Tuesday, August 7, 2012

So Much To Say

I have a ton of thoughts in my head tonight so bare with me. 
 
First.... the Olympics. 

I made it my goal this year to watch a little bit of everything and I think I've done a pretty good job. Granted, I'm behind on the events that started this week (track events mostly) but I'm hoping that NBC keeps the replays up after the Olympics so I can take some time to watch them in the coming weeks.

The first bittersweet part of the Olympics has been the Americans' performances in the equestrian events. Overall, we really haven't lived up to expectations. The team won't be bringing home a team medal and we only have three individual chances now in two events, but even their chances are looking slim. 

However, it's been great to watch Great Britain win two different team gold medals (in show jumping and dressage) and a silver medal on their home turf. Especially during the Queen's Diamond Jubilee year. 

I was surprised to learn that Great Britain never won a medal in dressage (not sure if this is overall or just for team medals) but they made a big splash on that front by winning the whole thing.

Another bittersweet moment was watching Michael Phelps' last Olympics. He retires as the most decorated Olympian and it's pretty awesome to know that I watched all his Olympic performances through the years. Talk about an awesome athlete! Of even more interest to me, it looks like his next venture will be buying racehorses. That would be beyond cool!

For my own exciting news of the week, I finally got back in the saddle on Saturday after a three month absence. Jen Rotyz and I (read a blog from earlier in the year for more on how awesome Jen is) went out to lunch and she asked if I wanted to go riding afterwards. I am desperately missing being in the saddle so I jumped on the chance (no pun intended), even though I haven't been in an english saddle since probably February (my first words to her were "excuse me if I look like a fish" when she brought out the saddles).

When she made a comment that "Boomer" (Point of Impact) hadn't been rode in a month, I figured that I'd be on her other horse so it was a major surprise when she not only had me catch Boomer but also let me ride him. Boomer is the most expensive Point Given foal ever sold so just on that fact, it was awesome to get to ride him. But if you know my obsession when it comes to Point Given, you'll understand how high I was floating at getting to ride one of his babies. 

PG is fully responsible for bringing me into horse racing and is hands down my favorite racehorse of all time. I had a BLAST riding and remembered just how important it is for me to be around horses. I could feel my mood change and I'm still on the riding "high" five days after the ride.

I think Jen was happy to have someone else on Boomer as well because she kept taking pictures while we were riding, so I have "proof" I got to ride such an awesome horse. I don't have nearly enough pictures of me riding (I'm the one that takes pictures, not the one that gets them taken) so it's always nice to have more! 

Here's a picture we had one of the owners of Blackwood Stables snap, which has a funny story behind it but Jen may disown me if I told it on the blog, haha.


Jen knows that eventually I will be searching for a Point Given baby and I told her that after seeing pictures of Boomer and me, I am claiming all 17.3 hands of him. We make a handsome pair, don't you think?


After our ride, we visited Three Chimneys stallion complex where I got to see my favorite boy from afar (he was on the other side of the pasture) and also got to see the new boys on the farm in person.

I've seen Cactus Ridge before when he was standing at another farm, but I hadn't seen the other two up close. 

One of the new boys, Ice Box, is entering his second year at stud in 2013 and still looks like he's in race shape. I'm pretty sure they could take him out of his stallion, put him in training, and he'd still be able to run a route. He's also a sweetheart and loved the attention we gave him. Caleb's Posse was my favorite three-year-old last year after Stay Thirsty and I had never seen him up close so it was awesome to see him so soon after retirement. 

Caleb was a massive ham when I went to take a picture of him. When he heard the word "Picture", he looked at me and then struck a somewhat "professional stallion" pose, which made me chuckle.

He's still adjusting to farm life but I got to see his turn out pen and it looks like he'll soon be able to enjoy the whole field. His first year at stud is 2013 and I can't wait to see his first crop in a few years.

Finally, a last little update if you are still reading.

This week, I am working the USEF merchandise booth for the US Pony Finals. I always knew there was a lot of money in ponies but I don't think I realized just how much. Today, I saw many "big" purchases (hundreds of dollars worth of gear) in the merchandise tent and it blew my mind! We had a mad rush from when we opened at 8am until about noon and I've been told we may have a few more rushes like that in the coming days but probably not that bad.

All I can say about that is "Thank the Lord!", there was massive running around going on and we sold probably 3/4 of our merchandise before noon. We start again at 8am tomorrow and I work until we close on Sunday afternoon so I'm expecting very little sleep over the coming days. I guess the good news is that it's not going to be as crazy as Young Riders!

Well that's it for my thoughts this week.

Until next time,
Mel

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Horses R Us

Happy Olympics Week!

