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Papa Kieffs

Papa Kieffs is a legend in Area VIII and most of the areas on the east coast.  Since my first days in young riders with Lauren Kieffer, her Dad has been there every step of the way as a prime example of the important role fathers play on our sport.  Lauren, thanks for writing this about Papa Kieffs and thank you for reading.
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Lauren Kieffer, Papa Kieffs, and David O'Connor in cowboy form

From Lauren:

A lot of you know my wonderful Dad--he goes by Papa Kieffs.  And if you do know him, it's most likely because he has fixed your bike/truck/flat tire/generator/camper/trailer or because he removed that stud that NO ONE can get out (heck, you probably can't get it out because he put it in).  Or maybe it is because you have been lucky enough to be around the campground when he has fried or grilled some form of deliciousness.

Papa Kieffs has been to countless events and worn at least as many hats. He has always been the official stud put-er-iner and the MacGyver of competitions, finding a way to fix anything.

Fortunately, as I eased out of the teen years he was able to drop the role of mediator between me and my mother (and by mediator I mean that when my smart mouth would out run my behind he would pull me aside and kick my behind).  He has been in every D Box from my first one star to Rolex and he can shlep water like a pro.

I'm fortunate enough to have one of the best Dads in eventing and I think we can all agree that the shows just wouldn't be as fun without all the Papas in the barns.

Young Riders Tips from Lauren Kieffer

It seems like a millennia ago now, but Lauren and I were teammates on the Area 8 YR team in '05 and '06.  The team in '06 was stacked--we had one Rolex horse, Bru McGuire, two future Rolex horses in Lauren Kieffer's Snooze Alarm and Hannah Burnett's Keep the Faith, and my horse was a XC machine.  To make a long story short, everyone on our team had high hopes, but by the time I started on course we already had two throw-out scores.  I'm glad that Holly, our coach, didn't tell me because I doubt I would have gotten around clean if I had known that we were out of the team competition.  Looking back, I was never that rider who was fanatically excited about Young Riders.  I always looked at Young Riders as just another three-day, but I did really enjoy being a part of a great team and having my score matter for more than just the individual result.

As an aside, I still tell the story about Bru McGuire being the only horse I have ever seen trot over the drop into the Head of the Lake at Rolex.  I was back in the vet box watching the live feed and all of the riders started to freak out, but, honestly, it never seemed like a bad strategy to me.  There's no way that horse was going to stop and it prevented him from running at the log.  But I digress.

Young Riders '10 starts today at the Kentucky Horse Park, where a new set of memories will be made by a new group of talented young riders.  Please be sure to check out our new question of the week, which is about Young Riders.  Links: CH-Y** entries, CH-J* entries, NAYRC Blog

Lauren was kind enough to take a trip down memory lane and send in a few words of advice for this year's Yong Riders.  Thanks for writing this Lauren and thank you for reading.
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Lauren at YR '07

O Young Rider's Championships, where to begin... well I guess technically that's not what it is called, it's the NAJYRC..LNOPQYRST. It's been adding letters for as long as I have done it. I competed at the NAJYRC three years in a row, '05, '06, and '07, and it was basically an epic fail, but I don't regret a minute of it and took away a huge amount of life experience. The whole process is a great experience for Young Rider's whether you are just doing it for the fun of it or whether you want to go on to be a professional. Some of my closest friends were made during the camps, training sessions, and competitions, and we are still close today. Here are a few tips I can pass down to you going to your first NAJYRC or looking to go in the future. 

1. Plan ahead. I have known way too many people who decided they wanted to do NAJYRC but didn't do their research into qualifications and in the end couldn't go. Or just counted on doing it at the last minute and missed out because of a silly runout at one of their qualifying runs. If considering going to Young Riders at all in the future make a schedule and go over it with your area's Chef d'equipe or Coach, even if you don't know them yet that is what they are here for, just shoot them an email ask their opinion. 

2. Use your area's camps and training session to your full advantage. Even if you are several years from being ready for Young Rider's go watch and get to know and understand the process. 

