Friday, July 08, 2022

Murdoch sets team for Tom Quilty

TATimes.com.au - Full Article

By Jeff Hanson
July 8, 2022

Tumut endurance rider and trainer Ellen Murdoch arrived in Tooraweenah on Tuesday ahead of the 2022 Tom Quilty Gold Cup, which will be held on Saturday and Sunday.

Murdoch will come up against well over 400 other endurance riders in the 56th running of the Tom Quilty, which will see horses and riders tested over a gruelling 160km journey.

The Tumut horsewoman has prepared three horses, and she will jump aboard nine-year-old Arabian, Henley Farm Janazah, while Jessica Williams will ride 10-year-old Arabian, Alzarah, and Susan Woodward jumps aboard the 15-year-old Anglo-Arabian, Castlebar What’s The Goss.

Murdoch said it was important to get to Tooraweenah early so the trio could have their horses in the best shape possible...

Read more here:
https://tatimes.com.au/murdoch-sets-team-for-tom-quilty/

Royal Bahraini team set for Slovakia challenge

GDNonline.com - Full Article

Fri, 08 Jul 2022

His Majesty King Hamad’s representative for humanitarian work and youth affairs and Royal Endurance Team captain Shaikh Nasser bin Hamad Al Khalifa is set to participate in the 120km and 160km races in the Samorin International Endurance Championship in Slovakia, following his achievement in 2016, when he took third place in the World Endurance Championship held at the same venue.

The team will be relying on the skills and capabilities of Shaikh Nasser in continuing to lead them in European championships, which will be a major factor to reach the podium in the Slovakian races...

Read more here:
https://www.gdnonline.com/Details/1126986

Wednesday, July 06, 2022

Australia: Tooraweenah 2022 Tom Quilty Preview

TomQuilty2022.com

All Trails Lead to Tooraweenah in 2022

Tooraweenah! It’s a small, serene little village of a few hundred hardy souls, nestled on rolling plains under the ancient stare of the spectacular Warrumbungle Mountains in the central west of NSW.

A few kilometres away, the Newell Highway hums to the rhythm of the main freight and tourist route between Melbourne, 930 km south, and Brisbane, 750 km north. Around 430 km eastward, Sydney’s chaos and congestion seem just as far away as its capital neighbours.

In fact, most of the time, this small rural hub supporting generations of stoic livestock and cropping families sits quiet and calm, proud and purposeful in its modest isolation, detached from the hustle and haste of city and the ‘burbs.

But there’s another side to this image of comfortable seclusion, because when it comes to endurance riding, community spirit and the true embodiment of country hospitality, Tooraweenah punches way above its weight. Always has!

Indeed, this is a town typifying the Australian character, with a tireless tenacity and gritty determination which not only exults the experience and attitudes of its sparse population, but personifies the fundamental meaning of ‘endurance’ by providing the perfect platform for this amazing sport and its legendary mantle, the Tom Quilty Gold Cup.

In 2022, the famed Quilty heads back to Tooraweenah and much as it did in 1991, the town and its dedicated committee are boldly determined and well advanced with plans to deliver a national championship event which will hammer into obscurity the difficulties and distress of the past few years.

Recovering from years of brutal drought, devastating mouse plagues and of course, the callous constraints of Covid-19 which caused Western Australia’s 2020 Quilty to be rescheduled to 2021, Tooraweenah is now tearing at the bit to make the 2022 Tom Quilty something supremely memorable. An expression, perhaps, that endurance riding and the people who strive to keep the sport unique in the equestrian world, will not be cowed by adversity or setbacks.

It all starts, of course, with a committee which in Tooraweenah’s case collectively accounts for a vast level of experience in organising and conducting a highly acclaimed 80 km annual endurance ride as well as numerous 160 km NSW State championships and the 1991 Tom Quilty won by western NSW rider Andrew Bailey. It’s worth noting that in 2018, Andrew returned to the scene of his ’91 Quilty victory to take out the 160 km NSW State Championship on many of the same tracks, though the more ferocious climbs of 30 years ago have now been resigned to campfire folklore, much to the relief of those with long memories.

Even so, the 2022 Tooraweenah Quilty will be a true championship course befitting the history and heritage of the most prestigious ride on the Australian endurance riding calendar. Typically though, Tooraweenah’s reputation as a demanding endurance course is equally matched by enviably high completion rates at all distances.

What’s more, such is the spirit of endurance riding in this neck of the woods, with 2022 marking 44 years of annual endurance events centred on this formidable little town, that several members of the ’91 Quilty organising committee remain staunchly involved in bringing the 2022 event to reality.

The president of the Tooraweenah endurance riding club, for instance, is Anthony Blessing, a former endurance competitor with 35 years’ experience in the sport and a man who knows what it takes to bring many varied abilities together for a common goal.

Then there’s the club vice-president and chief steward for the 2022 Quilty, Peter Bonham. The Bonham name is synonymous with endurance riding and even now, with more than 45 years in the sport as an organiser, steward and competitor with numerous Quilty buckles on the shelf, it’s not unusual to see Peter riding alongside one or more of his six grandchildren at an event.

