Guys. I’m super fucking over having a broken ankle. It’s annoying. I’m irritated. I hate everything about it. I want to ride. Hell, I want to be able to lead a horse. And just go about my day to day chores without taking 900 years and/or falling over. Gaaaaah. Last week I got the “foot” of my peg leg stuck in the hay pallets and went boom like a tree felled by a lumberjack.
Anyway. Done complaining for now. Maybe.
Mom and son
I finally got a pic of Sadie and Presto together, on her 17th birthday, which was also Mother’s Day. It’s really cool to see them next to each other. When I can actually stand on two legs again we’ll have to get some pics of them standing side by side, but for now the head shots are freaking adorable. It’s totally insane to think that was 2005 when I bought the breeding that produced Sadie, 19 years ago. Nineteen. Bonkers.
In related news, Presto has at least been able to stay in some kind of work while I’m on the IR list, thanks to my friends!
Lija dressaging him up
He’s had a few different people riding him, which I’m super grateful for and so is he. Idle Presto is not a happy Presto (as I tell him daily “maybe you should have thought about that before you yeeted me into the ground” and “you fucked around and now you’re finding out” and “it’s called consequences, my dude”).
It’s not as much work as he’s usually in, but it’s absolutely waaaaaaay better than nothing. I’d hate for him to just sit and lose all of his fitness. Plus it’s good for him to be ridden by other people. He does feel as though there has been a severe lack of jompies in his life, tho. Please see above oft-repeated phrases in parentheses.
Lottie Durrr
In other news, Lottie has been here for a week now. It annoys the heck out of me that I can’t be doing all the stuff with her that I’d like to be doing. I planned on giving her downtime from riding, but if I was able to actually stand solidly on two legs I’d be bringing her in and brushing her and spending time with her at least. Now our interactions are limited to feeding and a quick groom/fly spray in her stall every night. Sigh.
But once again my friends have been helping. She got her feet done last week, the farrier got here literally right as the hauler was pulling in, so we just went ahead and did her feet that day. Her angles are special, so may as well get started on those asap. Hillary held her for the appointment since we didn’t know how she would be, but Lottie was a superstar. Really quiet and sweet and well-behaved, especially considering she just got off a trailer.
Lottie’s first chiro appointment
The next day our vet was coming out anyway to chiro another horse, so I went ahead and had her do Lottie also. She’s QUITE sore, which is to be expected from a 7yo racehorse that spent two days hauling across the country.
Once again Lottie was really well-behaved for her appointment (Michelle held her this time), even if she had no idea what the vet lady was doing to her. Lottie thinks we’re all a bit odd here.
So far it’s been hard to get a good read on her personality. She seems really reserved, and like she’s always seen humans as being transactional. Shes a good girl, but a little bit robotic in how she interacts. I’m itching to be able to bond with her a little bit to see how her personality starts to come through.
She can move tho
In other other news, we’ve been scanning and breeding mares like nobody’s business. So far we’ve bred Peyton, Vee, Chanel, Gossip, Sadie, and Fey (all WTW foals except Fey, that one would be mine). And we’ve still got 3 or 4 more to go.
Fey is looking like a real horse
Give us your best “black dot” vibes for all these upcoming pregnancy checks! It would be nice if we had lots of babies on the ground next year, especially since some of the mares are getting older and toward the end of their breeding career.
The eagle has landed! And by eagle I mean gray TB mare, Gospel Carlotta. I’m calling her Lottie.
Before we can officially embark on the Lottie adventures, I feel like I must introduce her properly. And because you’re on the blog space of a pedigree nerd, that introduction surely must include a deep dive into her breeding and heritage. Who is she, where did she come from, and why did I like that pedigree so much? Let us begin.
pretty girl
Lottie is 7 years old, raced 29 times, was bred and has been owned her entire life by Oklahoma breeder/trainer/owner Steve Williams. He also trained her throughout her entire career, and that’s who I bought her from. She has always been based out of his farm in Oklahoma, and only raced at Oklahoma racetracks. She won once at Remington Park, twice at Fair Meadows, and once at Will Rogers.
I’ve contacted the track photographers about trying to get win photos but am still waiting to hear back. Her running style was always to come from far back – she was often just a hair slow to break, and would tuck in until the far turn, where she either fired or didn’t, and either was able to pass horses or not. She won a lower end Allowance in 2021 but has mostly been running in cheap claiming races. Her last race was on April 2nd, where she finished last of six.
