Showing posts with label Golden Lightning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Golden Lightning. Show all posts

Sunday, July 11, 2010

A Blessing in Mule's Feet



Golden Lightning and Jan Worthington win the 2009 75 miler at Fort Howes

This is one of a series of profiles of horses and riders on track for competing for 5 spots on the US Team for the World Endurance Championship, part of the 2010 Alltech FEI World Equestrian Games, to be held on September 26th, in Lexington, Kentucky.

Sunday July 11 2010

2010 WEG: Golden Lightning and Rider Jan Worthington - A Blessing in Mule's Feet

This is what happens when you aren't fast enough to be a racehorse:

You finish 23 of 24 endurance rides. You win 4 times, you win 2 Best Condition awards. You get a round trip all-expense paid air ticket to Malaysia. You survive a lightning strike. You get a round trip all expense paid air ticket to the UAE.

Namely, you end up in the barn of Jan Worthington in Scales Mound, Illinois.

And to think she almost sent him back.

"I bought him just by looking at his pictures - which was a big risk, because you don't know what their minds or soundness will be like - but when he arrived here, his feet were not the same as the pictures I was sent!" The former owner Leon had sent pictures of some big solid round horse feet. 'Leon' the horse had little mule feet.

Which turned out to be an asset. "With feet like this," Jan's farrier told her, "He'll stay sound forever." And so far he has. (Except for the time with the lightning bolt...)

That was 4 years ago, when Leon - Golden Lightning, a son of *Wiking (the imported Polish arabian, who became the all-time leading sire of Arabian racehorses), was 6. Since then, Leon and Jan have travelled the world together, and formed a strong bond while sharing some rather hair-raising adventures.

Horses weren't always in the picture for Jan, though. "I wanted to ride since I was born - I can't remember not wanting a horse." But her parents didn't have a lot of money, so there wasn't much she could do except dream, like a lot of little horse-crazy girls. She saved her money from babysitting, ("back in those days, we got 50 cents an hour"), and in 8th grade she had finally saved enough to buy her first horse. "That horse ran away with me all the time, it was a wonder I wasn't killed."

Her family moved to Fairfax, Virginia, when she was 14 or 15, and - lucky Jan - a horse came with the house. "It was the start of my quasi-endurance riding. I rode with the hunt, and since we couldn't afford a truck and trailer, I'd ride my horse to the hunt along the roads, do the hunt, and then ride her back on the roads. It was a wonder I wasn't killed then too!"

Jan's horse life stopped temporarily, as it tends to do sometimes, when she got married and had kids. When the kids were out of the house, she bought a horse again. A friend of her farrier did endurance and competitive trail riding, and so Jan did her first endurance ride.

She was instantly hooked. It wasn't long before she bought her son Guy an endurance horse too, and after his first ride, he was hooked on endurance too. Now, over 27,000 AERC miles and 38 years later (which includes a Team Gold Medal at the 1988 WEC in Front Royal, Virginia, and a Team Bronze Medal at the 1999 Pan American Championships in Winnipeg, Canada), Jan still is hooked on endurance, and Guy still occasionally does endurance rides with his mom.

Meanwhile, along came Leon-with-the-mule-feet four years ago. Jan started riding the horse, and decided to keep him when he turned out to be okay, and he just got better. "He's wonderful to ride, he's rate-able, he doesn't panic at anything. He's nothing unusual - he just does his job, he goes fast if I ask him to go fast, he slows down if I ask him to slow down."

Jan is pretty fond of him, and Leon of her - he'll nicker to her when he sees her out working around the farm. "We like each other, he trusts me," she says, which is good relationship to have when you almost get struck by lightning on a ride.


It was the World Endurance Championship in Malaysia, 2008. Jan sums up the ride as "a disaster." Jan and Leon were riding with Meg Sleeper and Syrocco Reveille in a monsoon thunderstorm at midnight, cantering through 6 inches of water on the ground when it happened. A bolt of lightning struck very close to them. "It must have gone from his steel shoes up into his body - he jumped once and hit a tree and I ended up in front of his saddle; he jumped again and I came off. He dragged me a long way - I was hanging onto the reins - long enough to think I better not let go now, and long enought to think I couldn't hold on any longer. He finally came to a stop, with me underneath him looking up at his belly. But he didn't move; he just stood there. I'd lost my glasses (and hurt her ankle), it was dark and pouring, and I think Meg had come off too.

"Eventually we got back on our horses and rode on..." Jan and Leon went on to finish the ride - but Leon was pulled at the finish for lameness. Needless to say, it was wrenching, after what all they'd been through. The chef d'equipe, Becky Hart, had thought Leon was pulled for metabolics. The lameness was so subtle, nobody on the US team could see it.

Human emotions aside, Leon came out of the race just fine, and spent his winter in Florida, where he and Jan won and BC'd a 55 mile ride in January. She had the vets go over him with a fine tooth comb, because they'd been invited to the President's Cup in the UAE. The vets couldn't find a hair out of place on Leon, and so he hopped on a plane to Abu Dhabi in February where, along with John Crandell and LR Jasuur Melika, they finished the 160-km sand ride in under 9 1/2 hours, making it look like a walk in the park.