3. Talk to your area's Chefs and Coach. For a lot of us from smaller areas the NAJYRC is really our first experience with jogs, qualifications, CICs, and CCIs. Take advantage of your Coach's professional experience and ask questions, nothing is worse then going into it all without a clue, trust me, I was clueless my first year and it just makes it that much more confusing, they are there to help you. 

4. Be a team player. Stick together and help each other out. 

5. Last but not least, Enjoy it! I have so many memories from NAJYRC and very few of them are from the actual competition, of course that could just be me wanting to forget haha. It's most of our first experience with being on a team and you would be amazed how close you can become by the end of the week with people that were merely acquaintances at the beginning. Of course maybe in my teams case it was more of a bond formed by a vow of secrecy to never confess to all the pranks we pulled....

Lauren Kieffer and Snooze Alarm: Rolex Recap

In her latest entry, our guest writer Lauren Kieffer describes the event that turned her into an official four-star rider.  I was so proud of Lauren throughout the entire weekend at Rolex.  Lauren's XC was one of the highest quality rides on Saturday and that's coming from people much higher up on the food chain than myself.  One day you are going to look back and think to yourself: that girl that's standing on the podium -- I read about her first 4* on Eventing Nation.

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Well my little Arab jumped around "The Three Day That Shall Not Be Named". I guess we can call it Rolex now. Rolex was a great experience all around. I think the hardest part is how anti-climatic it is when it's finally over and enjoying it without picking apart every mistake. The whole week started on a high when I won the Dubarry boots for best dressed at the first jog. I considered going home while I was ahead, I was afraid my luck may have peaked too early in the week! There was a lot of laughter in the barns about winning best dressed considering I am rarely seen in anything but my trusty camo hat and Carhartt, but I busted it out for the jog, I wanted those boots badddd. 

We did our dressage Thursday afternoon and Snooze was pretty lit by the atmosphere, it was a great feeling trotting into that grandstand arena though. He wanted to be pretty fresh and we had some less than stellar moments but he also had some really good moments such as his extensions and changes. The great part about doing our dressage on Thursday was having all day Friday to think about my cross country. I got up and had a great jump school in the morning and then took another walk around my course. The more I walked it the less nervous I got and the more I was looking forward to it. 

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I was pretty excited when Cathy Weischoff asked me to ride in the Mounted Games at noon and it was a risky but fun distraction. My trusty steed was a tiny pony named Chip. We took a warm up lap around the arena and he seemed pretty rideable so Cathy and I had a little race, and let me tell you, Chip may be small but he is a strong little bugger and I may have mauled down a group of Pony Clubbers in an attempt to stop. I was on team Gummi Bears who were great sports in explaining the games to me and darn it if these kids can't ride. The Gummi Bears did end up winning the prestigious Prince Phillip Cup at the end of the weekend. I like to think Chip and I played a small part in their success, or maybe it was more like they won despite us.... 

Saturday morning rolled around, luckily I got a good night's sleep because for some reason I get sleepy whenever I'm nervous. I got up and took a last walk around the course and then I went back to my stall and took a nap till I needed to hop on. The best part about getting on is that once you are sitting on your horse the nerves go away and you focus on your job. We had a great warm up, he was fresh but rideable so we headed to the start box, we walked around it a couple times, 10-here it is-9-8-the biggest countdown of my life so far-7-6-now or never-5-4-HOLD. You can't be serious. Well ok I can wait another minute, the countdown starts again 10-9-8-7-do you mean it this time?-6-5-don't mess with me-4-3-2-1-GO! OK! And we were finally off! Snooze went right into a rhythm from the start and was right on everything. He just kept jumping bigger and better the whole way around and finished the course a very brave and happy pony. It was such a great feel jumping through the Duck Pond, the first real question and thinking "We've got this." And galloping down to the Head of the Lake and seeing the crowd, and nothing beats crossing the finish line with all of your friends and family cheering. 

Snooze's Arab blood was evident in the D box when his low heart rate amazed the vets and he recovered quickly and was mostly concerned about how much grass he could shove into his mouth. It was nice going so early and after some fluids and a few icings we just let him rest and recover. He came out on Sunday morning feeling great and was a gentleman at the jog. 