Her sire, Gospel Tiz Key, never raced and never stood at stud publicly. He was bred in Kentucky by Adena Springs and sold as a 5yo “race or stallion prospect” to Steve Williams. Gospel Tiz Key only had about 30 offspring, all between 2017 and 2021 and all bred by Steve, who uses the Gospel prefix.
Gospel Tiz Key is by Tiznow, who won the Breeder’s Cup Classic twice and earned 6.4 million dollars in his career. He’s been a really successful sire of racehorses including Midnight Bourbon, Tourist, and Colonel John. He’s also got a few good sporthorses to his credit, being the sire of Mia Farley’s 5* horse Phelps and 3* horse Tiz Ready. His sons have produced a lot of sporthorses too: Outrageous Limit is the sire of 4* horse Outrageous Dance and 3* horse Teki to the Limit, and Colonel John is the sire of 4* horse Lovely Assistant. Those are just the FEI horses… there are tons more at the national levels. Tiznow’s full brother, Tizbud, has also produced a PSG/Int dressage horse, Big Variety.
Tiznow
Gospel Tiz Key’s dam, Honey Ryder, was also an excellent racehorse. She won multiple graded Stakes throughout her career, including a win in a Grade 1 and a 2nd and 3rd place finish in the Breeder’s Cup Filly and Mare Turf, earning over 2.7 million in her career. She was exclusively a turf horse, and Bloodhorse described her as “a true distance specialist, she won as far as 1 1/2 miles, and her average winning distance was about 10 1/2 furlongs.”. In 2008 she sold in foal to Giant’s Causeway for $1.75 million. Unfortunately none of her offspring ever showed anywhere near her level of racing talent despite being sired by some top stallions.
Honey Ryder’s sire, Lasting Approval, was a stakes winner, also finishing second in the Grade 1 Hollywood Derby. He was a reasonably successful sire both in the US and later on in Argentina, and Honey Ryder was his top earner. Lasting Approval was by the stallion With Approval, who produced some 3* and 4* event horses.
Lasting Approval
Lasting Approval’s dam was La Gueriere, the best female offspring of a mare named Lady Winborne, who was part of a very famous line of mares.
Moving to the bottom side of Lottie’s pedigree, her dam Nikimoto was…. not a very good racehorse. She made two starts as a 3yo and never hit the board. They tried to sell her in foal to Showing Up but bidding only got up to $3200 and didn’t meet the reserve. Then they ended up selling her in foal to Einstein for only $1300, to Steve. Overall she had 6 foals, with none being particularly successful racehorses. Lottie is her most successful offspring with $61k in earnings.
Nikimoto’s sire was the well-known Macho Uno, who won the Breeders Cup Juvenile and earned 1.8 million.
Macho Uno
Macho Uno is known for throwing good movers and jumpers (no surprise considering he’s by Holy Bull out of a Blushing Groom mare!) and is the damsire of 3* horse Uno Concerto.
Nikimoto was out of a mare named Sunday Sensation, who sold for $155k as a yearling but only had 2 wins and $86k in earnings. She produced a few foals here in the US before being sold to Korea. Sunday Sensation was by the stallion Royal Academy, who raced in the US, Ireland, and England. He won the Breeder’s Cup Mile and was second in the Irish 2000 Guineas.
Royal Academy
Royal Academy was also shuttled all over the world throughout his breeding career, from Australia to Japan to the US to Brazil to Ireland. He sired more than 160 stakes winners that earned over $120 million, leaving a particularly strong influence in Australia – he’s the grandsire of Australian phenom race mare Black Caviar.
Royal Academy’s dam, Crimson Saint, was a very famous producer – she was the dam of several big name horses including the mare Terlingua, the dam of Storm Cat and Pioneering.
she also was a stakes winner herself
Outside of the racing world, Royal Academy has also left his mark. He’s the second sire of 5* horses Twilightslastgleam and Ferro Point, as well as second damsire of 5* horse SAP Talisman.
Sunday Sensation’s dam was the Australian-bred Arborea, who won multiple stakes races including the VATC One Thousand Guineas. She had 3 foals in Australia before being exported to the US, where she had 7 foals, and then went back to Australia and had 4 more foals. LOTS of foals. Unfortunately none of whom were superstars on the racetrack.
Arborea
You may have noticed that there are a whole lot of gray horses in Lottie’s pedigree. Indeed, both of her parents are gray. Which means there’s a possibility that she herself is homozygous gray. I’ll definitely be doing some DNA testing on her and I’m curious to see what her color panel is, including her base color. For those who aren’t familiar with how the gray gene works (gray is actually not a coat color, it’s a modifier… horses aren’t born gray) here’s a rundown.
