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For Immediate Release
Mary Hilton for Starting Gate Communications
MEDIA CONTACT: (802) 362-9023
Vermont Summer Festival Ramps Up for Week
2: Manchester Classic Horse Show
Abigail Greer and Nevada Dominate Hunter Ring
Kim Perlman and Postman Top Level 4 Jumpers
East Dorset, VT — July 20, 2005 –
The Vermont Summer Festival launched Week 2 of the five-week
event today with the Manchester Classic Horse Show, which
runs from July 20-24, 2005, at the Harold Beebe Farm in East
Dorset, Vermont. More than 900 horses are on the grounds,
keeping the five hunter/jumper rings full of action. Dominating
the hunter ring today, Abigail Greer of Cohassett, Massachusetts,
riding Nevada for owner Deirdre Catani, won all four of
the classes they entered – the Hi Low Hunter, two Green
Working Hunter Over Fences classes, and the Green Working
Hunter Under Saddle. The Grand Prix ring was also in action
today, showcasing jumper classes, and Kim Perlman of Garrison,
New York, aboard Postman for owner Animation/Caroline Sykes
won the biggest class, topping a field of 25. The Vermont
Summer Festival features hunter/jumper competition Wednesday
through Sunday, every week through August 14th.
Trainer Abigail Greer and Carl Catani, who
owns River Wind Farm in Pembroke, Massachusetts, brought 12
horses to the show this week and had an outstanding day with
Nevada, owned by Mr. Catani’s daughter, Deirdre. Nevada
is a six-year-old warmblood that Greer has been riding for
two years. Greer also trains Deirdre who shows the bay gelding
in the younger Amateur-Owner classes. “He’s a
nice hunter and we usually do well under Jimmy Lee,”
said Greer, acknowledging today’s judge officiating
in the hunter ring for all four of her wins. “Jimmy
Lee likes a good classic hunter and Nevada fits that type.”
Greer showed the horse in three over-fences classes and a
flat class to claim the cache of blue ribbons. “Today
he was good at the galloping long run to the oxer,”
Greer said. “He was relaxed and I could just gallop
up to the oxer and fire off the ground. That’s where
he probably did his best today.”
Greer is aiming to qualify Nevada for Harrisburg
and Washington and show him in the indoors this fall. “Nevada
is a classic hunter. He’s a very good jumper, he jumps
in very good form, and he covers the ground very nicely,”
Greer noted. Of her clean sweep today, Greer said, “It
feels good!”
Kim Perlman Wins Level 4 Jumper
Kim Perlman, 39, of Garrison, New York, rode Postman for his
girlfriend, owner Caroline Sykes, to the win in the Level
4 Jumpers, topping the field of 25 horses. It was a bit of
a bad luck/good luck for Sykes and Perlman today - Sykes usually
competes her gelding but had to sit out this class because
she sustained an injury earlier in the week when she fell
while riding a young horse; Perlman, who usually only rides
the horse at home and prepares him for the ring when Sykes
competes was schooling him today when he decided it would
be a nice round for the horse to jump. “I guess I went
a lot faster than I thought because I really didn’t
have any intention of going in there to win!” Perlman
said. “I went fast, but I didn’t think I went
that fast. Lo and behold, one of my students said, you won!”
Perlman was second to go in the class, formatted
so that riders in the first round who are fault-free stay
in the ring and ride the shortened jump-off course, so when
he clocked in clean in 32.327 seconds, he did not expect that
it would hold up for another 23 rides, but it did!
Edged into second place by fractions was Claire
Parr riding her own Alibi, who cleared the tiebreaker course
in 32.806 seconds. Taking third place was Gwen Goodwin aboard
her own Panter, who stopped the clock at 34.176 in the jump-off.
All three of the top placers put in double-clear performances
today.
Perlman said the course designed by David Ballard
included many tight rollbacks, but he noted that Postman was
able to leave a stride out heading for the timers and that’s
where he gained the fraction of a second for victory. Postman
is a 12-year-old Dutch gelding known as ‘Scubey’
that Sykes has owned for three years.
Perlman and his River Stone farm will participate
in all five weeks of the Vermont Summer Festival, with between
eight and 14 horses competing each week. Perlman operates
River Stone farm in Garrison, New York, and has been participating
in the Vermont Summer Festival since the event began, including
at Stowe and Sugarbush where it was held before it moved 12
years ago to its present location in East Dorset, Vermont.
“We love Vermont!” Perlman said.
Vermont Summer Festival
JULY 13-17 – Manchester Summer Festival
JULY 20-24 – Manchester Classic Horse Show
JULY 27-31 – Valley Classic Horse Show
AUGUST 3-7 – Manchester & the Mountains Horse Show
AUGUST 10-14 – Vermont Summer Celebration
As per tradition, the Vermont Summer Festival
will feature a $10,000 Mini Prix every Friday, as well as
a $30,000 Grand Prix held each Sunday for the first four weeks.
New for 2005, the Vermont Summer Festival will conclude with
a grand finale, the $50,000 Vermont Summer Celebration Grand
Prix. Each of the five weeks will also feature a $10,000 Show
Jumping Hall Of Fame High Junior/Amateur-Owner Jumper class,
part of the Show Jumping Hall of Fame Jumper Classic Series.
Marshall & Sterling and North American League (NAL) classes
are also held throughout the five weeks of competition.
For more information on the Vermont Summer
Festival, please call (802) 496-9667 or (802) 362-9023 or
email.
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