was dead-set against him getting her. Meleah was only four months old, we were so busy building up our business, but then I caved in and decided to buy her for him for his first ever Father’s Day present. I hid her at my neighbour’s place, and in the morning we snuck her over – and that was it, she was his.”
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That one gift set off a raft of wins, with Genoa winning her first World Cup, in 2006 Peter took her to Europe where she was the best-performed non-Europeanbased horse, qualifying for WEG in Aachen in 2006. But behind the scenes it wasn’t all just been trying for another baby, and in 2007 she started on a course of IVF,
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about horses - Peter and Michelle had
I suggested he bring horses up to me. And, as they say, the rest is history.
D: Emily and Elkee LangMcMahon with their rosettes at the Aquis Champions Tour.
which resulted in her, as she says in a
E: The Lang-McMahon tribe in a rare moment together!
The twins were born in February 2008,
best time.” But it wasn’t long before resuming her life in Australia produced something very special – a meeting at the Sale Show in 2002 with another jumper, Peter McMahon. “Pete was in drought at the time,” she says, “and having to cart water so I suggested he bring horses up to me. And, as they say, the rest is history.”
good horsewoman way, “foaling down in 2008”. and Peter left to chase his Olympic dream with Genoa when they were four weeks old, with Michelle following when they were eight weeks. “I left them with my Mum and Dad,” she says. “I just knew I had to go, and so I went. I was there a month, with Meleah and was with Pete at the selection events and once he qualified I came home.” It wasn’t the easiest of homecomings; one of the babies was sick and in hospital, so Michelle landed and went
It’s been a hell of a ride, to use a horse
straight into hospital for a week, only to
metaphor, since then. By June 2003
discover that the selectors were, in her
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F: Michelle Lang-McMahon (middle) with Zara Phillips.
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words, “being difficult”. So the day she
I just made sure she stayed in work,
“To be honest, I was a bit miffed,” says
was discharged, she flew back to Europe.
and I persuaded him to take her to the
Michelle. “I was like, so, I have to go
Horse of the Year Show in New Zealand
around all these shows by myself now
in 2009. I knew that there was $150,000
– well, that sucks.” But never one to be
for the top jumper, and I knew he could
thwarted for long, a slight change of
A legal battle went Peter’s way, but unfortunately in Hong Kong disaster struck when Genoa flipped herself over a practice jump, and Pete broke his
win it.”
direction towards breeding racehorses,
collar-bone. “I thought he’d just corked
As it turned out, Michelle was right.
it,” says Michelle, with what I’ve come to
Peter McMahon rode the only double-
already produce a couple of truly special
realise is her usual direct fashion. “He
clear in the Bell Tea Olympic Cup,
was screaming at me, it’s my shoulder,
actually failed to sell at auction as a one-
winning the largest ever prize in the
and I’m like, can’t you just be like Gillian
year-old. Putting her money where her
Southern Hemisphere. For him, it was
Rolton and get back on? But the bone
mouth is, Michelle had decided to keep
enough. Despite the lure of Kentucky,
was actually piercing his skin, and so
her. The filly went on to win close to $2
he decided to retire, and despite the lure
million, including her first big race at the
that was that, it was the end of the
of the amazing Animate, who has since
Magic Millions.
gone of course to be highly successful
“I learned everything I could about
dream which was really sad.”
has seen the Lang-McMahon camp horses, including Real Surreal, who had
But Michelle wasn’t going to let her
with Paul Brent, Peter McMahon was
husband walk away from his hugely
happy to hang up his spurs and to
her for a second. “We knew she had it
successful partnership with Genoa just
concentrate on running the family
in her to win at the Magic Millions, and
yet. “He was really down and out from
business Kolora Stud in the hinterland of
she’d raced well the weekend before.
the result of the Games,” she says, “but
the Gold Coast.
