May 26, 2015


















 









McLain Ward Kicks Off Devon with Open Jumper Domination
By: Rebecca Walton

The country's top show jumpers have arrived at the Devon Horse Show and Country Fair, and in a fitting fashion eight-time Grand Prix of Devon winner McLain Ward claimed the first two Open Jumper victories. In the first Open Jumper class, he piloted the 15-year-old Hanoverian mare HH Ashley to the fastest double clear effort during the five-horse jump-off for owners Double H Farm of Wellington, Florida. He followed it up with a victory in the $10,000 Open Jumper Speed class aboard HH Best Buy, also owned by Double H Farm.

 

McLain Ward and HH Ashley

"It's a great way to start off Devon," smiled Ward. "Ashley is a wonderful horse and she's actually been jumping really well lately - a little bit of four-faultitis, so it was nice for her to have a little more luck tonight and have a win."

Twenty-three entries showed over the opening track, and Ward was the pathfinder with HH Ashley and the first to return for the jump-off. With a faultless round in 38.181 seconds, they set the pace to beat.

Switzerland's Beat Mandli came close with the Grant Road Partners' Celina, clearing the course in 38.308 seconds, which would be good enough for second place. Sarah Wayda was next with Faroukh, but the pair lowered the height of a vertical for four faults in 41.213 seconds for fifth place.

Adrienne Sternlicht also had four faults with Raia D'Helby, but was a bit faster in 38.638 for fourth place. The third place ribbon went to the last pair on course, Peter Leone with Lionshare Farm's Wayfarer. They were clear over the track , but a time of 38.739 seconds would put them behind Ward and Mandli in the event sponsored by Herr's.

"HH Ashley is a fast horse, so that makes it a little bit easier," explained Ward. "I thought I had a nice cut on the yellow vertical, but she's also just quick naturally."

The $100,000 Sapphire Grand Prix of Devon is scheduled for Thursday evening, and while Ward plans to compete with HH Ashley and his World Equestrian Games partner Rothchild, he also aimed for the win tonight.

"Her job, more than anything, is to win classes," noted Ward. "My plan tonight was to try to be competitive with her and set Rothchild up for the grand prix with a little more of a training round. Going along with her doesn't really hurt her for the grand prix. It kind of gets her in gear and gets her jumping across the fences a little bit."

HH Ashley was injured in early 2013, but Ward had confidence that she would make it back to the winner's circle. "It's my second season with her," he said. "She had been injured and been out for several years, and I asked the Harrisons if I could have an extra shot to bring her back with my team, and they did an incredible job. She's had two great seasons. We felt she had a few good years left in her, and it's really great to see her back in the sport and doing it happily."

In 2012, the two-time Grand Prix of Devon winner and two-time Olympic Gold Medalist Sapphire was retired by Ward at the Devon Horse Show, and this year the event will be named after the incredible mare, making the event that much more special for Ward as he competes with HH Ashley and Rothchild.

"It's a really special thing - such a large event with so much history, such an important event on the schedule, so it's a great honor," he commented. "The pressure is the same all the time though."

 

McLain Ward and HH Best Buy

 

In the final event of the night, Ward once again led the victory gallop, this time aboard HH Best Buy. Brandie Holloway with Hays Investment Corp's Lucky Strike posted the first clear round in a time of 61.399, which would hold up for second place. Mandli was also faultless later in the order, but was more conservative with Grant Road Partners' Antares F for fourth place in 70.806 seconds. Taking home third was his student Katie Dinan riding Bijou de Balou to a clear round in 68.108.

With the door cracked open for Ward, he raced through with HH Best Buy, an 8-year-old Holsteiner mare. They broke the beam at 58.985 seconds to take home the blue ribbon.

Ward concluded, "Devon is a great show. Phenomenal footing, the best atmosphere in the country and it's a great event - I always really enjoy being here and trying to be successful here."

The Open Jumpers will continue on Wednesday with two events, including the Hit & Hurry feature event in the evening. The Young Jumpers will also get underway with the 5-Year-Old and 6-Year-Old classes in the morning, followed by the 7& 8-Year-Old Jumpers later in the afternoon.

For more information about the Devon Horse Show and complete results please visit www.DevonHorseShow.net.

