T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
274.1 | Cashel | TLE::DAVIDSON | | Wed May 20 1987 11:47 | 39 |
| Hi,
The 'new Cashel people' are the 'old Cashel people'. The "small
cape style house" may be small by Hollis standards -- but is really
a large garrison/colonial.
Basically - When Dottie and Nick Demis bought the property (then
known as Southgate), it was with the intent of building a house on the
premises (40+ acres). However, nobody told them that in Hollis a 'Building
Rights' form had to be transferred within 60 days of the closing date
otherwise the buyers would have to wait 5 YEARS before applying for the
'Building Rights' (note, 'Building Rights' only allow the owner to APPLY
for a 'BUILDING PERMIT').
Well, the 'Building Rights' were never transferred. They are now
appealing the Town of Hollis to recognise a late transfer so they can
build their house. Some of their neighbors do not want a horse facility
so close (they could have asked to see the site plan that the previous
owners submitted to the town's planning board and requested changes) and
relations are alittle strained, even though Dottie and Nick have _tried_
to make ammends.
So, Dottie and Nick have decided to put the farm up for sale for a
somewhat exorbident (sp?) amount, and if someone comes up with the $$ -
they'll sell the place. Additionally, the farm was also suppose to be
used for training and selling of warmbloods, but the people who were
suppose to do the importing, training, and selling have relocated to
Pennsylvannia.
Hope this clears things up.
-Caroline
P.S. Even if they subdivided the property and sell portions of it -- the
buyers would have to wait 5 years to build on it -- all due to a lack of
'Building Rights'.
|
274.2 | shocking news... | CADSE::NAJJAR | | Thu May 21 1987 11:01 | 3 |
| I was suprised to hear of Maj. Carmona's death. At least
his contributions to dressage will be remembered, and I'm
sure his wife Gail will continue to use his training methods.
|
274.3 | Major Carmona | TALLIS::MJOHNSON | | Fri May 22 1987 12:06 | 11 |
| I was shocked to hear of Major Carmona's death also. He was one of the
Masters in his field. What I admired most about him was how he never
discriminated among different breeds of horses. He would respect any
horse and devote equal training time and consideration to each horse.
When I watched him training at his home, I marveled at how much the horses
enjoyed being ridden by him. The dressage world will miss him and I'm
sure his horses will miss him as well.
|
274.4 | injured co-worker | GEMVAX::FISHER | | Fri Aug 23 1991 17:39 | 21 |
| I received this message from an "electronic newsflash". I
did not receive permission from the author (since I'm not
sure who the author is). Anyway, I thought this notesfile
was an appropriate place to put it. Anybody know Hope or
what happened?
|As you may know, Hope Greenfield was in a serious accident this past week-
|end while participating in a competition with her horse.
|
|Hope has broken her back in two places, (though she is not paralyzed),
|as well as having a broken arm. They expect to do surgery on her back on
|Monday, 8/26.
|
|Listed below is where you can send cards, flowers etc.:
|
| Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center
| 2 Maynard Street
| Hanover, New Hamphsire 03756
|
| Room 413
|
274.5 | Poor Hope - it happened at GMHA | TFOR2::GOODNOW | | Fri Aug 23 1991 20:04 | 15 |
|
Yeah, she was in my division at GMHA. I was in warm-up when it
happened, so I heard that it had happened but didn't see it.
It happened at a straightforward gallopy fence in a field, Suzi Gornall
said they got in wrong and Riley dropped a knee and twisted. Needless
to say, she fell pretty hard.
I haven't heard anything since Sunday morning (day after), at which
time she was in pretty rough shape. Suzi said she had some fractured
vertebrae and a shattered elbow.
Thanks for the address, so we can send cards, etc.
Amy
|
274.6 | | SSVAX::DALEY | | Tue Aug 27 1991 13:27 | 2 |
| Any update on Hope?
|
274.7 | a brief update | MCIS2::DUPUIS | Love is grand, Divorce is 20 grand | Thu Aug 29 1991 15:37 | 7 |
| From what I hear...
Hope will be put in a body cast tomorrow, and because of the excellent
physical shape she was in, she will be going home in about a week and
may possibly be able to return to work a few weeks after that.