And finally it was time for show jumping, my low point of the weekend. He warmed up really well and I was feeling really confident going in, but unfortunately it didn't go as planned. #2 to #3 were two oxers on a pretty forward 7 strides, I was on the fence about whether to do it in 7 or 8 strides because he doesn't have a big stride but I had watched several people go and they all did the 7 and I made the rookie error of doing what everyone else does instead of doing the right thing for my horse. I didn't get the 7 done and we crashed into the 3rd fence. Let me tell you, it was about the longest five seconds of my life watching that fence fall down, but I refused to let myself get flustered so I gave him a pat, waited for the ground crew to get that entire freakin jump set back up while trying to ignore the thousands of people staring at me and my little Arab, and then carried on with the course which he jumped brilliantly, not touching a rail. 

I felt like I had let Snooze and his fans down but on the other hand I can promise you that I will not make the same mistake twice and I have come out of the weekend more motivated than ever. 

Snooze is now in Virginia living his fat kid dreams for the next month and now I am in Florida jumping back into reality riding and packing to turn around and go to Virginia on Thursday. We haven't made a concrete plan for the fall yet but who knows, maybe the Maggot will be leaving on a jet plane....

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Chapter 1234


So the three week countdown begins.  It definitely took until the drive home for it to hit me that "the three day that shall not be named" is almost here.  As most of you who have spent any amount of time around eventing realizes, it is always safer to be a bit of a pessimist because SOMETHING always goes wrong no matter what your plan is or how good your program is.  One of the best things Karen and David have ever told me about this sport is to not let the highs get you too high because the lows are so low. So granted, a lot of things could still go wrong, but it's looking like getting there is a very good possibility.


We just got back from The Fork, which was gorgeous as always.  Hannah won the Advanced, woo hoo! And even though John would never write about himself on Eventing Nation I'll do it for him and tell everyone he had a great go on his horse, Everest.  Snooze was in the CIC*** and was pretty good.  The dressage test has a lot of canter work and when your horse's natural canter is like a camel with hip dysplasia it doesn't bode well for the score, he was actually pretty good though and got a 54, which is a 4 point improvement from the last time he did that test.  The cross country course was really nice, The Fork always seems to have a good flow and Snooze felt really confident and straight the whole way around, I was quite slow though which really always irritates you at the end of the day but we will save it for when it counts.  We had one rail in the show jumping but it was mine not his and he was a lot more rideable and flowing throughout the course.


So at the end of the day, I'm feeling pretty confident.  I'm sitting on a horse that after having ridden for 9 years knows me as well as I know him, and I have the best coaches, vet, farrier, friends, and family as a support team.  But regardless of how confident I am, I'm still pretty sure I'm getting an ulcer.  Now I will just spend the next three weeks keeping up on our fitness, practicing our test, and being as prepared as we can be.  So everyone cross your fingers for us and hopefully the next time I write to you will be from Kentucky!

Lauren Kieffer and Snooze Alarm PTR: Chapter 4

From Lauren:

Poplar Place ran a great show this weekend, the weather was super and everything was organized really well.  It felt like a vacation because I sold two of my horses last week so I only had the three.

The Maggot put in one of his better dressage tests, a big improvement over Pine Top but unfortunately the score didn't reflect that.  Sometimes the judges don't like my little arab so we were about midpack after the day.  His trot work scored quite well but his walk and canter did not.  It's a fine line with him in the walk and canter going forward without letting him look lateral, because that is how he likes to go.  So going home I'm going to have to work on letting the judges see what I want them to see without crossing that line.

The Advanced cross country was a good track, they asked the right questions, although I would have liked the gallop fences to be a little bigger just so he would have held off them more.  I had to waste a lot of time bringing him back just because he wasn't impressed, but I guess that is kind of a good thing.  They had the burial mound on course as usual but after about the first seven horses, three had fallen, so they took it off just before I went out.  The jump judges ran out and were waving their arms in front of it so I would know not to jump it which nearly got me dumped, don't they k now arabs have never seen humans before?!  He also nearly took out my knee cap on the fence after the finish because he was spooking at a dressage letter.  Clearly after jumping around an advanced that is the scariest thing he has ever seen, riggggghhhtttt, I think he's fit enough if he has enough energy to worry about that.