But there I was at the MM, and this is
racing,” she says, and you don’t doubt
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no word of a lie, I’m standing there
she was out the back, and I’m like, this
This year the program has changed a
and a bird pooped on my head and it
is not good, and then when the horses
bit, with more prize-money on offer.
splattered all over me. My Mum said it
were swooping on the home-turn to look at her come home - it was a wall of
“If you double up your entry fee and
was good luck, and not to wipe it off – so I didn’t, and she won by three lengths!”
horses, and suddenly they’re past you
Despite the excitement of the jumping circuit, Michelle says that the thrill of
on the finish line, it’s an indescribable feeling!”
you qualify for the final we have prizemoney first to 12, and we will triple your money. We’re basically asking riders to back themselves! The Grand Prix is
seeing your own horse race is something
Between the breeding, the coaching,
else. “I knew all the sectionals, and I
the competitions, and now the fact
would have been disappointed if she’d
that all three children, Meleah, and
been fourth or less, but our trainer had
ten-year-old twins Emily and Elkee, are
said that we needed to be six or less for
all following in their parent’s footsteps,
teams. I’m determined that this will
her to be pretty certain to win. So when
it’s hard to imagine a busier life, or a life
become an international event not just a
where running a major event is even the
Queensland or an Australian event.”
I went to get our number the people
$45,000 to win, this year, and we’ve also created an all-girl Aquis team. We’ve got great sponsors, and corporate
in front of me were all getting high
slightest possibility.
numbers – 22, 11, 17. I went up to pull
“I don’t really recognise the concept
out my brick, and at the very last second
of not being able to do something,”
it was as if my head was literally pulled
Michelle says off-handedly. “But I do
to the right, and there it was – number 3!
think it gets a little easier to run – even
Aquis Tour of Champtions go here:
When our race came, it was something
though of course the expectation from
http://elysianfields.com.hk/
else. They jumped from the barriers, and
everybody coming gets higher.”
showjumping/
I’d say the odds on her achieving her ambition would be high indeed. For more information on this year’s
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DAVID FINCH
The Quiet Achiever The much-loved David Finch is a formidable showjumper, breeder of sport horses at his property Finch Farm, five times Equestrian Queensland Coach of the Year, and of course, Chair of Equestrian Queensland.
I
t’s not easy getting hold of David Finch, or Finchy, as he’s inevitably and affectionately known in the industry.
used to hang around after mustering to go for another ride. I grew up in a stock saddle behind a mob of cattle, and I think in the long run it’s been a great
“Darl,” he says, when I call him for our
thing for me to have those country skills.
first appointment, “I’m just loading a
You learn to keep it real.”
horse, can I call you back?”
‘Keeping it real’, meant, as it almost
The next morning on the rescheduled
inevitably does for anyone wanting
appointment we get a few sentences in
competition horses, supplementing his
and then he tells me, “I’ve got a load of
income. “I got into teaching just to help
people here for breakfast.”
support my own riding and competing,”
Then there were lessons, a visit to his
he says. “It just grew like topsy and
grandfather and some work he had to
almost overnight I had a business.”
do.
But not all riders make good teachers,
I was just beginning to take it personally
and having watched him teach at
when we made a firm booking – for
numerous clinics over the years, there’s
7.00am – it seemed about the only time
something about his natural, down-
David could take a moment out of his
to-earth approach which is not only
busy life as, not just as the proprietor
sensible, but also very reassuring to
of his stud, Finch Farm, but as a coach
all levels of riders. As a teacher he
and teacher, current chair of Equestrian
becomes deeply engaged with helping
Queensland – and let’s not forget – a
the rider get the best from their horse –
gun showjumper on his brilliant horse
and he doesn’t discriminate, travelling
Charlemagne in his own right.
Queensland teaching showjumping,
David can’t remember a time without
cross-country and dressage. It’s not
horses. Growing up on the family farm
difficult to see why he’s won the
outside Roma, he learned on ponies
Australian Equestrian Coach of the Year
and bush-horses. “I always wanted
gong and the Equestrian Queensland
more riding,” he says. “I was the kid that
Coach of the Year five times.