/red
|
274.8 | End of an era in dressage | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | | Fri Aug 30 1991 14:40 | 23 |
| It is with great regret that I note the death of my friend and longtime
coach, Dr. Henri L. M. Van Schaik. Born in Holland in 1899, he served
in the Dutch army in WWI as an officer in a mounted unit. He later rode
for Holland competitively in jumping and was a member of their Silver
medal winning showjumping team at the 1936 Olympics. He also learned
dressage and while in Europe trained several horses to Haute Ecole
levels.
He emigrated to the US in 1953 and settled in Cavendish VT. For many
years, he operated a small riding academy from his own stable. He also
gave clinics throughout the US. He travelled to Europe annually to keep
in touch with the dressage community there. As an I rated judge, he
also travelled widely to judge competitions.
He was a contemporary and acquaintance of Alois Podhajsky(the late
director of the Spanish Riding School and real life hero portrayed in
Disney's
"The Miracle of the White Stallions") and Waldemar Seunig (A late
German riding master of some renown). With Van Schaik's death and the
deaths in recent years of great European masters such as Olivera
and American based/European trained men like Andrew De Szinay(sp?), Major
Szilagi and Hector Carmona Sr, I feel that we are at the end of an era.
|
274.9 | he will be missed | ISE006::JOHNSON | | Fri Aug 30 1991 14:54 | 8 |
|
That is very sad news. He will be greatly missed by the dressage
world.
Melinda
|
274.10 | Jappeloup Dead at 16 | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Admire spirit in horses & women! | Sat Dec 07 1991 21:41 | 29 |
| This is about a celebrity horse rather than horse-person. So, moderator
please feel free to move it if there is a more appropriate spot. I
couldn't find one that seemed good to me in note 4.
JND
Just over a month after the conclusion of his retirement tour, the great
French show jumper Jappeloup died following heart failure at the home of rider
Pierre Durand on Nov 5. Jappleoup was 16.
During his carrer the diminutive French-bred part Trotter did just about
everything a show jumper can do. He competed in 5 FEI Volvo World Cup Finals,
placing second in 1988 and 1990 and third in 1985. He competed in four
European Championships, winning in 1987 and leading the French team to the
silver medal. He competed in two World Championships, placing fourth in 1986
and winning the team gold in 1990.
But the careful black jumper will always be best remembered for the ease with
which he won the 1988 Olympic gold medal in Seoul. He was the only horse to
jump two clear rounds on the final day.
In honor of his partner, Durand arranged an international retirement tour to
selected shows this year, a la basketball greats Julius Erving and Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar. His last stop in North America was the Spruce Meadows(Canada)
Masters in September, where he finsihed a respectable sixth in the Du Maurier
Grand Prix. Jappeloup's tour culminated at the Durand-managed Paris Masters in
late September, where he was officially retired.
From "The Chronicle of the Horse" Nov 29 1991
|
274.11 | What a way to go! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Wed Jun 23 1993 15:13 | 18 |
| Extracted from the June 4 Chronicle of the Horse:
"Fernanno 'Chin' Dufort galloped his last set on Feb 10. Dufort
finished working a filly at Foxtrack Farm in Southern Pines, N.C.,
pulled up, gently rolled off and died of heart failure. He was 75. Two
days laster the filliy finished second in the maiden hurdle at the
Moore County Point-to-Point."
That's the way I wanna go out. 'Course, I'd like to be more like 95 at
the time!
The article reminded me of something van Schaik told me when he came back
from Europe one summer. He said, "Handler[Podhajsky's successor as Director
of the Spanish Riding School] invited me to a performance. We were
to have dinner together afterwards. But, during the performance, he fell
dead from his horse." I thought it a drastic way to get out of a dinner
engagement... ;-) especially since Handler must have been less than 65
because the Austrian government has mandatory retirement at 65.
|
274.12 | Rembrandt | CMOTEC::HARWOODJ | Judy Harwood - REO - 830 2879 | Mon Jul 26 1993 08:38 | 42 |
| Folks,
I have in front of me the latest edition (July '93)of Dressage -
a UK magazine devoted to dressage topics and news.