 

McLain Ward and HH Ashley Greet Fans

 

RESULTS: Class 241, $10,000 OPEN JUMPER
1    1820    HH ASHLEY     MCLAIN WARD     0   69.504    0    38.181    
2    942    Celina     Beat Mandli     0    71.026    0   38.308    
3    731    WAYFARER     PETER LEONE     0    72.702    0    38.739    
4    715    Raia D' Helby     Adrienne Sternlicht     0   71.579    4    38.638    
5    1287    FAROUKH     SARAH WAYDA     0    70.442    4    41.213    
6    1129    VDL WIZARD     CALLAN SOLEM     0     73.493    3    0    Withdr     
7    177    QUOINTREAU UN PRINCE     LAURA CHAPOT     4   68.378            
8    174    ISHD DUAL STAR     LAURA CHAPOT     4   69.156    

RESULTS:  Class 242, $10,000 OPEN JUMPER
1    1819    HH BEST BUY     MCLAIN WARD     0    0    0    58.985    
2    1522    LUCKY STRIKE     BRANDIE HOLLOWAY     0    0    0    61.399    
3    945    Bijou de Balou     KATHERINE DINAN     0    0    0    68.108    
4    943    ANTARES F     Beat Mandli     0    0    0    70.806    
5    1127    B AMELUSINA     CALLAN SOLEM     0    1    1    71.223    
6    605    I LOVE LUCY     HUNTER HOLLOWAY     4    0    4    57.743    
7    176    BRADBERRY     LAURA CHAPOT     4    0    4    59.622    
8    265    Bahrain 8     DANIEL DAMEN     4    0    4    63.680

 

Steege and Stewart Secure Devon Hunter Championships   

By: Emily Riden

Before competing in the First Year Green Hunters, Ellen Toon and Amanda Steege joked that Steege, Havens Schatt and Liza Boyd should all take a turn in the Devon Horse Show's Dixon Oval aboard Mirror Image.

 

It was in fact only Steege who rode Mirror Image, or "Mimi," to Devon's First Year Green Hunter Championship on Tuesday morning, but had the three professionals made the unusual decision to each ride, it would not have been the first time they had all competed aboard the 8-year-old Oldenburg mare. Steege, Schatt and Boyd took turns competing Mirror Image throughout the Winter Equestrian Festival (WEF).

Amanda Steege and Mirror Image

"I started showing Mimi for [the Toons] last spring and showed her all last year in the 3'3" Pre-Greens," Steege explained. "Then we had sort of a weird situation with Florida because Mimi goes to Wellington, and I go to Ocala."

 

Steege showed Mirror Image at the beginning of the winter season, and she then turned to good friends Schatt and Boyd for assistance in bringing the mare along throughout the circuit.  

"Havens [Schatt] and Liza [Boyd] both rode her for us during the circuit, which was amazing. I kept saying all winter that I hope Mimi's champion at Devon so we can do an interview about what an awesome experience it was to have those two girls step in and help me!" Steege said. "Everybody was just so nice through that whole process."  

 

Steege continued, "Each girl, when they would show her in Wellington, they would text me at the end of every class and let me know how it went. They were super supportive. When we started Wellington, she was a little nervous the first couple weeks. Then those girls did her for a few weeks. I came back and did her in WEF 12. Ellen had also been showing her really successfully in the 3'6" Amateurs. She was like a different horse when I came back WEF 12, so I couldn't wait to text those girls and tell them how much it helped me and her. That was just the most awesome experience ever. I can't imagine doing that with two other riders and having it go as smoothly."

Amanda Steege and Mirror Image

Jimmy and Ellen Toon initially found Mirror Image in Europe and were struck by her striking resemblance to Ellen Toon's extremely successful amateur-owner hunter mount, Invincible or "Shaq," and hence the name, Mirror Image was born.

 

"When we were in Europe and we were looking for a horse, we both kept saying 'she looks so much like Shaq,'" Ellen said. "She's so Shaq-ish we would say. If they're right next to each other they don't, but we do confuse them a lot."

 

Jimmy and Ellen Toon imported Mirror Image to their JT Farm, where Jimmy Toon handles her training, meeting Steege on the road at horse shows.

 

"Jimmy's amazing. He can just take a horse that's a good horse and make it a great horse." Ellen Toon said.

 

Steege added, "I think it really says a lot about Mimi that all of us got tricolors on her in Wellington: Ellen, Havens, Liza and myself. I just don't think that there are that many First Year horses that can do that. I think it also shows what a good job Jimmy does to make her so trained and nice to ride that four different girls could ride her in a 12 week period and all end up with tricolors."

 

Taking the reserve championship in the First Year Green Hunters were John French and Sochi, owned by Lee Kellogg Sadrian.

 

The rest of the day's hunter divisions belonged to Scott Stewart. Stewart claimed the championship in the Green Conformation Hunters with Stephanie Danhakl's First Light, and he followed it up with the Second Year Green Hunter championship aboard Ashcroft, owned by Gina Day.

 

Before jumping to two Devon blue ribbons and earning scores of 90, 89, 89 and 86 in the Dixon Oval with Stewart, Ashcroft was competing in the 5-Year-Old Jumpers with Canadian rider Ben Asselin.

 

Stewart and Ken Berkley tried him, and, with their positive endorsement, Day bought him sight unseen.  

 

"I trusted their judgment. I've been riding with these guys for a long time; they know my ride," Day said. "[Ashcroft's] mind is amazing. He's 6 years old. He's a baby, and he doesn't get frazzled. He's great. His head is really good. You can't buy a mind. That's hard to find."   