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A: David Finch riding Charlemagne Ego Z.
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C: David Finch with Charlemagne Ego Z (left) and Calgary GNZ.
‘
D: David Finch on his Sporthorse stallion, Charlemagne Ego Z.
‘
B: The winning Queensland team with David Finch at the 2016 Tamworth World Cup State of Origin.
I’ve never been one for early peaking. In fact I’ve never peaked early in anything. I just poke along, and that’s what I get my horses to do.
an European pedigree in a modern sport horse body. David comes as close to waxing lyrical as I’ve ever heard when he’s talking about the big grey. “He’s the best horse in the world,” he says. “He’s just come up through the ranks to Grand Prix, and he’s taken it all in his stride. I always mean to do more with him, he’s
“One of the things I love about teaching
really helped me in the industry. I’ve
such a pleasure to ride. And he is siring
is that I could be helping a young kid,
learned to survive – and if you want
some amazingly talented progeny.”
mentoring a seasoned competitor, or
to be involved in the equestrian world
teaching a 60-year-old who just wants to
long-term that’s what you have to do.”
One of the main differences between
pop over low jumps because that’s their
David and many other trainer/breakers,
Perhaps, more than anything, David’s
is, it seems to me, the more European
long-term survival could be put down
route he takes with his horses – who are
Did he ever envisage such complete
to the planning he’s executed for his
not started under saddle until they’re
immersion in the industry, I wonder? “I
breeding program, which has earned
three or even four. “We really don’t do
always knew the horse industry would
his horses an amazing reputation
much with our horses here until they’re
be my life, but things didn’t come easily,
as competition horses in Australia.
five or six,” he says. “I’ve never been one
and financially it was often tough, so
His main ‘man’ at the moment is the
for forcing young horses to compete too
I had to really think about what I was
wonderful 2005, 17hh Sporthorse,
early – it’s not good for their long-term
doing,” he says. “I traded my way up,
Charlemagne Ego Z, by Calvaro Z – a
physical health, and I don’t think it’s
at first through the classic avenue of
horse that won Grand Prix and World
good for them mentally either – these
re-training off the track thoroughbreds,
Cup events, and sired a prolific stream
larger horses need time to mature,
later through my breeding program.
of Sporthorses, including Charlemagne,
physically, mentally and emotionally,
I’ve had to learn to improvise which has
who is truly the classic embodiment of
and we give them that time. We’ve
passion,” he says.
B
D
C
got young horses going into dressage, showjumping and eventing, but we never push them too young.” He pauses for a beat. “I’ve never been one for early peaking. In fact I’ve never peaked early in anything. I just poke along, and that’s what I get my horses to do.” Those of us who have watched him jump a Grand Prix jump course might agree to differ, but unlike some other showjumpers who concentrate on only the competition side of the sport, it is the holistic balance of his life that makes David such a respected figure in the industry he loves so much. With his official Chair of EQ hat on, he
D
talks about his ambitions for Equestrian
would love the sport to be accessible to
his Olympic debut in showjumping at
Queensland and the kind of work that it
everyone, and I like to think Australia is
the Beijing Olympics.”
can do supporting young riders. “I think
a place where kid can have a go. I also
One of the advantages, as he sees it,
because of my country background one
love the fact that equestrian sport is
to the type of horse that we breed in
of the things that is really important to
one of the few sports where men and
Australia is the presence of the purebred
me is helping genius country kids that
women compete equally and age makes
thoroughbred line in our sport horses.
may not have access to the money or
very little difference,” he says. “Look at
“These days with technology, you
support other kids may have,” he says. “I
Laurie Lever. He was 60 when he made
can collect genetics from around the
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E: Young ones on the farm, ‘poking along’ until they’re ready. F: David Finch riding Charlemagne Ego Z.