The gene responsible for turning a horse gray is one that acts to slowly de-pigment the horse over time. The gray modifier gene is actually the loss of color. Gray horses are all born another color and progressively lose pigment throughout their lifetimes, while still retaining their dark skin color. A gray horse can be born with any coat color or pattern.
Graying happens due to the presence of a dominant gene (known in equine genetics as “G”) on the twenty-fifth chromosome. Gray is epistatic, which means the gray gene overrides the normal coat color: if a horse has a gray gene, it WILL eventually be gray. A gray horse must have at least one gray parent, as the gene is not recessive and cannot “hide” or skip generations. Lottie had two gray parents, so she could have inherited the gene from one or both of them.
the progression of depigmentation
Horses that possess the gray modifier gene will eventually look almost white all over. As they age and each season’s coat sheds out, they will become lighter and lighter. The speed at which this happens is extremely variable – some horses are light at a very young age, while others may take a decade or more.
Additionally, during the depigmentation process some horses will retain small flecks of pigmented hairs and have a “flea‐bitten” appearance, while others will retain pigmented hairs outlining lighter-colored areas and have a “dappled” appearance. Some horses go through both stages while others go through neither… the greying process varies widely from horse to horse.
If Lottie has one copy of the gray gene, then there’s an automatic 50% chance that any foals she had in the future would be gray (unless I bred her to a stallion that was also gray… that ups the chances). If she has TWO copies of the gray gene, then any foal she has will be gray, 100%.
That’s pretty much all there is to know about Lottie so far, at least on paper. More updates next week as she settles in and I get to know her more!
We have had no shortage of OTTB’s around here lately. We’ve got the long-term ones, like Henry, the broodmares Vee and Peyton, past ones like Gemma, and more recent ones Freya, Argo, Tilly, and Lottie.
Having a few here at the same time that all came off the track within a few months of each other has been an interesting compare and contrast. From the way they act to their aftercare to what they eat to how they’re trained – they’re all very very different, and yet… similar? I think people tend to lump OTTBs in together in one big category, and in my experience with so many of them over the years, I would say that’s both true and false. True because they have similar backgrounds and have had similar jobs and lifestyles, but false because like any other type of horse, they’re all individuals.
And so are the people they end up with. I believe strongly that there is more than one road to Rome, and a lot of different ways that could work to achieve an end goal. If there’s anything we know about horses by now, it’s that there’s no such thing as one right way. If only it was that easy, this horse thing would be a breeze.
There’s kind of a perpetual argument about what is the right or wrong thing to do for a horse coming off the track. Do you put it straight back into work? Do you turn it out for a while? Does it need a slow introduction to restricted solo turnout or can you kick it right out with a herd? Do you need to do lots of groundwork first or can you just swing aboard? How “broke’ are they really?
There are people that will argue to the death about one particular thing being the only right answer, but to me the answer is the always-irritating “it depends”. I think the real skill in being a horseman is assessing the horse and understanding in which scenario you might make which decision. And of course, being open to being wrong and trying something else instead. It’s why I’m always so hesitant to want to give anyone advice. The best I can do is say what’s worked for me and my horses, but that sure doesn’t mean it will work for someone else, their situation, and their own horses.
Henny ❤
But there are a few (very few) things that have been helpful across the board to us with all of our collective OTTBs here, so… let’s talk about those things!
Training
Ah yes, let’s start with the fun part first and work our way backwards. I’m not even going to get into super specifics here except for the fact that if you don’t have a ton of experience transitioning one from track to sport life, be willing to enlist assistance. If you have access to trainers that have a lot of experience, use them. Use them a lot. From the very very beginning. Because while you think that you’re not doing anything exciting in those first several months, just trotting in circles or working on steering, what you’re actually doing is re-installing new basics. Really important ones that the horse’s entire sport career will be built upon.
If you don’t have quick and easy access to good in-person help, there are other tools you can use to get you started. Y’all know I’m a big fan of Ride iQ. While I’ve mostly used and talked about features like the dressage test read-throughs (one of the motivating factors behind me scheduling that lesson with Peter Gray!), the conditioning schedule workshops, and the member video reviews (I’ve done a couple of those now, actually, it’s always fun to get a new perspective) there is actually quite a bit of content that could be helpful to someone with a horse that’s recently come off the track. There’s a whole “first 60 days” guided program geared specifically for OTTB’s, in fact, that I found to be a great addition/guidance.
and they’ve got a ton of OTTB resources and rides that are suitable for early-stage OTTB as well as continuing education up the levels. If you want structure and direction, these are a great way to achieve that. You might not have someone physically on the ground in your arena, but having them in your ear is the next best thing. After the basic first 60 days program, if you’re looking for other ideas, I think the 6 Weeks to Show Ready program is a good building block.