If you know me, you know I LOVE the Olympics. Every two years, I am obsessed with watching them, especially since the last few Olympics have had major meanings, (and life changes) for me. This year, the Olympics has even more meaning since I've helped put together parts of the USEF's material for them and I know more people there.

This year, the Olympics have also made me realize how involved I am in the horse world lately. When I was actually competing with my horses, I was pretty deep into the industry, but I honestly can't say I was this far into it. I definitely spent a lot of time with both my horses and my friends that were also involved in horses, but I always had an outlet to escape for a few hours, even if it was just school. 

At school, I was a somewhat normal person. People knew I was involved with horses but it wasn't what defined me for those 6-8 hours a day. Funnily enough, back then, I wished that it would have defined me. But now as I've "grown up" (huh?) and moved on from hoping that anything except my talents define me, horses and sports describe.... well.... me.

I'm not going to lie, I basically live and breathe our equine friends these days. While I don't see an actual horse up close and personal most days, even though I work at the Horse Park, my life is full of them. 

In the mornings, I usually have an equine-type of text on my phone from Twitter (a few sources I follow with my mobile notifications), when I'm driving to work, I pass by at least three farms depending on the way I go, then I go to the USEF, and on the way home, I usually drive down Old Frankfort Pike to avoid traffic.

I do go to the gym for about an hour almost every day and don't do the horse thing there but then I go home to a house that I share with two other people that work in the industry. Even when I don't really talk to them, I am either looking up news on the horse front or writing an equine based article. Basically, my life is horses 23/7 (taking off the gym hour).

A few years ago when I was nearing an equine burn out, I would have hated this lifestyle, but these days I love it. I'm definitely not involved as much competition-wise as I was back then (okay, not at all) and I'm missing actually messing with horses but even without that, I'm still just as deep in it as I was during my big years.

However, this also opens up more life questions about where exactly I want to go after my internship. But I've decided that other than doing a few simple things, I'm not worrying about that until the Fall.

Either way, I'm almost positive I'll keep up my Horses R Us theme that I have going on now because I really can't see any way to avoid it. 

Like the mob, the horse industry always sucks you in and never lets you get too far away.

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Championships, the Olympics, And Other Musings

After two weeks of working my tail off, I am finally finding time to spend a little time catching you all up on my adventures.

Over the last threeish weeks, the North American Junior & Young Rider Championships have consumed my life. To say I basically lived at the Horse Park except for a few hours of sleep every night would be no exaggeration as I put over 125 hours in at work during our last two week pay period.

While the show only lasted five days, I quickly learned that a lot goes into setting up a show of this caliber. Over a week before the show started, we were off and running with long days and nights to get all the last minute preparations done.

By the time the actual show rolled around last Tuesday, I had already clocked in a week and a half of continuous work with no real relief in sight. Thankfully, I had prepared myself for a tiresome and busy week because I literally put in at least 14 hours of work every day during the show except for our last day (Sunday). Even after four days of being back to my regular schedule, I am still exhausted. However, it was literally the time of my life getting to see world class horses compete and experience the world of upper level riders, even if most of them are teenagers.

Of course, as we were wrapping up the Championships (something that we are still working on), part of our office was preparing to go to London for the Olympics. 

Our High Performance Communications Director left on Tuesday for the U.K. after playing event director all week for the show. I'm still not sure how she is pulling it all off, I think she is the energizer bunny in disguise because she was literally the first person to get there in the morning and last person to leave at night. The bonus? She also came in to work up until she had to be at the airport to fly out to London.

Today, the other group of London goers prepared to set off on the trip to the Olympics so the office was a bit hectic with show wrap up and last second instructions for the next few weeks. The good news is that I was given two new Olympic "swag" items to wear and that always makes my day. 

I also got my next task for the next few weeks, or even months, as we redo the Rule Book for 2013. I'm not 100% sure what is all going to go into my part of the project and have a meeting tomorrow to clarify a bit more so I'll hold off on totally trying to explain that for now. 

All I know is that it means I get to play in InDesign again, something I loved messing with in college so it will be fun to be "reunited" with the program (even though I have it on my home computer).

As for the other musings that I posted in the title of this blog...

The other night my roommate and I went out to dinner and were talking about my time here. We realized I've been here almost 2 months. While I haven't done too much in social circles (I'm still working on that), I've had the time of my life and am trying to figure out how I can stay here after the internship is done but that's another adventure in itself.

My life is currently all kinds of exhausting but the opportunity I've been granted is amazing and I look forward to continuing on with it in the next few months, if not the next few years.

