by Nancy Jaffer | Dec 28, 2023
Barbara Hay’s life focused on raising young horses and training young riders.
She died at her Rainbow Ridge Farm in East Amwell, N.J., on Dec. 27, just three days short of her 72d birthday.

Barbara Hay on the farm with her horses. (Photo © 2023 by Nancy Jaffer)
A national examiner for the U.S. Pony Club who was the chief horse management judge at many Pony Club rallies, Barbara never lost sight of what was important to her.
Although she was dealing with Lewy Body dementia and Parkinson’s disease, even in her waning days, Barbara “thought she was teaching Pony Club or doing a rating,” and would go out to the barn with her clipboard, said her daughter, professional horsewoman Bridget Hay.
“Horses were everything for her and Pony Club was such a part of her life,” Bridget explained.
Dressage professional Kim Herslow, who also has a farm in Hunterdon County, said, “Barbara was such a local horse hero. She will definitely be remembered by everybody who had horses in our area. Through all the Pony Club and all the time she has put into growing our younger equestrians, everyone knew Barbara.”
Added Kim, a friend for two decades, “She had such a passion for helping people learn and being involved with the horses as much as she could be. Bridget did everything she could to keep her mom in the saddle.”
Not too long ago, Kim recalled, Bridget had her Grand Prix horse on the longe line with her mother aboard. Barbara was “having a blast” doing piaffe and passage. “She kept talking abut it for days afterward.”
Trainer/judge Marilyn Payne said of Barbara, “in the horse world she was such a big name, especially Pony Club, she did so much for Pony Club. She was just fabulous, volunteering all the time and worked tirelessly. She was a very knowledgeable horsewoman.”
Marilyn mentioned Barbara had “a fabulous personality. She was nice to everyone; everyone loved her.”
Scores of people posted on social media after learning Barbara had passed away, many offering tributes about all the woman known fondly as “Baba” had done for the equestrian community.
Ralph Reilly commented, “Barbara was one of the kindest, most giving people I have ever known. Her encouragement and patience with all the Pony Club kids was remarkable. She touched so many young lives, leaving them all for the better. She is a cherished memory for us.”
Lucia Stout Huebner stated, “What a marvelous, beautiful and giving woman Barbara Hay was. Best riding instructor ever. She had a perfect balance of authority and kindness.”
Even before she could walk, Bridget began riding under the direction of her mother and was part of the Amwell Valley Pony Club. Together, the two bred dressage horses that Bridget went on to compete at Grand Prix, starting an impressive pipeline of American-bred horses who could excel in the discipline.

Bridget Hay and her mother, Barbara, cleaning tack during Dressage at Devon in 2016. (Photo © 2016 by Nancy Jaffer)
Early in her career, Barbara worked for breeder Gordon Smith, starting all the babies of his Trakehner stallion, Parliament.
Their breeding project began with Ming, an Oldenburg mare by Weltstern, who Barbara got in trade by riding for Ilona English. Ming became the foundation of the Hays’ program, in which Barbara played a major role.
“Her thing was breaking young horses. She helped me start all the babies here,” said Bridget, noting her biggest challenge came when her mother wasn’t able to work with her anymore after her diagnosis in 2020.