While Malaysia was the most disastrous ride Jan and Leon have had, last year's Kentucky Cup in Lexington - the pre-ride for this year's WEC - was the hardest and most miserable. That was the ride where it unseasonably poured before, during, and after the ride, and the course became treacherously slick, and horses were traveling through inches-deep mud over much of the trails. It was considered so hazardous by officials that by noon, the hundred mile ride was shortened to 75 miles. "During one of those loops, I noticed Leon was lathering up - which was not right, because it was cold and raining, and he's never done that - and that's when I realized how hard he was working in that mud," Jan said. "So I asked him to slow down. Even with going slower, we ended up passing about 6 horses on that last loop." Jan and Leon finished 3rd, a terrific accomplishment for the conditions.


Monsoons, lightning strikes, treacherous mud - why do it?

"Endurance is such a challenge. You get to see if you pitched your training and knowledge well enough to conquer the course, or if you can ride well enough to do well. It's easier now, going faster. We used to take 23 hours to do a hundred; now we think a 10-hour hundred is slow. The agony doesn't last as long on a fast 100, but the fun does!

"I enjoy the competition. Maybe you win one ride, maybe you wait in the weeds and you win next time. It's fun or I wouldn't do it. It's hard work - you have to do your homework. And when you have a farm, it's stressful." When Jan and her partner Grace Ramsey aren't caring for and riding and training their 46-some horses, and herding the 27 cows, and baling hay, and doing everything else that comes with their JG Ranch, they continue to spend time in the UAE training horses, which they started doing in 1992 for young Shaikh Mansour of Abu Dhabi.

"It takes a family to support a person like me, and I truly appreciate them. Everybody helps - someone farm-sits when we are gone to rides and to the UAE; they shoe our horses; they crew for me; Guy still rides some of my horses if they're green and need a few rides first."

It's the challenge, it's family, and it's a nice horse with little mule feet that keep her enjoying this sport of endurance, as they aim for a slot on the US Team for the World Endurance Championship.

"I'm so blessed!"

Friday, October 16, 2009

2009 Kentucky Cup Endurance



Wednesday October 14 2009

Great weather for an endurance ride, if you're a duck. On second thought, I didn't see any ducks anywhere around. Mid-40's and dumping rain most of the morning, then rain and wind, then light rain and wind, then mist and wind, more rain, more wind, and colder. By noon the officials had decided to shorten the 100-mile ride to 75 miles. Slick course with deep mud, that only got slicker and deeper as the day wore on.

One of those days that this wimpy endurance rider was glad she was not riding.

Lots of blankets in the vet gate


On people too


This little river at the out gate was not there yesterday.




Jeremy, riding Sir Smith, is cold...


but they head out on Loop 3.


Valerie Kanavy, twice former World Champion, heads out on loop 2 with LM Parys. The mare vetted out lame after loop 2 - they'd slipped and fallen on a road.




Gabrielle Mann and Big Easy - they stopped after Loop 2 - conditions just too tough, not worth risking an injury.


Lost a shoe? Put it on in the rain while the horse is eating.


Boy is it muddy.


One of my heroes, Jan Worthington (she's 69) and her cool horse Golden Lightning (Leon), going out on loop 3.




How do you cool a hot horse down on a cold wet windy day? There's a fine line between cooling him down while keeping him warm, and crossing that line to where he's too cold. Here they're putting water on his neck and shoulders, but you can see his tail is clamped to his butt.


Here they're pouring water all over him (and it's cold water, not warm) - neck, shoulders, back, butt. You risk causing the horse to cramp up, pouring cold water on his back and butt. A lot of horses did cramp up behind and were pulled.


The vetting area is a sea of mud - as is everything else.
'

My hero Jan and Leon finished third and got Best Condition!


Many more photos, and stories, at the Kentucky Cup on Endurance.net

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

2009 Fort Howes Endurance Ride - Day 1



Saturday June 6 2009

Mud, Anyone?

It rained all night, and just stopped for the start of the 75 mile ride at 6:30 AM. The skies stayed gray and threatening all day, though we lucked out and didn't get any rain. It was cool all day, and the temperature dropped to the low 40's (or less) by evening. Those who were clever enough to bring winter clothes stayed somewhat warm (lucky me!) and those who didn't think to bring muck boots got their riding shoes a bit muddy (unlucky me!).

If you want the full ride story, go to the Fort Howes page on endurance.net.

Here are a few photos from the gray - but quite pleasant and fun, and always beautiful - day.

10-year-old Granger Eichhorn riding his first 50 on his cute pony, with his dad, and trotting out at a vet check.




Two ladies on the 35.


No matter which way you pointed your lens, it was beautiful - even this little swamp!


Three gals having fun on the 75. Young Rider Kirsten Kimbler on the right finished 3rd.


A young rider at the vet check.


10-year-old Coletan MacLeod with his horse Zorro's SeaBiscuit, doing their first 50.




When you come to Montana, bring yer slickers! These 35-milers are prepared for the rain! (Which miraculously didn't come today.)


Jan Worthington (69 years old) and Leon coming in off their 3rd loop. Look how good Leon looks!


Three riders in the 50 sprint for the finish line.


Jan and Leon win the 75! Happy campers. Leon got Best Condition also.