Live from my bed in Kentucky,
Mel

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Living And Breathing the Business

Welcome to the end of another hot week in Lexington. Usually I'm a fan of hot weather but when stepping outside and instantly getting drenched with sweat happens, it's time to reevaluate my fandom. When even lifelong citizens of Kentucky are complaining, I don't feel so bad though.

But this post isn't just for complaining about the heat, I promise.

Before I moved here, I looked at all the sales dates to try and figure out which ones I could attend. While most of the sales are actually during the week (a not so fun thing for me since I work Monday thru Friday), they have viewings during the weekends. The first sale in my sights was the July Fasig-Tipton sale. I've never went to an auction there as last November, we only went to see horses at Keeneland, not over across town (to put it in perspective, Keeneland is three miles from my house, F-T is about 15-20). 

It looked like the heat was again going to foil my plans for going to the "kickoff" sale of the auction season. Yesterday it was much too hot to do much of anything and that was when I planned on going and the forecast showed that it was going to stay hot for the rest of the week. But when I woke up today and my phone said it was only 89* out, I decided to take the chance of going, even when the other two weather sources said it felt more like 100*.

I'm not going to lie, my desktop background made me feel like a slacker if I didn't go (more on that later), so that had a major part in it and I'm glad I did. I got to see some awesome horse flesh and even talked with grooms, buyers, and sellers during the 2 1/2 hours I was there. I took over 1,300 pictures and spent a few hours this afternoon sorting them out and putting them on the web. I'm about half way through so tomorrow night I get to do the process again.

Now back to my desktop background. 

When I went to the Kentucky Derby Museum a few weeks ago when I was up in Louisville, I took a picture of one of the many quotes on the walls. If you know me, you know I'm a HUGE Bob Baffert fan, so it's no surprise that it's his quote I took a picture of. The quote goes like this:

"If you're gonna be successful, you have to live and breathe this business."

Since my life right now pretty much revolves around horses, I feel like I fit that quote pretty good. However, when I was at breakfast with a friend a few weeks ago, one of their friends that stopped by our table gave me some advice on getting into the thoroughbred side of things (the place I ultimately want to go), 

"You have to constantly be seen and let them get familiar with you."

He was referring to everyone in the business because let's face it, the racing industry is not easy to get into without help (thankfully I have a wonderful support system behind me). So when I lollygagged about trying to come up with an excuse not to go out to the auction grounds today, I just felt more and more guilty. It wouldn't just be missing a day of seeing the future stars of our sport, it would also be a missed opportunity to get myself a glimpse of the inside of the industry, even if it didn't have any real effect today.

After all, good, professional exposure can't hurt. And I had a blast at the auction so it helped even more. Every day I spend doing something on the racing side of things, the more I realize that one day, I want to end up in the industry. My next task is to figure out how I can go from the unknown person walking around with a camera at the sales to someone people recognize. I have a feeling that may be a little tougher than I would like it to be. 

And for a small update on the internship front: This week was a lot of last second stuff to get done, especially since it was only three days of work. The eventing team was named early in the week so I worked on the media guide for that (I had helped with jumping last week), then I did our nominations for athletes of the month, which was kind of fun to do.

I've been trained to not put any opinion into anything, but this exercise was one where I had to make the riders sound even more awesome then they are. It was one of those creative type of tasks that let me escape my journalism ways for a bit. Then Friday was basically doing all the Young Riders stuff that needs to be done with the show only a week away. It was a pretty simple and straight forward week but it was really nice to have a steady stream of work to do, it made the days go by much quicker.


Until next time,
Mel

Sunday, July 1, 2012

A week of frustration and opportunity

As I sit through my first big storm in Kentucky, I figure it's a good time to blog.

Not much has changed since my last post on the internship. I finished all of the bios I talked  about last time, including adding the edits that our proof reader said needed to be done. The website is up and running now (http://www.usefnetwork.com/featured/Olympics2012/rosters/eventing.aspx) so there's not much for me to do other than make sure it doesn't go offline.

This week, my only real assignment was writing a press release on Monday and Tuesday. Other than that, I once again sat around waiting for work to come my way. I'm hoping that after this week, I'll have a lot more to do with the Young Riders Championships coming to the Horse Park next week and then the Olympics starting up right after that. But we'll see.

We've also started a "fitness challenge" at work where we can go so many miles on a bike, walking, or swimming that started today and goes until August 11 (around the end of the Olympics). Because I've been looking for a motivator to work out and get in shape/healthier, I jumped on this chance and started working out today. My "goal" is three miles a day on the bike to get the gold medal but after going over 10 miles today, I think I'll be way over that. 

