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HomeHorse ShowsTitle: Glen Oro Farm Reopens for Competition After Ice Storm: A New...

Title: Glen Oro Farm Reopens for Competition After Ice Storm: A New Season of Eventing Begins


Glen Oro Farm, one of Canada’s premier eventing venues and a leader in Ontario’s eventing community, has launched an exciting 2025 season — one that is already underway despite the powerful ice storm that swept through the region in late March.

Just days after power was restored and following countless hours of work to repair storm damage, Glen Oro Farm — in partnership with the Ontario Eventing Association (OEA) — hosted a highly anticipated and hugely successful XC Masterclass with Lucinda Green on April 29 to 30.

The event introduced an innovative clinic model designed to elevate both riders and coaches in the cross-country phase of the sport. Over 150 participants, including auditors, attended the two-day clinic led by Green, a world champion, multiple European champion, and six-time winner of the prestigious Badminton Horse Trials.

The clinic was a prototype, developed to deliver an immersive learning experience for coaches alongside riders, marking a transformative step in the professional development of XC coaches in Canada.

The clinic reached capacity and one of the close to 30 coaches who attended, Karen Briggs (EC Level II competition coach/Level I TD), said that having followed Green for years, “I was struck by just how deeply Lucinda’s teaching has influenced my own, and how many of her concepts and phrases I have passed on to my students such as: ‘you are in charge of the line, the pace, and the canter you create for the approach — the horse is in charge of his feet.’” Briggs added how she “appreciated the opportunity to approach this clinic from a coaching point of view and hear what has worked for Lucinda over the course of her long career” and would welcome the chance to do it again.

A first of its kind for both Green and Glen Oro — this coaches-coaching-coaches model is, indeed, unlikely to be the last clinic of its kind. The legendary eventer departed with great praise for Glen Oro owner Leslie May Saila for her vision and courage in making this type of clinic possible and for opening up her exceptional cross-country facility as the first venue.

Looking ahead, the 2025 competition season officially kicks off on May 11, when Glen Oro Farm hosts Ontario’s first EC-sanctioned horse trials of the year — launching a season steeped in tradition and excellence. This year also brings heightened anticipation with the return of FEI-sanctioned competition to Ontario, featuring a CCI1-S and CCI2-S**. This marks a major milestone for the province’s eventing community and reaffirms Glen Oro’s dedication to high-performance sport and offers a renewed momentum for the sport of eventing in Ontario and in Canada.

The FEI classes will run at Glen Oro Farm on July 26, drawing elite riders and horses from across Canada and beyond. It promises to be an exciting showcase of skill, athleticism, and the spirit of eventing at its finest.

“We’re thrilled to reopen our grounds for competition,” said Leslie May Saila. “After months of planning and preparation — and a true community effort to recover from the storm — we’re proud to once again offer riders a world-class venue and the opportunity to compete at the international level here at home.”

Three-time Olympian, five-time Pan American Games medallist, and one of Canada’s most successful event riders, currently ranked 39th in the world (FEI Eventing World Athlete Ranking), Jessica Phoenix, knows first-hand the importance of having FEI-level events on home soil. Fresh off a third-place finish in the CCI4-S and 14th in the CCI5-L at Kentucky, she shared: “Having FEI events literally in our backyard is an amazing opportunity for both riders and their equine partners to gain valuable experience at the upper levels of eventing. It builds our national program, strengthens our international readiness, and inspires the next generation.”

Glen Oro Farm continues to blend equestrian heritage with innovation, vision, and leadership — providing a flagship stage for both emerging talent and seasoned competitors in the sport of eventing. If the start of the 2025 season is any indication, the months that follow hold out the promise of unforgettable sport, true camaraderie, and the enduring spirit of horse and rider.

Glen Oro Farm, a leading eventing venue in Canada, has successfully reopened for its 2025 season following significant damage from a late March ice storm. The farm, in collaboration with the Ontario Eventing Association, hosted a successful XC Masterclass with renowned eventer Lucinda Green, attracting over 150 participants. This innovative clinic aimed to enhance the skills of both riders and coaches, marking a significant advancement in professional development within the sport.

The clinic, praised for its unique “coaches-coaching-coaches” model, received positive feedback from attendees, including EC Level II competition coach Karen Briggs, who highlighted the profound impact of Green’s teaching on her own coaching methods. Glen Oro owner Leslie May Saila was commended for her vision in facilitating this transformative learning experience, which is expected to pave the way for future clinics of its kind.

Looking ahead, Glen Oro Farm will officially kick off the competition season on May 11 with Ontario’s first EC-sanctioned horse trials, culminating in the return of FEI-sanctioned events in July. This development is seen as a major milestone for Ontario’s eventing community, providing local riders with invaluable opportunities to compete at the international level and fostering the growth of the sport in Canada.

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Title: "Against All Odds: Ali Kuhn and Little Hail Shine at the 2024 Kentucky Three-Day Event"


At the 2024 Defender Kentucky Three-Day Event, where seasoned professionals, Olympic veterans, and polished 5* horses command much of the attention, one compact, scrappy Thoroughbred stole the show—dressed in bright watermelon pink.

