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MAE XC Schooling, August 2025

Mid-America Eventing Xc Schooling

August 23rd, 2025


It was a great, but full, day of wranglin’ ponies & riders at the MAE open XC schooling at Heritage Park, in Olathe, KS.

The morning started out with me unloading Ginger Stiver’s Hennessy Venom “Vinny” only to find out he had a very loose shoe! Thankfully, my farrier (Ben Goddard) is truly a saint, and he went out of his way to come out and tack it back on. Since we had a busy day ahead of us, while I waited for Ben to arrive, I went ahead and tacked up my next ride to hopefully keep the day moving seamlessly.

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Jennifer Zielinksi’s Hugo

I had an absolute blast taking Jennifer Zielinski’s Hugo around XC while she’s been busy girl bossing! At 20 years young, Hugo has become quite the novice packer for Jennifer, but he is an older guy who needs to have his confidence built up in order to have faith in his ability for anything new. Well, this guy continues to step up to each new challenge with SO much heart and was happy to jump over training level no problem. Not once did he offer a refusal or even say no, he just kept trying his hardest over each new thing thrown his way. He is the shining example of “it doesn’t matter the breed or the age, as long as they have the desire to try!” And THAT he has in tenfold.

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Jennifer Zielinksi’s Hugo

Next, I went out with Emilia and Bernadine Blazewicz and their two wonderful super ponies, Apallo and Bullseye! It was only Apallo’s third time ever jumping and first time seeing cross country, and he answered every question thrown his way brilliantly! Millie did an excellent job piloting her new horse around and made sure he had a very confidence building session. He started out by trotting starter fences, and ended the day confidently cantering over beginner novice with gusto! Bernie and Bullseye were both little spitfires, and despite both of their small statures, they kept up with Millie and Apallo no problem, sailing over beginner novice jumps that were almost the same height as Bullseye! It takes a lot of natural balance and courage to take a pony out on cross country, and Bernie absolutely nailed it! I am so proud of the rider these two young girls are growing into, and so proud of how they managed their ponies for their specific needs!

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Emilia Blazewicz & Apallo

Lastly, after Ben got Vinny’s shoe tacked back on, I went out on Vinny while Nicole Jackson, Erica Garman, and Michaela Holcomb went out on Huey, Archer, and BT. While all three riders have different experience levels, they were all facing different challenges or riding completely new rides.

For Nicole, her mustang Fireball just got his hocks injected and was out this weekend, so to see her adapt to 17.2h thoroughbred Huey (a polar opposite of Fireball) was one of the highlights of my day. She started the day off slowly cantering over starter logs, but ended it galloping and sailing over training level fences – dressed with a giant grin on her face.

This was Erica’s second time schooling Archer XC (the first time being in June), and she gets the award for most improved because she has changed so drastically in her riding in such a short amount of time! She is always so willing to ride whatever horse I throw her on and is learning how to adapt to each one’s idiosyncrasies and get the best out of them. While Archer is tricky because he’s light in the hand while being heavy on his feet, Erica figured out his way of going quickly and was nailing some BN combinations by the end of the ride.

Michaela has quite a bit of riding experience, but it has been almost a decade since she competed regularly. So while she is the most experienced, she is the one getting the least amount of saddle time at this current moment. Despite being out of regular practice, she did an excellent job piloting BT over many starter and BN combinations. BT is quite the humbling ride, and reminded Michaela why we LOVE our thoroughbreds so much, because he is the boyfriend that always promises “this time things will be different” only to pull the same moves over again. Michaela did a great job keeping her whits and getting him to the other side!

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Michaela Holcomb & BT

After getting his shoe tacked back on, I schooled Ginger Stiver’s Vinny over the entire prelim course in preparation for the fall season. This was the first schooling all year that he was finally relaxed and didn’t spook at random leaves or dead patches of grass in the ground. To have his complete focus made my job so much easier as he was completely locked on to the task at hand. He was jumping out of his skin and even managed to jump out of his shoe (sorry Ben😭) and felt like the freak of nature Vinny that I have grown to love.