Barbara Hay with Bridget on Faolan at the 2022 USEF Festival of Champions. (Susan J. Stickle Photography)
Barbara’s husband, James, died 11 years ago on Dec. 28. In addition to Bridget, Barbara is survived by her son, Ryan; four grandchildren, Ryder, Audrey, Amelia and Julianna, and her sister, Susan Gaukin.
Visitation is 5-8 p.m, Jan. 2 at the Holcombe-Fisher Funeral Home in Flemington.
A Mass of Christian Burial will be offered at 10:30 a.m. Jan. 3 at St. Alphonsus Church in Hopewell, with a reception to follow.
Donations in Barbara Hay’s memory may be made to the U.S. Pony Club (https://www.ponyclub.org)
A celebration of life will be planned at the farm in the spring, with a date to be determined.
by Nancy Jaffer | Dec 22, 2023
Miss Molly can’t tell the story of how she wound up in two Texas auctions, just a short step from being sent to slaughter. But the scars on the palomino Quarter Horse’s face and legs; the way she bit at people, aiming to wound them, or kicked hard enough to leave more than a mark, spoke for how she had been treated.
A trainer who saw her photo bought Molly out of a kill pen, bringing her to a barn in Hillsborough, New Jersey, as a prospective lesson horse. But from the beginning, it was obvious Molly had big issues.
“Whatever you do, don’t take off her halter,” the shipper who dropped off the horse warned the trainer. And this was a mare advertised by the killl pen as “well-broke, extremely sweet, friendly and gentle.”
However, “It was very clear within a few days that she would never be a lesson horse,” said Christianna (CC) Capra, the co-founder of Spring Reins of Life (SRoL), a therapeutic organization that was based at the Hillsborough stable when Molly arrived. The mare’s tendency to bite and kick looked as if it would spell her doom. The prospect of euthanasia was right around the corner.
“She was not handleable. Anyone who came near her, she would react this way,” said CC.
There was one exception.
Veterans who had been receiving therapy with SRoL walked up to the round pen to see Molly and would pet her on the face.
“She had her ears forward and was like `Hi, how are you?’” CC recalled.
“I saw that out of the corner of my eye,” CC said, wondering at the time, “She hates people. How does she not hate you? There’s something about this horse and veterans.”
Just before SRoL moved to Hunt Cap Farm in Three Bridges six years ago, seven women joined together as Team Molly to pay the mare’s bills and give her a chance.
The trainer who owned Molly agreed to let CC take her, with this admonition: “If she doesn’t work out as a veterans’ horse, you’ve got to let her go.”
SRoL is an EAGALA (Equine Assisted Growth and Learning Association) Model Program offering equine-assisted psychotherapy for groups of trauma survivors. It uses horses for therapeutic intervention designed to reach veterans, teens, women at risk or others who have a hard time in traditional talk therapy.
Horses are selected for their capacity to work with troubled or suffering individuals. These clients are able to develop personalized coping skills from interacting with horses on the ground (the program does not involve riding.)

Molly with Christiana Capra and her Winnie award. (Photo © 2023 by Lawrence J. Nagy)
Dr. Judith Shoemaker, a Pennsylvania veterinarian who specializes in integrative medicine (which includes chiropractic and acupuncture) worked with Molly to overcome her reflexive reaction of biting and striking. Also involved with Molly’s program is Dr. Maria Katsamanis of Hopewell, New Jersey, an author and dressage trainer who has a doctorate in clinical psychology.
Molly soon proved her worth.
“It was really the veterans who opened her up,” said CC.
“She’s highly intelligent. Molly would approach someone in the arena; if they’re really suffering, she would leave the wall and go to them.”
Perhaps the most dramatic example of how Molly connects with veterans involves Stephen Cherry, who was referred to SRoL eight years ago by the Lyons Veterans Administration Hospital.
The 65-year-old retired Air Force veteran had seen Molly at the Hillsborough farm, and asked CC if he could go in the ring with the mare.
He got permission, with the proviso that if Molly showed any adverse reaction, he would be pulled back.
Steve was advised to watch the mare’s eyes and ears; then he walked in slowly, as if he were rehearsing the wedding march. He approached Molly, kneeling in a submissive manner, and finally was able to lean on her shoulder. It was a special moment.
“I felt an instant connection right there,” said Steve.

That moment when veteran Steve Cherry made his first connection with Miss Molly, shortly after she came to New Jersey.
“The thought of being loved was something I could feel in that horse.”
Everyone who saw that breakthrough was so moved they were crying, noted CC.
Now each Tuesday and Friday, Steve visits Molly, so eager to get there that he wakes up at 4 a.m.
“I have a responsibility,” he explained.
Steve feeds and grooms Molly, takes her to the paddock, then handles another important duty: “One thing I love to do with a horse is give them a little kiss,” he confided.
At first, he was worried about approaching her, after finding out from a psychic how she had been mistreated. But he stayed with it.
“And she’s done nothing but respond to me. Miss Molly has brought out the best in me I’ve ever been,” he stated firmly.
“She has gone from being a frightened, uncared-for horse to one that’s willing to accept people. I’ve had days I get down on the ground and lie down and she would lie down, I would crawl towards her, give her a kiss and then I’m lying across her back.”

A glimpse of Steve Cherry sleeping on Miss Molly, as another horse stands watch.
“I have a slight form of PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) I didn’t want to be around people at all. But now, the people that are involved with the horses — I’m talking to people, I’m working with people, I’m laughing. I’ve actually come out of my shell. I’ve gone from city boy to country boy.”
He owes so much of his progress to Miss Molly.
“It’s wonderful. She understands me. What I’m doing now is just a start, I plan on doing anything in the world I can for this horse, and any other horses after this.”
Sean Glynn, a volunteer at the barn, is another who greets Miss Molly with a kiss.

