Alice Tarjan found herself in the company of such big names as Olympic medalists Steffen Peters and Adrienne Lyle today when the U.S. Equestrian Federation announced the Dutta Corp. U.S. Dressage Team Short List for the 2022 FEI Dressage World Championships in Herning, Denmark, this summer.
“It’s an honor,” said Alice. The Oldwick, N.J., resident was chosen with Serenade MF, a 9-year-old Hanoverian mare that she has trained to Grand Prix herself.
“Her breeder, Maryanna Haymon, is absolutely thrilled because she’s the only American-bred on the list. That’s kind of exciting,” said Alice, who has a whole string of horses she bought as youngsters and developed.
“It is amazing how she can just bring up horse after horse to Grand Prix like that and have them do as well as they do. That is remarkable. No one has ever done that here,” said U.S. dressage development coach Charlotte Bredahl.
“All her horses are good horses. Alice has such a talent for putting piaffe/passage on all her horses. She does it really well and they come out doing it well. You don’t see any resistance in the piaffe/passage tour like you often see with others. Her horses are always ready to perform in that.”
Serenade is by Sir Donnerhall out of a Don Principe mare. Making the list is a dream come true from so many angles, and a little hard to believe for the always low-key and modest Alice, who spent some time working with former U.S. dressage technical advisor Debbie McDonald over the winter.
“Growing up, you read all the magazines and think, `Wow, that’s so cool,’ and when it’s you, somehow it’s like, `I’m not that good. Everyone else is awesome.’ I don’t know how I get up there.”
Of her mare, Alice acknowledges, “She’s gone well. She’s an interesting horse, really talented and pretty rideable.”
Even so, she pointed out “when you walk through the barn, she’s not the horse you would pick. It’s interesting because she’s the smallest one of the bunch (her nickname is Shrimp) but she sure does her job every time she goes out there.”
Last year, Alice finished sixth with Candescent in the mandatory observation trial for the U.S. Olympic dressage team candidates. Candescent, a Hanoverian Alice bought as a four-year-old, was on the short list for the Olympic squad and the top six from the trial were supposed to go to Europe before the Tokyo Games, but she didn’t feel her mare had enough experience to make that trip. So she was willing to wait for another opportunity down the road.
Her plans call for her to renew her focus on Candescent in the autumn, explaining, “You can only compete so many horses at once. She had an easy spring.”
The horses and riders on the list will compete at observation events in Europe before final team selection in July. Major shows where they will appear include the Rotterdam,, Netherlands, CDIO5* and the Aachen, Germany, CDIO5*/CDI4*.
It’s a little early to make the choice of which to attend, but Alice is leaning toward Rotterdam. She’ll be helped by her close friend Lauren Chumley, a professional trainer from Pittstown who groomed for her when she went to Aachen last year, and she expects her trainer, Marcus Orlob of Annandale, to fly over when she competes.
Others on the list are Katie Duerrhammer of Colorado with Paxton, a 2011 Westphalian gelding, and Quartett, a 2007 Bradenburg gelding, both owned by Kylee Lourie; Californian Ben Ebeling with Illuster van de Kampert a 2008 Belgian Warmblood gelding owned by ACR Enterprises, Inc., and Indeed, a 2008 Danish Warmblood mare owned by Vantage Equestrian. Also named is Sarah Tubman of Wellington, Fla., with First Apple, a 2010 KWPN stallion owned by Summit Farm.
Former Canadian Olympian Ashley Holzer of Wellington, now a U.S. citizen, was chosen with Valentine, her 2010 Hanoverian mare, while Charlotte Jorst of Reno is on the list with Kastel’s Nintendo, a 2003 Dutch Warmblood stallion owned by Kastel Denmark.
Adrienne, a member of the Tokyo Olympic silver medal team who lives in Wellington, will be competing Salvino, a 2007 Hanoverian stallion owned by Betsy Juliano LLC. She is joined by her teammate, Steffen, of San Diego, riding with Suppenkasper, a 2008 KWPN gelding owned by Four Winds Farm and Akiko Yamazaki.
The third member of the Tokyo team, Sabine Schut-Kery, had said her Sanceo was not ready to compete by the deadline for selection to the short list, but she may have another chance at selection for the championships down the road.