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Ginger Stiver’s Hennessy Venom

Lastly, I want to thank Cade Kress for spending 7 hours on his day off waking up early with me to load horses, hold Vinny for Ben, and follow my students and me around the XC course getting some professional grade video. I am so beyond grateful to have such a supportive and amazing partner who fully embraces this crazy horse life.

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Until next time, we look ahead to Otter Creek’s Fall HT!

Otter Creek Summer HT, August 2025

Otter Creek Farm Summer Horse trials

august 8-10, 2025


We had a great weekend up north in Wheeler, Wisconsin at what I like to call “Camp Otter” for the 2025 Otter Creek Summer Horse Trials.

Despite the early morning two hour rain delay on XC day, the organizers were able to somehow pull off the most impressive feat of running the training, novice, beginner novice, AND starter riders out the box in one minute increments to catch up the schedule, and they were able to make up over an hour and a half of lost time to finish the day only 40 minutes behind schedule. I’ve truly never seen anything like it! Remember to ALWAYS THANK YOUR VOLUNTEERS because man, what an amazing bunch of volunteers they have up north.


It was Ginger Stiver’s Hennessy Venom “Vinny’s” first official run of the season after an EPM diagnosis last fall kept us out of spring season. While on paper it doesn’t look like it was a successful show (though we still managed to finish 4th place in the Open Modified), in reality it feels like we are coming out of the weekend so much stronger, and I am SO proud of him (and myself) for overcoming many hurdles to get to this point.

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Vinny on XC at Otter Creek Farm

Last October, he was putting his feet in ditches going through coffins and had lost awareness of his body. This past weekend, he was back to the *almost too careful* Vinny I have grown to appreciate and showed some freak of nature athletic ability that only he can pull off to jump a clean show jumping round.

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Vinny in SJ at Otter Creek Farm

Our XC was definitely not what I envisioned, but despite me dropping my crop before jump 9 and Vinny losing his shoe after the ditch and wall, we managed to regroup and finish strong — which is a HUGE win because in the past I would’ve had to retire once his adrenaline is spiking and things go wrong. Vinny is definitely the trickiest horse I’ve ever ridden but we are teaching each other so much and really starting to develop a solid partnership, and I can’t wait to see where the fall season takes us.


Sam Parcell and Danger Zone “Archer” also made the trek north with us for Sam’s very first out of town event. His dressage test was much improved from his previous run at Windermere Run in the spring, and I LOVED see how much gains he’s made in the jumping phases.

Sam Parcell and Archer on SJ at Otter Creek Farm

Sam only just started riding 15 months ago (and recently turned just 15 years old) but despite his inexperience and young age, he has really put in the commitment and works so hard to make his goals happen! Otter Creek is not an easy venue, especially for his 2nd ever recognized event (and only 3rd XC if you include the schooling show he did before Windermere), and he came out with ice in his veins and the poise of a seasoned pro!! 💪🏼🥳

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Sam Parcell and Archer on XC at Otter Creek Farm

But despite how much Sam has grown as a rider, what I’m most proud of is how much he has grown as a horseman. He is learning how to be in tune with his horse’s needs, how to take care of his horse and his stuff, and how the majority of riding is done outside of the saddle. To hear him tell Archer good boy and to see him shower him in pets & praise after their XC round, or to wake up to Sam already filling his hay nets & water buckets made me one proud coach.

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Sam Parcell and his mother, Veronica, studying the SJ course

And — he might have the biggest cheerleading section of any rider I know. Sam had ELEVEN family members drive up this past weekend (from as far as Florida!) to come support him all weekend. They were posted up all over XC, running and cheering and supporting him through all of the highs and lows — in the pouring rain & scorching heat. It genuinely warmed my heart to see so much love for him.


We always have the best time at Otter Creek and genuinely cannot wait to come back for the next one! Now that the summer is finally cooling down, things are heating up for a busy fall and we are so excited!