Volunteer Sean Glynn always gives Miss Molly a special greeting. (Photo © 2023 by Lawrence J. Nagy)
“When she’s calm, I feel some type of energy from her. Whether she’s in a good mood or a bad mood, I can feel that vibe.”
He noted, “Just by her actions, It’s sad to say someone probably abused her, hurt her. Now that she’s here, I think she trusts people a lot more.”
Molly has gotten recognition beyond the accolades from those she has helped in the SRoL program.
In 2019, she was named the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs/New Jersey Health Care System’s Therapy Animal of the Year. Her video story, “Miss Molly’s Journey,” won a Winnie award at the 2023 Equus Film & Arts Festival in the category of Horses for Mental Health.
Steve noted, “She seems to feel something in people like us: `Oh, I’m going to come over and stand next to you. Oh, you’ve got some kind of a problem? I kind of understand you’.”
But now Molly has a problem.
She hit her head on a stall door, which exacerbated what is possibly an old concussion, leaving her with what Dr. Shoemaker said may be comparable to traumatic brain injury (TBI) in a human. That resulted in a loss of equilibrium when she walks. She has to move on a flat surface; it is difficult for her to step up, but Steve has no problem getting her in and out of the paddock with the incentive of treats.
Meanwhile, Molly is on hiatus from her therapeutic duties. The mare sees the world in a distorted way, due to a visual problem with her depth perception, so it isn’t safe for her to work with clients at this time.
Because SRoL’s mission is to rehabilitate people, that organization cannot spend money on helping a horse. After Team Molly ran its course, Dr. Maria’s Friends of Pegasus foundation has become the avenue for funding that can be used for Molly’s treatment, which includes special food, veterinary care and other therapy.
For a complete rundown on Miss Molly, a look at her award-winning video and how to help by contributing via Venmo and Paypal so she can get the help she needs, click on this LINK
To contribute by check, make it out to Friends for Pegasus (make the memo Miss Molly) and send to Friends for Pegasus at Mythos Farm 128 Lambertville Hopewell Road Hopewell, N.J. 08525.
“Head trauma or soft tissue injury as a result of training or mishandling and injury is not much spoken about,” Dr. Maria noted, but it can happen when “people get harsh with horses” or use poor equipment. Behavioral issues, she said, “can very well be untreated concussive injuries.”
The horse can perceive things in their space very differently than it would if their brain were normal.
“Then people deem it dangerous, or it gets itself into harmful situations,” she commented.
They put on more pressure, thinking it’s a behavioral issue, when actually the horse’s perception is off.
“Molly must have seen very harsh handling,” Dr. Maria believes.
She pointed out that “because we could see the injuries on her face, we could deduce there was some jostling of the brain.”
One way of addressing the situation was “a breathing protocol that we used to reverse her severe hyperventilation and poor breathing behavior,” combined with a visual motor process protocol.
As Molly progresses, said Dr. Maria, “People will see themselves in her eyes. They will cheer her recovery on and therefore, their own.”
Molly definitely makes an impression.
“She is truly an exceptional therapy horse,” said Dr. Shoemaker.
“She has appreciated the care and concern for her. She likes being touched now more than she did, and touch is such an important part of TBI programming. You want to reach as many corners of her brain as possible, and all those corners of her brain are connected to her body.”

A happy Miss Molly after a good roll and a treat. (Photo © 2023 by Lawrence J. Nagy)
The veterinarian said she is hoping that “will open up other places in her brain to help her have a more enriched life. Look at all the people who come through this program that people have written off. Yet with the proper kind of therapy, it’s possible to see miraculous changes.
“She’s in the right place to give it a try. Her job is such she doesn’t have to be cross-country riding sound. She has to be upright, safe and happy.”
For a complete rundown on Miss Molly, a look at her award-winning video and how to help by contributing via Venmo and Paypal so she can get the help she needs, click on this LINK
To contribute by check, make it out to Friends for Pegasus (make the memo Miss Molly) and send to Friends for Pegasus at Mythos Farm 128 Lambertville Hopewell Road Hopewell, N.J. 08525.
by Nancy Jaffer | Dec 16, 2023
There’s more to Somerset Grain & Feed than its name implies.
In addition to selling sustenance for horses and other animals, grooming tools, pet toys and various agricultural items, it is also a quaint mini museum on the outskirts of suburban Bernardsville, New Jersey’s, shopping district.
Somerset Grain is very down-home, almost as if it doesn’t belong there. And in less than six months, it won’t.
The business that hearkens back to an earlier era and its country roots is moving 10 miles west to the more rural Long Valley section of Washington Township, Morris County. But it won’t be changing its style or its name.