The dynastic influence continues with Peter’s daughter and club secretary Sonia Bonham whose background in endurance spans more than 40 years, most appreciably as both a highly accomplished competitor and immensely capable ride organiser.

However, as Sonia is quick to add, Tooraweenah boasts an extensive and diverse ride committee made up of many members, each with a long connection to endurance riding through the families and local businesses that stretch deep into the community and surrounding areas.

All the town’s facilities will be primed for the running of the 2022 Tom Quilty, from the friendly atmosphere of the Mountain View Hotel Motel, the Tooraweenah Trading Co. rural supplies store, the caravan and camping facilities of the Tooraweenah Tourist Park, and the numerous and various wares of local suppliers. For more detailed supplies, the major rural centres of Coonabarabran and Gilgandra are an easy drive north and south respectively.

As for the ride base, the Tooraweenah Showground on the edge of town is a tried and proven venue for endurance rides, and already there’s plenty of work being undertaken to make it even better.

Bordering the local golf course which is being made available for all strapping and vetting roles, the showground features excellent showers and toilets, an extensive area for the mandatory vet hospital and ample areas for sponsors and suppliers to showcase their products.

A large open area immediately across the road from the central showground is now being prepared for the hundreds of cars, trucks, floats and goosenecks set to hit the town for the running of the 56th Tom Quilty in July 2022.

There is, of course, still plenty to be done but organisers know only too well what it takes to make the Tom Quilty a truly memorable event for competitors, strappers, sponsors, suppliers and visitors alike.

Meantime, for anyone wanting to arrive with horses and freshen up a week or two before the event, there will be plenty of hospitality and space on local farms to settle in and sample the surrounds and atmosphere of this amazing community.

Tooraweenah! Where horses are in the heart and endurance riding in the blood.

Sunday, July 03, 2022

Mongol derby approaches for Doddie's Dazzlers

BorderTelegraph.com - Full Article

2 July 2022
By John Hislop

IN less than 50 days time, two Borders women known as the Doddie5 Dazzlers will be participating in the world’s toughest horse race.

Alice Gully (46) from Heriot and Kate Mactaggart (46) from Jedburgh, decided to complete the Mongol Derby which takes place from August 7-20 in temperatures which range from freezing to 38 degrees centigrade to raise £30,000 for Doddie Weir’s My Name 5’ Doddie Foundation.

They will ride semi-broken wild horses over a 1000km route across mountains, rivers and desert through the Mongolian Steppe and survive on a diet of offal and mutton, and the terrain covers mountains, rivers and desert.

Usually, half of the riders quit or are injured before the finishing line but the pair are determined, not only to finish, but to win.

Alice said: “It’s was Kate’s idea but when she suggested we both do it, I jumped at the chance. I’d heard about the race several years ago...

Read more here:
https://www.bordertelegraph.com/news/20248859.mongol-derby-approaches-doddies-dazzlers/

Sunday, June 26, 2022

Wellingtonian prepares for 'longest and toughest' horse race, Mongol Derby

Stuff.co.nz - Full Article

Kiah Radcliffe
05:00, Jun 25 2022

A journey across rugged, treeless Mongolian grassland on a semi-feral horse isn’t everyone’s idea of a good time.

But for Siobhan Ryan, it’s what she’s been preparing for the past three years.

Ryan has been selected to compete in this year’s Mongol Derby - aptly referred to as the longest and toughest horse race in the world.

Covering a total of 1000km over a maximum of ten days, Ryan is expected to do 160km a day, changing horses every 35km. She said the Derby has a 50% completion rate...

Read more here:
https://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/wellington-top-stories/129053941/wellingtonian-prepares-for-longest-and-toughest-horse-race-mongol-derby

Thursday, June 23, 2022

FEI Board allocates key events until 2026

Inside.fei.org

22 June 2022 Author: FEI Communications

The FEI Board allocated major FEI Finals and Championships during its two-day in-person meeting taking place at the FEI Headquarters on 21 and 22 June.

The Longines FEI Jumping World Cup™ Final 2025, the FEI Dressage World Cup™ Final 2025, and the FEI Vaulting World Cup™ 2025 will be organised in Basel (SUI). The FEI Driving World Cup™ Final 2025 will take place in Bordeaux (FRA). In 2026, the Longines FEI Jumping World Cup™ Final and FEI Dressage World Cup™ Final will be held in Fort Worth (USA). The FEI Endurance World Championships 2024 will be held in Monpazier (FRA).

“Today the FEI Board made allocations until 2026 and, after some years of disruption due to Covid-19 and EHV-1, we have excellent sport to look forward to in the coming years,” FEI President Ingmar De Vos said.

