Wednesday, March 19, 2008

A Letter from the President of the USEA

The president of the United States Eventing Association (USEA) issued this statement today regarding not only Darren Chiacchia's injuries, but several of the issues that have been a hotbed of controversy in the 3 day eventing world of late. If you are a horse person with familiarity of the system and it's flaws, I encourage you to get involved. If you know an eventer who has an opinion (and every eventer should -- it's their sport at stake), please pass this on so that they may read it and contact the appropriate individuals.

Darren has had a setback, unfortunately. He was extubated and breathing on his own, but spiked a fever yesterday afternoon and had to be reintubated and is now back on the vent. He has pneumonia.... It's an unfortunate, but not unforseen occurrence.

A Message from USEA President Kevin Baumgardner
Updated: March 19, 2008

Eventers everywhere are deeply saddened by the accidents that occurred this past weekend at the Red Hills Horse Trials in Tallahassee, Florida. First and foremost, our thoughts, prayers, and heartfelt wishes for a speedy recovery go out to our dear friend and USEA board member Darren Chiacchia. Darren is an extraordinary horseman who has worked tirelessly on behalf of the sport of Eventing. We also send our condolences to Jonathan Holling and Missy Miller and those connected with Direct Merger and Leprechauns Rowdy Boy. These beloved horses were the best of the best—they will be missed. Furthermore, the USEA recognizes the excellent work of the Red Hills' Organizing Committee under very trying circumstances.

The sad news from Red Hills comes at a time when the USEA is taking a hard look at the sport of Eventing. During the December 2007 Convention in Colorado Springs, the USEA reaffirmed its commitment to horse and rider safety as the paramount consideration in the governance of our sport. The centerpiece of the Convention, the all-day-Saturday G10 Summit, was devoted exclusively to a full and open discussion of the safety issue among all of the stakeholders in the sport—riders, trainers, coaches, breeders, owners, officials, organizers, parents. A number of positive changes came out of our discussions in Colorado Springs, including the implementation of beefed-up qualification standards at preliminary level and higher that will go into effect this December 1.

Having said that, I remain deeply concerned with the direction the sport has taken over the past several years. It would be unfair and counterproductive at this juncture to focus on any one incident, cross-country course, or horse trials. We should never jump to conclusions regarding single incidents, let alone lose sight of the fact that there is, and will always be, an element of risk in any sport involving horses. And I will never point fingers or be a party to personal attacks on any individual involved in the sport, no matter how much I might disagree with his or her views. But the overall trends, particularly over the last three years, are unmistakable—and in my view totally unacceptable. I know that my concern that the sport has gotten off track is shared by many of our members, amateurs and professionals alike.

We seem to be in an ever-spiraling loop in which the aspect of cross-country that attracted most of us to the sport in the first place, the joy and thrill of galloping rhythmically over jumps across country, has been replaced with questions of extreme technicality and a proliferation of combinations taken at show-jump speed. It appears that the driver behind this emphasis on increased technical difficulty is the need to challenge and sort out the elite combinations competing at the highest levels of the sport. The net effect of this shift in emphasis, however, has not been confined to the upper levels. Rather, because of the need for each level to serve as preparation for the next, the sport has been altered all the way to the novice and training levels. This has left a large proportion of our core USEA membership—the 90-plus percent of Eventers who will never compete above preliminary—asking whether there is a place left for them in the sport.

Our members want courses that provide fun and challenge, and that leave both horse and rider feeling elated and wanting more. Unfortunately, this is all too frequently not the experience that is reported by many of our members. Cross-country should be a positive, exhilarating and educational experience for an appropriately prepared horse and rider. That is particularly true at the levels populated by adult amateurs and youngsters.

And what about our horses? Does the gallop-collect-gallop-collect nature of many of our courses, combined with the rigid adherence to established optimal speeds despite the twistiness of many modern courses, best serve the talents and abilities of our mounts? We owe the highest duty of care and compassion to these wonderful animals—in my view, the bravest and most noble horses in the world.

