Classroom: June 2010 Archives
He was named one of the 50 most influential horsemen of the 20th Century by the Chronicle in 2000. He is also the only rider to have won both a gold medal in Eventing and a Tevis Cup buckle in Endurance. Denny Emerson was inducted into the USEA Hall of Fame in 2006 carrying honors including team gold for the US at the World Championships in '74, Rider of the Year in '72, and acting as President of the USEA for a total of five years. He has also received the USEA Wofford Cup for lifetime service to Eventing. Denny runs Tamarack Hill Farm with his wife, May, in Strafford, VT and Southern Pines, NC. (Above: Denny and Core Buff [out of Royal Core] in Blue Ridge, VA in the late 70's.)
4. Do you support bringing back the long format?
1. What are 3 essential skills you stress to students?
One of them goes back to something Jack LeGoff preached all the time. To jump a fence correctly you have to have a canter that combines speed, balance, and impulsion. The problem is balance and impulsion are not compatible qualities. It is easy to get impulsion without balance and vise versa. The trick is to keep a canter with both that is active enough to go forward and back as needed. One thing said about Margie Goldstein-Engle is her body is a tuning fork for the right canter. Within two strides after a fence she recognized the canter she had and knew immediately if and how she needed to adjust it. So one skill is to make your body a tuning fork for the right canter and to learn to combine balance and impulsion. How do you take a horse running long, flat, and on the forehand and get him to bring his hocks under him and his body up? So another skill is to have the ability in the last few strides before a fence to take a canter that is forward and down and turn it into something that is over and up. That's a real skill. If you watch Bruce who rides with a bit of a half-seat and Phillip is standing straight up-every rider achieves this goal differently, but this skill is very important because it is related to safety. Not being able to make this adjustment is what leads to horses catching a knee and these darn rotational falls. So many Eventers aren't foxhunting, steeplechase riding, and learning to "ride by the seat of their pants." They don't gallop, set up, and jump up, they just gallop and keep galloping. Jack LeGoff said the key is three things: 1: a good seat; 2: a good seat; 3: a good seat. In other words, having an independent seat.
2. Why are gymnastics jumping exercises so important?
Because you put the horse in jeopardy where his job is to get himself out of trouble. You have to say "Here, Horse. Sink or swim." The distances are already set right so you don't have to worry about that. The best exercise is this: Jump a cross-rail, 18 feet to a Swedish oxer with a false ground line in the middle, then 18 feet to another X. The Swedish oxer will be slightly confusing and will encourage him to really jump up and round; you want his withers to hit you in the sternum. All you have to do is look up, smile, and close your legs. Gymnastics give the horse a chance to learn how to save his own ass. You'll get it wrong sometimes. It doesn't matter if you're Mark Todd. Even the best will get it wrong, and that is when your horse has to have survival instincts.
3. In a sentence (or several), what makes a four-star horse?
Especially with the short format you've got to have...well...what you can't have is weak links. In the long format, a horse who is a little flat in showjumping or dicey in dressage but is a mega machine on cross-country could get away with having a slightly weak link. Not today. A four-star horse must be bold. He has to be fancy enough to get good scores but quiet enough to ride correctly. He must be brave, agile, fast and scopey and still sound enough on Sunday to pass the jog and leave all the rails up. What a four-star horse really needs is a four-star rider.
It isn't going to happen. The world has changed. There is no land, no foxhunting, no steeplechase rides. It is also a different group of people. This is my 57th year competing. I've been Eventing since '62 when judges were military guys so the sport was still close to its military roots. Technically it was a great test, but it's not going to happen. The Training and Preliminary three-days are great opportunities to ride horses that want to jump all day. He's on fire on XC if he's the right horse. Do you know how nervous you get before showjumping? Imagine doing a second showjumping round almost immediately. You'll be a lot less nervous and it's easier; that's what it's like on XC after doing steeplechase.
5. How does a conditioning program change from the short format to the long format?
They had to be such a bloody rock to do 18 miles. When I was at Burghley in '74 the endurance test was 17.7 miles. You had to have a horse that could go all day and had to be at almost Tevis Cup fitness. The heart, feet, and lungs had to be fit. Like Iron Man. I think the short format is harder because it is easier to run at a steady pace for a long time than run like a scared rabbit, set up, showjump a fence, run, SJ, etc. That's really hard on a horse. I don't think people have quite figured out how to get ready for the short format.