Show jumping was proof that you can't always count on the scoreboard to know if a round was good or not.  He jumped clean but he was not very rideable, nothing disastrous but not much rhythm too it.  The unfortunate thing with losing your young rider status is you don't get to be excited just for jumping clean.  I'm working on a fake ID that says I'm 18, it's taking some work to find someone to make it, apparently there isn't a high demand for underage IDs.  Fortunately they are having an unrecognized three phase show at the Florida Horse Park this weekend so he is going to a few of the lower show jumping classes for a little refresher course.

We are off to The Fork next, one of my favorite events.  If that goes super well we will be headed to  "the  three day that shall not be named".  My life has turned into a Harry Potter Movie for the poor people around me, talking about Rolex is like talking about Lord Voldemort, under absolutely no circumstances are you allowed to say the word Rolex out loud.  Luckily Hannah has been through it all before so she is handling all the details and all I have to do is keep my head out of my butt and ride my horse well.

So until after The Fork, everyone enjoy the nicer weather and I'll talk to ya'll soon.

Lauren Kieffer and Snooze Alarm PTR: Chapter 3

In our latest guest blog, Lauren writes about her performance last weekend at Pine Top.  One of the characteristics that makes Lauren one of our country's brightest rising stars is her ability to objectively analyze her performance as a rider.  Hearing some of the A&B listers out there talk, or reading their blogs, makes me think that they might have better results if, every once in a while, they started looking for answers rather than excuses.  Thanks for writing Lauren, and thank you for reading.


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From Lauren:

Well this weekend was one of those weekends that the first thing I wanted to do when I got home that night was hole up with my friend Jim Beam and pout, but before I got too far into my glass of bourbon and coke I needed to evaluate my weekend and get over myself because I'm pretty lucky to have made it home with a sound self and sound horses. 

So the first thing I looked at was my dressage performances. They were all pretty mediocre and the biggest problem was that my horses weren't half halting well enough in the ring, so now that I'm home I need to spend a lot of time in the ring and work on my horses half halting from my seat and waiting in the corners so that when I get to the show and they are tense or excited by the atmosphere I have that tool to work with. One good thing about Snooze's test was that although I didn't have that tool when I needed it, the quality of his gaits in his lateral work was better than it was in the fall last year so I know I've gone in the right direction with that. 

Next was the show jumping, Snooze was very good and overall all the horses were quite good, only having one rail between the five of them. (Note to self- look into becoming a showjumper: better hours, no riding in unsavory weather, more money.... Hmmm) 

And last but not least, the cross country. Snooze was a wild man, especially to the gallop fences, although quite rideable and attentive in the combinations. I ended up with a lot of time penalties though because I had to spend a long time bringing him back after galloping because he was so strong. I'm going to have to experiment with bits over the next few weeks but I'm thinking I will switch him from his full cheek twisted snaffle to a three ring and see if he is more responsive to the added leverage. 

Overall, my performance at Pine Top was pretty mediocre but things could always be worse and one of the best things you can do after a rough weekend is use it as an opportunity to look back and see what you need to work on and go home and fix things so you can come back out and give it a better try next time around. 

Snooze's next event will be the Advanced at Poplar Place Horse Trials in three weeks so I have lots of time to practice and school for a better performance, although Snooze may take some convincing because I'm pretty sure he thinks his performance was perfectly fine, clearly his modifications to the dressage test deserved extra points and if I had just let him run as fast as he wanted we would have finished WELL inside of the time on cross country, but lucky for me Snooze can't talk. 

Let's make sure we keep the riders that had bad falls this weekend in our thoughts and prayers for speedy recoveries and quick returns. And the Maggot and I will talk to ya'll again soon!