Even if you DO have the benefit of regularly scheduled professional oversight/involvement, there’s (IMO anyway) tremendous value in maintaining guidance in between lessons or training rides, or even maybe just hearing a different perspective or trying a different technique.
Another perk of Ride iQ, aside from the guided audio rides, is that they also have a really deep library of podcasts with a wealth of information on a lot of these same topics. OTTBs are a commonly talked-about discussion, and you can hear a lot of different advice and tips from tons of people that have so much experience with horses like this. The Ask an Expert series is fantastic too, with topics from ulcers to feet to nutrition to maintenance and on and on and on.
That app is truly a wealth of knowledge for any horse owner, but particularly for someone who is tip-toeing into new or unfamiliar territory. I’ve been a member since the day it launched, and truly can’t say enough good things about it. If you want to try it out there’s a free two week trial, and then monthly membership is $29 or the annual works out to like $25/mo. That’s like… 1/3 the cost of a single lesson these days. I’m a big fan of not wasting money, but spending it in ways that are wise, and this is one of those things that’s worth it tenfold, especially if you aren’t in a regimented trainer-led program.
one of Argo’s first post-track rides, doing a Ride iQ lesson!
Another resource I’ve been really enjoying for the OTTB side of things is the OTTB on Tap podcast. They’ve had a few episodes that might be particularly helpful when it comes to care, or things to consider, or even how to go about picking the right horse for you in the first place. Definitely recommend giving that a listen, too!
Feed
Ok moving on to the less fun parts… the topic of feed is one of those things you hate to even talk about because it’s guaranteed to start an argument among the masses, but in general: you have to be prepared to feed them as much as they need of whatever they need. If you’re used to easy keeping quarter horses or warmbloods, it may seem like a TB needs to eat a lot in comparison, especially one fresh off the track. You’ll come across one every once in a while that is a very easy keeper, or one that doesn’t do a bit of a regression in their condition as they transition from a race diet to a sport diet (that can be alarming if you aren’t prepared for it) but those are less common. Especially in that first year or so when they first transition to sporthorse life.
It also depends a great deal on the quality of your pasture and forage. Some horses do better on a higher alfalfa diet, some do better on a grass hay diet, some need a lot more fat than others, etc etc. And you’ll see some people say that they feed all of their horses exactly x, y, z things and it works perfectly for all of them… if that’s true, great. But then one will come along and prove you wrong. We all know it. Horses thrive on proving us wrong.
Right now for instance we’ve got one that really only eats alfalfa and requires a lot of it. Another is grass hay only. The others eat a mix. One puts on weight like crazy as soon as the spring grass comes in. One of them eats 3 times as much grain as another one. A couple get extra fat via flaxseed oil. Some get soaked alfalfa cubes, another won’t eat anything that’s remotely soggy. Horses gonna horse. Don’t be afraid to play around as needed to figure out what works best for your horse, and be open-minded to changing things or feeding more than you normally would. Going from a high starch, high calorie, sugar-infused racehorse diet to something typically high fat/fiber and lower starch is going to be an adjustment for their body… keep that in mind.
Feet
A good farrier that has experience with transitioning OTTBs to sporthorses is going to be an absolute lifesaver. Many (not all, but many) racehorses are shod very very differently and with a different hoof balance than sporthorses are. Having a farrier that 1) understands what changes need to be made 2) knows how to make those changes gradually in a way that helps the horse rather than hinders it, is critical.
If you’ve got one with particularly interesting angles or something suspicious, getting farrier view x-rays right from the beginning is never a bad idea. It will show you what’s really going on inside the foot and help your vet and farrier make the right choices to get those feet trending the right direction. I think a common mistake too is to pull the shoes off the horse right away without really considering how fair that is to the horse based on the foot it currently has, your footing, and what you’re expecting it to do. Give it time and the proper support. No hoof, no horse.
Ulcer care
Listen, none of us want to hear it but the reality is that most horses have ulcers. And the more stressful their life is, and the harder they work, the more likely it is that they’ve got them. I mean really, even pasture puffs can have stomachs that you wouldn’t believe. You should expect to treat any new horse for ulcers, but especially an OTTB. They’re going from a high-stress but familiar life, to a different and thus still stressful one. Help them out and set them up for success.