I watched the Wofford Cup in 1961. I was riding Morgans and doing 100-mile endurance races at the time. I had never jumped. I was 20. I wanted to do it because I did not know how. (Left: Denny and Paint at his first competition, 1954 -- times are different and these days cool kids wear helmets all the time when riding)
7. Has your experience in Eventing affected your approach to Endurance in any way? Or vise versa?
I was 15 years old when I did my first 100-mile race. Everybody used to do Endurance. You learned how to get horses fit the long and slow way. There are two kinds of fitness. The heart and lungs get fit the fastest before the muscles and tendons which get fit before the hooves and bones, which are the slowest to get fit. To get rock hard fit, you had to do tons of long slow miles on pavement and up hills. The fitness of an Endurance rider is to gut it out, not have the iron quick reflexes of an Advanced Event rider.
8. Who are three up and coming riders to watch out for?
Like Jimmy says, you always go to the "usual suspects"...the two Wills [Faudree and Coleman]. Michael Pollard, I think he's a sleeper who just doesn't have the stock right now. Rebecca Howard is a good girl. She has guts. There are 10 or 15 of them out there who just need to catch a break with the right horses.
9. Do you have a favorite horse from your career?
I think the best horse I've had is York, who I bought from New Zealand in the mid-70's. The American Eventing community didn't know how susceptible to worms the horses from New Zealand and Australia are. So I lost two years with him to worms. Then he came back and won Chesterland and was USEA Horse of the Year. York would be a horse in 2010 who could still be a big time horse. Victor Dakin was a cross-country machine, but he wouldn't be good today because he was bad in dressage. (Right: Denny and York at Groton House, 1979. York was bought sight-unseen from NZ through Lockie Richards)
10. What are your interests besides horses?
I write some, I read, garden, build stone walls...but I'm pretty interested in horses. I like breeding and jumpers. I have a theory that in the next 10 years if Eventing doesn't keep changing....When I started 48 years ago, the speeds were identical but the courses were more flowing. I think they could try slowing down the speeds by 20 mpm or so. See if it allows the riders more time to gallop and set up where they don't have to run like scared rabbits in between fences. There is going to be a Congressional hearing if we don't stop losing riders and horses. Someone will come down on us like a ton of bricks. Last year, Phillip had two rotational falls and lost one horse. Zara had a rotational fall, broke her collarbone and lost her horse. That is not a fixed sport. Somehow we have to figure out how to make it safe without gutting it. You are going to be the ones to figure it out; I don't know how to do it. We should start trying new things. [Here Denny quoted from the poem "Charge of the Light Brigade" by Alfred, Lord Tennyson] "Theirs not to make reply / Theirs not to reason why / Theirs but to do & die / Into the Valley of Death." That's what our riders are like. They don't analyze, they just do it. The upper-level riders need to be more advocates for fixing the sport. They don't make waves but they have the most invested. I don't know if it's the shift to the short format or if it's because the sport is more suburbanized. No seat-of-the-pants stuff. Kids learned to be clever and ride in the backseat by going out and being defensive, aggressive riders. Kids need to get savvy. Imagine Buck's experience compared to 99% of the riders. He rode ponies, foxhunted, steeplechased, all because he was Bruce's son. It's not their fault, it's just a different world.
Thanks Denny for educating Eventing Nation, and thanks for reading!
Peter Atkins and HJ Hampton "Henny" have stormed onto the eventing scene this spring by combining great rides, quality horsemanship, and awesome technology. Henny and Peter have developed a loyal base of fans who love the helmet cam videos--hint hint sponsorship companies. Peter was kind enough to answer a few questions for Eventing Nation. Let's take a moment to get to know Peter and Henny.
----1. Tell us about Henny's personality.