Tom Milesnick and his son, Jesse, left at the counter of Somerset Grain and Feed. (Photo © 2023 by Lawrence J. Nagy)
“That’s who we are,” proprietor Tom Milesnick stated proudly.
“We’re a feed store. That’s our identity.”
The move is the rainbow at the end of an 18-year quest for Tom, who is in business with his 26-year-old son, Jesse. Tom doesn’t own the Bernardsville building and the rent kept rising, so he needed to set up shop elsewhere. The former UPS facility where he’s headed fills the ticket. And while it’s spacious, with room for tractor-trailers and trucks to maneuver more easily than at the Bernardsville site, the location also is appropriate because Long Valley and neighboring Hunterdon County have more farms in this era than northern Somerset County.
“Back in the day, we had all these big estates,” Tom recalled, citing such historic Bernardsville family names as Roebling and Post. Early in the last century, they would mail the store their orders, written in perfect penmanship, for 5,000 pounds of cattle feed or 1,000 pounds of sheep feed, and the business would run it up to them.
As time went on, the farm owners died, the barns got converted to houses, the acreage was carved up “and there’s no more big estates,” sighed Tom, guessing there might be just a “backyard pony or two” left in Bernardsville, where bridle trails once wound through the borough.
In the bigger picture, though, he has always dealt with farm owners in nearby Bedminster and Harding Township, as well as places further afield, such as Oldwick.
“Thank goodness this area’s still equine, and thank goodness for the people who do have the means to preserve what we have,” he said.
Tom congratulated the officials of Washington Township, telling them “You have maintained the integrity of this valley, you’ve let it grow, let new business come in, without compromising it.”
The chickens, horses, pigs and other livestock still have a home there, he pointed out.
Many of those who have been coming to Somerset Grain for years will redirect their GPS settings for the new venue on East Mill Road.
Asked for his opinion of the move, customer Rob Pullam said, “I don’t know if it’s good for Bernardsville, but it’s fine for us. I’m quite excited.”
The Bedminster resident and farm manager added, “Where they’re going is not that far from us, and it’s a different direction. Now we’re going to go somewhere else and see the same people.”
But for others who have dropped in at Somerset Grain on a regular basis for years, it’s the end of an era.

The potbellied stove at the end of one of Somerset Grain’s eclectic aisles will be moving to Long Valley. (Photo © 2023 by Lawrence J. Nagy)
“I’m really sorry that they’re going to Long Valley, which is too far for me,” said longtime regular customer Simona Balzer of Bernardsville, who was buying a Christmas present for her daughter’s dog the other day.
“It’s so fun to come here. This store is something. It has so much history,” she noted wistfully.
Somerset Grain, which opened in 1945, is the third feed store on the Bernardsville site. The first one, in the late 1800s, was Bob White and Son. Tom found a pen from that store at a sale and it’s a treasured artifact, marked with the White store’s phone number, 209. That is not an area code; there just weren’t that many phones back then. After Bob White, the store became Barker and Higgins before it was Somerset Grain.
At one time, dating back to the late nineteenth century, grain was milled at the location. Before the advent of tractor-trailers, train cars filled with different grains would come to the store via a siding from the main track. Workers shoveled loose grain from the cars, then sent it up the three-story tower to get ground. The finished product went into 100-pound bags secured with a miller’s knot. The empty rail cars would roll back to the main track and get hooked up to the train again.
Tom pointed out that the feed store “was the gas station of its time.”
It fueled the horses who pulled the wagons and livestock; “everything was powered by the feed store,” he commented.
Well-schooled in the business, Tom is adamant about “the right way to run a feed mill, order six days worth of feed every seven days. You only stayed a little bit ahead of your stock and got new every week. The less time we have the feed,” he explained, “the longer you can keep it.”
A disastrous fire put an end to the milling operation in 1968, as hay and grain fed the blaze for three days. The fire was suspicious, but no one ever determined how it started, and Tom noted that G.F. Hill in Gladstone also burned around the same time.

A photo from a Bernardsville News story about the 1968 fire.
Asked whether he will miss the old store, Tom said, “I’ve been coming here 42 years. I’ve been here more than I’ve been in my own house.”
So there’s nostalgia, but he quickly added, “I’m excited about the future.”
Before coming to Somerset Grain, Tom was working at the Veterans Administration supply depot in south Somerville.
“It was crazy money for a kid,” he noted, but punching a time clock and working in a place surrounded by barbed wire wasn’t for him. When a new employee came to the depot after leaving a job at the feed store in 1981, Tom saw an opportunity. Although he’d been earning $14 an hour, he took a huge cut to $5.75 an hour when he got a job from Pete Mastrobattista, who owned Somerset Grain at that time.
Pete couldn’t believe Tom wanted to give up his secure government job, and neither could Tom’s mother.
He remembered, “My mother cried, she grabbed my arm and said, `You’re not thinking clearly.’ ”
He replied, “I’m being true to my heart. This is what I want to do.”
It turned out to be the right decision.
“I’ve enjoyed every day in this place,” he declared.
Every weekend, “I couldn’t wait to come back here on Monday morning. I can’t believe I’m getting paid to do this. It’s been freedom.”
Tom remembers in the early ’80s, he’d get to the store when it was pitch black outside and three or four farmers already were waiting for the doors to open, reading the newspaper with their trucks’ cab lights on. They’d come in as soon as he turned the key, share a pot of coffee and talk about their animals and their crops.
“Those were the good old days,” said Tom.
“Thank goodness I got a chance to see that old guard.”