world,” he says, “but the fact is that our
to compare ourselves to the rest of the
people who are good at it. I’ve never
thoroughbreds became a particularly
world, according to David. “Australians
been the smartest person in the world, I
tough strain of the breed, and it’s that
do incredibly well on the world scene for
surround myself with smart people – at
toughness, speed and desire to win that
a country with a small population,” he
EQ for instance, on the board we have
you can use in Australian horses.”
says, “but I’m not a fan of comparisons.”
some amazing people. You can’t let your
A downside though, to the world of
If you really want to get good at
own ego and self-gratification get in the
technology is that it’s too easy for us
something, he says: “Hang around with
way of success.”
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E Back on his 400-acre farm, south west of Toowoomba, the breeding provides the backbone of all the operations. “At the end of the day you can’t help but get emotionally connected,” he says, “although I’m definitely not a rainbow and unicorn person! But delivering a foal, standing it up, seeing it take its
F first steps, growing them up, getting on
could be riding, coaching, there in an
them for the first time, and then seeing
official capacity, watching horses he’s
them at competitions, it can’t help but
bred compete – or he might even have
be rewarding.”
designed the jump course.
In fact, chances are that if you’re at a
“The horse industry is my world,” he says.
showjumping competition, ‘Finchy’ will
To our minds the industry is all the
have had something to do with it. He
better for his presence in it.
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VICKI WILSON
Vicki Victorious The Wilson sisters are famous around the world for their equestrian achievements. From World Cup Showjumping, to winning the Road of the Horse, to working with New Zealand’s wild horses, Vicki has proved being the youngest is no disadvantage.
R
iding on the sheep’s back. It’s an expression usually associated with Australia’s wool industry but for one
from her home in Hawke’s Bay as if
the fence into the paddock beyond and
waiting that long was a tough slog for a
trying to clamber up on sheep that were,
toddler. But for this toddler, it obviously
in her words, “a bit wild”. No wonder her
was, so Vicki did the next best thing.
parents bought her a pony.
of New Zealand’s top equestrians, Vicki
“Until I was two I just used to climb on
Wilson, it was literally the start of her
the pet sheep that were in the paddock
unusual and stellar career.
next to our house, and cling on until I fell
“I didn’t get my first pony until I was twoand-a-bit,” she tells me on the phone
46
off,” she says. She still remembers climbing through
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Vicki, 26, and her two sisters, Kelly, 31, and Amanda, 28, are famous, not only in New Zealand but world-wide, not just for their derring-do in the showjumping ring, and for Vicki’s extraordinary
The three Wilson sisters: Amanda on the left, Kelly in the middle and Vicki on the right.
performances in the US Road to the
produced a book (written by Kelly),
But if Vicki’s life, in which she’s blended
Horse Colt Starting Championship, in
and a documentary series, Keeping up
all her passions into her breeding,
which she’s been the only woman to
with the Kaimanawas, (produced by
starting and rehabilitation establishment
win it twice in a row, but also for their
Amanda).
at Hawke’s Bay, seems luxurious now, it
work with New Zealand’s wild horses,
In 2015, the Wilson sisters spent
the Kaimanawa, to avoid them having
100 days taming 11 wild American
to be culled when the herd exceeds
mustangs in the West, which has
sustainable management numbers.
been documented in a book and
“My parents weren’t wealthy,” she says,
Their journey with the Kaimanawa
documentary called Mustang Ride.
“and although they encouraged us to
wasn’t always like that growing up on their parent’s farm in the Waikato region of the North Island.
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Year show than any other rider in history. Winning the World Cup in 2014 took her showjumping career to another level, and she has also competed under the New Zealand flag in Europe with many wins and placings. She’s performed all over New Zealand and Australia in bridle-free, bareback stunts, jumping to
‘
‘
A
... realising they had three horse-obsessed daughters, they supported them as best they could.
