Do you have the courage to gallop a four mile course with solid jumps (about 30 of them) ranging up to four feet high and almost ten feet wide (at the base)? I sure don’t. Very few riders in the world have both that opportunity and moxie; however, I got to ride the course at Rolex Kentucky–at a walk.
My trail guide was Olympic eventing gold medalist Leslie Law who narrated the course from the perspective of a competitor!
An excerpt from “My Ride with the Law (at Rolex!)”:
Never in my wildest dreams would I have thought I’d ever have the chance to ride the Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event cross-country course during the “Best Weekend All Year” in April! Especially since I’ve had my horse for less than a year and I’m not an eventer. (Details, details!) Thanks to the five-star hospitality of the country’s lone four-star event, and as a Sidelines Magazine representative, I was able to join a team of media members on a sneak preview trail ride to see several sections of course designer Derek di Grazia’s masterpiece on the bluegrass.
A Distinguished Trail Guide
As if the honor of riding the course at Rolex Kentucky wasn’t enough, our trail guide was 2004 Olympic individual gold medalist for Great Britain, eventer Leslie Law. Following the end of the dressage day-one press conference, a posse of golf carts whisked us off to meet our mounts tacked up in Western saddles. Leslie greeted us sporting jeans, sneakers and a riding helmet.
I rode Rainbell, a chestnut mare with a long mane and white face. All of the writers had to sign waivers warning us that riding is inherently a dangerous activity and that we’d ride responsibly and only at a walk. I smirked thinking that our stroll around the jumps was probably pretty low on the scale of danger. Rainbell sporadically gave me a jig of a trot, but no one seemed to notice. It was a brisk spring day in Lexington and I too was excited to ride the course at Rolex Kentucky!
Click here to read the rest of this article featured in the July issue of Sidelines magazine.
Your Turn: How would you like to ride the course at Rolex Kentucky? Would you rather walk the course on a trail horse in a Western saddle going AROUND the fences OR gallop the course on a veteran Rolex horse, jumping OVER the fences–you would literally just have to steer and hang on and you would magically be assured of no falls?
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haha if that magical mythical veteran rolex horse existed that required nothing but steering – yea, i would 100% choose that option lol. but somehow i suspect even the most veteran of xc horses would ask for a little more support… meaning realistically i’d be on the trail horse instead 😉
I think a trail ride around the jumps sounds just fine to me! So cool that you got to do that!
ABSOLUTELY JUMP ALL THE THINGZ! I think if Arwen could magically grow longer legs she’d also be raring to go!
Give me a few shots of tequila and I’d confidently tell you I could get a 12 hand pony around the course, despite having never jumped anything bigger than 90cms myself 😉 I’d absolutely take the chance to jump that course on a good horse! It’d fulfill my lifelong International Velvet fantasy. And if the course were Badminton rather than Kentucky, all the better 😉
Over or through!!! No around for me, please. 😀
OMG!! I bet that was awesome!! magically no falls?? Heck yeah Id hang on for dear life!!!