Tom holds a photo of the old store from the 1940s or early 1950s. You can see the milling tower that would be destroyed in a fire years later rising above the building. (Photo © 2023 by Lawrence J. Nagy)
Now his enthusiasm has refreshed, as he’s eager to open a new place and become part of the scene in Long Valley.
“I’m coming in there to make friends with everyone. I want to reach out to the people of that area. I want to know, `What would you like us to bring in?’ ”
Tom plans to devote an aisle to Long Valley products, such as honey, sausage, items from the “home farms.”
“Socks, soap, sauce,” he elaborated.
Prior to the move-in, he’s gutting the interior of the building that was in the Hemmings family for 90 years and once housed a moving company.
“I want it all wood and barn beams,” Tom noted.
“When you walk in there, I want you to think you walked into somebody’s barn. We’re going to have the wood stove, my old signs.”
The ones relating to Bernardsville will stay in the borough, because they are part of its history. But the others undoubtedly will pique the interest of their new audience in Long Valley.
They are an eclectic bunch, those signs and accompanying memorabilia, including the Kennedy/Johnson 1960 presidential campaign poster he rescued from a dumpster, and the one from a poultry feed company advising chickens to, “Lay or Bust.”

Intriguing signs are a trademark of Somerset Grain.
Tom found that in the old portion of his store when he was using a broom handle to break ceiling panels, having considered that area a possible fire hazard.
After he gave the ceiling a good poke, “down came this treasure trove of stuff,” including invoices from the 1900s and sadly, a dead cat who had succumbed to the 1968 fire.
The current store was built in 1947 as an addition to the original structure, where wooden bins used to hold barley, whole oats, bran, cracked corn and grass seed. Tom ripped out the wooden bins and stopped weighing out the merchandise. Instead of 10 pounds of flax, customers had to buy a bag of it. The floor was too weak for the weight of the bags, so it was shored up with metal—coffee cans, license plates, old road department signs, and insulated with hay to keep the heat in. Tom replaced the floor, keeping only a bit of it for the sake of nostalgia.

The front entrance of the store. (Photo © 2023 by Nancy Jaffer)
Tom grew up with dogs, and seeing to the pheasants and quail his family raised.
“That’s where the responsibility came of taking care of a domestic animal; domestic animals are dependent on us. That rang true with me,” Tom observed.
“People need us. We’re tougher than the mailman or the banks.”
No matter the weather, “we show up and deliver feed, even when you wouldn’t let your dog go out. If you’ve got a 1,200 pound animal that’s hungry, kicking the walls, what are you going to say?”
Rain, snow, sleet, whatever, “We go.”
Tierney Sullivan, who ran Coach Stop saddlery in Bedminster from 1979 to 2015, noted Tom “has stood the test of time. As far as the local horse community goes, he’s kind of like the glue.”
Tierney and Tom would share customers and help each other out; if he needed a green halter, she’d send it along; if she needed Farrier’s Formula, he’d provide it.
“He fed them and I outfitted them,” she said.
Tom, who is 64, at some point down the road will retire and hand the business over to Jesse.
He has another son who is in information technology, but Jesse “likes this kind of work. He and I are exactly alike,” Tom mused.
“He’s a hard-working, good kid.”
Jesse started working at the store when he was in high school, going full-time in 2019. It was always assumed he’d take over the business.
“I never fought it,” he said with a smile.
“It’s always been like a second home to me, because I basically have grown up here. It will be nice to have something we can put money into and improve, something for the long run.”
Jesse is getting some part-time help from his girlfriend, Brianna Graf. Formerly a whipper-in for the Essex Foxhounds, she now has a job on a horse farm and her own MagnaWave business, providing therapy to horses. The two met when she was picking up feed at the store, and they obviously have a lot in common.