1.82m bareback and 1.95 in a saddle in Puissance events. In 2018 Vicki defended her title in the US competing against two former Road to the Horse champions, this time starting two colts instead of one – at the same time. It’s almost too much to contemplate that in this one discipline alone Vicki nailed the following firsts, by being the first rider from the English discipline to compete in Road to the Horse; the first rider from the English discipline to win Road to the Horse; the first New Zealander to compete in and win the Road to the Horse; the first rider to jump bareback in the Freestyle event; the first rider to wear a helmet; the first rider to use an English saddle – and, in a testament to her own work, the first rider to do body work on their colt.
ride, we could never afford a good or
have come to her for help – one could
I was already in awe of this woman I’d
educated horse, only the dangerous and
say almost miraculously well.
seen last year at Equitana changing
problem horses that were other people’s rejects. But we were all desperate to ride so we took them on.”
“All my first showjumping horses were other people’s rejects,” she says. “What it fired in me was a curiosity as to why
Although her parents were supportive,
this horse wasn’t performing. I learned
her father had broken his back in his
to go through an entire process with
twenties, and no longer rode, and her
a horse and to gradually eliminate all
mother, who had learned to ride as a
the possible physical problems – foot
teenager, was an “occasional” rider, says
balance, saddle fit, dental problems,
Vicki. But realising they had three horse-
incorrect feed for that horse. Looking
obsessed daughters, they supported
back with the knowledge I have now
them as best they could. Growing up in
there were even more horses I could
several young women’s relationship with their horses – and the way the horses used their bodies – right in front of my eyes, but by the time I digest all this, I feel in need of a nice cup of tea and a lie down. How on earth, I wonder, does she do it? She laughs. “I don’t know, it just grew and unfolded as it went, and I’m on a journey which is leading me to inspire and educate people around the world so they have a better relationship with
a Christian household encouraged them
have fixed, but I was learning as I went.”
to dig deep whenever a problem came
Vicki’s learning took her to extraordinary
Also, I think if you don’t love what you’re
up, and it’s a solution-based approach
places. After working her way up from
doing, and you don’t wake up every
to horses which has served Vicki – and
local gymkhanas, she’s now won more
morning ready to jump out of bed and
the thousands of horses and riders who
awards at the New Zealand Horse of the
do that ‘thing’, then why do it?”
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their horse. That’s what keeps me going.
B
A: Vicki on her first pony. B: Vicki jumping another horse in 2013.
That ‘thing’ has also led her to take over
Her equine body therapy work that
horse has been the teacher. Sometimes
all the shoeing and trimming of the 100
has become core to her life with horses
of course, horses with behavioural issues
or so horses she has on her property. “I
came about when she was mentored by
will turn out to have kissing spine, or
took over the shoeing about ten years
a well-known New Zealand equine body
arthritis, or a bone spur - something that
ago,” she says. “To me foot balance
therapist Dan Erikson for six years.
has to be managed rather than cured,
is perhaps the most fundamentally
“How I’ve learned is that I ask questions.
but it’s still about giving them quality
important element of all, and I wanted
I’ve watched every horse trainer I’ve
of life. I don’t feel I need to study under
to be sure that it was correct for all my
ever met, every equine therapist, every
any one particular person, or that there
horses, and for my clients, so I decided
vet, dentist and farrier, and I’ve asked
is any one method that works – we
to do it myself…it keeps me busy,”
questions – why are you doing this?
have to be open-minded and not afraid
she concludes, in what is possibly the
What’s this for? What will the result of
to continue exploring. To me, every
understatement of the year so far.
this be?” she says. “Most importantly the
single horse is different and every horse
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requires a different program to help it fulfil its potential.” One of Vicki’s many tools is the use of the Equisystem, a bandage that is wrapped around the horse to help horses engage their hindquarters. It’s a technique she’s refined from her time showjumping in Europe 12 years ago. “I saw that almost all the trainers used a leather strap going over the horse’s rump and loins,” she says, “and what it creates is these very uphill, powerful horses, so I decided that when I got home I would try it with my horses. Well, it was a bit of a disaster – they were bucking, and kicking, and clearly not happy, so I thought – how do I
C: Vicki is also well known for her stunt riding. D: One of Vicki’s students using her Equisystem bandage.