I also think that scoping before treatment is very very very highly recommended if you can at all manage it. We have scoped all of ours, and all of them have had different types of ulcers and/or presentation that changed the necessary treatment (length, dosage, and medication). It’s all fine and good to throw Ulcergard at one for a few weeks and hope you accomplished something, but the truth of the matter is that you have no actual idea unless you look. Those meds are expensive as hell, spend the $300-400 up front to do the scope and actually SEE what you need. At least then you can be certain about the medications you’re buying.
For instance, we’ve had horses on Ulcergard/Gastrogard, Miso, Sucralfate, and Nexium, or some mix of those, and for various amounts of time. I wouldn’t want to be throwing sucralfate at an ulcergard problem, just like I wouldn’t want to be throwing ulcergard at a miso problem. If at all possible, just scope the horse first.
The age old question: to let down or not to let down?
This is another fun one that people like to be 100% dead set on and argue about. Is it best to get the horse off the track and turn it out for a few months, or to transition it straight to work? IMO it’s another one of those “it depends”. I’ve done both. Some really need time and space to mentally decompress or physically unwind. Others will make seriously bad life choices if you take away their daily structure and work routine.
While it’s true that just chucking a horse out in a pasture can heal a lot of physical and mental ailments, it can also be worse for others. To me it’s one of those things you have to use your critical thinking skills with, and then be willing to change your mind depending on how things go.
Which is… kind of the summary of this entire post, isn’t it?
It’s been show recap central around here for a while, and while the blog has been covering the things that already happened, life has still been trucking along in the meantime. Plus I’ve been mum about some stuff publicly on purpose while I waited to see how they went (Patreon folks y’all had the tea, so a lot of this might not be news to you at this point). Anyway… let’s catch up on what’s been going on around these parts.
BEMER bliss
First and foremost: Argo sold. He sold a while ago actually, we’ve just been waiting on a shipper. West Texas isn’t the most common route, especially this time of year when every truck in Ocala is pointed north. His PPE went really well, much better than you’d expect for an 8yo that raced for 5 years of his life without any real breaks. They did a fair amount of x-rays and there was nothing particularly noteworthy on any of them. The only weird thing came in his bloodwork, with some elevated liver values. We ended up doing repeat and additional bloodwork over the next couple weeks and determined that he does indeed have a functional liver, and will indeed be fine. It did manage to give me some mild panic though in the meantime.
Selling horses is just stressful as hell. I bought and sold some in my 20’s and I have kind of forgotten how horrible it is, even when the people involved are really nice. It’s just anxiety central. I hate everything about it. And I never even actually advertised him and had to deal with all that part of it. But now he’s just been sitting here for basically a month waiting to get on a truck, and every day I’m like “please don’t do anything stupid to maim yourself”. He’s such a sweet dude and I’ve enjoyed having him, but I’ll still breathe a sigh of relief when he gets on the trailer and heads to his new people.
So Maj-eth-tic
When he first sold I was holding out hope that I’d find something else pretty quickly and be able to pick back up on the journey to RRP for this year. But lord there was nothing. Just nothing that I liked that was also in my price range. The double edged sword of things like RRP is that it’s raised the value of these horses coming directly off the track, which is a great thing. The downside is that now a lot of them are out of my budget. Gone are the days when $2500 was a lot for one fresh off the track. The only horses I saw that I really liked were priced at 6k and 8k respectively, still on the track. They were nice horses, so people can price them at whatever they want, but it did put them solidly out of my reach.
I scoured every single TB group on facebook. Every track resource. I even started stalking cheap claiming horses at the Tampa meet and messaging their trainers/owners. Still nothing. Nothing nothing nothing. And if anything did happen to pop up, you’d better be on it within literally minutes, because the resellers nab the cute and less expensive ones super fast. They know what they’re doing.
If I’d just been looking for a horse, there would have been a few of interest that would have worked. But I figured since I had a little bit more to spend this time (thanks Argo!) and I remembered now how much I hate selling horses, plus I’d be starting so late in the year for RRP, ideally I was looking for something that I’d want to keep rather than just take to RRP and then sell. If I found something that excited me, great. If not, I was fine with calling RRP a loss for this year and waiting til the fall to find something for next year.
Hi Henny!
Which is good, because I was looking for like 6 weeks. My window for realistically making RRP this year came and went, which is fine. I basically gave up, but kept looking at all the groups once or twice a day just to see if anything came up that was interesting.