So as we all know eventing is the most predictable sport and career choice anyone could decide to devote their entire life to... predictable as in that you can guarantee that no matter what your plans and schedule are they are most definitely not going to go as planned.  Luckily, the blip in my plan was pretty  minor, at least for this week.  Snooze was suppose to have his first outing at the Florida Horse Park in the intermediate this weekend but unfortunately he pulled a muscle in his back so I couldn't put a saddle on him for a couple days, so then I did a frantic scramble to scratch him from there and enter him in the the preliminary at Rocking Horse on the Tuesday, which I never could have gotten done without the patience and understanding of the awesome event secretaries Jennifer Holling (who had to deal with me being a pretty big pain in the you know what all weekend since I was running 5 other horses) and Rick Dunkerton putting me into Rocking Horse at the last minute.  I'm pretty sure event secretaries should get saint hood or knighted or maybe we should all just bring them a bottle of their favorite booze every once in awhile, because I sure know if it was me I would most definitely not answer my calls.

As for Snooze's run at Rocking Horse, he was a pretty big brat for the dressage, but what can you do but laugh when you go to trot around the dressage ring and your 3* horse stops dead and snorts like an elephant at the letter K, sure haven't ever seen a dressage ring before.  But his changes were clean, even though they aren't in the preliminary test.... minor details.  The judges comments probably read something like "horse a bit green and tense today, with time and experience he may have potential for the future..."  He was super in the show jumping and on cross country and I pulled him up after he got his feet wet at the water because I didn't want to run him the whole track when he's suppose to compete in the advanced at Pine Top in 10 days.  The next fence judge was pretty confused when I pulled up petting my horse and telling him what a good boy he was," um you know that's not the finish right?"

I most definitely have to give a shout out to Kendal Lehari who busted her hump all weekend competing her own horse and coming back to the farm and keeping Snooze going while I was at the event, and to Annie Yaeger (she's going to be soooo stoked to get two shout outs, she deserves them though), for being helper/groom at the show for Karen, Hannah, and myself all weekend.  And of course Maximus Corcoran for all her help and for making sure I keep my sense of humor when Snooze tries to make a fool of me every chance he gets.  And I most definitely can't leave out KOC and DOC, I couldn't do this without them, and my owners and sponsors and parents and friends and family.....  We all know that it takes a huge team and a lot of support to get this done. 

Snooze and I will be off to Pine Top with KOC next weekend with a trailerful and if everyone could just cross their fingers for no snow for us that would be super.  Until then, stay tuned in the EN!  

Our Path to Rolex series continues with a good friend of mine, Lauren Kieffer.  I met Lauren and Snooze when riding on the first of our two Young Rider teams together, and since then she has developed into a fantastic rider under the tutelage of David and Karen at OCET.  Lauren's OCET teammate, Hannah Burnett, will also be writing about her spring for us (check back soon), and both Lauren and Hannah are two of America's rising stars.  Thank you for reading.



From Lauren:

Hello Eventing Nation! I'm really excited to have been invited to keep you all up to date over the next several months as I make my first attempt at Rolex Kentucky CCI****. If I were you I wouldn't always believe all the nice things John says about Hannah and I, he's just trying to keep on our good side since we are letting him sleep on our couch, but I'll try not to disappoint all of you. 

I'll start by just telling you all a little bit about my horse Snooze Alarm and what we have been up to so far. I've had Snooze AKA The Maggot for 9 years now, and just as a side note I would not recommend for anyone to buy a four year old, barely broke, redheaded, Arabian as their 13 year old kids first event horse, of course my parents can't be blamed because I did bust out the tears and a "but, but Daddy, I LOVE him!" when I got told no. We had a great time until I tried to move up to Intermediate and broke my back when I was 17 and once I recovered from that and my parents realized I was too ignorant to be scared they shipped me off to Karen and David's, which is where Snooze and I have been ever since. We've done a lot together including three NAJYRC's (Go Area VIII!), we've been named to the Developing Rider's List twice, the B-List, and have spent the last two years doing advanced horse trials, CIC***'s, and a CCI***. I have a lot to thank him for. 

He had a nice vacation this winter and is rarin' to go. He's been going for long trots and flatting and had his first jump and canter last week. His work load will start getting upped over the next couple weeks and the plan right now is to do an Intermediate at the Florida Horse Park Winter II and then we'll head up to Pine Top to freeze our tails off and do the Advanced.

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