Brianna Graf and Jesse Milesnick are working side by side. (Photo © 2023 by Lawrence J. Nagy)
She notes her extensive equine background is a real plus in assisting customers with questions about their horses.
Somerset Grain is all about service, doing the basics and doing them right, without bells and whistles.
“There are certain things that deserve to be kept simple, and this is one of them,” said Tom.
“It gives you good purpose.”
Tom noted the one downside of the move is that “We’re going to lose a handful of my older customers in their 80s that buy their birdseed. Them I’m going to miss; they’re not going to drive 10 more miles to get bird seed. We do have a couple of people with some driving issues and we bring birdseed to their porch. We still will do that. We can’t forget you.”
by Nancy Jaffer | Dec 14, 2023
It was the second day in a row of a 1-2-3 finish for British dressage riders at the London International Horse Show, but this time, it was set to music.
Charlotte Dujardin and Imhotep dominated on Thursday in the FEI Dressage World Cup Freestyle as they had in the Grand Prix, with the 10-year-old gelding showing controlled power and mature consistency in his first indoor show.
He was marked at 89.465 percent in front of an enthusiastic crowd at the ExCel (Exhibition Centre London), with a high score of 98.600 for the artistic part of the performance. Her lowest artistic mark was 94 (something almost anyone else could only dream of), which puts a number on why the fans were enraptured by her ride.
She got 10s from four of the five judges for the music and her interpretation of it. Charlotte also received three 10s for choreography, one 10 for harmony and another for her canter pirouette right, as well as degree of difficulty.

Charlotte and Imhotep thrilled the crowd at ExCel with their freestyle.
World Champion Lottie Fry was a comfortable distance behind in second place with 85.040 percent on Everdale, who is Imhotep’s sire and wasn’t the rider’s world championship mount.
She did not score lower than a 9 for choreography, degree of difficulty and music (which included French lyrics). But a 5.5 and two 6.5s for collected walk brought her score down a bit.

Lottie Fry and Everdale.
Her experience in the electric arena was “incredible and like no where else,” said Lottie.
“I think this was one of my favorite tests I have ridden. With this new music, it was amazing to ride, and Everdale was just brilliant tonight.”
Becky Moody rode the 9-year-old Jagerbomb to a total of 83.675 percent in her first international freestyle with her homebred gelding by Dante Weltino OLD.
He was full of pizzaz and couldn’t stop bouncing through the awards ceremony as the third-place winner threw in some extra-curricular piaffing. Like Charlotte, Becky is a product of Carl Hester’s supervision.
Charlotte was thrilled to appear again at one of her favorite shows, nine months after giving birth to Isabella Rose.
“It was so sad to miss last year,” she said of the 2022 edition of the show, “but obviously, I was pregnant so there wasn’t anything I could do. But to be back here this year riding makes me feel so proud to be British. To be able to ride in front of a home crowd, I know many of you can’t get to see us when we go abroad…all the competitors, it’s our dream to ride here and I am absolutely over the moon with this horse. To perform what he has tonight and yesterday, I couldn’t ask any more.”
She added about Imhotep, better known around the barn as Pete, “Even though he was nervous, he was still with me, which is all I can ask for. He is still a young horse and has so much more to give.”
A line of two-tempis that melded seamlessly into one-tempis and passage half-pass added sparkle to the ride, the type of touches that Charlotte executes so well. It will be interesting to see how this partnership progresses toward the 2024 Olympics.
“Paris next year, it couldn’t be more exciting,” said Charlotte, who spoke with pride of the team winning gold earlier this year at the European Championships as she reviewed her marvelous year.

The podium for the FEI Dressage World Cup Freestyle in London was all about Britain.
“Incredibly proud moment,” she said before the prize-giving.
“What an honor it is to be British. I can’t thank Carl enough for everything he’s done for me and put me where I am today,” she continued. Carl also is half owner of Pete with Coral Ingham.
“It’s so emotional to think what I’ve achieved this year. I really didn’t think I’d be riding. It’s been fantastic, it’s been the best year ever.”
Becky agreed with Charlotte about the importance of the London International, which many still call Olympia after its former home.

Jagerbomb gets a pat of appreciation from rider Becky Moody.
“You dream about riding at this show. It is somewhere that we all aspire to compete at.
“I was incredibly nervous in the build-up. Being on the podium with Lottie Fry and Charlotte Dujardin is amazing. They both inspire me on a daily basis. They are incredible role models, and it is incredible being sat next to them. But I do have every intention of beating them in the future,” she promised.
Click here for results
by Nancy Jaffer | Dec 13, 2023
It was exhilarating to see the talent on display Wednesday in the qualifier for Thursday’s FEI World Cup Grand Prix Freestyle at the London International Horse Show. How much better will the top horses perform when the music is playing and the chips are really down?
No surprise that multi-multi medalist Charlotte Dujardin distanced the field in the Grand Prix with Imhotep’s mark of 81.761 percent, but what impressed was the margin she enjoyed over World Champion Lottie Fry on Everdale with a 77.435.