Little Hail, a 15.2-hand (maybe, on an especially tall day) gelding with a grumpy face and a heart the size of the Horse Park itself, didn’t just finish his first CCI4-S last weekend. He carried his rider, Wisconsin-based Ali Kuhn, around her first-ever 4, completing one of the toughest events on the U.S. calendar with grit, joy, and not a single ounce of pretense.

“I never expected to be here,” Ali admits. “Let alone to finish here.”

Little Hail is 16 this year, and his journey to Kentucky was anything but linear. Originally campaigned by John Crowell, ‘Hail’ competed successfully before being turned out in a field when John stepped back from competing. By the time Ali got the call, Hail had been out of work for over two years.

“Dorothy [Crowell] and John had offered him to a few people, and no one wanted him,” Ali recalls. “Too small, not fancy enough, just kind of overlooked. But I had just put down my horse—my Intermediate hopeful—and I was ready to give up. I’d lost three horses to freak things. I was going to be done.”

Then the phone rang. “John said, ‘Hey,’ and I said, ‘Are you finally going to give me Hail?’ And he paused and said, ‘Actually, that’s why I’m calling.’ I was terrified. I didn’t want to take him—what if something happened again? But my husband said, ‘I think you should.’”

And so she did. Hail was delivered to a truck stop in Sun Prairie, WI—”like a sketchy horse drug deal”—and the next chapter of their story began.

“He was fat, out of shape, and the first time I jumped him, I genuinely thought he was trying to kill me,” she laughs. “But then we got to work. We started slow. First event? I got run away with. But after a couple levels, it became obvious—this horse loves the job. No jump is too big. No course is too long.”

Under the steady guidance of John and Dorothy Crowell, along with Cathy Jones Forsberg, Ali and Hail slowly climbed the ranks. From Training to Modified, then to Intermediate—where they kept winning.

“I remember telling Dorothy I wanted to try Intermediate,” Ali says. For her, even “just” going Intermediate was the dream. “She said, ‘Let’s do it—he’ll love it.’ And he did. The height just made him happier. It was like, finally, someone was respecting his opinion about fence size.”

For most riders, especially those in the Midwest, just reaching the Advanced level is a career goal in itself. But Ali’s little horse kept saying yes.

“I never dreamed that big,” she admits. “But then I joked to Cathy at Rocking Horse that maybe I’d try the [Kentucky four-star] next year. And she looked right at me and said, ‘Why wait for next year?’ I thought she was out of her mind. But then we went and did our first Advanced, and he was perfect.”

With that encouragement, the plan shifted—Ali would try to qualify for Kentucky.

“But the final three-star I needed was a disaster,” she says. “I got held on course at a frangible they were fixing, launched into a combination, and had a dumb run-out. It was terrible. Zero out of five stars. I went home thinking, ‘What am I doing?’”

Still, they pressed on. They made it to TerraNova for a final prep, and even through nerves and another bobble, Hail jumped out of his skin. Kentucky, incredibly, was on.

But not everyone thought it should be.

“I had people—good riders—say, ‘Hey, I want you to know that I did every other four-star before I took that one on.’ And I totally understand. I don’t recommend this path for most people. But I lived in Kentucky. Hail had been to the Horse Park a thousand times. We’d just won a three-star there that fall. For us, it felt like home.”

That context matters. Kentucky was her first 4*, but it wasn’t a leap of faith—it was the next step in a well-prepared, deeply supported journey. Still, Ali admits there was a chip on her shoulder.

“Absolutely,” she says when I asked her about this. “There were people who didn’t think we could or should. And I wanted to show them—and myself—that we could. I didn’t get handed a made horse. I had $700 in my bank account and a dream. I said, ‘I am not leaving Kentucky with a letter. I am leaving with a number.’”

And she did.

“I didn’t even turn on my watch,” Ali said of her memorable cross country round, which even elicited messages from riders she hadn’t met, like Will Faudree and Hawley Bennett-Awad. “I just rode the plan. I walked the course with my sister and said, ‘I think we can do this.’ And I meant it. I’ve never ridden better in my life. He was so happy out there. Every jump, he was like, ‘YES!’ I just remember going into the box, I looked at her and I was almost in tears, and I said, ‘You know we can do this, right?’ And she said, “Absolutely.’”

And the bright pink gear? A joke-turned-tradition.

“It started with the teenage girls in my barn. They thought Hail would look cute in watermelon pink LeMieux,” Ali said. “I was like, ‘No way, I’m trying to be professional.’ So they bought it all for my 30th birthday—bonnet, saddle pad, helmet cover, the works. I wore it once and everyone made fun of me—until the pictures started coming in. He looked amazing. So we leaned into it.”

Even more poetically, those colors—black, pink, and white—turned out to be Little Hail’s racing colors. “He was the last foal born at Harbor View Farm, and they actually reached out after Kentucky. They were thrilled. The people who foaled him were there to watch. They said he was a menace as a baby. So they couldn’t believe he was out there doing this.”

So what’s next?

“People ask if I’m thinking about a five-star. And honestly? I don’t know. I’ve already gone so far beyond what I ever thought I could do. If it works out someday, sure—but this? This was already my dream.”

And her message to others?

“I just want people to know that they don’t have to be rich. They can run around Kentucky in hot pink and smile and have a good time, and have a freaking dollar to their name—and they can still do it.”

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