What can we do? The answer is plenty. To begin with, we need the active participation of our membership. When you are concerned with the direction of the sport you love, it is not good enough to sit on the fence and passively watch events unfold. Get involved! And I don't mean just the "grass roots" USEA membership (which judging by the large number of emphatic emails I have received in the last few days is already energized). We also need the active involvement of a broad spectrum of our Eventing professionals, the riders, trainers and officials out there who do not belong to the small coterie who have dominated the direction of the sport over the past twenty years. I believe there is a "silent generation" of Eventing professionals, most in their thirties or early forties, who are concerned with the current condition of the sport. In large part, these professionals have not actively participated in the governance of the sport or spoken up publicly, perhaps because they feel that their voices won't be heard or, worse, because they feel intimidated by the "old guard" at the top. Well, I have a message for that "silent generation": now is the time to speak up. I challenge all Eventing professionals to take a stand on this critical issue and get involved. It's now or never. I promise that your voices will be heard. And I also have a message for those who would block constructive change in the sport: Expect a fight. Neither I nor the USEA is going to stand idly by while our sport continues down this path.

Over the past several months, Darren Chiacchia has taken a leadership role in terms of looking at how we can modify our national level courses, particularly at preliminary and training, to better suit the majority of horses and riders competing at these levels. Through his position as chairman of the Professional Horsemen's Council, Darren worked with multiple USEA committees and spearheaded the development of a "white paper" on potential changes to cross-country courses that was presented to the Board of Governors in Colorado Springs. Included among the concepts discussed in the white paper were fewer technical questions, more forgiving jump faces, fewer combinations, more realistic optimal speeds and the like. I appointed Darren as the leader of a USEA task force charged with converting the ideas in the white paper into concrete rule-change proposals, to be submitted to the USEA Board of Governors and then forwarded on for action by the USEF Eventing Technical Committee (chaired by my fellow USEA Governor Malcolm Hook). During Darren's convalescence, I have asked Gina Miles, his close collaborator in developing the white paper, to move forward with the task force's work on an expedited basis. A number of other prominent figures in the sport, among them Kim Severson, have also volunteered to become actively involved in this effort. I, too, will work closely with this task force. I believe it is equally important that all segments of our membership forcefully express their views on the necessity of the types of changes being addressed by this task force. Please pass your thoughts on to me—I will forward them to Gina, Kim and the other members of the task force.

On a separate track, the USEA will immediately investigate avenues to work with veterinarians and equine research professionals to find ways to reduce the stressors on our horses and explore the mechanisms of equine cardiovascular failure. If it makes sense to do so, I will ask the USEA Board of Governors to commit funding to this effort. We reaffirm the USEA's commitment to ensuring the well-being of our equine partners as well as the safety of our riders.

As many of you are aware, the USEA Board will be conducting a strategic planning session in Leesburg, Virginia this coming Friday and Saturday. This will be a topic for the meeting and I will solicit additional input on ways to move forward quickly and positively with these initiatives.

Again, this is no time for fence-sitting. If you believe it is time to stand up for your sport, please make your voice heard and volunteer to be part of the solution. Please contact me at kbaumgardner@corrcronin.com or at (206) 621-1480.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

A Sad Day For Equestrian Sports

Yesterday, March 15, 2008, was a very sad day in the world of 3 Day Eventing.

Two horses were killed and a prominent rider critically injured on the cross country course of the Red Hills Horse Trials in Tallahassee, Florida.

The rider, Darren Chiaccia, sustained a closed head injury, several broken ribs, and lung contusions when his horse, Baron Verdi, flipped over a fence and landed on him. There was no way that Darren could have escaped his injury.

The horses,Leprechaun's Rowdy Boy and Direct Merger, both suffered freak occurrences that left them dead where they stood. Direct Merger suffered a heart attack after the 8th fence on the course, while Leprechaun's Rowdy Boy appears to have hit his head on one of the elements of a 4 fence combination, leading to convulsions and his demise.

I want to extend my deepest condolences to the families affected by this tragedy...