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change that?” Vicki’s solution was to use the elastic bandage. “I’ve refined the bandage quite a few times over the years,” she says. “We’re not wanting to hurt or restrict the horse in any way
D whatsoever, all I want to do is to remind their brains that they have a powerful engine behind.” At Equitana, three of Vicki’s hand-picked young women and their horses were helped with the bandages, and to be honest, if I hadn’t seen it with my own eyes I would never have thought that it could make so much difference (in conjunction, of course, with the instantaneous body work Vicki does during a lesson). “The thing with horses is that they are actually naturally heavy on the heavy head, neck and shoulders, and they tend to work forward – in their natural state they carry 60% of their weight on the forehand and 40% on the back. Add a 70-95kg rider to that, and suddenly 80% of their weight is on the forehand. It’s our job to make sure that they can correctly use their body to support a rider. The bandage is a reminder that they have an engine to help them push from the end, so they can lift through their core, and take contact forward. This pays dividends in all work, not just jumping, because it’s vital that the horse should be ‘on’ the bit through its body, not through its neck, which is what we tend to see far too much of.” Horse welfare is paramount to all three sisters, and is one reason why they became involved with the Kaimanawa program which has seen the numbers of wild horses gradually culled over the years to bring the herd down from over a 1000 to 350, which the Kaimanawa Heritage Society believes is a sustainable
‘
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forehand,” Vicki explains. “They have a
The Equisystem is a bandage that is wrapped around the horse to help horses engage their hindquarters.
D
the Year award,” she says. “When we
“Within 45 days we had an 18-year-old
first got involved with the re-training
stallion cantering down the beach safely
program, any horse over four was going
with a rider on,” she says. She feels
to slaughter, and after I’d seen these
deeply for the horses, who, contrary
beautiful, strong horses in their home
to the US where mustangs are ‘held’
ranges, my sisters and I agreed that there was no reason for any of them to
in custody for six months to two years before being rehomed, or Australia where brumbies are given some time
amount on the million wild acres they
be slaughtered.”
have to live in.
The first time they took Kaimanawas
helicopter into stockyards, and the very
“One of the Kaimanawa ponies that
home, 11 horses, of all ages and genders
next day are delivered to their new
came from a muster went on to win
were lucky enough to find themselves
homes. “I do believe the musters are
New Zealand’s prestigious Pony of
with Vicki.
done as quietly and gently as possible,”
in holding yards, are mustered by
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E: Vicki and Kentucky strutting their stuff.
she says, “but the fact is that we are taking these wild horses out of the ranges and putting them into prison cells. So it’s essential that you get the rope on them and start walking them off your property as soon as possible, because freedom is so important to them.” The rehoming program has been working so well that in that last four musters no horses have gone to slaughter. “It’s pretty incredible for such a small country that we’re managing our wild horses so well,” she says. “But it’s also a case of trying to create easy transitions – a two-year-old will transition into a human way of life much easier than an older horse.” For Vicki these problems are simply another way to learn solutions. “What I’ve learned is to feel, to observe, to listen and to have empathy,” she says. “Wild horses senses are much more acute than a domesticated horse, but, on the other hand they are also much more family oriented than the average domesticated horse, because their
E
family is all important. I think that’s why they become such loyal, brave friends.