And then I was at the POP show with Hillary on Sunday… which was her OTTB mare Tilly’s horse trial debut by the way. Tilly just came off the track in December and she went to the big scary busy Florida Horse Park last weekend and got a 36 on the flat and marched around both jumping phases like an actual pro. Big props to Hillary and Tilly, I think she’s got a really nice one and she’s done a great job in just a few months time. She’s working her butt off to make sure the basics are installed thoroughly and correctly from the very beginning, and I think it shows.
Hillary and Tilly-moo!
Anyway… Hillary was in warmup and I popped open my facebook to do a little mindless scroll. I hadn’t really been on it yet that morning because I’d gotten up early to get all the farm chores done in order to make it to the show in time to catch Hillary’s dressage. So I open it up and the very first thing at the top of my feed was an ad in one of the OTTB groups for a gray mare. I am not a lover of gray, I’d prefer it NOT be gray honestly, but her pics looked potentially cute so I clicked on the pedigree. Low and behold, she was by a Tiznow son out of a Macho Uno x Royal Academy mare.
That got my attention. I love Tiznow (he’s Argo’s damsire, but most commonly known in the sporthorse world as being the sire of 5* horse Phelps), Macho Unos are known for being good jumpers, and Royal Academy (another 5* connection – he’s the second sire of Twilightslastgleam and Ferro Point, second damsire of SAP Talisman) is my favorite source of Nijinsky.
Helloooo
Her jog video was not the best quality but she seemed to move pretty evenly. I messaged the seller to ask the price, thinking she’d for sure be out of my price range (the gray ones almost always are, I find it hilarious that grays tend to sell for more considering that I’d much prefer a horse not be gray), but low and behold… she was within the threshold. I think it helps that she was based in Oklahoma, not exactly a hub area. I called to talk to the listing agent about her, made an offer, the owner made a counter offer, and like 5 minutes later I bought myself another horse on PayPal. Totally normal Sunday morning activity.
So now we wait for her to get here. The process of finding her a ride has not been super quick, which is a good thing really because on Monday I fell off of Presto and broke my ankle.
At the time I thought this was really swollen but it has since proven that this was only the beginning
Ha. Haaaaaa.
It’s as if he felt me send in that Prelim entry for Majestic Oaks a few days prior and was like nah, let’s waste more of mom’s money and decimate her dreams. His favorite pastime. Luckily it’s a fairly small and simple break, nothing crazy. I can’t put any weight on it for at least 10 days, and then after that I’ll probably be in a boot of some kind for a little while. But hopefully I won’t be out of the saddle for too long. Probably just long enough to miss the last shows before the summer break here in Ocala, which is just about right for Presto. He does have impeccable timing. Love that for me.
Megan was going to come back to FL to coach me for my Prelim debut so when I texted her and asked if she wanted to ride him instead she was like “well turns out I just broke my ribs…”. We’re all down for the count. Oh well. Whatcha gonna do. The green numbers will have to wait. I’m mostly just glad it wasn’t worse, because I felt the pop when I hit the ground and was really worried I’d torn some kind of soft tissue. That would have been a lot worse and taken a lot longer to heal. I’ll take a minorly broken ankle.
This peg leg (ok it’s called a hands-free crutch but whatever) has come in super clutch aside from destroying my shin
In the meantime hopefully the mare gets here soon and in one piece, and she can enjoy a bit of a vacation until I’m back on two feet again. She raced about a month ago so some time off will probably do her good, and give us some time to get to know each other. I’ll do a full post about her and her history/pedigree later, once I’ve had more time to get it all together. In the meantime… yep, basically now you’re all caught up on the major stuff. 😅
Ask and ye shall receive! Although you’ll probably be disappointed, because I am certainly not anything close to a style icon. There were a few *chef’s kiss* pieces that were really pulling their weight though, and they deserve some kudos.
First Jog
glitter on the top and the bottom
I hope you guys aren’t expecting some kind of fancy fashionista type content when it comes to my jog outfits. For as much as I value and appreciate nice riding clothes, I’ve always been cheap AF when it comes to regular clothes. And while I did have to go shopping for this particular occasion (I tried real hard to come up with something I could wear out of the clothes I already have, and I was able to use a few pieces, but my closet in general is sparse), my budget was low. I was looking for a pair of pants that could do double duty for both jogs, and a couple tops. That’s it. And I had to go to the mall. THE FREAKIN MALL.
Anyway.