I also want to pose some questions -- but before I do that, I want to stress that I do not, in any way, blame the riders, the course designer Capt. Mark Phillips, the event organizers or anyone associated with this event. I especially don't blame the horses. We can assume that they died doing what they loved to do, and neither suffered.

I think that several things need to be addressed and talked over and thought through. I know that eventing has become a hugely popular sport and that more and more people are competing, but these accidents are happening more and more often. Why did we switch to the short format CCI? Why, even though we have the short format, are riders not conditioning their horses for the long format events? I feel that at least a few of these accidents can be prevented by fitness. What happened yesterday was a complete freak occurrence, and nothing could have prevented it, but sometimes these things can be prevented, and I feel like they should be if they can be. Another thing that I thing we need to think about is the questions that these courses are asking. Cross country courses these days are not just long galloping efforts with some big fences thrown in for variety (not that they have ever been at the highest levels of the sport, but bear with me....). Today's cross country courses are TRAPPY....and they have to be RIDDEN, every single stride. I don't know that a lot of riders are aware of that. Darren certainly was, and our top top riders certainly are, but a lot of the up and coming riders seemt to be buying horses who know their jobs and then depending on them to answer the questions while they sit up there and look pretty. (or not) Event horses have to think on their feet, yes, but they depend on their riders to tell them when things are okay and when they're not. I rode at an event barn for a few years as a child, and those horses were SMART, and they had a HUGE instinct for self preservation, but you know what? They still depended on their riders for guidance, and I think one of the issues with eventing today is that many people at the lower levels simply can't RIDE. (Now, I'm not trying to say that nobody who events can ride, and I'm not trying to say that only people at the upper levels can ride. Everyone has to start somewhere, but I think that people who event have to have the presence of mind to Have A Trainer and Use Their Trainer. Lots and Lots of accidents can be prevented if people just listen to someone who has their best interests at heart.) Today's courses are so technical and ask so many tough questions of both horses and riders that I think we need to really think about what we're perpetrating here. Do people HAVE to do this? No. But those who do I think really need to ask themselves if they're ready to be jumping/showing at the level that they are. There is No harm in staying at a lower level until you're Ready to move up. That's why I think that people need to have trainers and Listen to Their Trainers.

I know that's not going to solve the problem. And I know that even if someone has a trainer, they won't necessarily listen to what that trainer has to say anyway... but we can hope.

Eventing is a dangerous sport. But it shouldn't have to be deadly.

Just my $.02

Fly free Rowdy and Direct Merger, may you run and jump pain free.

Friday, March 7, 2008

Killing Time

Classes were cancelled today, as I suspected they would be. It's actually somewhat amusing because the current temperature is 46 degrees F, and probably 80% of the snow is gone, leaving us with huge expanses of my favorite thing, Mud. (If you had a greyhound that liked to go and run around in the mud and then run INSIDE to your bed, mud would be YOUR favorite thing, too.) All venting about mud aside, it's been a pretty relaxing day, all in all. I finally got caught up on all the email that I hadn't read yet from being gone last weekend, and a few in my inbox that I had saved to read later, which is really nice. Livvy and I are getting ready to go see The Other Boelyn Girl and have a bit of a date, and then we'll come home and I'll try to get a tad of studying done for next week -- I have to get started on the literature review for our group project in Toxicology, and I have 3 tests next week, one of which is a Practical in Micro Lab. Fortunately I'm not really behind, but I do have quite a bit of reading to do.

So what am I doing? Why, BLOGGING of course! That's the BEST way to not get things done!

Alright, off to the movies!

I'm sure I'll have a better update later.

Thursday, March 6, 2008

SNOW!





Alright, this is North Texas! Who turned on the snow machine?!

Since 12:00 PM, we've had 7" of snow, and it's not showing any signs of letting up. It's BEAUTIFUL -- and I always love snow because it's so silent and crinkly when it's falling.

I took a few pix -- Mostly of things just outside the windows, since I didn't want to get my camera wet, but here they are. :)