Photo of the Week: Sharing a laugh

Anna Rau shares a laugh with her OTTB gelding Iceberg Lounge.

Anna Rau shares a laugh with her OTTB gelding Iceberg Lounge.

Anna Rau used to write the words “my own horse” at the end of her mother’s grocery shopping lists. “She’s written it on every one since she was 2,” says Kate Rau. After realizing her daughter wasn’t going to outgrow the dream of owning her own horse, the family purchased off-track Thoroughbred Iceberg Lounge nearly two years ago.

The gray gelding is terrified of dragonflies and his own tail, but adores Anna. “It’s been a really good fit; he is devoted to her and she is to him,” Kate says. Iceberg, who is now named Areion, is doing liberty training with Anna.

In this picture, Anna was simply sitting quietly, on a beautiful summer day, making her energy inviting so that he would want to come to her, looking for a connection.

In the future, Anna plans to study veterinary sciences with the goal of becoming a large-animal vet.

A bold T’bred trains with Grand Prix jumper

Milyone and Grand Prix jumper Erika Cooper pose at a recent show in California.

Milyone and Grand Prix jumper Erika Cooper pose at a recent show in California.

A California OTTB who passed from the finest hands in horseracing to an owner so devoted she made sure the spirited red gelding got everything he could ever want, has begun to show promise as he trains with FEI Grand Prix jumper Erika Cooper.

Milyone, a Kentucky bred great-great grandson of Majestic Prince who was once trained by Kentucky Derby winning trainer John Shirreffs, has continued his grand affiliations with good horsemen at the direction of his doting owner, Linda Moss.

After providing an abundance of care to address feet and back issues—treatments included months of rigorous chiropractic, theraplate, and functional stimulation therapies at Templeton Farms Equestrian in California, Moss decided it was time to get her horse equivalent of a sports car to someone gifted enough to bring out his sport horse talents.

Milyone
Sire: Maria’s Mon
Dam: Queen of Millbrook
Foal date: March 1, 2005
“My husband and I are proud to be able to do this for him. We have such a special connection to him … and we wanted to give him the opportunity to do what he’s meant to do,” Moss says. “The way John Shirreffs trains his horses, he always puts the horse first. And we tried to mirror that, by doing everything we could for him” before turning him loose on the sport horse world.

And when he finally got a chance to strut his stuff, he was quite a powerhouse, says Cooper, noting that the very first thing she taught him was where the brakes were.

“When I first got on Milyone, he was strong and fresh and would whinny and pull me along,” she says. “The first time I took him out on an endurance hill, he was so wild I had to keep him glued to the fence line; I think it took us two months to have a normal riding day.”

Soon after, they clicked so well that Cooper can conduct phone interviews while riding him on the buckle!

Cooper describes Milyone as a brave jumper.

Cooper describes Milyone as a brave jumper.

Thrilled with the opportunity to train Moss’s treasured OTTB, Cooper is starting Milyone in the deep end of the pool. Though careful not to “over face” him with jumps too imposing, she is seasoning him at A-rated shows, helping him acclimate to the big atmosphere while competing in shows against the very best Warmbloods and competitive sport horses.

In April, the pair participated in the 94th annual Flintridge Horse Show, competing in classes with as many as 28 other horses. Despite the overwhelming atmosphere of 300 horses, Moss notes her horse showed “flashes of brilliance” in his maiden voyage.

And Cooper concurs that Milyone just well may be off to a roaring start in his second career.

“He’s got a lot of jump in him and he’s definitely brave,” Cooper says, noting that in a sport dominated by Warmbloods, she is proud to ride a Thoroughbred where few compete.

“I grew up working with racehorses and I started working with them when I was 12,” Cooper says. “I kept my own first OTTB until he died at age 24. I’ve just always loved their heart and bravery. I get that same sense with Milyone … and I would love to see a horse like him do well in a world dominated by Warmbloods.”

T’bred went from ugly duckling to dressage star

The Roman Knows and Kelly Vineyard are an award-winning dressage team.

The Roman Knows and Kelly Vineyard are an award-winning dressage team.

A Roman-nosed racehorse once thought to be a bit of an ugly duckling has so thoroughly transformed himself into a creature of beauty and talent in the Dressage ring, that his longtime rider swears she is forever sold on Thoroughbreds to do for her what her Dutch Warmblood never could.

Kelly Vineyard of Gainesville, Fla. says she owes everything to her short, narrow-necked OTTB.

Her aptly named gelding The Roman Knows helped pluck her from relative obscurity in Level 2 Dressage—where she was marooned for years struggling on her Dutch Warmblood— to the highest levels of a rarified sport.

Together, the pair moved swiftly up the ranks, earning USDF Bronze and Silver, and competing strongly in the Prix St. Georges.

The Roman Knows
Sire: Quinton
Dam: Miss Crystal W.
Foal date: May 10, 1994
With awards too numerous to count, but which Vineyard keeps tucked in a three-ring binder for posterity, the greatest achievement was that an equine few would look twice at rose to become the horse of a lifetime; achieving High Point wins at every level, a first-place in Prix St. George in 2006, and the USDF all-breed win in 2008.

“Before I bought Roman in 2008, I sat on many Warmbloods searching for the perfect dressage horse,” she says. “I tried tons of horses by the time I tried him. And I remember thinking that he wasn’t very impressive looking. He wasn’t the type of horse you’d look at in the paddock and say, wow! But, he had straight legs, and he was balanced, so I decided to try him.”

He had her at the first ride.

Roman did for Kelly Vineyard in the dressage ring what no Warmblood could.

Roman did for Kelly Vineyard in the dressage ring what no Warmblood could.

“I knew instantly that he was right for me,” she says. “He was so light and easy for me, so forward and so sensitive. I knew when I got on him there was something very special about him.”

By this point in Roman’s life, he was already a schoolmaster who had already earned his 2006 Prix St. George first place, but he was by no means a push-button pony all takers could ride. “A couple of others had tried him as well and he ran backwards with them,” she says. “So the people involved in his sale knew that the fact I was able to walk and trot him” was a very good sign.

As Roman eases toward retirement at 21, he presides over a barn and paddock as an accomplished athlete and a family member who agreeably teaches Vineyard’s 4-year-old to ride. A schoolmaster loved beyond measure, whose 15.3 hand frame moved flawlessly into a level she never would have imagined, was nearly overlooked as the ugly duckling when she first met him in 2008.

“I still remember when I first looked at him and thought, ewww, you want me to ride him? But after our life accomplishments together … I’m never going back to another breed. His gaits might not be quite as fancy as the others, but he had a consistency that was unmatched,” she says. “It got to the point that every time we went into the ring I knew I was going to get a ribbon.

“And because of Roman, the next horse I get will be an off-track Thoroughbred.”