Lottie Fry and Everdale. (Photo London International Horse Show/Peter Nixon)
That being said, Lottie was not on her World Championships horse, who is Glamourdale. She rode Everdale to Olympic bronze in Tokyo. Both are by Lord Leatherdale and known for their exceptional extended canter. And Imhotep is by Everdale, to complete the circle.
The order of finish was 1,2, 3 for Britain, as Becky Moody took third on Jagerbomb with 75.087 percent. (It was also 1,2,3 for KWPN (Dutchbreds), it should be noted. The only thing that marred the afternoon for the British was the elimination of Emilie Faurie, after the judges spotted blood in the mouth of his mount, Bellevue.
Charlotte had one big oops with her 10-year-old mount, nicknamed Pete, when he broke into canter before he made the transition from piaffe into extended walk in the first third of his test. Two of the five judges acknowledged that mistake with marks of 4, which was understandable. Charlotte’s total, however, was buoyed by several 10s, including her final halt. Pete’s power really showed off in his extended trot, and Charlotte’s expertise was demonstrated in her seamless transitions (except for the one referenced above).

It’s a well-deserved victory lap for Charlotte Dujardin and Imhotep, better known as Pete. (Photo London International Horse Show/Peter Nixon)
Charlotte’s partner, Dean Golding, was on hand with their daughter, Isabella Rose, born in February. The two of them watched with Charlotte’s longtime mentor, Carl Hester, who was not competing.
Pete, who hasn’t been outside the top three placings in his starts this year, sparkled and enjoyed the crowd at ExCel during the class presented by Bret Willson Dressage International Ltd. and supported by Horse & Hound. The show, a London fixture at Christmas, used to be known as “Olympia” after its former home in the city.
“It’s Imhotep’s first indoor show, so for him to come here — to this incredible show with an amazing set-up and atmosphere — and perform so well with no experience is amazing,” said Charlotte.

Charlotte and Imhotep.
“I missed coming to the London International Horse Show so much last year and am so happy to be back, this time it being even more special with my daughter, Isabella, watching me.”
Charlotte, looking forward to the freestyle, added “I am so excited for tomorrow, I absolutely love the Freestyle to Music, it’s the party piece. Who knows how Imhotep will go?
“Fingers crossed, he will be okay. He’s such a fantastic horse and I love him to bits. If he needs me to hold his hand, I can hold his hand, I can feel him breathe and I can reassure him and it’s the most incredible feeling. To have the opportunity to go into that arena and do that performance is all very exciting.”
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by Nancy Jaffer | Dec 5, 2023
There were a lot of important questions asked during Town Hall sessions Monday and Tuesday at the U.S. Hunter Jumper Association’s annual meeting, but they all could be boiled down to this big picture concern: “Are we doing the best thing by our horses? Are we doing the best thing by our people and our sport?”
Since USHJA was founded as an affiliate of the U.S. Equestrian Federation 20 years ago, the horse world has changed dramatically. At the same time, the universality of online videos means little goes unnoticed — or unremarked.
One of the biggest challenges involves dealing with “social license,” public acceptance of the way an organization or industry operates.
In that context, USHJA President Mary Knowlton announced she will appoint a blue ribbon commission to examine “integrity and welfare in our sport,” with a report due at the association’s mid-year meeting.
She started Tuesday’s session in Concord, N.C., by “throwing a bomb into the room,” as she put it, recounting the awful story she heard about a horse who collapsed in the stable area of an indoor show. Onlookers said people were beating and kicking the horse, throwing water on him in an effort to get him up. Mary said he had suffered an “adverse reaction to some drug” that was given to make him quiet.
“People saw this and they didn’t report it,” she said about the incident.
“Does your silence make you part of this? What are we going to do about something like that?”
Mary quoted a comment made to her a while back by Katie Benson, a member of the USHJA’s Competition Standards Committee: “When our love of winning becomes higher and more important than our love of horses, we’re in a bad place.”
Mary agreed, suggesting, “Let’s be willing to look at ourselves.”
Everyone else is looking, and that’s a problem.
Marnye Langer, who has several horse-related businesses in California, said the Los Angeles city council is seeking to ban rodeo, and along with it, use of spurs and standing martingales.
She reminded her audience of the old saying, “How goes California, so goes the rest of the country. It’s a real possibility.”
Equine welfare was discussed on many fronts, with several people mentioning the need for more drug testing at shows.
Veteran trainer Otis Brown believes “probably 30 percent of the winners” are medicated with illegal substances.
“It’s up to us to turn the people in,” he said, or to inform the Drugs & Medication Committee about “what they’re using.”
Jennifer Matts, a Zone 4 committee member, commented, “People know the drug testers leave at 2 in the afternoon and we have a $100,000 Spectacular that starts at 6.”
“I applaud the (USHJA International Hunter) Derby we have in Kentucky because they have assigned testers and vet techs to them (the horses) for the 12 hours before the competition,” she mentioned.
Jennifer has checked the trash cans around the stabling area, noting “you would be as appalled and disgusted as I am when you go through these trash cans and see what they’re doing to these animals.”
She added “We need to have some sort of tools we can use to try and curb it.”
In Canada, she said, stewards can request a drug test on a horse they suspect has been given something illegal.” But Jennifer was told that can’t be done in the U.S. because it’s considered “targeting.”
Also on the welfare front, there were comments about trying something similar to eventing’s Minimum Eligibility Requirements for riders moving up to the next level in competition. It was pointed out that would make it easier for trainers to rein in students who are eager to advance beyond their capabilities, and thus curtail the danger that presents to their horses.