“We are delighted that Longines CHI Basel will host the FEI World Cup™ Finals in three disciplines in 2025. The last time Switzerland, which is home to the FEI, hosted the FEI Jumping World Cup™ was in 2010, the very year when Longines CHI Basel was created. Switzerland has never hosted an FEI Dressage and Vaulting World Cup™ Finals so it is a welcome development. Since 2010, Basel has grown into a world class venue and we are confident that the FEI World Cup™ Finals 2025 will be organised at the highest level.

“The Jumping International de Bordeaux has held FEI Driving World Cup™ events for many years and hosted successful Finals in 2018, 2019 and 2020. We have no doubt that the 2025 Final will be organised with the traditional expertise and will attract the usual big crowd of cheerful fans.

“It is wonderful that the Longines FEI Jumping World Cup™ Final and FEI Dressage World Cup™ 2026 will travel to the United States. With only two years to go until the LA28 Olympic and Paralympic Games, excitement will be mounting and I’m convinced that it will be an event full of excellent sport, cheer and high energy.

“In addition, we allocated numerous championships for the next two years. The FEI Calendar is as busy as ever and we are looking forward to many unforgettable moments.”

The FEI Board also allocated the following Championships:

Jumping

• FEI Jumping South American Championship for U25, Juniors, Pre-Juniors and Children, Porto Alegre (BRA), 24-29 October 2023
• FEI WBFSH Jumping World Breeding Championship for Young Horses, Lanaken (BEL), second half of September 2024
• FEI Jumping European Championship for Young Riders, Juniors and Children, Kronenberg (NED), 11-14 or 18-21 or 25-28 July 2024
• FEI Jumping European Championship for Ponies, Opglabbeek-Sentower Park (BEL), mid-July 2024

Dressage

• FEI Dressage European Championship U25 and Young Riders, St. Margarethen (AUT), 16-21 July 2024
• FEI Dressage European Championship for Juniors and Children, Opglabbeek-Sentower Park (BEL), mid-July 2024
• FEI Dressage European Championships for Ponies, Opglabbeek-Sentower Park (BEL), mid-July 2024

Eventing

• FEI Eventing European Championship for Young Riders and Juniors, Strzegom (POL), 15-18 August 2024
• FEI WBFSH Eventing World Breeding Championship for Young Horses, Lion d’Angers (FRA), dates TBD 2024

Endurance

• FEI Endurance World Championship for Young Horses, Arborea (ITA), September 2024
• FEI Endurance European Championship for Young Riders and Juniors, Arborea (ITA), September 2024

Vaulting

• FEI Vaulting World Championship for Young Vaulters, Flyinge (SWE), 26-30 July 2023
• FEI Vaulting European Championship for Juniors and Young Vaulters, Bern (SUI), 15-21 July 2024

The Board decided to reopen the bid process for the FEI Driving World Championships for Young Horses for the years 2023 and 2024.

A summary of the other key decisions taken by the FEI Board is available here.

Tuesday, June 21, 2022

The Equestrianists Creates The Academy: the Launchpad to Derby Triumph

Equestrianists.com

June 17 2022

We've made an Academy for the world's biggest horse races...

In 2008 we started working on a brand new horsey adventure. The now Guinness world record holding 1000km Mongol Derby thundered into the record books in the summer of 2009.

But what we created turned out to be an entirely new equine sport and one that would grow to grab headlines around the world. Recently we split the horsey arm off into it's own branch called the Equestrianists (can you see what we did there?) as we launched our second race in Patagonia - the Gaucho Derby.

These adventuring behemoths are multi-horse relay races so each horse only rides 25 odd miles but the riders get a pounding. To stage one Mongol Derby we vet and train 1,500 horses with a crew of 500 people for just 45 riders from all over the globe. It's an absolute beast of a thing. Imagine thundering over the steppes of Mongolia on a rocket of a horse as you navigate yourself towards the finish line all the while living with the herding families for 10 days.

A new way to start your equine adventure

All that epicness presents a unique set of challenges for riders - it's no small undertaking. You can't race if you don't know which end of a horse goes forwards because we want to look after our trusty horse partners so we need people who can actually ride.

After getting a little addicted to these equine wonders we decided to find a way to make these titans of adventure as accessible as possible to us normal humans. So we've created a whole new thing we're calling The Academy.

These are week-long introductions to the sport that take place in the regions where the full races are staged. They serve as training and an introduction to this new sport along with diving headlong into the local culture. From simulated race days, workshops from our experienced crew to the chance to live and ride alongside the local people who make these races quite incredible, The Academy is a great way to dip your toe into the world of equine adventure racing.

And if it goes well, you can qualify for a full race. Then maybe you'll be spread across the pages of the world's press as you fly over the line in first place on some future gigantic race.

So if you have dreams of being Genghis Khan or riding Hidalgo take a look at this... https://equestrianists.com/the-academy/?mc_cid=859c7a1b3a&mc_eid=7c8bc2cd62

Saudi Arabia: AlUla's Unique Terrains Offer Ideal Setting For Endurance Racing Ahead Of 2026 Championship

OneArabia.me - Full Article By OneArabia Published: November 30, 2025 The AlUla Governorate's diverse landscapes offer a prime setti...