Plus, after the challenge is over, I should be better off since it takes three weeks to form a habit and the challenge is a little under six weeks so I should still be going at that point. I have a fitness goal that I want to reach by October so hopefully this is the right step towards that.

There's not much more to report on so Until next time,
Mel

Sunday, June 24, 2012

An Update

As I lay here in bed sunburned and tired from a fun weekend up in Louisville, I'm not too creative tonight so it's going to be a quick update.

When I last left the blog, I hadn't been doing anything at the internship but wasn't too worried. But on Monday when the other intern got a call to do some stuff on top of what they already had her doing and I was still sitting there, I got extremely frustrated. There's only so much I can take of doing nothing when everyone else is doing a lot of stuff so I kind of had a silent freak out and started questioning some things. Thankfully, Tuesday I was given a lot of things to do so the questioning was short term.

With all of the Olympic short lists named, we have been working on an Olympic team website so I spent my week writing and updating team member bios in addition to other stuff. Friday was another boringish day, but after spending the three days prior to that doing a lot of work, I was okay with the break. 

Friday night, I headed to one of my best friends' houses to stay with her and her fiance for the weekend. She was extremely eager to introduce me to bison lasagna, something I hadn't had yet. Let's just say Friday's dinner  was amazing.

Saturday we headed to Churchill Downs for a day of racing including the Debutante and it was so nice to be back at the track. We also went to the Derby museum between some races and let's just say, it made me once again think about some stuff but that's for another blog.

Today, we went and visited her horse which was desperately needed on my end because I am having massive equine withdrawal without a horse to mess with all the time. I got home around 5 tonight and spent about 3 hours putting up some of the pictures I took Saturday because I just can never stop working. I have one folder done and have one more to go before I'm totally done but that gets to wait for another night because I need to rest a bit before morning.

Until next time,
Mel

Friday, June 15, 2012

The First Week of Work Wasn't So... Full of Work

After nearly six months of waiting, I started my internship with the USEF on Monday. In my head I had grand ideas of immediately being given a long to-do list of articles to write, interviews to conduct, videos to edit, etc. Instead, I waited in the office for an hour while the secretaries tried to find out where I belonged since my boss was on her way back from the Festival of Champions in New Jersey and the human resources head honcho wasn't in yet.

I would be lying if my week got any better on the ideas I had at the top of this blog, although I did get to find clips of a Canadian event rider who had been named to the Olympic team so we could send it to one of the canadian channels to air for a segment. The office was maddeningly busy except for me. The other intern was doing stuff for an event she's been hired solely to work, my boss was running around trying to get stuff ready for weekend two of Festival of Champions, and I was sitting at my desk waiting for an order. At one point, I actually built the two bookshelves that had been ordered (with the other intern) because it gave me something to do.

During the first few days of the no work, I was getting frustrated. After all, I had drove across the country for this internship after waiting for six months to start and all I was doing was sitting at a desk doing nothing. But then I put everything in perspective. 
    * First, the USEF internship is something that not everyone gets to do. In fact, right now there are only three interns in the whole office. That's a ton of space and not a lot of interns.    
    * Second, I came to the USEF partially because it is an Olympic body. Sure, I may not be getting any experience at this particular event (the selection trials for London are being held at FOC) but I am able to observe how everything works around the office and prepare myself for the next organized chaos. 
   * Third, I am here for six amazing months and am already in love with the place. In the grand scheme of the almost 26 weeks I am at the internship, this is only 4% of the opportunity. Sure, I may not have had the chance to shine this week but I did put myself out there and let everyone know I was willing to work so it wasn't a total bust.

Today I got a brief "tour" of the Horse Park when we ran magazines out to the racks at three different places and even got a chance to watch a few jumping rounds when we had some issues with the gator and needed to be rescued at Rolex Stadium. This is the stadium where I've seen amazing things happen on television but have never seen it live, let alone actually seen an event in it. 

 One of the jumping rounds in the Stadium today.

So while this week didn't go as planned, I have 25 more weeks to experience and hopefully, if I'm lucky I'll be allowed to stay here. There's no doubt in my mind that I want to work in the equestrian field now and that I want to stay in Lexington if at all possible. After spending a week "researching" all the talent we have on the US teams in addition to the up-and-comers, I am truly excited for the future of equestrian sports and want to stay at the national level where I can really be a part of it all. And if I can do my part to bring retired racers into a second career here as well (in addition to possibly investing myself into one of these disciplines), then all the better.

So yes, this first week may have been challenging for much different reasons than I expected, but it was definitely a learning experience and probably a good break before the chaos starts. Hopefully next week will bring a little more work and a new lesson that only working at an organization like this can teach me.

Until next time,
Mel