He is a very complex horse, as are most "special horses". He came to me quite brain fried from the Hunters and wouldn't even canter a cross rail happily. He is the bravest XC horse, yet he is scared of anything different on the ground especially the shadows of power lines on the road, changes of color in the grass, even tire tracks after the arena has been dragged! He has a weird tongue fetish, he'll see you coming, whip his head in little circles until he gets his tongue out the left side and then will ask you to scratch it. Though the thing he loves the most is looking after our son, Owen. Whether he is in a lead line class, or Owen is just holding him, Henny just loves him.
2. Whose idea was the helmet cam?
I asked one of my owners, who doesn't get to many events, if she would like to see what I see going XC, she said yes and paid for the camera, www.equicamhd.com. I put the first one on youtube for her to see and it started. I was actually quite surprised how cool it looked and how quickly it caught the attention of everyone.
3. How is Eventing different in the US than Australia? Likes and dislikes?
When I was a younger (not sure if I have grown up yet) my father was a MFH and I was on staff from when I was 12 or 13. As well as eventing our family did a lot of show jumping, point to pointing (races for fox hunters over hunt type courses), trained steeple chasers, I rode in a few professional hurdle races and steeplechases. Most riders didn't just event they rode in multiple disciplines. Here most event riders just event and (in my opinion) try to be too technical and controlling on XC. I see too many people trying to show jump every jump, especially combinations, then going really fast in between. I feel more riders need to get out of the ring and gallop/jump unknown jumps, ie fox hunting, before they start going XC. I learnt to jump the most "unsafe' jumps in the world, when the hounds headed off in the bush you go where they go, if there is a four strand, 4ft, barbed wire fence in the way you jump it! That is how I learned to be defensive in my body position. I think too many Americans treat XC jumps like stadium jumps, they aren't, XC jumps don't fall down.
4. Do you have a good luck charm? Rituals? Superstitions?
Not really. I hate luck. I have had a lot of bad luck in the last few years. I would hate to come off a course and have someone say, "you were lucky to get round". I prefer no luck, no bad and not needing good luck. I just want to ride well and have fun. Isn't that why we do this? To have fun! I hate it when people say good luck, how about saying "have a great ride!" I seem to have a knack for finding 4 leaf clovers anywhere they grow but every time I have ever picked one, I've had terrible luck. Every time I have given one to a friend/client, they have had terrible luck. I saw a lot of them walking the course at Rolex, I left them all there. I guess the only superstition I have is to never pick 4 leaf clovers!
5. How did you begin Eventing?
I was born into it. My mother was on the Australian long list for the LA Olympics.
6. What are you doing when you're not at the barn?
Not at the barn? Hmmm, now there's a concept. I feed the boys every morning and night and ride them in between. When I stopped riding for a few years in '04 and '05, I got pretty competitive in IPSC pistol shooting. It is very much the same concept as eventing, various kinds of courses with 6 - 32 targets that have to be shot as quickly and accurately as possible. HUGE adrenaline rush, equal to running around Rolex XC. Unfortunately I only get to shoot 3 or 4 times a year.
Link: full Henny Rolex course at www.runhennyrun.com
7. What is the hardest lesson to learn with horses?
Humility, every time I think I have figured something out, something else comes up. I discovered a long time ago the more I learn about horses, the more I realize how little I really know and much more I have to figure out.
8. I love how verbal you are with your horses on cross-country! Do you find it makes a difference?
YES, I walk out in the morning to feed them and they say Hello, if I don't say hello back they look unhappy. Henny especially is very verbal, he loves to be talked to. Training all my horses I am always telling them what I want them to do, it seems to work, after a while I just have to think it and they generally are trying to do it.
9. What do you tell your students about communicating verbally with their horse on course?
In all my training I teach my students to verbally "tell" their horses what to do. Just like when you are lunging a horse, if they are connected with you and you say canter they canter. If you are on a horse and set it up so they can do the correct thing, then verbally tell them to do it, they tend to do it. My whole riding philosophy is to figure out how to make it easy for the horse to do what you want him/her to do. If we make it easy for them to do what we want them to do they will make our life really easy. The next step is to figure out how to make them think it is their idea to do what we want them to do.
10. You and Henny now have a huge base of fans from the helmet cam videos. Did you expect such a big reaction when you made the videos?
Thanks Peter and go eventing.