The first order of business was finding the pants, and the ones I went specifically in search of actually materialized directly in my line of sight the moment I stepped into Dillard’s. What are the odds? The shopping gods were really doing me a solid there. I was looking for the Spanx faux leather leggings that have been a popular jog outfit staple for lots of people over the years, and I ended up trying on the regular ones and the shinier patent ones. Mostly because the patent ones were on sale. Naturally though, I didn’t like how shiny they were, but I did like the regular ones. They were comfy, they were flattering, and they would go with a lot of different things. Sold.
full fit
Also, listen, I’m gonna need y’all to pretend you don’t see the absolute disaster situation that was happening in my bedroom when I took these pics. I was trying my outfits on literally the day before while I was packing, sending pics to my friends to ask if they were acceptable. I had no intention of these photos ever seeing a public space. Alas, here we are, so whatever you’re thinking just… shhhhhh. I know.
The sparkly silver flame sweater was an absolute banger of a find, snagged at Forever 21 off of their clearance rack for $10 (it’s a couple bucks more online, but still cheap!). No joke. I love that sweater, too. I mean, is it itchy as hell? Sure is. But I thought it really went with the whole Presto vibe. I’m sure I’ll wear it again in the winter (with a shirt under it to stop the itchies).
As for the shoes, long-time readers have actually seen them before. I mentioned them in a post in 2020 when I got them, saying “I originally wasn’t gonna post these since they’re a non-horse item, but I’m so in love with them that I’m thinking I might need to do a 3Day JUST so I can jog up in these bad boys.“.
shiny stompers
Well what do you know, the glitter combat boots DID eventually make it to a jog, 3.5 years later. They were like $25 from Walmart and I still love them just as much as when I found them. I only wear them for special occasions, but they’re magnificent.
As for Presto, he wore his dressage bridle for the first jog, which is this (minus the bonnet):
moar sparkles, y’all
It’s actually a complete Frankenbridle. The crown, cheeks, and throatlatch are Henry’s old Eponia dressage bridle. The noseband was custom made for me by Dark Jewel Designs, to go with the gorgeous light blue plaited browband that I got from her last year. It’s a black leather crank, no flash, with black glitter padding and gunmetal glitter piping. I love that it’s sparkly but not garish.
The bridle’s coordinating light blue browband didn’t match my jog outfit or my shad, so I borrowed a sparkly silver crystal browband from Hillary instead. My reins are the Correct Connect 1″ Sure Grip reins, which I really like for dressage. His dressage bit is a Herm Sprenger WH Ultra Sensogan Loose Ring (did I have a slight panic moment an hour before dressage and text one of the stewards to make sure it was FEI legal? Surely did.).
I would not put this level of flash on a horse’s head if they weren’t steady in the connection, but that’s one of Presto’s strengths so I figure we can show it off.
Dressage
ITS SO TEAL AND AMAZING
For this phase I was outfitted largely by Luxe EQ (the mobile store I work for in the winter when it’s here at WEC). Specifically, the shad, the breeches, and the gloves are from there. First and foremost, lets talk about the real showstopper – the shad.
If you’ve never been to For Horses’ website to play around in their Custom Lab configurator, you’re missing out on a good time. Short coats, tail coats, all kinds of colors and collars and pipings and buttons… it’s fun. My coat is the Jenni, in dark deal with black collar and points and silver glitter piping at the collar, points, and around the tails. I am obsessed with her.
Big huge thank you and credit to Luxe EQ owner Megan as well as For Horses on the shad… they really did me a huge huge solid, getting it to me in just a couple weeks – A COUPLE WEEKS – from Italy. When I have more time I’ll get it tailored a little bit… I ordered a medium to account for my shoulder width and it needs to be taken in a bit at the waist and in the arms, but the fit was pretty darn good, considering it’s a stock size!
It’s the silver piping around the tails, for me
It truly is a dream coat, and I was so excited to be able to rock something like this at my first FEI. I got several compliments, and I love how the color looks on Presto. I wanted something a little bit different from the normal navy or black, since I am fortunate enough at this point to have a horse that’s pretty good on the flat. I can stand out a bit and have it be in a good way rather than a bad way. But I also didn’t want something super garish, or that leaned into the realm of tacky. Originally I was hoping to find something in a dark purple, but when I saw the little sample fabric square for the dark teal, I knew that was it. The online configurator is great, but if you ever find yourself near the Luxe EQ store, I highly recommend going in and looking at their big sample book thingy. Putting all the stuff together in person really helps you visualize all the options and how they’ll look. It was hella fun.