It contains the following - which is reproduced without
permission.
-----------
"Nichole Uphoff's double Olympic gold medal horse Rembrandt
is out of training for at least the rest of the season
following an accident at the National German championships
in Verden.
After a chaotic lap of honour for the champions, the horses
were jammed up at the exit. In this mess, Bric, the mare
belonging to show jumper Barbara Reitter kicked Rembrandt.
He stood on three legs immediately.
He had fractured a piece of bone, luckily not in a joint
and an operation in the clinic of FEI vet Dr Peter Cronau
in Wattenscheid fixed the bone with two screws. Dr Cronau
said the operation went well and he is optimistic.
Rembrandt recovered quickly from an hour of anasthesia and
if everything continues as well as it looks at the moment
he will need about three months rest before starting training.
Nichole Uphoff said she will start him, at the earliest in
the Spring of 1994 when he will be 17. He will only appear
in public again if he is "a thousand per cent alright" said
Jurgen Uphoff, Nicole's father.
The horse is not insured. Jurgen Uphoff reserved the right
to take steps for compensation."
-----------
I can't find the original note breaking the news of Rembrandt's
injury. Hopefully if the moderators feel that this is mis-placed,
they will move it to a more appropriate note.
Judy
|
274.13 | just curious | CSCMA::SMITH | | Mon Jul 26 1993 13:17 | 6 |
| I know this is way off the subject but I'm curious. If your at an
event and if your horse kicks another horse or person and the horse,
rider or person gets hurt, does any normal insurance cover you for
this (homeowners or anything)? Does the new MASS law protect you?
Sharon
|
274.14 | Thanks for the good news! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Mon Jul 26 1993 14:49 | 14 |
| Thanks, Judy! That's good news indeed(and this is at least as
appropriate a spot to put the news as wherever the other notes were...
Which I think was Note 10 Dressage. Maybe?)
Anyway, In the 2 reports I had read, they said that Rembrandt didn't
have a very good chance of survival. One actually said he only had a
50-50 chance of making it through the operation.
Apparently, those reports were 1) WRONG and 2) speculations made before
the operation.
So, thanks for the good news. We could all use some of that these days!
John
|
274.15 | define NEGLIGENCE | KAHALA::HOLMES | | Tue Jul 27 1993 17:27 | 41 |
| >> The horse is not insured. Jurgen Uphoff reserved the right
>> to take steps for compensation."
>> -----------
In the U.S. the magic word is NEGLIGENCE.
Believe it or not I was on a jury last week. A four
day trial about a car accident.
When we started deliberations the judge gave us a
five question work sheet.
Question One. Was the person being sued (the defendant)
negligent in the operation of his vehicle ?
The answer was "no" and we were done.
If we had decided "yes" then we would have voted on how much
money to award the plaintiff and also that if the plaintiff
was also negligent, by what percent, and that percent of money
would be deducted from the award.
Let's just say that jury duty was an eye-opening experience.
I won't comment on the Teasing-the-stallion-before-a-trail-ride case,
that would be to easy.
So at a horse show, or a major horse show how do you convince a jury
that your horse was kicked because of negligence on someones part ?
The reason the U.S. courts are so messed-up is that everyone sues
anyone (who has the money or is insured) because they may settle
out of court because it's cheaper than a trail.
Keep in mind the car accident on trial last week happened on
Nov 23, 1987 !
Anyone know how this would work in Europe ?
|
274.16 | Rembrandt | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Wed Jul 28 1993 20:31 | 19 |
| Cross posted from rec.equestrian
Article 15869 of rec.equestrian:
Organization: mbp IT GmbH at ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
Date: Tue, 27 Jul 1993 15:28:48 CET
From: Dr. Lutz Massonne <[email protected]>
Subject: Rembrandt
The latest I have read here in the local German horse press was that
Rembrandt is recovering fine after his knee fracture.
He is still at the hospital and being worked in walk and trot,
at the hand.