The idea of ‘naughty’ horses is
multiple colt starter Nick Dowers. Nick,
something that distresses her. “No
the 2016 World Champion and National
horse, in my opinion, wakes up saying
Reined Cow Horse Futurity Champion,
For Vicki working with wild horses is all
‘Oh today I want to be naughty, and be
will be meeting the New Zealand
about the feel, timing and pressure. “I’m
smacked and punished,’ she says firmly.
showjumper and two-time Road to the
not saying that people should get cross
“What I’ve discovered is that the horse
Horse Champion head on with three
at their horses – but unfortunately it
that doesn’t, or can’t do something
horses to start simultaneously in the
happens,” she says, “however, you can be
we’ve asked for has a problem, and it’s
round pen. Vicki doesn’t intend to try
cross at a domestic horse and the next
our job as its rider, or trainer, or owner
out the technique beforehand. “We’ll
day they’ll forgive the person, but if you
to find out the problem and offer a
just turn up on the day and see what
put a fraction too much pressure on at
solution.”
happens,” she says mildly, as if starting
the wrong time, the wild horse won’t
If winning the Road to the Horse was
forget in a hurry. There are no shortcuts
tough in 2017 against all women
training wild horses. But if you do it
competitors, tougher again in 2018
“2017 was pretty tough for me because
right, and learn what you become is a
against two previous winners, and
I dislocated my shoulder on the first day,
horseman or horsewoman, rather than
with two colts to start, it’s going to be
and I was in agony,” she says. “I had to
just a rider, and to me that is much more
tougher again in 2019 – with Vicki going
change my approach. One of the things
important.”
head to head with previous winner and
I did that I was really happy with was
You become their family. They become yours.”
three startled colts in one round-pen will be a walk in the park.
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F
F: Kaimanawas, New Zealand’s wild horse at home on the range. G: Vicki doing bodywork on a sore horse.
to teach my horse to lead really well, because I couldn’t risk my shoulder
G
being pulled. It stood us both in good stead by the end of the competition, because he was so bonded with me.” That horse, Kentucky, came home to New Zealand with her and has since gone onto to become a wonderfully successful all-round horse. Vicki’s goal is to educate people around the world to be the world’s best teacher they can be for their horse. “Personally for me, it’s vital to have healthy, happy horses,” she says. “Even my top showjumpers round up stock, swim in the river, get ridden on the beach, have time off, do groundwork. Every horse needs variety, just as we do in our lives, and every horse deserves to be working
have long, healthy, happy competition
and he works with me with the horses. I
at its physical peak. Whatever that is for
careers. I’d love to compete in the
that particular horse.”
compete once a month rather than once
Longines World Champions Tour, but
a week, and what I want now is for every
She’s off again in just a few days to
even more importantly I want do as
compete in the US Road to the Horse once more and see if she can make it
many clinics and workshops around the world so I can continue to teach people
horse that comes through my place to be set up to have a long career.”
a hat trick of wins. Beyond that she
about their horses’ bodies.”
I can’t help thinking that it’s not just the
has plenty of other goals. “I love my
Her life, she admits, used to be about
horses that are going to have a long
breeding programme,” she says, “and I
winning. “It’s not anymore,” she says. “I
career, and that Nick Dowers may have
want to bring on my young horses to
have a partner, Michael (Whittacker),
his work cut out.
54
H O R S E V I B E S M A G A Z I N E - O U R J U M P I N G H E R O E S - M AY 2 0 1 9
Between Horse and Rider Introducing the
EK-26 Special Jump Saddle The innovative shock-absorbtion technology increases comfort and performance, benefiting the tuning between horse and rider. The EK-26 Special jump saddle features a deeper seat and is now available in printed leather.
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Proud supporters of Billy Raymont, seen riding Oaks Redwood at the WEG.
1/11 MILDON ROAD, TUGGERAH NSW 2259
TRAILRACE SADDLERY Tuggerah NSW Ph: 02 4353 1922
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M AY 2 0 1 9 - H O R S E V I B E S M A G A Z I N E - O U R J U M P I N G H E R O E S
55
When you want
THE BEST for your Superstar
Winx and her devoted strapper Umut
Horsepower Products Available online from www.store.horsepower.com.au
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