I opted for black collar/points with silver glitter piping specifically to go with my show helmet, a glossy black Harry’s Horse that has silver glitter up the middle. I’m obsessed with that helmet but it’s become really hard to find. I thought the coat details would look sharp with the helmet, and they did. THEY DID.
And the real icing on the cake was one I’d completely forgotten about – my Stockbubble stock tie. It wasn’t until I was putting the shad in my coat bag that I realized it, but my stock tie is a white fabric with silver glitter, and double piping in black and silver. I mean come on. The coordination factor was just *chef’s kiss*.
I can never get pics to show the glitter in the fabric very well, but trust me it’s there
The breeches are what have become my favorite go-to whites: the Struck 2.0. These just fit me really well, are comfy, not see-through, and wash well, so I’ve stuck to them. Every time I venture out to try to find something cheaper I absolutely loathe them, so Struck it is. The inside of the fabric is tan so they’re so much more opaque than anything else I’ve found.
The gloves are my Cavalleria Toscana mesh grip gloves that I wear every day… they’re so lightweight and comfortable I just find myself always reaching for them. The boots are my trusty Romitelli’s with the black glitter top that I’ve had for a while now. You can’t see it in these pics but my belt was my favorite African beaded Zinj belt with blue/silver moons and stars that I always wear at shows.
sparkles bring me joy, even if my face doesn’t show it
As for Presto’s dressage outfit, he’s wearing my rehabbed Custom Saddlery dressage saddle (that thing has been a super purchase), an Engel sheepskin girth, a Mattes custom pad (white sheen with black piping, a row of rhinestones, and then another row of black piping, with natural sheepskin under the panels… thank goodness I got this before the Hufglocken fallout happened with Mattes), and the same bridle he jogged in. Oh, plus his sparkly mesh If the Bonnet Fits bonnet. True story, Strax got ahold of that bonnet a couple months ago and pulled a lot of the crystal edge off. Luckily Sierra was able to fix it for me and get it back in time!
Cross Country
a flying fit, if you will
We’ve talked about this pretty recently I feel like, and nothing is really new aside from the gloves, so I won’t spend a lot of time here. I put links to save anyone the effort of chasing me down to ask where to get something. And for the Riding Warehouse links I have a discount code there: BREVENT10, and for Royal Equine links my discount code there is presto.
Presto is wearing:
Arion figure 8 bridle (an absolute angel gifted this to me and I love you forever for it)
custom pinney holder from a lady that doesn’t make them anymore (sadly)
Bender golf gloves (you have to buy left and right hand separately, but they’re BOMB) with skull and crossbones
The second jog
she’s a runner, she’s a track star
This outfit is really hard to see in the screenshots, so I hope you’re ready for another terrible mirror selfie that was never meant to see the light of day. Same disclaimers apply.
The top is a very shiny, super lightweight black and silver sparkle mock neck. I got it at Forever 21 for $4.80 on their mega super duper clearance red tag rack. I can’t even find it online, but it’s super lightweight and comfortable and I love it. Going forward I’ll probably use it as my hot-weather XC shirt since it’s thinner than the Samshield shirt.
i even only put one shoe on for this adventure, because lazy
The bottoms are the same faux leather leggings as the first jog outfit. The shoes are the black and white star sneakers (now that I went to get the link for y’all I see that they’ve added a lot more styles, including glitter ones. This is bad for me.) that I bought on Amazon last December to be my “casual but cute retail shoes” for working at the store during the winter season. They’ve already been worn a lot but are still in good enough shape and they’re the cutest more-casual type shoes I have.
Then I topped the whole thing off with my oversized faux leather jacket that I also already owned. Because we’re on a damn budget, people.
i know, wow, you are overwhelmed with color.
So technically, if we use girl math, this outfit cost me less than $5. Right? Right.
Showjumping
he might need a stud girth soon
There’s not much unique about this phase’s attire, it’s mostly just a mishmash of dressage and XC stuff. It’s the same helmet, breeches, boots, bonnet, and gloves as dressage. Same saddle, saddle pad, breastplate, girth, whip, spurs, bridle, and bit as XC.
The only thing that ever really changes for SJ is which coat I wear. I was tempted to go with my teal Penelope one to keep the teal theme, but I just really like the juju that lives in my light blue Laguso coat and felt like I needed all the good juju I could get, so it was the winner.
I do tend to always wear the same show shirt for showjumping under my coat, the Samshield Faustina in black lurex. Sparkly black, ya know? I’m predictable.
And that’s it!
Which… is a lot. Lord. This sport is relatively absurd, isn’t it?