Regards, Lutz
Dr. Lutz Massonne - mbp Informationstechnologie GmbH
Tel. +49 6151 902027 - at ESOC; Robert-Bosch-Str. 5
Fax +49 6151 902271 - D-64293 Darmstadt; Germany
e-mail [email protected] / X400: C=DE;A=DBP;P=ESA;S=MASSONNE;G=LUTZ
|
274.17 | Cass Ole - The Black Stallion | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Wed Jul 28 1993 20:31 | 15 |
| Cross-posted from rec.equestrian:
Article 15672 of rec.equestrian:
From: [email protected] (Linda Bishop)
Subject: Cass Ole - The Black Stallion
Organization: University of Texas at San Antonio
Date: Fri, 23 Jul 1993 19:27:48 GMT
Several of you,, in the past, have asked about Cass Ole, the
Arabian stallion who was in the Black Stallion movie. I thought
you would like to know that Cass colicked about two or three
weeks ago. Seeing as he was 25 years old, Dr. Cueo decided against
surgery and Cass was put down.
Linda
|
274.18 | Genuine Risk & Julie Krone | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Wed Jul 28 1993 20:32 | 24 |
| Cross-posted from rec.equestrian:
Article 15860 of rec.equestrian:
From: [email protected] (Mary McHugh)
Subject: Genuine Risk & Julie Krone
Date: Tue, 27 Jul 1993 16:49:21 GMT
I should have posted this earlier, but for anyone that is interested, last
Sunday's New York Times had a very nice article on Genuine Risk's as of yet
unnamed baby (he's 2 months old now & has recovered nicely from surgery). It's
in the sports section and features a picture of him grazing with Jenny. What
a looker! The Firestone's are trying to get Jenny in foal again despite all
the problems she's had.
This Sunday's NY Times Magazine section had a lovely article on Julie Krone
along with some nice pictures, esp. of her and her first pony "Filly" which
she tracked down & brought back to NJ. It's a very interesting article
which focuses a lot on how tough she is and how tough it is for women to
break into the business.
They're too long to post but if there is interest & I have the time, I might
paraphrase them.
Mary McHugh
|
274.19 | Rembrandt back to work | CMOTEC::HARWOODJ | Judy Harwood - REO - 830 2879 | Fri Mar 11 1994 08:59 | 18 |
|
Rembrandt back to work
Full training has started again for Rembrandt, double
Olympic gold medal dressage ride of Nicole Uphoff-Becker,
following several months rest after he was kicked during
the lap of honour at the German championships.
Rembrandt had to undergo surgery after a bone near the knee
was split and his chances of a comeback seemed gloomy.
Nicole is optimistic that she will defend her World
Championship title in The Hague. She hopes to start him
in the first German qualifier during the CDI Wiesbaden over
Witsun.
(From Horse & Hound 10/3/94 - without permission)
|
274.20 | Rembrandt at Wiesbaden | FSAEUR::LOTHROP | | Wed May 25 1994 06:38 | 12 |
| I got the chance to go to the CDI Wiesbaden this past weekend and
indeed, Rembrandt looked wonderful. He won both the Grand Prix and the
Special. His Grand Prix score was 1784 points, his second highest
score ever! His highest score came at the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona,
but I don't know what it was exactly.
I'm not sure what his competition schedule looks like for the rest of
the summer, but would assume he'd be going to the WEG. I'm hoping
he'll compete at the CHIO Aachen, which I have tickets for in the
middle of June - I'd love to see him again!
Janet
|
274.21 | PAT SMYTHE DIES AGED 67 | CHEFS::HARWOODJ | A sunken souffl� is a risen omelette | Tue Mar 12 1996 12:45 | 23 |
| There doesn't seem to be an obituary note - so I'll
enter this note about Pat Smythe here.
Moderators please move if there is a note that I have
missed.
For Horse & Hound (without permission)
PAT SMYTHE DIES AGED 67
Pat Koechlin-Smythe, heroine of British show jumping
died in hospital on Tuesday last week after a long
illness.
David Broome, chairman of the British Show Jumping
Association said: "Pat was a great ambassador for the
sport, always imamaculately turned out and one of the
greatest horsewomen I have known in my time.
The image she portrayed was always something to look
up to. She is a great loss to us all.
|