Scott Stewart and Ashcroft

Ashcroft is not the first Devon winner Day has had with Stewart and Berkley at Rivers Edge Farm. She also owned the 2010 Devon Grand Hunter Champion, Premier, ridden to the win by Berkley.  

 

"Premier is totally perfect for me, and I think Ashcroft is the same," Day said. "You wouldn't know he's a stallion; he's so mellow."  

 

Like Ashcroft, Danhakl's First Light is just a 6-year-old stallion that is already coming well into his own in the show ring. He came into the day on Tuesday with three wins already in the Green Conformation Hunters, and he added another over fences victory to his win list before riding away with the division championship.

Stephanie Danhakl, First Light and Scott Stewart

The reserve championship in the Green Conformation Hunters was awarded to Havens Schatt and Custom Made, owned by Shaw Johnson Price. Schatt also earned the reserve championship in the Second Year Green Hunters aboard Deborah Perkins' Set to Music.  

 

The professional hunters return to the Dixon Oval on Wednesday for the conclusion of the professional hunter divisions and the naming of the 2015 Devon Leading Hunter Rider and Devon Grand Champion Hunter honors. Competition resumes at 8 a.m. beginning with the Regular Conformation Hunters. For the full schedule and results visit www.devonhorseshow.net.

Rachel Shoemaker Drives Homebred Mare to Single Horse Driving Championship
By: Mary Adelaide Brakenridge

Rachel Shoemaker of Malvern, Pennsylvania, represents the fifth generation of her family to compete at the Devon Horse Show, and she earned her first blue ribbon and her first championship Tuesday night in the Dixon Oval. Driving Willisbrook Farm's Rally Cart, she claimed the Single Horse Driving Championship and earned the Championship Apron, presented by Misdee Wrigley Miller. 

Rachel Shoemaker and Our New Dawn


Shoemaker recalls being at Devon about 15 years ago to compete in Three-Gaited Show Pleasure classes and catching a glimpse of a stunning mare competing in a Park Horse class. Her family bought the mare, named Carrigan's Magic, and Shoemaker competed her for years before deciding she wanted to try breeding show horses. The result of Shoemaker's first breeding from Carrigan's Magic was Our New Dawn, Shoemaker's partner for her Devon championship.

"I'm very new to carriage driving, but I've always loved it," Shoemaker said. "It's so pretty, and the attention to detail appeals to me. Over the last few years, we've learned a lot more about it. This is such an accomplishment for [Our New Dawn]. I'm not a trainer; this is not my job. She's been my passion and my hobby for the last several years, and she's such a fantastic horse."

The championship win came as a surprise to Shoemaker, who was more focused on making it through her very first Scurry Driving class with the 6-year-old American Saddlebred mare. Scurry classes require precision and quick thinking from the driver, who must navigate a series of cones at speed without knocking the balls from atop the cones.

"It was so nerve wracking!" she said. "I walked the course and immediately determined all the turns were too tight. But all the other competitors were fantastic. They were giving me tips; they were telling me I'm going to be amazing. Next year we're going to go faster!"

Shoemaker said the win was "the greatest feeling," thinking back to the days she would watch the Devon Horse Show as a child with her great-grandmother.

"My great-grandmother has always been an inspiration to me," she said. "I learned an awful lot from her and from coming to Devon and being in this environment. It makes you better at what you do because you've got something to aspire to. You've got a lot of motivation to do well here."

Tied for the reserve championship in the Single Horse division were the Mackeand Back to Back Dog Cart, owned and driven by Tanya Mackeand, and the Gentlemen's Phaeton, owned by James & Kathleen Leo and driven by PJ Crowley. Coaching competitors also returned to the Dixon Oval Tuesday evening to take another step closer to their championship, which will be awarded Friday. Misdee Wrigley Miller drove her own Miller Park Drag to her second victory in the division.
 

Misdee Wrigley Miller
Back Barn Tour Offers Behind The Scenes View of Devon
 

For the twelfth year in a row, The Devon Horse Show and Country Fair hosted free back barn tours on the storied property. Hundreds of Devon Fans, including Pony Clubbers, 4-H members, local riders and families, took advantage of the opportunity to enjoy a very special afternoon.  

Photo By: Brenda Carpenter

 

Meeting first at the Garden Caf?'s Pavilion, teams of volunteer guides provided not only a fascinating history lesson about the 119 year old show, but also an insider's view on what goes on behind the scenes to make Devon so special. The half hour tours allowed guests the opportunity to visit many areas of the show grounds, including the stable office, the farrier barn, the beautiful new Devon Club and many of the beautifully restored barns on the grounds.

 

Always a highlight, guests had the chance to meet and greet many four legged stars of the Dixon Oval, including Hackney ponies and Saddlebreds as they rested in their stalls. Numerous owners and riders were kind enough to take the time to speak to the tour members, making the event even more special.

 

Be sure to plan for attending next year's tour. Held always on the Tuesday of the Show from 3-6 PM. See you then!

 

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