The unending show schedule for many horses is a concern and the idea of mandatory retirement on course after a certain number of faults was mentioned.
USEF judge Andrea Welles suggested a “see something, say something” campaign and more severe punishment for bad sportsmanship or mistreating horses, so it affects the livelihood of the offender.
“We have to put some teeth in whatever we develop as our sportsmanship rules,” agreed Otis.
The cost of showing is an issue that sparked a dialogue. As Mary pointed out, it’s expensive to put on a horse show, and expensive to compete in one. But the point was made that to make shows more inclusive, the cost needs to be lower, and if that’s the case, more rules make the shows more costly by requiring extra people to enforce them. As Mary noted, judges and stewards may be afraid to make judgment calls; it’s easier to have rules to lean on.
Shanette Barth Cohen, who runs the Hampton Classic, suggested USHJA might be able to help shows get sponsorship outside of the usual suspects in the industry with a collective effort, or perhaps train shows on how to get sponsorship. If sponsorship increases, it might follow that exhibitors’ fees could be decreased.
As Whitney Allen, the USHJA’s director of operations pointed out, “there’s a lot of levels of complexity there” between the national and regional segments of corporations. The concept offers an opportunity to “pull together some data we’ve been lacking as an organization and as an industry” we can turn around and have these bigger national conversations about sponsorship.
Amy Center, a Florida trainer and USEF official, said “we need to mainstream our sport and make it accessible, that it’s not just for the rich little white girl. We need to make horses important to everyone. We need to change it so we have better marketing, better story lines, mass appeal.”
Active membership has remained stuck in the 36,000 range since 2008, but with Outreach for the lower levels and Intercollegiate Horse Shows Association memberships, it goes to 51,948, Mary pointed out. There was talk about how to get more people involved.
Otis figured the average age of those in the meeting room was 45.
“We are in a very bad situation. We need to figure out innovative ways to bring the younger generation into this room if we want to continue doing what we’re doing,” he said.
That concern that was brought up by others in terms of who will carry on what needs to be done for the sport after current leadership has stepped away. Otis suggested giving zone awards at a banquet during the annual meeting to get kids and their parents to attend. He also thinks giving money away for Outreach classes would help as well.
Britt McCormick, who will take over as USHJA president in December 2024, said, “One of the issues I think we have in our sport and our industry is that we have a really hard time letting go of the`what is’ and a really hard time thinking what we want this to look like in the future.
“We keep tweaking and tweaking the same old tired model that we’ve been using since the ’50s. I think this is where we as an industry voice have to stop living in the past and in some cases, stop living in the present, and start figuring out what we want this sport and this industry to look like five, 10, 20 and 50 years from now.
“We’ve reached the limits of what we can do under this current (member-driven) business model, and it’s starting to fail.”
He added, “There are barriers to entry on the participation level and people are finding other places to spend those recreation dollars and at the end of the day, that’s what we’re competing for, is that recreational dollar all the way across the country. We just happen to use horses.”
He has suggested changing the business model to something “more expansive and global, so instead of trying to fill a stadium full of members, we need to fill that stadium full of fans and sponsors and supporters who want to watch our limited number of exhibitors.
“We have to figure out a way to take the media opportunities we have,” to use those through USHJA and the federation ”to help get more people to shows, not just to compete, but to watch. Until you have butts in seats, that advertiser isn’t going to give you any money to put on that event.”
Britt said USHJA has to work with its affiliates and pool resources for the greater good. The effort also will require assistance from USEF.
“If we can get this new thought process started…it will trickle down to the competition level and that is where we’re finally going to be able to break through to the next business model.”
That needs to be done by figuring out a new business model in cooperation with the affiliates, the federation and the membership. “Otherwise,” Britt contended, “we’re done.”